<h2>CHAPTER IX.</h2>
<h3><i>The "Double-Crank."</i></h3>
<p>The weeks that followed immediately after bulged big with the
things which Billy must do or have done. For to lie on one's back
in the sun with one's hat pulled low, dreaming lazily and with
minute detail the perfect supervision of a model cow-outfit from
its very inception up through the buying of stock and the building
of corrals and the breaking of horses to the final shipping of
great trainloads of sleek beef, is one thing; to start out in
reality to do all that, with the hundred little annoyances and
hindrances which come not to one's dreaming in the sun, is
something quite different.</p>
<p>But with all the perplexities born of his changed condition and
the responsibility it brought him, Billy rejoiced in the work and
airily planned the years to come—years in which he would lead
Alexander P. Dill straight into the ranks of the Western
millionaires; years when the sun of prosperity would stand always
straight overhead, himself a Joshua who would, by his uplifted
hands, keep it there with never a cloud to dim the glory of its
light.</p>
<p>For the first time in his life he rode over Texas prairies and
lost thereby some ideals and learned many things, the while he
spent more money than he had ever owned—or ever expected to
own—as the preliminary to making his pet dream come true;
truth to tell, it mattered little to Billy Boyle whether his dream
came true for himself or for another, so long as he himself were
the chief magician.</p>
<p>So it was with a light heart that he swung down from the train
at Tower, after his homing flight, and saw Dill, conspicuous as a
flagstaff, waiting for him on the platform, his face puckered into
a smile of welcome and his bony fingers extended ready to grip
painfully the hand of Charming Billy.</p>
<p>"I'm very glad to see you back, William," he greeted earnestly.
"I hope you are well, and that you met with no misfortune while you
were away. I have been very anxious for your return, as I need your
advice upon a matter which seems to me of prime importance. I did
not wish to make any decisive move until I had consulted with you,
and time is pressing. Did you—er—buy as many cattle as
you expected to get?" It seemed to Billy that there was an anxious
note in his voice. "Your letters were too few and too brief to keep
me perfectly informed of your movements."</p>
<p>"Why, everything was lovely at my end uh the trail,
Dilly—only I fell down on them four thousand two-year-olds.
Parts uh the country was quarantined for scab, and I went way
around them places. And I was too late to see the cattlemen in a
bunch when they was at the Association—only you ain't likely
to savvy that part uh the business—and had to chase 'em all
over the country. Uh course it was my luck to have 'em stick their
prices up on the end of a pole, where I didn't feel like climbing
after 'em. So I only contracted for a couple uh thousand to be laid
down in Billings somewhere between the first and the tenth of June,
at twenty-one dollars a head. It was the best I could do this
year—but next winter I can go down earlier, before the other
buyers beat me to it, and do a lot better. Don't yuh worry, Dilly;
it ain't serious."</p>
<p>On the contrary, Dill looked relieved, and Billy could not help
noticing it. His own face clouded a little. Perhaps Dill had lost
his money, or the bulk of it, and they couldn't do all the things
they had meant to do, after all; how else, thought Billy uneasily,
could he look like that over what should ordinarily be something of
a disappointment? He remembered that Dill, after the workings of
the cattle business from the very beginning had been painstakingly
explained to him just before Billy started south, had been anxious
to get at least four thousand head of young stock on the range that
spring. Something must have gone wrong. Maybe a bank had gone
busted or something like that. Billy stole a glance up at the
other, shambling silently along beside him, and decided that
something had certainly happened—and on the heels of that he
remembered oddly that he had felt almost exactly like this when
Miss Bridger had asked him to show her where was the coffee, and
there <i>wasn't</i> any coffee. There was the same heavy feeling in
his chest, and the same—</p>
<p>"I wrote you a letter three or four days ago—on the third,
to be exact," Dill was saying. "I don't suppose it reached you,
