Part 7 (2/2)

”Some one is killed! I know there is!” exclaimed the nervous woman. ”I'm sure some one is killed!”

”Only the cow, mother,” replied Jed. ”It might have been worse. We still have the pigs left. They seemed to like this rain, for they're out in the open part of their pen, getting a good soaking.”

”Oh, Jed! How can you joke at such a serious time as this?” asked Nettie, reproachfully.

”Might as well joke as cry,” answered her brother.

”That's the right view to take of it,” put in old Gabe. ”Always look on the bright side of things. Of course, it's too bad to lose a valuable cow, but it might have been worse. I had a partner prospecting with me once. He got careless with some dynamite, and it blowed our shanty to pieces. We had narrow escapes. But do you think my partner worried over it? Not a bit. He said he was thinking of building a new shanty, anyhow, and the dynamite blast saved him the trouble of tearing the old one down.”

”That must be a dreadful country, out in the mining region,” remarked Mrs. Crosby, who had somewhat recovered her composure.

”Oh, it's no worse than lots of other places, ma'am. If a man, or a boy either, for that matter, behaves himself and minds his own business, he'll get along all right. I wish I was back there, that's what I do.

But listen to that rain! It's a regular cloudburst. I guess you'll get all you want, Mr. Crosby.”

”Yes, the rain will do all sorts of good.”

”That'll make up for the cow, dad,” put in Jed, determined to look on the less gloomy side. ”Then we can sell the hide to the butcher, so it won't be a total loss.”

But when, a day or so later, the dead cow was sold for the hide, only a small sum was realized. As Mr. Crosby could not afford money for another animal, the family had to buy milk and b.u.t.ter of a neighbor.

Gabe Harrison remained at the farm, for there was plenty of work to do, as, following the rain, a big crop of weeds sprang up, and had to be hoed down. This labor the old miner could do very well, and for a week Mr. Crosby, his two sons, and Mr. Harrison were kept very busy.

But even the rain could not make up for the long dry spell, and it did not need a very expert farmer to see that only about three-quarters of the usual crop could be harvested from the Crosby place.

”I'm afraid we're going to have a hard time this winter,” remarked the farmer to his wife one night, after the others had gone to bed. ”Pork is going to be high, and so is feed, as there was a short crop of hay, and the horses eat an awful lot.”

”It's too bad. What can we do?”

”I don't know, Debby. Sometimes I'm tempted to sell out and go to some other place.”

”Where do you mean?”

”Well, down South or farther West. I've been struggling along for several years now, working hard, and barely making a living. I can't get a dollar ahead, try with all my might.”

”Yes, you do work terribly hard, Enos. I wish you didn't have to.”

”Oh, I don't mind the work. It's the lack of returns that I'm dissatisfied with. You work hard for that matter, and so do the boys.”

”And Nettie does her share. Poor girl, she wants a new dress very much to wear to the Sunday-school picnic next week.”

”I wish I could get it for her, but I don't see how I can. Money is dreadfully scarce, and I can't borrow any more. I suppose I could sell one of the pigs----”

”No, I wouldn't think of that,” objected his wife. ”We'll need them for pork this winter. Nothing like pork to see you through a hard winter.

Nettie will have to wear the old dress. Maybe I can turn it again, though the land knows I've done that twice already. But she'll not complain.”

<script>