The Fire-Warden
by
I
“And of course what I buy is my own,” continued Burleson, patiently. “No man here will question that, I suppose?”
For a moment there was silence in the cross-roads store; then a lank, mud-splashed native arose from behind the stove, shoving his scarred hands deep into the ragged pockets of his trousers.
“Young man,” he said, harshly, “there’s a few things you can’t buy; you may think you can buy ’em–you may pay for ’em, too–but they can’t be bought an’ sold. You thought you bought Grier’s tract; you thought you bought a lot o’ deer an’ birds an’ fish, several thousand acres in timber, and a dozen lakes. An’ you paid for ’em, too. But, sonny, you was took in; you paid for ’em, but you didn’t buy ’em, because Grier couldn’t sell God’s free critters. He fooled ye that time.”
“Is that the way you regard it, Santry?” asked Burleson. “Is that the way these people regard private property?”
“I guess it is,” replied the ragged man, resuming his seat on the flour-barrel. “I cal’late the Lord A’mighty fashioned His wild critters f’r to peramble round about, offerin’ a fair mark an’ no favor to them that’s smart enough to git ’em with buck, bird-shot, or bullet. Live wild critters ain’t for sale; they never was made to buy an’ sell. The spryest gits ’em–an’ that’s all about it, I guess, Mister Burleson.”
A hard-faced young man leaning against the counter, added significantly: “We talked some to Grier, an’ he sold out. He come here, too, just like you.”
The covert menace set two spots of color deepening in young Burleson’s lean cheeks; but he answered calmly:
“What a man believes to be his own he seldom abandons from fear of threats.”
“That’s kinder like our case,” observed old man Santry, chewing vigorously.
Another man leaned over and whispered to a neighbor, who turned a grim eye on Burleson without replying.
As for Burleson and his argument, a vicious circle had been completed, and there was little chance of an understanding; he saw that plainly, but, loath to admit it, turned towards old man Santry once more.
“If what has been common rumor is true,” he said, “Mr. Grier, from whom I bought the Spirit Lake tract, was rough in defending what he believed to be his own. I want to be decent; I desire to preserve the game and the timber, but not at the expense of human suffering. You know better than I do what has been the history of Fox Cross-roads. Twenty-five years ago your village was a large one; you had tanneries, lumber-mills, paper-mills–even a newspaper. To-day the timber is gone, and so has the town except for your homes–twenty houses, perhaps. Your soil is sand and slate, fit only for a new forest; the entire country is useless for farming, and it is the natural home of pine and oak, of the deer and partridge.”
He took one step nearer the silent circle around the stove. “I have offered to buy your rights; Grier hemmed you in on every side to force you out. I do not want to force you; I offer to buy your land at a fair appraisal. And your answer is to put a prohibitive price on the land.”
“Because,” observed old man Santry, “we’ve got you ketched. That’s business, I guess.”
Burleson flushed up. “Not business; blackmail, Santry.”
Another silence, then a man laughed: “Is that what they call it down to York, Mr. Burleson?”
“I think so.”
“When a man wants to put up a skyscraper an’ gits all but the key-lot, an’ if the owner of the key-lot holds out for his price, do they call it blackmail?”
“No,” said Burleson; “I think I spoke hastily.”
Not a sound broke the stillness in the store. After a moment old man Santry opened his clasp-knife, leaned forward, and shaved off a thin slice from the cheese on the counter. This he ate, faded eyes fixed on space. Men all around him relaxed in their chairs, spat, recrossed their muddy boots, stretching and yawning. Plainly the conference had ended.