<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0036" id="link2HCH0036"></SPAN></p>
<br/>
<h2> CHAPTER II </h2>
<p>It was a good afternoon's tramp to Niles, passing through the town of
Haywards; yet Saxon and Billy found time to diverge from the main county
road and take the parallel roads through acres of intense cultivation
where the land was farmed to the wheel-tracks. Saxon looked with amazement
at these small, brown-skinned immigrants who came to the soil with nothing
and yet made the soil pay for itself to the tune of two hundred, of five
hundred, and of a thousand dollars an acre.</p>
<p>On every hand was activity. Women and children were in the fields as well
as men. The land was turned endlessly over and over. They seemed never to
let it rest. And it rewarded them. It must reward them, or their children
would not be able to go to school, nor would so many of them be able to
drive by in rattletrap, second-hand buggies or in stout light wagons.</p>
<p>“Look at their faces,” Saxon said. “They are happy and contented. They
haven't faces like the people in our neighborhood after the strikes
began.”</p>
<p>“Oh, sure, they got a good thing,” Billy agreed. “You can see it stickin'
out all over them. But they needn't get chesty with ME, I can tell you
that much—just because they've jiggerooed us out of our land an'
everything.”</p>
<p>“But they're not showing any signs of chestiness,” Saxon demurred.</p>
<p>“No, they're not, come to think of it. All the same, they ain't so wise. I
bet I could tell 'em a few about horses.”</p>
<p>It was sunset when they entered the little town of Niles. Billy, who had
been silent for the last half mile, hesitantly ventured a suggestion.</p>
<p>“Say... I could put up for a room in the hotel just as well as not. What d
'ye think?”</p>
<p>But Saxon shook her head emphatically.</p>
<p>“How long do you think our twenty dollars will last at that rate? Besides,
the only way to begin is to begin at the beginning. We didn't plan
sleeping in hotels.”</p>
<p>“All right,” he gave in. “I'm game. I was just thinkin' about you.”</p>
<p>“Then you'd better think I'm game, too,” she flashed forgivingly. “And now
we'll have to see about getting things for supper.”</p>
<p>They bought a round steak, potatoes, onions, and a dozen eating apples,
then went out from the town to the fringe of trees and brush that
advertised a creek. Beside the trees, on a sand bank, they pitched camp.
Plenty of dry wood lay about, and Billy whistled genially while he
gathered and chopped. Saxon, keen to follow his every mood, was cheered by
the atrocious discord on his lips. She smiled to herself as she spread the
blankets, with the tarpaulin underneath, for a table, having first removed
all twigs from the sand. She had much to learn in the matter of cooking
over a camp-fire, and made fair progress, discovering, first of all, that
control of the fire meant far more than the size of it. When the coffee
was boiled, she settled the grounds with a part-cup of cold water and
placed the pot on the edge of the coals where it would keep hot and yet
not boil. She fried potato dollars and onions in the same pan, but
separately, and set them on top of the coffee pot in the tin plate she was
to eat from, covering it with Billy's inverted plate. On the dry hot pan,
in the way that delighted Billy, she fried the steak. This completed, and
while Billy poured the coffee, she served the steak, putting the dollars
and onions back into the frying pan for a moment to make them piping hot
again.</p>
<p>“What more d'ye want than this?” Billy challenged with deep-toned
satisfaction, in the pause after his final cup of coffee, while he rolled
a cigarette. He lay on his side, full length, resting on his elbow. The
fire was burning brightly, and Saxon's color was heightened by the
flickering flames. “Now our folks, when they was on the move, had to be
afraid for Indians, and wild animals and all sorts of things; an' here we
are, as safe as bugs in a rug. Take this sand. What better bed could you
ask? Soft as feathers. Say—you look good to me, heap little squaw. I
bet you don't look an inch over sixteen right now, Mrs.