however. I was going to have you meet me in Hardup; but then your
telegram was forwarded to me there and I came on here at once. I
only arrived this morning. I think that after we have something to
eat we would better start out immediately, unless you have other
plans. I drove over in a rig, and as the horses have rested several
hours and are none the worse for the drive, I think we can easily
make the return trip this afternoon."</p>
<p>"You're the doctor," assented Billy briefly, more uneasy than
before and yet not quite at the point of asking questions. In his
acquaintance with Dill he had learned that it was not always wise
to question too closely; where Dill wished to give his confidence
he gave it freely, but beyond the limit he had fixed for himself
was a stone wall, masked by the flowers, so to speak, of his
unfailing courtesy. Billy had once or twice inadvertently located
that wall.</p>
<p>A great depression seized upon him and made him quite
indifferent to the little pleasures of homecoming; of seeing the
grass green and velvety and hearing the familiar notes of the
meadow-larks and the curlews. The birds had not returned when he
went away, and now the air was musical with them. Driving over the
prairies seemed fairly certain of being anything but pleasant
to-day, with Dill doubled awkwardly in the seat beside him,
carrying on an intermittent monologue of trivial stuff to which
Billy scarcely listened. He could feel that there was something at
the back of it all, and that was enough for him at present. He was
not even anxious now to hear just what was the form of the disaster
which had overtaken them.</p>
<p>"While you were away," Dill began at last in the tone that
braces one instinctively for the worst, "I met accidentally a man
of whom I had heard, but whom I had not seen. In the course of our
casual conversation he discovered that I was about to launch myself
and my capital into the cattle-business, whereupon he himself made
me an offer which I felt should not be lightly brushed aside."</p>
<p>"They all did!" Billy could not help flinging out
half-resentfully, when he remembered that but for his timely
interference Dill would have been gulled more than once.</p>
<p>"I admit that in my ignorance some offers advantageous only to
those who made them appealed to me strongly. But I believe you will
agree with me that this is different. In this case I am offered a
full section of land, with water-rights, buildings, corrals,
horses, wagons and all improvements necessary to the running of a
good outfit, and ten thousand head of mixed cattle, just as they
are now running loose on the range, for three hundred thousand
dollars. I need only pay half this amount down, a five-year
mortgage at eight per cent. on the property covering the remainder,
to be paid in five yearly installments, falling due after shipping
time. Now that you did not buy as much young stock as we at first
intended, I can readily make the first payment on this place and
have left between ten and twelve thousand dollars to carry us along
until we begin to get some returns from the investment I am anxious
to have you look over the proposition, and tell me what you think
of it. If you are in favor of buying, we can have immediate
possession; ten days after the deal is closed, I think the man
said."</p>
<p>Billy tilted his hat-brim a bit to keep the sun from his eyes,
and considered gravely the proposition. It was a great relief to
discover that his fears were groundless and that it was only
another scheme of Dilly's; another snare which he, perhaps, would
be compelled, in Dill's interest, to move aside. He put the reins
down between his knees and gripped them tightly while he made a
cigarette. It was not until he was pinching the end shut that he
spoke.</p>
<p>"If it's as you say"—and he meant no offense—"it
looks like a good thing, all right. But yuh can't most always tell.
I'd have to see it—say, yuh might tell me where this bonanza
is, and what's the name uh the brand. If it's anywheres around here
I ought to know the place, all right."</p>
<p>Alexander P. Dill must, after all, have had some sense of humor;
his eyes lost their melancholy enough almost to twinkle. "Well, the
owner's name is Brown," he said slowly. "I believe they call the
brand the Double-Crank. It is located—"</p>
<p>"Located—hell!—do yuh think <i>I</i> don't know?"
