Another and greater enterprise was diverting Mr. Gwynne's attention
from the delinquencies of his debtors, namely: the entrance of the
National Machine Company into the remote and placid life of
Mapleton and its district. The manager of this company, having
spent an afternoon with Mr. Gwynne in his store and having been
impressed by his charm and power of persuasive talk, made him a
proposition that he should act as agent of the National Machine
Company. The arrangement suggested was one that appealed to Mr.
Gwynne's highly optimistic temperament. He was not to work for a
mere salary, but was to purchase outright the various productions
of the National Machine Company and receive a commission upon all
his sales. The figures placed before Mr. Gwynne by the manager of
the company were sufficiently impressive, indeed so impressive that
Mr. Gwynne at once accepted the proposition, and the Mapleton
branch of the National Machine Company became an established fact.
There was no longer any question as to the education of his family.
In another year when his boy had passed his entrance examinations
he would be able to send him to the high school in the neighbouring
town of Easton, properly equipped and relieved of those handicaps
with which poverty can so easily wash all the colour out of young
life. A brilliant picture the father drew before the eyes of his
wife of the educational career of their boy, who had already given
promise of exceptional ability. But while she listened, charmed,
delighted and filled with proud anticipation, the mother with none
the less painful care saved her garden and poultry money, cut to
bare necessity her household expenses, skimped herself and her
children in the matter of dress, and by every device which she had
learned in the bitter school of experience during the ten years of
her Canadian life, made such preparation for the expenses of her
boy's education as would render it unnecessary to call upon the
wealth realised from the National Machine Company's business.
In the matter of providing for the expense of his education Larry
himself began to take a not unimportant part. During the past two
years he had gained not only in size but in the vigour of his
health, and in almost every kind of work on the farm he could now
take a man's place. His mother would not permit him to give his
time and strength to their own farming operations for the sufficient
reason that from these there would be no return in ready money, and
ready money was absolutely essential to the success of her plans.
The boy was quick, eager and well-mannered, and in consequence had
no difficulty in finding employment with the neighbouring farmers.
So much was this the case that long before the closing of school in
the early summer Larry was offered work for the whole summer by
their neighbour, Mr. Martin, at one dollar a day. He could hardly
believe his good fortune inasmuch as he had never in all his life
been paid at a rate exceeding half that amount.
"I shall have a lot of money, mother," he said, "for my high school
now. I wonder how much it will cost me for the term."
Thereupon his mother seized the opportunity to discuss the problem
with him which she knew they must face together.
"Let us see," said his mother.
Then each with pencil and paper they drew up to the table, but
after the most careful paring down of expenses and the most
optimistic estimate of their resources consistent with fact, they
made the rather discouraging discovery that they were still fifty
dollars short.
"I can't do it, mother," said Larry, in bitter disappointment.
"We shall not give up yet," said his mother. "Indeed, I think with
what we can make out of the farm and garden and poultry, we ought
to be able to manage."
But a new and chilling thought had come to the lad. He pondered
silently, and as he pondered his face became heavily shadowed.
"Say, mother," he said suddenly, "we can't do it. How much are you
going to spend on your clothes?"
"All I need," said his mother brightly.
"But how much?"
"I don't know."
"How much did you spend last year?"
"Oh, never mind, Lawrence; that really does not matter."
But the boy insisted. "Did you spend thirty-one dollars?" His
mother laughed at him.
"Did you spend twenty?"
"No."
"Did you spend fifteen?"
"I do not know," said his mother, "and I am not going to talk about
it. My clothes and the girls' clothes will be all right for this
year."
"Mother," said Larry, "I am not going to school this year. I am
not going to spend thirty-one dollars for clothes while you and the
girls spend nothing. I am going to work first, and then go to
school. I am not going to school this year." The boy rose from
his chair and stood and faced his mother with quivering lips,
fighting to keep back the tears.