Babe-in-the-Woods.”</p>
<p>“Don't I?” she glowed, with a flirt of the head sideward and a white flash
of teeth. “If you weren't smoking a cigarette I'd ask you if your mother
knew you're out, Mr. Babe-in-the-Sandbank.”</p>
<p>“Say,” he began, with transparently feigned seriousness. “I want to ask
you something, if you don't mind. Now, of course, I don't want to hurt
your feelin's or nothin', but just the same there's something important
I'd like to know.”</p>
<p>“Well, what is it?” she inquired, after a fruitless wait.</p>
<p>“Well, it's just this, Saxon. I like you like anything an' all that, but
here's night come on, an' we're a thousand miles from anywhere, and—well,
what I wanta know is: are we really an' truly married, you an' me?”</p>
<p>“Really and truly,” she assured him. “Why?”</p>
<p>“Oh, nothing; but I'd kind a-forgotten, an' I was gettin' embarrassed, you
know, because if we wasn't, seein' the way I was brought up, this'd be no
place—”</p>
<p>“That will do you,” she said severely. “And this is just the time and
place for you to get in the firewood for morning while I wash up the
dishes and put the kitchen in order.”</p>
<p>He started to obey, but paused to throw his arm about her and draw her
close. Neither spoke, but when he went his way Saxon's breast was
fluttering and a song of thanksgiving breathed on her lips.</p>
<p>The night had come on, dim with the light of faint stars. But these had
disappeared behind clouds that seemed to have arisen from nowhere. It was
the beginning of California Indian summer. The air was warm, with just the
first hint of evening chill, and there was no wind.</p>
<p>“I've a feeling as if we've just started to live,” Saxon said, when Billy,
his firewood collected, joined her on the blankets before the fire. “I've
learned more to-day than ten years in Oakland.” She drew a long breath and
braced her shoulders. “Farming's a bigger subject than I thought.”</p>
<p>Billy said nothing. With steady eyes he was staring into the fire, and she
knew he was turning something over in his mind.</p>
<p>“What is it,” she asked, when she saw he had reached a conclusion, at the
same time resting her hand on the back of his.</p>
<p>“Just been framin' up that ranch of ourn,” he answered. “It's all well
enough, these dinky farmlets. They'll do for foreigners. But we Americans
just gotta have room. I want to be able to look at a hilltop an' know it's
my land, and know it's my land down the other side an' up the next
hilltop, an' know that over beyond that, down alongside some creek, my
mares are most likely grazin', an' their little colts grazin' with 'em or
kickin' up their heels. You know, there's money in raisin' horses—especially
the big workhorses that run to eighteen hundred an' two thousand pounds.
They're payin' for 'em, in the cities, every day in the year, seven an'
eight hundred a pair, matched geldings, four years old. Good pasture an'
plenty of it, in this kind of a climate, is all they need, along with some
sort of shelter an' a little hay in long spells of bad weather. I never
thought of it before, but let me tell you that this ranch proposition is
beginnin' to look good to ME.”</p>
<p>Saxon was all excitement. Here was new information on the cherished
subject, and, best of all, Billy was the authority. Still better, he was
taking an interest himself.</p>
<p>“There'll be room for that and for everything on a quarter section,” she
encouraged.</p>
<p>“Sure thing. Around the house we'll have vegetables an' fruit and chickens
an' everything, just like the Porchugeeze, an' plenty of room beside to
walk around an' range the horses.”</p>
<p>“But won't the colts cost money, Billy?”</p>
<p>“Not much. The cobblestones eat horses up fast. That's where I'll get my
brood mares, from the ones knocked out by the city. I know THAT end of it.
They sell 'em at auction, an' they're good for years an' years, only no
good on the cobbles any more.”</p>
<p>There ensued a long pause. In the dying fire both were busy visioning the
farm to be.</p>
<p>“It's pretty still, ain't it?” Billy said, rousing himself at last. He
gazed about him. “An' black as a stack of black cats.” He shivered,
buttoned his coat, and tossed several sticks on the fire. “Just the same,
it's the best kind of a climate in the world. Many's the time, when I was
a little kid, I've heard my father brag about California's bein' a blanket
climate. He went East, once, an' staid a summer an' a winter, an' got all
he wanted. Never again for him.”</p>
<p>“My mother said there never was such a land for climate. How wonderful it
must have seemed to them after crossing the deserts and mountains. They
called it the land of milk and honey. The ground was so rich that all they
needed to do was scratch it, Cady used to say.”</p>
<p>“And wild game everywhere,” Billy contributed. “Mr. Roberts, the one that
adopted my father, he drove cattle from the San Joaquin to the Columbia
river. He had forty men helpin' him, an' all they took along was powder
an' salt. They lived off the game they shot.”</p>
<p>“The hills were full of deer, and my mother saw whole herds of elk around
Santa Rosa. Some time we'll go there, Billy. I've always wanted to.”</p>
<p>“And when my father was a young man, somewhere up north of Sacramento, in
a creek called Cache Slough, the tules was full of grizzlies. He used to
go in an' shoot 'em. An' when they caught 'em in the open, he an' the
Mexicans used to ride up an' rope them—catch them with lariats, you
know. He said a horse that wasn't afraid of grizzlies fetched ten times as
much as any other horse. An' panthers!—all the old folks called 'em
painters an' catamounts an' varmints. Yes, we'll go to Santa Rosa some
time. Maybe we won't like that land down the coast, an' have to keep on
hikin'.”</p>
<p>By this time the fire had died down, and Saxon had finished brushing and
braiding her hair. Their bed-going preliminaries were simple, and in a few
minutes they were side by side under the blankets. Saxon closed her eyes,
but could not sleep. On the contrary, she had never been more wide awake.
