me what for," growled the other savagely. "Boy and 
man, I've worked for the P. and S. W. for over ten years, and never one 
yelp of a complaint did I ever hear from them. They know damn well 
they've not got a steadier man on the road. And more than that, more 
than that, I don't belong to the Brotherhood. And when the strike came 
along, I stood by them-- stood by the company. You know that. And 
you know, and they know, that at Sacramento that time, I ran my train 
according to schedule, with a gun in each hand, never knowing when I 
was going over a mined culvert, and there was talk of giving me a gold 
watch at the time. To hell with their gold watches! I want ordinary 
justice and fair treatment. And now, when hard times come along, and 
they are cutting wages, what do they do? Do they make any 
discrimination in my case? Do they remember the man that stood by 
them and risked his life in their service? No. They cut my pay down 
just as off-hand as they do the pay of any dirty little wiper in the yard. 
Cut me along with--listen to this--cut me along with men that they had
BLACK-LISTED; strikers that they took back because they were short 
of hands." He drew fiercely on his pipe. "I went to them, yes, I did; I 
went to the General Office, and ate dirt. I told them I was a family man, 
and that I didn't see how I was going to get along on the new scale, and 
I reminded them of my service during the strike. The swine told me that 
it wouldn't be fair to discriminate in favour of one man, and that the cut 
must apply to all their employees alike. Fair!" he shouted with laughter. 
"Fair! Hear the P. and S. W. talking about fairness and discrimination. 
That's good, that is. Well, I got furious. I was a fool, I suppose. I told 
them that, in justice to myself, I wouldn't do first-class work for 
third-class pay. And they said, 'Well, Mr. Dyke, you know what you 
can do.' Well, I did know. I said, 'I'll ask for my time, if you please,' 
and they gave it to me just as if they were glad to be shut of me. So 
there you are, Presley. That's the P. & S. W. Railroad Company of 
California. I am on my last run now." 
"Shameful," declared Presley, his sympathies all aroused, now that the 
trouble concerned a friend of his. "It's shameful, Dyke. But," he added, 
an idea occurring to him, "that don't shut you out from work. There are 
other railroads in the State that are not controlled by the P. and S. W." 
Dyke smote his knee with his clenched fist. 
"NAME ONE." 
Presley was silent. Dyke's challenge was unanswerable. There was a 
lapse in their talk, Presley drumming on the arm of the seat, meditating 
on this injustice; Dyke looking off over the fields beyond the town, his 
frown lowering, his teeth rasping upon his pipestem. The station agent 
came to the door of the depot, stretching and yawning. On ahead of the 
engine, the empty rails of the track, reaching out toward the horizon, 
threw off visible layers of heat. The telegraph key clicked incessantly. 
"So I'm going to quit," Dyke remarked after a while, his anger 
somewhat subsided. "My brother and I will take up this hop ranch. I've 
saved a good deal in the last ten years, and there ought to be money in 
hops."
Presley went on, remounting his bicycle, wheeling silently through the 
deserted streets of the decayed and dying Mexican town. It was the 
hour of the siesta. Nobody was about. There was no business in the 
town. It was too close to Bonneville for that. Before the railroad came, 
and in the days when the raising of cattle was the great industry of the 
country, it had enjoyed a fierce and brilliant life. Now it was moribund. 
The drug store, the two bar-rooms, the hotel at the corner of the old 
Plaza, and the shops where Mexican "curios" were sold to those 
occasional Eastern tourists who came to visit the Mission of San Juan, 
sufficed for the town's activity. 
At Solotari's, the restaurant on the Plaza, diagonally across from the 
hotel, Presley ate his long-deferred Mexican dinner--an omelette in 
Spanish-Mexican style, frijoles and tortillas, a salad, and a glass of 
white wine. In a corner of the room, during the whole course of his 
dinner, two young Mexicans (one of whom was astonishingly 
handsome, after the melodramatic fashion of his race) and an old fellow! 
the centenarian of the town, decrepit beyond belief, sang an 
interminable    
    
		
	
	
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