Mother reached out her hand and drew him toward her. "My darling
boy," she said in a low voice, "I love to hear you, but listen to
me. Are you listening? You must be educated. Nothing must
interfere with that. No suffering is too great to be endured by
all of us. The time for education is youth; first because your
mind works more quickly and retains better what it acquires, and
second because it is a better investment, and you will sooner be
able to pay us all back what we spend now. So you will go to
school this year, boy, if we can manage it, and I think we can.
Some day," she added, patting him on the shoulder, and holding him
off from her, "when you are rich you will give me a silk dress."
"Won't I just," cried the boy passionately, "and the girls too, and
everything you want, and I will give you a good time yet, mother.
You deserve the best a woman ever had and I will give it to you."
The mother turned her face away from him and looked out of the
window. She saw not the fields of growing grain but a long vista
of happy days ever growing in beauty and in glory until she could
see no more for the tears that quietly fell. The boy dropped on
his knees beside her.
"Oh, mother, mother," he said. "You have been wonderful to us all,
and you have had an awfully hard time. A fellow never knows, does
he?"
"A hard time? A hard time?" said his mother, a great surprise in
her voice and in her face. "No, my boy, no hard time for me. A
dear, dear, lovely time with you all, every day, every day. Never
do I want a better time than I have had with you."
The event proved the wisdom of Mrs. Gwynne's determination to put
little faith in the optimistic confidence of her husband in regard
to the profits to be expected from the operations of the National
Machine Company. A year's business was sufficient to demonstrate
that the Mapleton branch of the National Machine Company was
bankrupt. By every law of life it ought to be bankrupt. With all
his many excellent qualities Mr. Gwynne possessed certain fatal
defects as a business man. With him the supreme consideration was
simply the getting rid of the machines purchased by him as rapidly
and in such large numbers as possible. He cheerfully ignored the
laws that governed the elemental item of profit. Hence the
relentless Nemesis that sooner or later overtakes those who,
whether ignorantly or maliciously, break laws, fell upon the
National Machine Company and upon those who had the misfortune to
be associated with it.
In the wreck of the business Mr. Gwynne's store, upon which the
National Machine Company had taken the precaution to secure a
mortgage, was also involved. The business went into the hands of a
receiver and was bought up at about fifty cents on the dollar by a
man recently from western Canada whose specialty was the handling
of business wreckage. No one after even a cursory glance at his
face would suspect Mr. H. P. Sleighter of deficiency in business
qualities. The snap in the cold grey eye, the firm lines in the
long jaw, the thin lips pressed hard together, all proclaimed the
hard-headed, cold-hearted, iron-willed man of business. Mr.
Sleighter, moreover, had a remarkable instinct for values, more
especially for salvage values. It was this instinct that led him
to the purchase of the National Machine Company wreckage, which
included as well the Mapleton general store, with its assets in
stock and book debts.
Mr. Sleighter's methods with the easy-going debtors of the company
in Mapleton and the surrounding district were of such galvanic
vigour that even so practiced a procrastinator as Farmer Martin
found himself actually drawing money from his hoarded bank account
to pay his store debts--a thing unheard of in that community--and
to meet overdue payments upon the various implements which he had
purchased from the National Machine Company. It was not until
after the money had been drawn and actually paid that Mr. Martin
came fully to realise the extraordinary nature of his act.
"That there feller," he said, looking from the receipt in his hand
to the store door through which the form of Mr. Sleighter had just
vanished, "that there feller, he's too swift fer me. He ain't got
any innards to speak of; he'd steal the pants off a dog, he would."
The application of these same galvanically vigorous methods to Mr.
Gwynne's debtors produced surprising results. Mr. Sleighter made
the astounding discovery that Mr. Gwynne's business instead of
being bankrupt would produce not only one hundred cents on the
dollar, but a slight profit as well. This discovery annoyed Mr.
Sleighter. He hated to confess a mistake in business judgment, and
he frankly confessed he "hated to see good money roll past him."