The cigarette, ready to light as it was, slipped from Billy's
fingers and dropped unheeded over the wheel to the brown trail
below. He took the reins carefully from between his knees,
straightened one that had become twisted and turned out upon the
prairie to avoid a rough spot where a mud-puddle had dried in hard
ridges. Beyond, he swung back again, leaned and flicked an early
horse-fly from the ribs of the off-horse, touched the other one up
a bit with his whip and settled back at ease, tilting his hat at
quite another angle.</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<p>"Oh, where have yuh been, Billy boy, Billy boy?</p>
<p>Oh, where have yuh been, charming Billy?"</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>He hummed, in a care-free way that would have been perfectly
maddening to any one with nerves.</p>
<p>"I suppose I am to infer from your silence that you do not take
kindly to the proposition," observed Mr. Dill, in a colorless tone
which betrayed the fact that he did have nerves.</p>
<p>"I can take a josh, all right," Billy stopped singing long
enough to say. "For a steady-minded cuss, yuh do have surprising
streaks, Dilly, and that's a fact. Yuh sprung it on me mighty
smooth, for not having much practice—I'll say that for
yuh."</p>
<p>Mr. Dill looked hurt. "I hope you do not seriously think that I
would joke upon a matter of business," he protested.</p>
<p>"Well, I know old Brown pretty tolerable well—and I ain't
accusing him uh ribbing up a big josh on yuh. He ain't that
brand."</p>
<p>"I must confess I fail to get your point of view," said Mr.
Dill, with just a hint of irascibility in his voice. "There is no
joke unless you are forcing one upon me now. Mr. Brown made me a
bona-fide offer, and I have made a small deposit to hold it until
you came and I could consult you. We have three days left in which
to decide for or against it. It is all perfectly straight, I assure
you."</p>
<p>Billy took time to consider this possibility. "Well, in that
case, and all jokes aside, I'd a heap rather have the running uh
the Double-Crank than be President and have all the newspapers
hollering how 'President Billy Boyle got up at eight this morning
and had ham-and-eggs for his breakfast, and then walked around the
block with the Queen uh England hanging onto his left arm,' or
anything like that But what I can't seem to get percolated through
me is why, in God's name, the Double-Crank wants to sell."</p>
<p>"That," Mr. Dill remarked, his business instincts uppermost, "it
seems to me, need not concern us—seeing that they <i>will</i>
sell, and at a price we can handle."</p>
<p>"I reckon you're right. Would yuh mind saying over the details
uh the offer again?"</p>
<p>"Mr. Brown"—Dill cleared his throat—"offered to sell
me a full section of land, extending from the line-fence of the
home ranch, east—"</p>
<p>"Uh-huh—now what the devil's his idea in that?" Billy cut
in earnestly. "The Double-Crank owns about three or four miles uh
bottom land, up the creek west uh the home ranch. Wonder why he
wants to hold that out?"</p>
<p>"I'm sure I do not know," answered Dill. "He did not mention
that to me, but confined himself, naturally, to what he was willing
to sell."</p>
<p>"Oh it don't matter. And all the range stuff, yuh said—ten
thousand head, and—"</p>
<p>"I believe he is reserving some thoroughbred stock which he has
bought in the last year or two. The stock on the range—the
regular range grade-stock—all goes, as well as the
saddle-horses."</p>
<p>"Must be the widow said yes and wants him to settle down and be
a gentle farmer," decided Billy after a moment.</p>
<p>"We will meet him in Hardup to-night or to-morrow," Dill
observed, as if he were anxious to decide the matter finally. "Do
you think we would better buy?" It was one of his little courteous
ways to say "we" in discussing a business transaction, just as
though Billy were one of the firm.</p>
<p>"Buy? You bet your life we'll buy! I wisht the papers was all
signed up and in your inside pocket right now, Dilly. I'm going to
get heart failure the worst kind if there's any hitch. Lord, what
luck!"</p>
<p>"Then, we will consider the matter as definitely settled," said
Dill, with a sigh of satisfaction. "Brown cannot rescind
now—there is my deposit to bind the bargain. I will say I
should have been sorely disappointed if you had not shown that you
favored the idea. It seems to me to be just what we want."</p>
<p>"Oh—that part. But it seems to <i>me</i> that old Brown is
sure locoed to give us a chance at the outfit. He's gone plumb
silly. His friends oughta appoint a guardian over him—only I
hope they won't get action till this deal is cinched tight." With
that, Billy relapsed into crooning his ditty. But there were odd
breaks when he stopped short in the middle of a line and forgot to
finish, and there was more than one cigarette wasted by being
permitted to go cold and then being chewed abstractedly until it
nearly fell to pieces.</p>
<p>Beside him, Alexander P. Dill, folded loosely together in the
seat, caressed his knees and stared unseeingly at the trail ahead
of them and said never a word for more than an hour.</p>
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