She had never slept out of doors in her life, and by no exertion of will
could she overcome the strangeness of it. In addition, she was stiffened
from the long trudge, and the sand, to her surprise, was anything but
soft. An hour passed. She tried to believe that Billy was asleep, but felt
certain he was not. The sharp crackle of a dying ember startled her. She
was confident that Billy had moved slightly.</p>
<p>“Billy,” she whispered, “are you awake?”</p>
<p>“Yep,” came his low answer, “—an' thinkin' this sand is harder'n a
cement floor. It's one on me, all right. But who'd a-thought it?”</p>
<p>Both shifted their postures slightly, but vain was the attempt to escape
from the dull, aching contact of the sand.</p>
<p>An abrupt, metallic, whirring noise of some nearby cricket gave Saxon
another startle. She endured the sound for some minutes, until Billy broke
forth.</p>
<p>“Say, that gets my goat whatever it is.”</p>
<p>“Do you think it's a rattlesnake?” she asked, maintaining a calmness she
did not feel.</p>
<p>“Just what I've been thinkin'.”</p>
<p>“I saw two, in the window of Bowman's Drug Store. An' you know, Billy,
they've got a hollow fang, and when they stick it into you the poison runs
down the hollow.”</p>
<p>“Br-r-r-r,” Billy shivered, in fear that was not altogether mockery.
“Certain death, everybody says, unless you're a Bosco. Remember him?”</p>
<p>“He eats 'em alive! He eats 'em alive! Bosco! Bosco!” Saxon responded,
mimicking the cry of a side-show barker. “Just the same, all Bosco's
rattlers had the poison-sacs cut outa them. They must a-had. Gee! It's
funny I can't get asleep. I wish that damned thing'd close its trap. I
wonder if it is a rattlesnake.”</p>
<p>“No; it can't be,” Saxon decided. “All the rattlesnakes are killed off
long ago.”</p>
<p>“Then where did Bosco get his?” Billy demanded with unimpeachable logic.
“An' why don't you get to sleep?”</p>
<p>“Because it's all new, I guess,” was her reply. “You see, I never camped
out in my life.”</p>
<p>“Neither did I. An' until now I always thought it was a lark.” He changed
his position on the maddening sand and sighed heavily. “But we'll get used
to it in time, I guess. What other folks can do, we can, an' a mighty lot
of 'em has camped out. It's all right. Here we are, free an' independent,
no rent to pay, our own bosses—”</p>
<p>He stopped abruptly. From somewhere in the brush came an intermittent
rustling. When they tried to locate it, it mysteriously ceased, and when
the first hint of drowsiness stole upon them the rustling as mysteriously
recommenced.</p>
<p>“It sounds like something creeping up on us,” Saxon suggested, snuggling
closer to Billy.</p>
<p>“Well, it ain't a wild Indian, at all events,” was the best he could offer
in the way of comfort. He yawned deliberately. “Aw, shucks! What's there
to be scared of? Think of what all the pioneers went through.”</p>
<p>Several minutes later his shoulders began to shake, and Saxon knew he was
giggling.</p>
<p>“I was just thinkin' of a yarn my father used to tell about,” he
explained. “It was about old Susan Kleghorn, one of the Oregon pioneer
women. Wall-Eyed Susan, they used to call her; but she could shoot to beat
the band. Once, on the Plains, the wagon train she was in, was attacked by
Indians. They got all the wagons in a circle, an' all hands an' the oxen
inside, an' drove the Indians off, killin' a lot of 'em. They was too
strong that way, so what'd the Indians do, to draw 'em out into the open,
but take two white girls, captured from some other train, an' begin to
torture 'em. They done it just out of gunshot, but so everybody could see.