Hence with something of a grudge he prepared to hand over to Mr.
Gwynne some twelve hundred and fifty dollars of salvage money.
"I suppose he will be selling out his farm," said Mr. Sleighter in
conversation with Mr. Martin. "What's land worth about here?"
"Oh, somewhere about a hundred."
"A hundred dollars an acre!" exclaimed Mr. Sleighter. "Don't try
to put anything over on me. Personally I admire your generous,
kindly nature, but as a financial adviser you don't shine. I guess
I won't bother about that farm anyway."
Mr. Sleighter's question awakened earnest thought in Mr. Martin,
and the next morning he approached Mr. Gwynne with a proposition to
purchase his farm with its attached buildings. Mr. Martin made it
clear that he was chiefly anxious to do a neighbourly turn.
"The house and the stable ain't worth much," he said, "but the farm
bein' handy to my property, I own up is worth more to me than to
other folks, perhaps. So bein' old neighbours, I am willin' to
give four thousand dollars, half cash down, for the hull business."
"Surely that is a low figure," said Mr. Gwynne.
"Low figure!" exclaimed Mr. Martin. "All right, I ain't pressin'
it on you; but if you could get any one in this neighbourhood to
offer four thousand dollars for your farm, I will give you five
hundred extra. But," he continued, "I ain't pressin' you. Don't
much matter to me."
The offer came at a psychologically critical moment, when Mr.
Gwynne was desperately seeking escape from an intolerable
environment.
"I shall consult Mrs. Gwynne," he said, "and let you know in a few
days."
"Don't know as I can wait that long," said Mr. Martin. "I made the
offer to oblige you, and besides I got a chance at the Monroe
fifty."
"Call to-morrow night," said Mr. Gwynne, and carried the proposal
home to his wife.
The suggestion to break up her home to a woman of Mrs. Gwynne's
type is almost shattering. In the big world full of nameless
terrors the one spot offering shelter and safety for herself and
her family was her home. But after all, her husband was her great
concern, and she could see he was eager for the change. She made
up her mind to the sacrifice and decided that she would break up
the home in Mapleton and with her husband try again their fortune.
"But four thousand dollars," she said, "is surely a small price."
"Small? I know it is small, but Martin knows I am in a corner. He
is a highway robber."
It was a bitter experience for him to be forced to confess himself
a business failure, and with this bitterness there mingled a
feeling of hostility toward all successful business men. To him it
seemed that in order to win success in business a man must become,
like Mr. Martin, a highway robber. In this mood of bitterness and
hostility toward successful men, Mr. Sleighter found him the next
day.
"Couldn't find you at the store," said that gentleman, walking in
with his hat on his head. "I wanted to get this business
straightened up, so I just came in. Won't take more than five
minutes. I guess you won't mind taking a little check from me.
Your business turned out better than that fool of an assignee
thought. Don't hurt me any, of course. I got all that was comin'
to me out of it, but here's this check. Perhaps you'll sign the
receipt. I guess they been puttin' it over you all right. You're
a little too soft with 'em."
Mr. Gwynne was an even-tempered man, but Mr. Sleighter's patronising
manner and his criticism of his business ability wrought in him a
rage that he could with difficulty control. He remembered he was in
his own house, however, and that the man before him was a stranger.
While he was searching for pen and ink the door opened and his wife
entered the room. Mr. Sleighter, with his hat still upon his head,
was intently gazing out of the window, easily rocking on the two
hind legs of the chair. The door opened behind him.
"My dear," said Mr. Gwynne, "will you excuse me? I am engaged."
"Oh, I beg your pardon, I didn't know any one was here. I merely
wanted--"
Mr. Sleighter glanced over his shoulder.
"Mr. Sleighter," said Mr. Gwynne. "My wife."
It was not his tone, however, that brought Mr. Sleighter hurriedly
to his feet with his hat in his hand. It was something in the
bearing of the little lady standing behind him.
