"I"ve been thinking over that matter of yours, Casey, and the more I think it over the less I like it. That charter, backed by Airline money and influence, will be a hard thing to get over. I hate to discourage you, but the best advice I can give to you and your neighbours is to put a fair price on your holdings, and offer them to the railway _en bloc_."
"But we don"t want to sell, Wade. Couldn"t you get an injunction or something, and tie up their operations?"
"No, I"m afraid not. You can"t bring an action until you have something to found it on--that is to say, some wrong to complain of--some actual interference with your rights to water. And you can"t get an injunction unless you can show that your rights are beyond question. It"s a toss-up whether that charter takes precedence or not. I"m speaking frankly to you. With an ordinary client I"d throw a professional front of profound knowledge, but as it is I own up that it"s a complicated question, depending almost entirely on the court. And courts are just as uncertain as other human inst.i.tutions."
Casey Dunne frowned through the spreading fog of cigar smoke. "I"m quite aware of it, Wade. But here it is: We don"t want to sell. Even if they gave us a fair present price, we would be losers, for land out there is going to double in value in the next couple of years. And what they intend to do is simply to freeze us out and force us to sell at dry-land prices. Therefore, we"ve _got_ to fight. Go ahead and try for an injunction. If that is refused, bring an action as soon as you can.
And meanwhile we"ll hang on to our water somehow."
"Don"t do anything to prejudice your case in the courts," Wade warned.
"According to you York will do that, anyway," said Dunne. "No, Wade, that"s flat, final, whatever. We won"t let go till we have to. We won"t be skinned out of the profit we are ent.i.tled to by foresight and hard work. Speaking for myself, I"ve put my whole stack on this bet, and with a straight deal it"s a sure winner. And if the deal"s going to be crooked I"ll break up the game any way that comes handy."
"Go to it, my friend," said the lawyer. "It"s your affair. I"ve told you what I think, and I"ll not add to it. I hope you have water when I come out this summer to make you that long-promised visitation." He changed the subject abruptly. "You and Clyde Burnaby seemed to be getting on swimmingly."
"Clyde--is that her name?" said Dunne. "Seems like a nice girl."
"She"s all of that. You know who she is, of course?"
"Not a bit. Just her name."
"Niece of old Jim Hess, with a fortune of her own."
"Pretty_ lucky_," Dunne commented.
"Pretty _and_ lucky," said his host. "Old York hates Hess like poison, a sentiment which Hess returns, according to rumour. I don"t suppose you"ve told Clyde Burnaby your troubles?"
Dunne stared at him. "Of course not! What do you take me for?"
"That"s all right, my son; don"t swell up so. Why don"t you tell her?"
"Why the deuce should I? Do you think I go yawping my business affairs to every female I meet?"
"Well, Clyde Burnaby"s good stuff," said Wade. "She has a level head.
If it comes up that way, Casey, tell her all about it. She"ll sympathize with you."
"I"m not looking for sympathy."
"And she might give you some good advice."
"Rats!" Casey Dunne commented, inelegantly but forcibly, and Wade said no more.
Dunne was glad when the cigars were ended. He found Clyde Burnaby at the piano, barely touching the keys. A faint melody seemed to flow from her finger"s tips.
"Do you sing, Mr. Dunne?"
"Only very confidentially. When I was riding for a cow outfit I used to sing at night, when the cattle were bedded down. Sort of tradition of the business that it kept "em quiet. They didn"t seem to mind my voice.
And that"s really the most encouragement I ever got."
Mrs. Wade asked Clyde to play. She complied at once, without hesitation. They applauded her. Afterward one of the men sang, to her accompaniment. Then she and Dunne drifted together once more.
"I liked your playing," he said, "but not what you played. It had no tune."
"It was Beethoven!"
"All the same, it had no tune. I like the old songs--the ones I can follow in my mind with the words I know."
"Why, so do I," she admitted; "but, my Philistine friend, I was expected to play the other kind."
"I understand that. But I like to hear what is low grade enough for me to appreciate. I don"t get much music at home."
"Tell me about your ranch. I"d like to know what you do and how you live. To begin with, beggin" yer honour"s pardon in advance, is there a Mrs. Dunne?"
"No such luck," he replied. He sketched the ranch routine briefly. She was interested, asking many questions. The evening wore away. The guests began to depart. But Clyde had arranged to stay the night with the Wades.
"By the way," she said, "I still have your ten-dollar bill. I will send it to you."
"Don"t do that. Keep it."
"I couldn"t."
"Of course you can. You may pay me interest if you like."
"At what per cent?"
"Current rates in my country--eight."
"Very well," she laughed. "It"s a bargain. But where is your security?"
He considered gravely. "Certainly I should have something. I will be satisfied with that rose you are wearing."
Clyde coloured slightly, glancing at him swiftly.
"Kitty," she called to Mrs. Wade, "I want you as a witness. Mr. Dunne has made me a loan. His security is this rose--and nothing more. Please witness that I give it to him."
And later that night Kitty Wade said to her lord:
"For a rancher, Harry, your Casey Dunne has cla.s.s. I never knew Clyde Burnaby to give a flower to any man before."
"And you see a case of love at first sight," said Wade, scornfully and sleepily. "Pshaw, Kitty, you"re barking at a knot. Casey"s a fine chap, but Lord! she"s got too much money for him. Suppose she did give him a rose! Didn"t she call you over to chaperon the transaction? That puts the sentimental theory out of business."
"And that"s all a lawyer knows!" said his wife. "Why, you old silly, don"t you see that she couldn"t have given it to him any other way--with all those people in the room? Clyde Burnaby can think about as fast as anybody I know."
CHAPTER IV
Casey Dunne pulled a fretful buckskin to a halt as he topped a rise and looked down on Talapus Ranch. It lay before him, the thousand-odd acres of it, lush and green beneath the sloping, afternoon sun, an oasis in a setting of brown, baked earth and short, dry gra.s.ses which seldom felt the magic of the rains. The ranch was owned by Donald McCrae, a pioneer of the district, and it was the show place of the country. It was Exhibit A to incomers, a witness to the results of irrigation. The broad, fat acres were almost level. There was no waste land, no coulees, no barren hills to discount its value. Every foot of it could be irrigated, and most of it was actually irrigated and cultivated.