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BOOK IIICHAPTER I
 The car ran as far as Hayward's, but at Saxon's suggestion they got off at San Leandro.  
“It doesn't matter where we start walking,” she said, “for start to walk somewhere we must. And as we're looking for land and finding out about land, the quicker we begin to investigate the better. Besides, we want to know all about all kinds of land, close to the big cities as well as back in the mountains.”
 
“Gee!—this must be the Porchugeeze headquarters,” was Billy's comment, as they walked through San Leandro.
 
“It looks as though they'd crowd our kind out,” Saxon adjudged.
 
“Some tall crowdin', I guess,” Billy . “It looks like the free-born American ain't got no room left in his own land.”
 
“Then it's his own fault,” Saxon said, with vague , resenting conditions she was just beginning to grasp.
 
“Oh, I don't know about that. I reckon the American could do what the Porchugeeze do if he wanted to. Only he don't want to, thank God. He ain't much given to livin' like a pig offen leavin's.”
 
“Not in the country, maybe,” Saxon . “But I've seen an awful lot of Americans living like pigs in the cities.”
 
Billy . “I guess they quit the farms an' go to the city for something better, an' get it in the neck.”
 
“Look at all the children!” Saxon cried. “School's letting out. And nearly all are , Billy, NOT Porchugeeze. Mercedes taught me the right way.”
 
“They never wore glad rags like them in the old country,” Billy . “They had to come over here to get decent clothes and decent grub. They're as fat as butterballs.”
 
Saxon nodded affirmation, and a great light seemed suddenly to in her understanding.
 
“That's the very point, Billy. They're doing it—doing it farming, too. Strikes don't bother THEM.”
 
“You don't call that dinky gardening farming,” he objected, pointing to a piece of land barely the size of an acre, which they were passing.
 
“Oh, your ideas are still big,” she laughed. “You're like Uncle Will, who owned thousands of acres and wanted to own a million, and who wound up as night watchman. That's what was the trouble with all us Americans. Everything large scale. Anything less than one hundred and sixty acres was small scale.”
 
“Just the same,” Billy held stubbornly, “large scale's a whole lot better'n small scale like all these dinky gardens.”
 
Saxon sighed. “I don't know which is the dinkier,” she observed finally, “—owning a few little acres and the team you're driving, or not owning any acres and driving a team somebody else owns for wages.”
 
Billy .
 
“Go on, Robinson Crusoe,” he good naturedly. “Rub it in good an' plenty. An' the worst of it is it's correct. A hell of a free-born American I've been, adrivin' other folkses' teams for a livin', a-strikin' and a-sluggin' scabs, an' not bein' able to keep up with the for a few sticks of furniture. Just the same I was sorry for one thing. I hated worse 'n Sam Hill to see that Morris chair go back—you liked it so. We did a lot of honeymoonin' in that chair.”
 
They were well out of San Leandro, walking through a region of tiny holdings—“farmlets,” Billy called them; and Saxon got out her ukulele to cheer him with a song.
 
First, it was “Treat my daughter kind-i-ly,” and then she swung into old-fashioned darky camp-meeting , beginning with:
 
“Oh! de Judgmen' Day am rollin' roun', Rollin', yes, a-rollin', I hear the ' awful soun', Rollin', yes, a-rollin'.”
 
A big touring car, dashing past, threw a dusty pause in her singing, and Saxon delivered herself of her latest wisdom.
 
“Now, Billy, remember we're not going to take up with the first piece of land we see. We've got to go into this with our eyes open—”
 
“An' they ain't open yet,” he agreed.
 
“And we've got to get them open. ''Tis them that looks that finds.' There's lots of time to learn things. We don't care if it takes months and months. We're footloose. A good start is better than a dozen bad ones. We've got to talk and find out. We'll talk with everybody we meet. Ask questions. Ask everybody. It's the only way to find out.”
 
“I ain't much of a hand at askin' questions,” Billy .
 
“Then I'll ask,” she cried. “We've got to win out at this game, and the way is to know. Look at all these Portuguese. Where are all the Americans? They owned the land first, after the Mexicans. What made the Americans clear out? How do the Portuguese make it go? Don't you see? We've got to ask millions of questions.”
 
She strummed a few chords, and then her clear sweet voice rang out :
 
“I's g'wine back to Dixie, I's g'wine back to Dixie, I's g'wine where de orange blossoms grow, For I hear de chillun callin', I see de sad tears fallin'—My heart's turned back to Dixie, An' I mus'go.”
 
She broke off to exclaim: “Oh! What a lovely place! See that arbor—just covered with grapes!”
 