"Pleased to meet you, ma'am. I hope you are well," he said, bowing
elaborately before her.
"Thank you very much, I am quite well. I have heard a great deal
about you, Mr. Sleighter. I am glad to meet you."
Mr. Sleighter held her hand a moment while her eyes rested quietly
and kindly, if searchingly, upon his face. This was the man who
had profited by her husband's loss. Was he too a highway robber?
Mr. Sleighter somehow felt as if his soul were being exposed to a
searchlight. It made him uncomfortable.
"It's a fine day, ma'am," he remarked, seeking cover for his soul
in conversation. "A little warm for the time," he continued,
wiping his forehead with a highly coloured silk handkerchief.
"Won't you sit down, Mr. Sleighter? Do you find it warm? I
thought there was quite a chilly wind to-day. But then you are
more accustomed to the wind than I."
The searching eyes were holding him steadily, but the face was
kindly and full of genuine interest.
"I guess so," he said with a little laugh. He would have scorned
to acknowledge that his laugh was nervous and thin. "I come from
the windy side of the earth."
"Oh!"
"Yes, I am from out West--Alberta. We have got all the winds there
is and the Chinook besides for a change."
"Alberta? The Chinook?" The eyes became less searching.
"Yes, that's the wind that comes down from the mountains and licks
up the snow at ten miles an hour."
"Oh!"
"It was an Alberta man, you know, who invented a rig with runners
in front and wheels behind." The lady was bewildered. "To catch
up with the Chinook, you see. One of my kid's jokes. Not much of
a joke I guess, but he's always ringin' 'em in."
"You have a son, Mr. Sleighter? He's in Alberta now?"
"No, the missis and the kids, three of them, are in Winnipeg. She
got tired of it out there; she was always wantin' the city, so I
gave in."
"I hear it's a beautiful country out there."
"Now you're talkin', ma'am." She had touched Mr. Sleighter's
favourite theme. Indeed, the absorbing passion of his life, next
to the picking up of good salvage bargains, was his home in the
Foothill country of the West.
While he was engaged in an enthusiastic description of the glories
of that wonderland the children came in and were presented. Mr.
Gwynne handed his visitor his receipt and stood suggestively
awaiting his departure. But Mr. Sleighter was fairly started on
his subject and was not to be denied. The little girls drew shyly
near him with eyes aglow while Mr. Sleighter's words roiled forth
like a mountain flood. Eloquently he described the beauty of the
rolling lands, the splendour of the mountains, the richness of the
soil, the health-giving qualities of the climate, the warm-hearted
hospitality of the settlers.
"None of your pin-head two-by-four shysters that you see here in
the East," exclaimed Mr. Sleighter. "I mean some folks, of
course," he explained in some confusion.
"And the children, did they like it?" inquired Mrs. Gwynne.
"You bet they did. Why, they was all over the hull prairie, all
day and all night, too, mostly--on ponies you know."
"Ponies!" exclaimed Larry. "Did they have ponies? Could they
ride? How big are they?"
"How big? Blamed if I know. Let's see. There's Tom. He's just
about a man, or thinks he is. He's sixteen or seventeen. Just now
he's in the high school at Winnipeg. He don't like it though."
Here a shadow fell on Mr. Sleighter's face. "And the girls--
there's Hazel, she's fifteen, and Ethel Mary, she's eleven or
somewhere thereabouts. I never can keep track of them. They keep
againin' on me all the time."
"Yes," said Mrs. Gwynne. "It is hard to realise that they are
growing up and will soon be away from us."
"That's so," said Mr. Sleighter.
"And the schools," continued Mrs. Gwynne, "are there good schools?"
"Schools?" exclaimed Mr. Sleighter. "There's a real good school
not more than a couple of miles away."
"Two miles," exclaimed the mother aghast.
