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Dust by Mr. And Mrs. Haldeman-Julius 
CONTENTS 
I. THE DUST IS STIRRED II. OUT OF THE DUST III. DUST IN 
HER HEART IV. A ROSE-BUD IN THE DUST V. DUST BEGETS 
DUST VI. DUST IN HIS EYES VII. MARTIN BATTLES WITH 
DUST VIII. THE DUST SMOTHERS IX. MARTIN'S SON SHAKES 
OFF THE DUST X. INTO THE DUST-BIN XI. THE DUST 
SETTLES 
 
I 
THE DUST IS STIRRED 
DUST was piled in thick, velvety folds on the weeds and grass of the 
open Kansas prairie; it lay, a thin veil on the scrawny black horses and 
the sharp-boned cow picketed near a covered wagon; it showered to the 
ground in little clouds as Mrs. Wade, a tall, spare woman, moved about 
a camp-fire, preparing supper in a sizzling skillet, huge iron kettle and 
blackened coffee-pot. 
Her husband, pale and gaunt, the shadow of death in his weary face and 
the droop of his body, sat leaning against one of the wagon wheels 
trying to quiet a wailing, emaciated year-old baby while little 
tow-headed Nellie, a vigorous child of seven, frolicked undaunted by 
the August heat. 
"Does beat all how she kin do it," thought Wade, listlessly. 
"Ma," she shouted suddenly, in her shrill, strident treble, "I see Martin 
comin'."
The mother made no answer until the strapping, fourteen-year-old boy, 
tall and powerful for his age, had deposited his bucket of water at her 
side. As he drew the back of a tanned muscular hand across his 
dripping forehead she asked shortly: 
"What kept you so long?" 
"The creek's near dry. I had to follow it half a mile to find anything fit 
to drink. This ain't no time of year to start farmin'," he added, glum and 
sullen. 
"I s'pose you know more'n your father and mother," suggested Wade. 
"I know who'll have to do all the work," the boy retorted, bitterness and 
rebellion in his tone. 
"Oh, quit your arguin'," commanded the mother. "We got enough to do 
to move nearer that water tonight, without wastin' time talkin'. Supper's 
ready." 
Martin and Nellie sat down beside the red-and-white-checkered cloth 
spread on the ground, and Wade, after passing the still fretting baby to 
his wife, took his place with them. 
"Seems like he gets thinner every day," he commented, anxiously. 
With a swift gesture of fierce tenderness, Mrs. Wade gathered little 
Benny to her. "Oh, God!" she gasped. "I know I'm goin' to lose him. 
That cow's milk don't set right on his stomach." 
"It won't set any better after old Brindle fills up on this dust," observed 
Martin, belligerency in his brassy voice. 
"That'll do," came sharply from his father. "I don't think this is paradise 
no more'n you do, but we wouldn't be the first who've come with 
nothing but a team and made a living. You mark what I tell you, Martin, 
land ain't always goin' to be had so cheap and I won't be living this time 
another year. Before I die, I'm goin' to see your mother and you 
children settled. Some day, when you've got a fine farm here, you'll see 
the sense of what I'm doin' now and thank me for it." 
The boy's cold, blue eyes became the color of ice, as he retorted: "If I 
ever make a farm out o' this dust, I'll sure 'ave earned it." 
"I guess your mother'll be doin' her share of that, all right. And don't 
you forget it." 
As he intoned in even accents, Wade's eyes, so deep in their somber 
sockets, dwelt with a strange, wistful compassion on his faded wife. 
The rays of the setting sun brought out the drabness of her. Already, at
thirty-five, grey streaked the scanty, dull hair, wrinkles lined the worn 
olive-brown face, and the tendons of the thin neck stood out. 
Chaotically, he compared her to the happy young girl--round of cheek 
and laughing of eye--he had married back in Ohio, fifteen years before. 
It comforted him a little to remember he hadn't done so badly by her 
until the war had torn him from his rented farm and she had been 
forced to do a man's    
    
		
	
	
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