Again and again she was attracted by the small places they passed. Now it was: “Look at the flowers!” or: “My! those vegetables!” or: “See! They've got a cow!”
 
Men—Americans—driving along in buggies or runabouts looked at Saxon and Billy . This Saxon could far easier than could Billy, who would mutter and deep in his throat.
 
Beside the road they came upon a lineman eating his lunch.
 
“Stop and talk,” Saxon whispered.
 
“Aw, what's the good? He's a lineman. What'd he know about farmin'?”
 
“You never can tell. He's our kind. Go ahead, Billy. You just speak to him. He isn't working now anyway, and he'll be more likely to talk. See that tree in there, just inside the gate, and the way the branches are grown together. It's a curiosity. Ask him about it. That's a good way to get started.”
 
Billy stopped, when they were alongside.
 
“How do you do,” he said gruffly.
 
The lineman, a young fellow, paused in the cracking of a hard-boiled egg to stare up at the couple.
 
“How do you do,” he said.
 
Billy swung his pack from his shoulders to the ground, and Saxon rested her telescope basket.
 
“Peddlin'?” the young man asked, too to put his question directly to Saxon, yet dividing it between her and Billy, and cocking his eye at the covered basket.
 
“No,” she up quickly. “We're looking for land. Do you know of any around here?”
 
Again he desisted from the egg, studying them with sharp eyes as if to their financial status.
 
“Do you know what land sells for around here?” he asked.
 
“No,” Saxon answered. “Do you?”
 
“I guess I ought to. I was born here. And land like this all around you runs at from two to three hundred to four an' five hundred dollars an acre.”
 
“Whew!” Billy whistled. “I guess we don't want none of it.”
 
“But what makes it that high? Town lots?” Saxon wanted to know.
 
“Nope. The Porchugeeze make it that high, I guess.”
 
“I thought it was pretty good land that fetched a hundred an acre,” Billy said.
 
“Oh, them times is past. They used to give away land once, an' if you was good, throw in all the cattle runnin' on it.”
 
“How about government land around here?” was Billy'a next .
 
“Ain't none, an' never was. This was old Mexican grants. My grandfather bought sixteen hundred of the best acres around here for fifteen hundred dollars—five hundred down an' the balance in five years without interest. But that was in the early days. He come West in '48, tryin' to find a country without chills an' fever.”
 
“He found it all right,” said Billy.
 
“You bet he did. An' if him an' father 'd held onto the land it'd been better than a gold mine, an' I wouldn't be workin' for a livin'. What's your business?”
 
“Teamster.”
 
“Ben in the strike in Oakland?”
 
“Sure thing. I've teamed there most of my life.”
 
Here the two men wandered off into a discussion of union affairs and the strike situation; but Saxon refused to be , and brought back the talk to the land.
 
“How was it the Portuguese ran up the price of land?” she asked.
 
The young fellow broke away from union matters with an effort, and for a moment regarded her with lack eyes, until the question sank into his consciousness.
 
“Because they worked the land . Because they worked mornin', noon, an' night, all hands, women an' kids. Because they could get more out of twenty acres than we could out of a hundred an' sixty. Look at old Silva—Antonio Silva. I've known him ever since I was a shaver. He didn't have the price of a square meal when he hit this section and begun leasin' land from my folks. Look at him now—worth two hundred an' fifty thousan' cold, an' I bet he's got credit for a million, an' there's no tellin' what the rest of his family owns.”
 
“And he made all that out of your folks' land?” Saxon demanded.
 
The young man nodded his head with evident .
 
“Then why didn't your folks do it?” she pursued.
 
The lineman his shoulders.
 
“Search me,” he said.
 
“But the money was in the land,” she persisted.
 
“Blamed if it was,” came the retort, slightly with color. “We never saw it stickin' out so as you could notice it. The money was in the hands of the Porchugeeze, I guess. They knew a few more 'n we did, that's all.”
 
Saxon showed such dissatisfaction with his explanation that he was stung to action. He got up wrathfully. “Come on, an' I'll show you,” he said. “I'll show you why I'm workin' for wages when I might a-ben a millionaire if my folks hadn't been mutts. That's what we old Americans are, Mutts, with a capital M.”
 
He led them inside the gate, to the fruit tree that had first attracted Saxon's attention. From the main crotch the four main branches of the tree. Two feet above the crotch the branches were connected, each to the ones on both sides, by of living wood.
 
“You think it growed that way, eh? Well, it did. But it was old Silva that made it just the same—caught two , when the tree was young, an' twisted 'em together. Pretty slick, eh? You bet. That tree'll never blow down. It's a natural, springy , an'............
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