breathin' much, an' every round was fast. An' my legs was like iron. I could a-fought forty rounds. You see, I never said nothin', but I've been suspicious all the time after that beatin' the Chicago Terror gave me.'
'Nonsense!-you would have known it long before now,' Saxon cried. 'Look at all your boxing, and wrestling, and running at Carmel.'
'Nope.' Billy shook his head with the conviction of utter knowledge. 'That's different. It don't take it outa you. You gotta be up against the real thing, fightin' for life, round after round, with a husky you know ain't lost a thread of his silk yet-then, if you don't blow up, if your legs is steady, an' your heart ain't burstin', an' you ain't wobbly at all, an' no signs of queer street in your head-why, then you know you still got all your silk. An' I got it, I got all mine, d'ye hear me, an' I ain't goin' to risk it on no more fights. That's straight. Easy money's hardest in the end. From now on it's horsebuyin' on commish, an' you an' me on the road till we find that valley of the moon.'
Next morning, early, they drove out of Ukiah. Possum sat on the seat between them, his rosy mouth agape with excitement. They had originally planned to cross over to the coast from Ukiah, but it was too early in the season for the soft earth-roads to be in shape after the winter rains; so they turned east, for Lake County, their route to extend north through the upper Sacramento Valley and across the mountains into Oregon. Then they would circle west to the coast, where the roads by that time would be in condition, and come down its length to the Golden Gate.
All the land was green and flower-sprinkled, and each tiny valley, as they entered the hills, was a garden.
'Huh!' Billy remarked scornfully to the general landscape. 'They say a rollin' stone gathers no moss. Just the same this looks like some outfit we've gathered. Never had so much actual property in my life at one time-an' them was the days when I wasn't rollin'. Hell-even the furniture wasn't ourn. Only the clothes we stood up in, an' some old socks an' things.'
Saxon reached out and touched his hand, and he knew that it was a hand that loved his hand.
'I've only one regret,' she said. 'You've earned it all yourself. I've had nothing to do with it.'
'Huh!-you've had everything to do with it. You're like my second in a fight. You keep me happy an' in condition. A man can't fight without a good second to take care of him. Hell, I wouldn't a-ben here if it wasn't for you. You made me pull up stakes an' head out. Why, if it hadn't been for you I'd a-drunk myself dead an' rotten by this time, or had my neck stretched at San Quentin over hittin' some scab too hard or something or other. An' look at me now. Look at that roll of greenbacks'-he tapped his breast-'to buy the Boss some horses. Why, we're takin' an unendin' vacation, an' makin' a good livin' at the same time. An' one more trade I got-horse-buyin' for Oakland. If I show I've got the savve, an' I have, all the Frisco firms'll be after me to buy for them. An' it's all your fault. You're my Tonic Kid all right, all right, an' if Possum wasn't lookin', I'd-well, who cares if he does look?'
And Billy leaned toward her sidewise and kissed her.
The way grew hard and rocky as they began to climb, but the divide was an easy one, and they soon dropped down the canyon of the Blue Lakes among lush fields of golden poppies. In the bottom of the canyon lay a wandering sheet of water of intensest blue. Ahead, the folds of hills interlaced the distance, with a remote blue mountain rising in the center of the picture.
They asked questions of a handsome, black-eyed man with curly gray hair, who talked to them in a German accent, while a cheery-faced woman smiled down at them out of a trellised high window of the Swiss cottage perched on the bank. Billy watered the horses at a pretty hotel farther on, where the proprietor came out and talked and told him he had built it himself, according to the plans of the black-eyed man with the curly gray hair, who was a San Francisco architect.
'Goin' up, goin' up,' Billy chortled, as they drove on through the winding hills past another lake of intensest blue. 'D'ye notice the difference in our treatment already between ridin' an' walkin' with packs on our backs? With Hazel an' Hattie an' Saxon an' Possum, an' yours truly, an' this high-toned wagon, folks most likely take us for millionaires out on a lark.'
The way widened. Broad, oak-studded pastures with grazing livestock lay on either hand. Then Clear Lake opened before them like an inland sea, flecked with little squalls and flaws of wind from the high mountains on the northern slopes of which still glistened white snow patches.