The idea was that the white men couldn't stand it, an' would rush out, an'
then the Indians'd have 'em where they wanted 'em.</p>
<p>“The white men couldn't do a thing. If they rushed out to save the girls,
they'd be finished, an' then the Indians'd rush the train. It meant death
to everybody. But what does old Susan do, but get out an old,
long-barreled Kentucky rifle. She rams down about three times the regular
load of powder, takes aim at a big buck that's pretty busy at the
torturin', an' bangs away. It knocked her clean over backward, an' her
shoulder was lame all the rest of the way to Oregon, but she dropped the
big Indian deado. He never knew what struck 'm.</p>
<p>“But that wasn't the yarn I wanted to tell. It seems old Susan liked John
Barleycorn. She'd souse herself to the ears every chance she got. An' her
sons an' daughters an' the old man had to be mighty careful not to leave
any around where she could get hands on it.”</p>
<p>“On what?” asked Saxon.</p>
<p>“On John Barleycorn.—Oh, you ain't on to that. It's the old
fashioned name for whisky. Well, one day all the folks was goin' away—that
was over somewhere at a place called Bodega, where they'd settled after
comin' down from Oregon. An' old Susan claimed her rheumatics was hurtin'
her an' so she couldn't go. But the family was on. There was a two-gallon
demijohn of whisky in the house. They said all right, but before they left
they sent one of the grandsons to climb a big tree in the barnyard, where
he tied the demijohn sixty feet from the ground. Just the same, when they
come home that night they found Susan on the kitchen floor dead to the
world.”</p>
<p>“And she'd climbed the tree after all,” Saxon hazarded, when Billy had
shown no inclination of going on.</p>
<p>“Not on your life,” he laughed jubilantly. “All she'd done was to put a
washtub on the ground square under the demijohn. Then she got out her old
rifle an' shot the demijohn to smithereens, an' all she had to do was lap
the whisky outa the tub.”</p>
<p>Again Saxon was drowsing, when the rustling sound was heard, this time
closer. To her excited apprehension there was something stealthy about it,
and she imagined a beast of prey creeping upon them. “Billy,” she
whispered.</p>
<p>“Yes, I'm a-listenin' to it,” came his wide awake answer.</p>
<p>“Mightn't that be a panther, or maybe... a wildcat?”</p>
<p>“It can't be. All the varmints was killed off long ago. This is peaceable
farmin' country.”</p>
<p>A vagrant breeze sighed through the trees and made Saxon shiver. The
mysterious cricket-noise ceased with suspicious abruptness. Then, from the
rustling noise, ensued a dull but heavy thump that caused both Saxon and
Billy to sit up in the blankets. There were no further sounds, and they
lay down again, though the very silence now seemed ominous.</p>
<p>“Huh,” Billy muttered with relief. “As though I don't know what it was. It
was a rabbit. I've heard tame ones bang their hind feet down on the floor
that way.”</p>
<p>In vain Saxon tried to win sleep. The sand grew harder with the passage of
time. Her flesh and her bones ached from contact with it. And, though her
reason flouted any possibility of wild dangers, her fancy went on
picturing them with unflagging zeal.</p>
<p>A new sound commenced. It was neither a rustling nor a rattling, and it
tokened some large body passing through the brush. Sometimes twigs
crackled and broke, and, once, they heard bush-branches press aside and
spring back into place.</p>
<p>“If that other thing was a panther, this is an elephant,” was Billy's
uncheering opinion. “It's got weight. Listen to that. An' it's comin'
nearer.”</p>
<p>There were frequent stoppages, then the sounds would begin again, always
louder, always closer. Billy sat up in the blankets once more, passing one
arm around Saxon, who had also sat up.</p>
<p>“I ain't slept a wink,” he complained. “—There it goes again. I wish
I could see.”</p>
<p>“It makes a noise big enough for a grizzly,” Saxon chattered, partly from
nervousness, partly from the chill of the night.</p>
<p>“It ain't no grasshopper, that's sure.”</p>
<p>Billy started to leave the blankets, but Saxon caught his arm.</p>
<p>“What are you going to do?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I ain't scairt none,” he answered. “But, honest to God, this is
