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The Withrow Water Right
by
The old woman fixed her small, shrewd eyes on her son-in-law.
“What else ‘d he say, Lysander?”
“Nothin’ much. Wanted me to use my influence with the old man!”
His mother-in-law gave a short, contemptuous sniff.
“I reckon he’d like to do business with the old man. What’d you tell ‘im?”
“I told ‘im I’d be sure to put my influence where it’d do the most good, an’ I ‘dvised him to see you. I ‘lowed him an’ you’d git on peaceable as a meetin’ to ‘lect a preacher,”–Lysander rubbed his gnarled hand over his face, as if to erase a lurking grin,–“but he didn’t seem anxious.”
“I reckon not. Is that all he said?”
“‘Bout all. He said it was a damned good trade.”
“Ly san der!” Mrs. Sproul sprang up, placing herself between her husband and the heap of slumbering innocents in the corner. “Ly san der Sproul,–and you a father! This comes of consortin’ with the ungodly, and settin’ in the chair of the scorner.”
“Oh, come now, Minervy, I was only quotin’.” Lysander’s eye twinkled, but he spoke contritely, with generous consideration for his wife’s condition, which was imminently delicate.
“Oh, you’re hystericky, Minervy. You’d best go to bed,” observed her mother. “You’re all tuckered out with yer walk. I guess Lysander’s told all he knows, hain’t you, Lysander?”
“‘Bout all,–yes. He followed me out to the wagon, and hinted something about Poindexter wantin’ help if he went to work on the tunnel, and ‘lowed I’d find it handier to have a job nearder home, now that the grape-haulin’ was over. But I told ‘im there was no trouble about that. The nearder home I got, the more work I found, gener’ly. Pay was kind o’ short, but then a man must be a trifle stickin’ that wouldn’t do his own work fer nothin’.”
Lysander got up and carried the baby into the adjoining room, bending his lank form from habit rather than from necessity, as he passed through the doorway.
Mrs. Sproul, tearfully resentful of the charge of hysterics, investigated the sleeping children with a view to more permanent disposal of them for the night, a process which resulted in much whimpering, and a limp, somnolent sense of injury on the part of the investigated.
“I don’t take much stock in Nate Forrester’s trades,” said the grandmother, elevating her voice so that Lysander could hear; “there’s some deviltry back of ’em, gener’ly; the better they look, the more I’m afraid of ’em. I don’t purtend to know what he’s drivin’ at now, not bein’ the prince o’ darkness, but I reckon he can wait till I do.”
II.
The next day Melissa turned her gray eyes with a vague, kindling interest toward the “volunteer barley-patch.” Two or three points of white gleamed upon it in the afternoon sun. She mused upon them speculatively for awhile, and then consulted Lysander.
“I reckon it’s the survey stakes, M’lissy,” he said kindly. “Forrester’s dividin’ it up, as he said. I wouldn’t say nothin’ ’bout it to yer maw, ‘f I was you; it’ll only rile her up.”
Melissa looked at the field in a quiet, dispassionate way.
“The land’s his’n, ain’t it, Lysander?” she asked.
“Oh, yes, the land’s his’n, an’ a good part o’ the canon, too,–all but a little that b’longs to yer maw. But the hull thing used to be hern; quite a spell back, though.”
Lysander was hauling stones from a knoll near the house, and dumping them on the edge of the canon,–a leisurely process, carried on by means of a sled, of unmistakable home manufacture, drawn by one of the dun-colored mules. Melissa was helping him in a desultory, intermittent fashion. There was a very friendly understanding between these two peace-loving members of the family.
The young girl carried two or three speckled granite boulders and dropped them into the rude vehicle, and then sat down on the edge of it meditatively. The dark rim of her hat made a background for her head with its little billows of richly tinted hair. Exertion had brought a faint transitory pink to her fair, freckled face.