'I've heard Mrs. Hazard rave about Lake Geneva,' Saxon recalled; 'but I wonder if it is more beautiful than this.'
'That architect fellow called this the California Alps, you remember,' Billy confirmed. 'An' if I don't mistake, that's Lakeport showin' up ahead. An' all wild country, an' no railroads.'
'And no moon valleys here,' Saxon criticized. 'But it is beautiful, oh, so beautiful.'
'Hotter'n hell in the dead of summer, I'll bet,' was Billy's opinion. 'Nope, the country we're lookin' for lies nearer the coast. Just the same it is beautiful… like a picture on the wall. What d'ye say we stop off an' go for a swim this afternoon?'
Ten days later they drove into Williams, in Colusa County, and for the first time again encountered a railroad. Billy was looking for it, for the reason that at the rear of the wagon walked two magnificent work-horses which he had picked up for shipment to Oakland.
'Too hot,' was Saxon's verdict, as she gazed across the shimmering level of the vast Sacramento Valley. 'No redwoods. No hills. No forests. No manzanita. No madronos. Lonely, and sad-'
'An' like the river islands,' Billy interpolated. 'Richer in hell, but looks too much like hard work. It'll do for those that's stuck on hard work-God knows, they's nothin' here to induce a fellow to knock off ever for a bit of play. No fishin', no huntin', nothin' but work. I'd work myself, if I had to live here.'
North they drove, through days of heat and dust, across the California plains, and everywhere was manifest the 'new' farming-great irrigation ditches, dug and being dug, the land threaded by power-lines from the mountains, and many new farmhouses on small holdings newly fenced. The bonanza farms were being broken up. However, many of the great estates remained, five to ten thousand acres in extent, running from the Sacramento bank to the horizon dancing in the heat waves, and studded with great valley oaks.
'It takes rich soil to make trees like those,' a ten-acre farmer told them.
They had driven off the road a hundred feet to his tiny barn in order to water Hazel and Hattie. A sturdy young orchard covered most of his ten acres, though a goodly portion was devoted to whitewashed henhouses and wired runways wherein hundreds of chickens were to be seen. He had just begun work on a small frame dwelling.
'I took a vacation when I bought,' he explained, 'and planted the trees. Then I went back to work an' stayed with it till the place was cleared. Now I 'm here for keeps, an' soon as the house is finished I'll send for the wife. She's not very well, and it will do her good. We've been planning and working for years to get away from the city.' He stopped in order to give a happy sigh. 'And now we're free.'
The water in the trough was warm from the sun.
'Hold on,' the man said. 'Don't let them drink that. I'll give it to them cool.'
Stepping into a small shed, he turned an electric switch, and a motor the size of a fruit box hummed into action. A five-inch stream of sparkling water splashed into the shallow main ditch of his irrigation system and flowed away across the orchard through many laterals.
'Isn' tit beautiful, eh?-beautiful! beautiful!' the man chanted in an ecstasy. 'It's bud and fruit. It's blood and life. Look at it! It makes a gold mine laughable, and a saloon a nightmare. I know. I… I used to be a barkeeper. In fact, I've been a barkeeper most of my life. That's how I paid for this place. And I've hated the business all the time. I was a farm boy, and all my life I've been wanting to get back to it. And here I am at last.'
He wiped his glasses the better to behold his beloved water, then seized a hoe and strode down the main ditch to open more laterals.
'He's the funniest barkeeper I ever seen,' Billy commented. 'I took him for a business man of some sort. Must a-ben in some kind of a quiet hotel.'
'Don't drive on right away,' Saxon requested. 'I want to talk with him.'
He came back, polishing his glasses, his face beaming, watching the water as if fascinated by it. It required no more exertion on Saxon's part to start him than had been required on his part to start the motor.
'The pioneers settled all this in the early fifties,' he said. 'The Mexicans never got this far, so it was government land. Everybody got a hundred and sixty acres. And such acres! The stories they tell about how much wheat they got to the acre are almost unbelievable. Then several things happened. The sharpest and steadiest of the pioneers held what they had and added to it from the other fellows. It takes a great many quarter sections to