PAY
DIRT: THE WHISPERING SANDS STORIES OF ERLE STANLEY GARDNER

Erle
Stanley Gardner loved the South West
Erle
Stanley Gardner is world-famous as the author of the Perry Mason mysteries. What
some may not know is that he was one of the most prolific writers of all time,
selling over 300 million copies. In addition to writing the Mason books and the
D. A. series for Morrow, he pumped out several novellas and short stories every
month for over three decades.
One
of the best series he wrote was the quasi-Western series collectively known as
“The Whispering Sands” series for Argosy Magazine between 1930-1934. Most
of these stories have been collected in two volumes:Whispering Sands: Stories
of Gold Fever and the Western Desert (1981) and Pay Dirt and Other
Whispering Sands Stories of Gold Fever and The Western Desert (Morrow, 1983).
Of the eighteen stories collected, all but two featuring Bob Zane, a knowledgeable
desert prospector, an amalgamation of the author’s own personality and the type
of man Gardner knew from his travels.
These
tales might be seen as Westerns by some readers but as the books’ over-long title
state they are actually “Stories of Gold Fever and the Western Desert”. Which
isn’t to say “The Whispering Sands” stories wouldn’t appeal to Western fans, but
that Gardner has mixed a wonderful blend of the Western, Mystery and Adventure
genres into these stories. The fiction most similar is perhaps Jack London’s stories
of the Klondike, in that Gardner captures a place and how it affects people in
the same way.
Gardner
states his theme in each story (which he never intended to be read in a volume
but in different issue of a magazine), telling about the “sand whispers”:
Of
course, those whispers, aren’t really voices. I know as well as you do that they’re
the noises made by the sand scurrying along on the wings of the desert winds and
rustling against the cacti and the sage. And then, when the wind gets stronger,
you an hear the sound of sand rustling against sand, the strangest whisper of
all.
It
is this desert phenomenon that has branded these stories “The Whispering Sands”
stories. Gardner writes of these things with a passion for the West that could
only come from living there. He traveled largely through Southern California,
Nevada and Mexico, camping out of doors, and writing his famous Perry Mason novels
while living the life a Westerner.
The
eighteen stories share many themes but also vary with the fortunes of Bob Zane.
“Gold Blindness” (March 8, 1930) is the first “Whispering Sands” story and one
of two that do not feature the experienced gold-hunter. Jimmy, a young prospector
finds a mine of raw gold held by a band of Indians. The man bides his time, gets
to know the Indians well until the beautiful Auno gives him a choice, her love
or the gold. The short ending tells how Jimmy chose. Gardner portrays the Indians
with depth in this and all his stories, showing them as he knew them and not as
Hollywood villains or saints.
“Fall
Guy” (March 22, 1930) concerns Sid, a mine guard, who with his friend, Phil, battle
Pedro Gallivan, a Mexican bandit who plays it close to the law, always using a
fall guy to take the blame. The plot becomes complicated when Dixie Carson enters
the scene, asking Phil to rehabilitate a drug-addicted City man named Hedley.
Pedro uses Hedley as his fall guy but Phil evens the score.
This
story is the first to use the idea of the desert strengthening the weak. As Gardner
says more than once: “’But that’s why the desert is so kind. It’s cruel to those
that don’t understand it; to the person who can understand her moods she’s a kind
and loving mother. There’s nothing that develops character like cruelty, and the
development of character is all life is for.’” He would use this theme again in
“Written in Sand”, “Pay Dirt” and “Sand Blast”.

June
7, 1930 featured Farley's The Radio Menace on the cover, not Whispering Sands
“Golden
Bullets” (June 7, 1930) is the first Bob Zane story. Zane goes into Yaqui territory
in the Sierra Madres to find two sets of gold seekers, the first, a woman named
Stella McCrae, who wants to find a fortune to save herself from marrying for money.
The other pair are two bad apples, following her. Bob saves Stella but the other
two fall prey to the Yaquis. The title of the story comes from the Yaqui Indians
using gold for bullet slugs.
“Blood-Red
Gold” (September 30, 1930) finds Zane on the trail for alluvial gold which is
covered in red metal. He is also hunting revenge for the death of Sid Grahame
by the city man, Harry Ortley. Harry is one in a string of city-bred baddies in
the series, who exemplify the greed, hypocrisy and soft weakness of the non-desert
man. Zane and a woman friend of Grahame’s track the killer to the mine then have
to survive Ortley’s cunning mind and high-powered rifle. Bob wins in the end because
he understands the desert better.

