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The Wizard’s Daughter
by
He stopped at the door of the tent and took off his rusty hat. The breeze blew his long linen duster about his legs.
“Have you looked much into electrical phenomena?” he asked, putting up his trumpet.
Palmerston moved a step back, and said: “No; not at all.” Then he raised his hand to possess himself of the ear-piece, and colored as he remembered that it was not a telephone. His companion seemed equally oblivious of his confusion and of his reply.
“I have made some discoveries,” he went on; “I shall be pleased to talk them over with you. They will revolutionize this country.” He waved his hand toward the mesa. “Every foot of this land will sometime blossom as the rose; greasewood and sage-brush will give place to the orange and the vine. Water is king in California, and there are rivers of water locked in these mountains. We must find it; yes, yes, my young friend, we must find it, and we can find it. I have solved that. The solution is here.” He stooped and patted his satchel affectionately. “This little instrument is California’s best friend. There is a future for all these valleys, wilder than our wildest dreams.”
Palmerston nodded with a guilty feeling of having approved statements of which he intended merely to acknowledge the receipt, and motioned his guest into the white twilight of the tent.
“Make yourself comfortable, professor,” he called. “I want to find Dysart and get my mail.”
As he neared the kitchen door Mrs. Dysart’s voice came to him enveloped in the sizzle of frying meat.
“Well, I don’t know, Jawn; he mayn’t be just the old-fashioned water-witch, but it ain’t right; it’s tamperin’ with the secrets of the Most High, that’s what I think.”
“Well, now, Emeline, you hadn’t ought to be hasty. He don’t lay claim to anything more’n natural; he says it’s all based on scientific principles. He says he can tell me just where to tunnel–Now, here’s Mr. Palmerston; he’s educated. I’m going to rely on him.”
“Well, I’m goin’ to rely on my heavenly Fawther,” said Mrs. Dysart solemnly, from the quaking pantry.
Palmerston stood in the doorway, smiling. John jumped up and clapped his hand vigorously on his breast pockets.
“Well, now, there! I left your mail in the wagon in my other coat,” he said, hooking his arm through the young man’s and drawing him toward the barn. “Did you get him turned on?” he asked eagerly, when they were out of his wife’s hearing. “How does he strike you, anyway? Doesn’t he talk like a book? He wants me to help him find a claim–show him the corners, you know. He’s got a daughter down at Los Angeles; she’ll come up and keep house for him. He says he’ll locate water on shares if I’ll help him find a claim and do the tunneling. Emeline she’s afraid I’ll get left, but I think she’ll come round. Isn’t it a caution the way he talks science?”
Palmerston acknowledged that it was.
“The chances are that he is a fraud, Dysart,” he said kindly; “most of those people are. I’d be very cautious about committing myself.”
“Oh, I’m cautious,” protested John; “that’s one of my peculiarities. Emeline thinks because I look into things I’m not to be trusted. She’s so quick herself she can’t understand anybody that’s slow and careful. Here’s your letters–quite a batch of ’em. Would you mind our putting up a cot in your tent for the professor?”
“Not at all,” said the young fellow good-naturedly. “It’s excellent discipline to have a deaf man about; you realize how little you have to say that’s worth saying.”
“That’s a fact, that’s a fact,” said Dysart, rather too cheerfully acquiescent. “A man that can talk like that makes you ashamed to open your head.”
Palmerston fell asleep that night to the placid monotone of the newcomer’s voice, and awoke at daybreak to hear the same conversational flow just outside the tent. Perhaps it was Dysart’s explosive “Good-morning, professor!” which seemed to have missed the trumpet and hurled itself against the canvas wall of the tent close to the sleeper’s ear, that awoke him. He sat up in bed and tried to shake off the conviction that his guest had been talking all night. Dysart’s greeting made no break in the cheerful optimism that filtered through the canvas.