"Oh, that's nothin'. They ride, of course. But we ain't got
much of a master now. He's rather--you know." Mr. Sleighter
significantly tipped up with his little finger and winked toward
Mr. Gwynne.
"But you love that country," she said.
"Yes, I love it and I hated to leave it. But the missis never
liked it. She was city born and bred. She wanted the lights, I
guess, and the shows. I don't blame her, though," he continued
rapidly. "It's kind of lonely for women, you know. They've got to
have amusements and things. But it's God's own country, believe
me, and I would go back to-morrow, if I could."
"You still own your ranch?"
"Yes; can't sell easily. You see there's not much broke on it--
only a hundred acres or so."
"Why, how big is the ranch?"
"Five hundred acres and a wood lot. I did not farm much, though--
mostly cattle and horses. I was away a good deal on the trail."
"The trail?"
"Yes, buying cattle and selling again. That was the worst of it.
I am not much of a farmer, though farming's all right there, and I
was away almost all of the time. I guess that made it pretty hard
for the missis and the kids."
At this point the Widow Martin came in to lay the table for tea.
Mr. Sleighter took the hint and rose to go.
"You will do us the pleasure of staying for tea, Mr. Sleighter?"
said Mrs. Gwynne earnestly.
"Oh, do," said the youngest little girl, Nora, whose snapping black
eyes gleamed with eager desire to hear more of the wonderful
western land.
"Yes, do, and tell us more," said the boy.
"I hope you will be able to stay," continued Mrs. Gwynne.
Mr. Sleighter glanced at her husband. "Why, certainly," said Mr.
Gwynne, "we would be glad to have you."
Still Mr. Sleighter hesitated. "Say, I don't know what's come over
me. I feel as if I had been on the stump," he said in an
embarrassed voice. "I ain't talked to a soul about that country
since I left. I guess I got pretty full, and when you pulled the
cork, out she come."
During the tea hour Mrs. Gwynne tried to draw her visitor out to
talk about his family, but here she failed. Indeed a restraint
appeared to fall upon him that nothing could dispel. Immediately
after tea Mrs. Gwynne placed the Bible and Book of Prayers on the
table, saying, "We follow the custom of reading prayers every
evening after tea, Mr. Sleighter. We shall be glad to have you
join us."
"Sure thing, ma'am," said Mr. Sleighter, pushing back his chair and
beginning to rock on its hind legs, picking his teeth with his pen
knife, to the staring horror of the little girls.
The reading was from the Scripture to which throughout the
centuries the Christian Church has gone for authority and guidance
in the exercise of charity and in the performance of social
service, the story of the Samaritan gentleman to whom the unhappy
traveller whose misfortune it was to be sorely mishandled by
thieves owed his rescue and his life.
Throughout the reading Mr. Sleighter paid the strictest attention
and joined in the prayers with every sign of reverence. At the
close he stood awkwardly shifting from one foot to another.
"Well, I'll be goin'," he said. "Don't know how you roped me in
for this here visit, ma'am. I ain't et in any one's house since I
left home, and I ain't heard any family prayers since my old dad
had 'em--a regular old Methodist exhorter he was. He used to pray
until all was blue, though most times, specially at night, I used
to fall asleep. He was great on religion."
"I don't suppose he was any the worse for that," said Mrs. Gwynne.
"Not a mite, not a mite, ma'am. A little strict, but straight as a
string, ma'am. No one could say anythin' against Hiram Sleighter--
H. P. Sleighter. I was named for him. He used to pray to beat
creation, and then some, but he was a straight man all right. And
to-night your kids and your family prayers made me think of them
old days. Well, good-night and thank you for the good time you
gave me. Best I've had in a dog's age."
"You will come again, Mr. Sleighter," said Mrs. Gwynne, giving him
her hand.
"Yes, and tell us more about that new country," added her son.
"My, I'd like to go out there!"
"It's a wonderful country all right and you might do a hull lot
worse."