October
25, 1930 featured A. Merrit's The Snake Mother on he cover, not Whsipering Sands
“Written
in Sand” (October 25, 1930) is a convoluted story about a woman who is trying
to clear her husband of a frame-up. Zane runs across the woman several times as
she pursues the men responsible for her husband’s arrest. He is in for the finale
which features a shoot out in the desert.
“Priestess
of the Sun” (December 6, 1930) is an old-fashioned Murder Mystery. Zane finds
the skeleton of a mule that has been shot with a high-powered rifle (the weapon
of choice of evil city men). From the clues, Bob figures a woman was ambushed
and left for dead in the desert. Later he meets two men who travel with him, though
he’s not sure which is the killer. After Zane figures out the murderer the
woman, who is not dead, and has “gone native” appears like an Indian Goddess,
frightening the killer to death. The other man proves to be her boyfriend, who
goes to live with her in the desert.
In
“Pay Dirt” (April 25, 1931) an old prospector is murdered, sending his young ward,
Ed Bocker, out into the desert with Bob Zane. Word gets out that the old man left
him a rich find in gold and soon the thieves are dogging them. In the end, Ed
learns how to be a man from the desert. One last surprise awaits Bob Zane.
“Stamp of the
Desert” (October 17, 1931) concerns “hi-graders” or miners who steal from the
mines they work in. Fred Conway, a friend of Zane’s is framed as a high grader
and Bob must find out who the real crooks are to save him.
In
“Singing Sand” (November 7, 1931) a city-slicker named Harry Karg hires Bob Zane
to take him and a small party into the dangerous Yaqui Indian territory. Zane
and Karg fight for supremacy of the little band. Harry Karg’s own greed and lies
deliver him up to the angry Yaquis.

January
23, 1932 featured A. Merritt's Dwellers in the Mirage on the cover, and you guessed
it, not Whispering Sands
“The
Whip Hand” (January 23, 1932) features more claim-jumpers. This time Zane must
rescue a young woman and trick the crooks into buying out his own worthless mine.
He would use a similar trick again in “Sand Blast”.
“The
Land of Poison Springs” (April 9, 1932) features another band of crooks trying
to kill off their only witness, Bob Zane. The wily desert-man leads them on a
chase through land with poisoned springs. His final trick is hilarious, as he
escapes while the crooks cover themselves with sand as an antidote to water they
think is poisonous. As in “Blood-Red Gold”, it is Zane’s knowledge of the desert
that proves superior.
“The
Law of Drifting Sand” (August 30, 1932) features another pair of destined lovers.
Zane must rescue them when they foolishly get stranded in the desert. The young
folks have a map and crooks following them. Zane saves the day by remembering
“the law of the drifting sand”—that only the small dunes move but the larger ones
stay fast.
“The
Land of Painted Rocks” (January 28, 1933) features an Indian who leaves Bessie
Crayton a lost fortune. Bob Zane and Bess must avoid the city thugs who murdered
the Indian and solve the mystery to find the gold. One of the more Mystery-oriented
stories, this tale features another lost mine and secret gold.
“Law
of the Rope” (March 11, 1933) is another Murder Mystery. This time Zane has official
powers as an employee of the Bleaching Skull Mine. He has been hired to stop a
rash of payroll hold-ups and high-grading. Zane traps the culprits, employees
of the mine, using his knowledge of the desert to prove their guilt. A great Western-style
gun-battle follows.
“Law
of the Ghost Town” (April 22, 1933) is a departure in the Whispering Sands saga.
In this tale, Bob Zane is temporarily deputy sheriff of a once-violent mining
town called Bodie. A slick city man murders one partner in a rich claim of some
mysterious ore but meets his death when the other partner mistakes him in a drunken
stupor for a long-dead rival in the good old days.
In
“The Big Circle” (September 2, 1933) Bob Zane is once again trailed by killers.
Zane tricks them by leading them off into waterless country where they throw away
their guns in the long struggle to keep walking. The clever desert man makes a
long circle, arriving back at their guns and rescue.
“Sand
Blast” (July 21, 1934) tells how Bob rescues an old partner’s city-soft son, George
Ringley, from kidnappers then takes him to the desert to toughen him up. Zane,
a woman named Sally Ehlers and George deal with claim jumpers. The first part
of the story is worthy of Dashiell Hammett while the second is pure Western.
The “Whispering
Sands” stories have the feel of the Western, shoot-outs, desert gold and a mixture
of Western, Indian and Mexican characters, but by being set in the 1930’s these
stories often feel like the Detective fiction of that era. Since both the cowboy
and the detective try to bring lawfulness to where there is none, this isn’t surprising.
Bess Drake, a character from “The Law of the Rope” asks Zane about the desert:
“Do you ever feel that there’s something about it that demands justice—something
that betrays men who are dishonest?’”
Bob’s
reply: “I didn’t say anything, because I knew it was a question that didn’t need
an answer.”
“The
Whispering Sands” stories ended in 1934 with “Sand Blast” as Gardner spent more
time with his ever-popular lawyer, Perry Mason. To the courtroom fan this seems
fair, but to those who love the West, even if it’s not the Old West, this seems
a shame. Gardner was a lawyer by profession but a Westerner at heart.



Erle
did get his name on a few covers