PAGE 25
The Withrow Water Right
by
“Orange-pickun’ before last ain’t nigh two years ago,” she mused, “an’ ‘t ain’t a year yet sence Lysander hauled grapes from the Mission to the winery; an’ the year before that he was over to Verdugo at the bee-ranch, an’ come home fer the grape-haulin’ at Santa Elena. That’s when Hooker was born; he’ll be two years old this fall; it’s ever so long ago. He couldn’t stand bein’ in jail that long; some folks could, but he couldn’t. He sings, and laughs out loud, and goes tearin’ around so lively. It ‘ud kill ‘im.”
She slipped down from the tree, and started toward the house. The path was hot to her bare feet, and the wind came in heated gusts from the mountains. The young turkeys panted, with uplifted wings, in the shade of the dusty geraniums, whose scarlet blossoms were glowing in fierce tropical enjoyment of the glaring sun. The hounds went languidly, with lolling tongues, from one shaded spot to another, blinking their comments on the weather at their human companions, and snapping in a half-hearted way at unwary flies.
Mrs. Sproul and her mother were still seated on the little porch when Melissa appeared.
“Why don’t you come in out of the heat, child?” called her sister, as reproachfully as if Melissa were going in the opposite direction. “We hain’t had such a desert wind for more ‘n a year. I keep thinkin’ about Lysander. I’ve heern of people bein’ took down with the heat, and havin’ trouble ever afterward with their brains.”
“Lysander ain’t a-goin’ to have any trouble with his brains,” said her mother significantly.
Mrs. Sproul turned a highly insulted gaze upon the old woman’s impassive face, and tilted her husband’s hat defiantly above her diminutive, freckled countenance.
“Lysander kin have as much trouble with his brains as anybody,” she said, with bantam-like dignity, straightening her limp calico back, and tightening her grasp on the baby in her arms.
The old woman elevated her shaggy brows, and made a half-mocking sound in imitation of the spitting of an angry kitten.
Mrs. Sproul’s pale blue eyes filled with indignant tears, and she turned toward Melissa, who looked up from the step, a gleam of sisterly sympathy lighting up the wan dejection of her young face.
“I wouldn’t fret, Minervy,” she said kindly; “Lysander don’t mind the heat. People never get sunstruck here; it’s only back East. I don’t think it’s so very warm, nohow.”
“Oh, it’s hot enough,” sniffled Mrs. Sproul, relaxing her spine under Melissa’s sympathy; “but it ain’t altogether the heat. I don’t like Lysander bein’ mixed up with murderers and dangerous characters; not but what he’s able to pertect himself, havin’ been through the war, but it seems as if the harmlessest person wuzn’t safe when folks go ’round shootin’ right an’ left without no provocation whatever. I think we’ll all be safer when that young feller’s locked up in San Quentin,–which they’ll do with him, Lysander thinks.”
Mrs. Sproul drew a corner of her apron tight over her finger, and carefully wiped a speck from the corner of the baby’s eye, gazing intently into the serene vacuity of its sleeping countenance as she spoke.
Melissa caught her breath, and turned and gazed fixedly through the shimmering haze of the valley toward Los Angeles. The girl herself did not know the resolution that was shaping itself from all the tangled facts and fancies of her brain. Perhaps, if she had been held to strict account, she would have said it was an impulse, “a sudden notion” in her parlance, that prompted her to arise the next morning, before the faintest thrill of dawn, and turn her steps toward the town in the valley. It was not a hopeful journey, and she could not analyze the motive that lashed her into making it; nevertheless she felt relieved when the greasewood shut the cabin, with its trailing pepper-trees and dusty figs and geraniums, from her sight, and she was alone on the mountain road. It was not a pleasure to go, but it was an undeniable hardship to stay. There had been no fog in the night, and from the warm stillness of the early morning air the girl knew that the heat had not abated. She was quite unmindful of the landscape, gray and brown and black in the waning light of the misshapen and belated moon, and she was far from knowing that the man she was making this journey to save would have thought her a fitting central figure in the soft blur of the Millet-like etching of which she formed a part.