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PAGE 6

The Withrow Water Right
by [?]

“Did Colonel Forrester steal the land and water from mother, Lysander?” she asked, with the calm, unreasoning candor of youth.

Lysander straightened his lank form, and then betook himself to a seat on a neighboring boulder, evidently of the opinion that the judicial nature of the question before him demanded a sitting posture.

“I dunno about that, M’lissy,” he said, shutting one eye and squinting across the valley sagaciously. “The Soo preme Court of the State of Californy said he didn’t, an’ yer maw says he did,–with regards to the canon, that is. The land,–well, she deeded him the land, but he sort o’ had the snap on her when she done it. You’ll find, M’lissy,” he added, with a careful disavowal of prejudice, “that there’s as much difference of ‘pinion about stealin’ as there is about heaven.”

There was a long, serene, comfortable silence. Even the mule seemed dreamily retrospective. Bees reveled in the honeyed wealth of the buckthorn, and chanted their content in drowsy monotony. The upland lavished its spicy sweetness on the still, yellow air. A gopher peered out of its freshly made burrow with quick, wary turns of its little head, and dropped suddenly out of sight as Melissa spoke.

“How come mother to deed him the land, Sandy?”

The weight of decision being lifted from Lysander’s shoulders, he got up and resumed his work, evidently esteeming a mild form of activity admissible in purely narrative discourse.

“Well, ye see, M’lissy, yer maw home-stidded the land and filed a claim on the water in the canon eight or ten years back, when neither of ’em was worth stealin’; an’ she ‘lowed she done the thing up in good shape, and had everything solid an’ reg’lar, till Colonel Forrester come and bought the Santa Elena ranch and a lot o’ dry land j’inin’ it, and commenced nosin’ around the canon, an’ hirin’ men to overhaul the county record; an’ the fust thing you know, he filed a claim onto the water in the canon. Then you can guess what kind of a racket there was on hand.”

Lysander paused, and sat down on a pile of stones, shaking his head in vague, reminiscent dismay. The young girl turned and looked at him, a sudden gleam of recollection widening her eyes.

“I b’lieve I remember ’bout that, Sandy,” she said, with a little thrill of animation in her voice.

“Like enough. You was quite a chunk of a girl then. Minervy an’ me was bee-ranchin’ over t’ the Verdugo, that spring. The rains was late and lodged yer maw’s barley, so as ‘t she didn’t have half a crop; an’ you know yer paw’s kind o’–kind o’–easy,”–having chosen the adjective after some hesitation, Lysander lingered over it approvingly,–“and bein’ as she was dead set on fightin’ the Colonel, she mortgaged the ranch to raise the money for the lawsuit.”

Lysander stopped again. Memories of that stormy time appeared to crowd upon him bewilderingly. He shook his head in slow but emphatic denial of his ability to do them dramatic justice in recital.

There was another long silence. The noonday air seemed to pulsate, as if the mountain were sleeping in the sun and breathing regularly. The weeds, which the weight of the sled had crushed, gave out a fragrance of honey and tar. A pair of humming-birds darted into the stillness in a little tempest of shrill-voiced contention, and the mule, aroused from dejected abstraction by the intruders, shook his tassel-like tail and yawned humanly.

Melissa got up and wandered toward the edge of the canon, and Lysander, aroused from the plentitude of his recollections by her absence, completed his load and drove the dun-colored mule leisurely after her.

The stones fell over the precipice, breaking into the quiet of the depths below with a long, resounding crash that finally rippled off into silence, and the two sat down on the side of the empty sled and rode back to the stone-pile.