gettin' on my nerves. If I don't find what that thing is, it'll give me
the willies. I'm just goin' to reconnoiter. I won't go close.”</p>
<p>So intensely dark was the night, that the moment Billy crawled beyond the
reach of her hand he was lost to sight. She sat and waited. The sound had
ceased, though she could follow Billy's progress by the cracking of dry
twigs and limbs. After a few moments he returned and crawled under the
blankets.</p>
<p>“I scared it away, I guess. It's got better ears, an' when it heard me
comin' it skinned out most likely. I did my dangdest, too, not to make a
sound.—O Lord, there it goes again.”</p>
<p>They sat up. Saxon nudged Billy.</p>
<p>“There,” she warned, in the faintest of whispers. “I can hear it
breathing. It almost made a snort.”</p>
<p>A dead branch cracked loudly, and so near at hand, that both of them
jumped shamelessly.</p>
<p>“I ain't goin' to stand any more of its foolin',” Billy declared
wrathfully. “It'll be on top of us if I don't.”</p>
<p>“What are you going to do?” she queried anxiously.</p>
<p>“Yell the top of my head off. I'll get a fall outa whatever it is.”</p>
<p>He drew a deep breath and emitted a wild yell.</p>
<p>The result far exceeded any expectation he could have entertained, and
Saxon's heart leaped up in sheer panic. On the instant the darkness
erupted into terrible sound and movement. There were trashings of
underbrush and lunges and plunges of heavy bodies in different directions.
Fortunately for their ease of mind, all these sounds receded and died
away.</p>
<p>“An' what d'ye think of that?” Billy broke the silence.</p>
<p>“Gee! all the fight fans used to say I was scairt of nothin'. Just the
same I'm glad they ain't seein' me to-night.”</p>
<p>He groaned. “I've got all I want of that blamed sand. I'm goin' to get up
and start the fire.”</p>
<p>This was easy. Under the ashes were live embers which quickly ignited the
wood he threw on. A few stars were peeping out in the misty zenith. He
looked up at them, deliberated, and started to move away.</p>
<p>“Where are you going now?” Saxon called.</p>
<p>“Oh, I've got an idea,” he replied noncommittally, and walked boldly away
beyond the circle of the firelight.</p>
<p>Saxon sat with the blankets drawn closely under her chin, and admired his
courage. He had not even taken the hatchet, and he was going in the
direction in which the disturbance had died away.</p>
<p>Ten minutes later he came back chuckling.</p>
<p>“The sons-of-guns, they got my goat all right. I'll be scairt of my own
shadow next.—What was they? Huh! You couldn't guess in a thousand
years. A bunch of half-grown calves, an' they was worse scairt than us.”</p>
<p>He smoked a cigarette by the fire, then rejoined Saxon under the blankets.</p>
<p>“A hell of a farmer I'll make,” he chafed, “when a lot of little calves
can scare the stuffin' outa me. I bet your father or mine wouldn't
a-batted an eye. The stock has gone to seed, that's what it has.”</p>
<p>“No, it hasn't,” Saxon defended. “The stock is all right. We're just as
able as our folks ever were, and we're healthier on top of it. We've been
brought up different, that's all. We've lived in cities all our lives. We
know the city sounds and thugs, but we don't know the country ones. Our
training has been unnatural, that's the whole thing in a nutshell. Now
we're going in for natural training. Give us a little time, and we'll
sleep as sound out of doors as ever your father or mine did.”</p>
<p>“But not on sand,” Billy groaned.</p>
<p>“We won't try. That's one thing, for good and all, we've learned the very
first time. And now hush up and go to sleep.”</p>
<p>Their fears had vanished, but the sand, receiving now their undivided
attention, multiplied its unyieldingness. Billy dozed off first, and
roosters were crowing somewhere in the distance when Saxon's eyes closed.
But they could not escape the sand, and their sleep was fitful.</p>
<p>At the first gray of dawn, Billy crawled out and built a roaring fire.
Saxon drew up to it shiveringly. They were hollow-eyed and weary. Saxon
began to laugh. Billy joined sulkily, then brightened up as his eyes
chanced upon the coffee pot, which he immediately put on to boil.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />