Part 37 (1/2)

”Yes,” her son replied.

”What did you shoot at?”

The young man glanced at Farwell from the corner of his eye.

”A skunk,” he replied. ”I missed him.”

Sheila bit her lip angrily. Farwell took his medicine in silence.

CHAPTER XXI

A week sufficed to put the ranchers' ditches and dams in condition to take care of water; but at the end of that time there was little water to take care of. It was being diverted into the company's ditch system.

Their ditches were running full, emptying upon lands on which scarcely a pretence of cultivation was being made, while the actual farmers, just when they needed it most, had barely sufficient water for their domestic purposes, for stock, and for their small gardens. There was none for the main crops in the fields.

Naturally the crops suffered, the grain most of all. A series of hot, dry winds came. With water they would have done little or no damage; without it the leaves curled, shrivelled, and turned pale, starving for lack of moisture. And the peculiarly galling feature of it was that the water which would have meant so much was practically running to waste.

In spite of these troubles Casey managed to devote time to his guests.

His projected excursion to the foothills was abandoned, but he and Clyde rode almost daily. He had reserved his little gray mare, Dolly, for her use, and she was becoming, if not expert, at least confident in the saddle.

She grew to love the long evenings, the soft twilights, the warm, sweet scent of the gra.s.ses, and the great stillness broken only by an occasional word and the beat of willing hoofs. On these evening rides she allowed her imagination to run riot. It pleased her to pretend that she and Casey were the only inhabitants of the land--an Eve and Adam of the West, pioneers of a remote civilization. All day she looked forward to this hour or two; at night, in her bed, she lived them over, recreating each mile, each word, each little thing--how the great owl had sailed ghostly across their path, the gray shape of a coyote fading into the dusk, the young broods of grouse hiding in the gra.s.s.

Occasionally she undertook to a.n.a.lyze her feelings toward Casey Dunne, but the result was indefinite. She enjoyed his companions.h.i.+p, looked forward to it, remembered his words, his tricks of manner and speech.

But these things, she told herself, were not conclusive.

His sentiments she had no means of judging. He was forever doing little things to please her; but then he did as much for others. At times he was confidential; but he seldom talked of himself, his confidences taking the form of allowing her to share his private viewpoint, revealing to some extent his mental processes. But he had never said one word which indicated more than friends.h.i.+p. Clyde saw little of Sheila McCrae. The latter had ridden over once or twice to see, as she said, how Casey was treating them. On these occasions Clyde experienced a recurrence of latent hostility. Sheila took no pains whatever with her appearance. She came in a worn riding costume, plain, serviceable, workmanlike; and she talked water and crops and stock with Casey and McHale, avoiding more feminine topics. If there was any understanding between her and Casey it did not appear to Clyde. But it was this unreasoning hostility more than anything else which made Clyde doubt herself. Was it, she wondered, in reality jealousy?

She put the thought from her indignantly, but it refused to be banished. She even catalogued her attractions, comparing them with the other girl's. The balance was in her favour; but in the end she felt ashamed of herself. Why should she do this? She found no satisfactory reply.

After a week of the water famine she saw a change in her host. He was more silent, thoughtful. Often when they rode together he had nothing to say, staring at the horizon with narrowed eyes.

”Do you ever tell anybody your troubles?” she asked abruptly one evening. They were riding slowly homeward, and the silence had been especially marked.

”Not very often,” Casey replied. ”People I've met have usually had enough of their own. They didn't want to hear mine.”

”Well, I haven't many troubles, and I'd like to share yours, if I may.

I suppose it's this water question.”

”Why, yes,” he admitted. ”It's getting to be a mighty hard thing to swallow--and look pleasant.”

”I know.” She nodded sympathetically. ”You feel helpless.”

”Not that exactly. The difficulty is to know just what to do--whether to do anything or not. The boys are very hostile. It wouldn't take much to start them.”

”In what direction?”

”In any that would give action. They'd like nothing better than open war.”