They were partners. The avuncular
title was bestowed on them by Cedar Camp, possibly
in recognition of a certain matured good humor, quite
distinct from the spasmodic exuberant spirits of its
other members, and possibly from what, to its youthful
sense, seemed their advanced ages which
must have been at least forty! They had also set
habits even in their improvidence, lost incalculable
and unpayable sums to each other over euchre regularly
every evening, and inspected their sluice-boxes punctually
every Saturday for repairs which they never
made. They even got to resemble each other, after
the fashion of old married couples, or, rather, as
in matrimonial partnerships, were subject to the domination
of the stronger character; although in their case
it is to be feared that it was the feminine Uncle
Billy enthusiastic, imaginative, and loquacious who
swayed the masculine, steady-going, and practical
Uncle Jim. They had lived in the camp since its
foundation in 1849; there seemed to be no reason why
they should not remain there until its inevitable evolution
into a mining-town. The younger members might
leave through restless ambition or a desire for change
or novelty; they were subject to no such trifling
mutation. Yet Cedar Camp was surprised one day
to hear that Uncle Billy was going away.
The rain was softly falling on the
bark thatch of the cabin with a muffled murmur, like
a sound heard through sleep. The southwest trades
were warm even at that altitude, as the open door testified,
although a fire of pine bark was flickering on the
adobe hearth and striking out answering fires from
the freshly scoured culinary utensils on the rude
sideboard, which Uncle Jim had cleaned that morning
with his usual serious persistency. Their best
clothes, which were interchangeable and worn alternately
by each other on festal occasions, hung on the walls,
which were covered with a coarse sailcloth canvas instead
of lath-and-plaster, and were diversified by pictures
from illustrated papers and stains from the exterior
weather. Two “bunks,” like ships’
berths, an upper and lower one, occupied
the gable-end of this single apartment, and on beds
of coarse sacking, filled with dry moss, were carefully
rolled their respective blankets and pillows.
They were the only articles not used in common, and
whose individuality was respected.
Uncle Jim, who had been sitting before
the fire, rose as the square bulk of his partner appeared
at the doorway with an armful of wood for the evening
stove. By that sign he knew it was nine o’clock:
for the last six years Uncle Billy had regularly brought
in the wood at that hour, and Uncle Jim had as regularly
closed the door after him, and set out their single
table, containing a greasy pack of cards taken from
its drawer, a bottle of whiskey, and two tin drinking-cups.
To this was added a ragged memorandum-book and a stick
of pencil. The two men drew their stools to the
table.
“Hol’ on a minit,” said Uncle Billy.
His partner laid down the cards as
Uncle Billy extracted from his pocket a pill-box,
and, opening it, gravely took a pill. This was
clearly an innovation on their regular proceedings,
for Uncle Billy was always in perfect health.
“What’s this for?” asked Uncle Jim
half scornfully.
“Agin ager.”
“You ain’t got no ager,”
said Uncle Jim, with the assurance of intimate cognizance
of his partner’s physical condition.
“But it’s a pow’ful
preventive! Quinine! Saw this box at Riley’s
store, and laid out a quarter on it. We kin keep
it here, comfortable, for evenings. It’s
mighty soothin’ arter a man’s done a hard
day’s work on the river-bar. Take one.”
Uncle Jim gravely took a pill and
swallowed it, and handed the box back to his partner.
“We’ll leave it on the
table, sociable like, in case any of the boys come
in,” said Uncle Billy, taking up the cards.
“Well. How do we stand?”
Uncle Jim consulted the memorandum-book.
“You were owin’ me sixty-two thousand
dollars on the last game, and the limit’s seventy-five
thousand!”
“Je whillikins!” ejaculated Uncle
Billy. “Let me see.”
He examined the book, feebly attempted
to challenge the additions, but with no effect on
the total. “We oughter hev made the limit
a hundred thousand,” he said seriously; “seventy-five
thousand is only triflin’ in a game like ours.
And you’ve set down my claim at Angel’s?”
he continued.
“I allowed you ten thousand
dollars for that,” said Uncle Jim, with equal
gravity, “and it’s a fancy price too.”
The claim in question being an unprospected
hillside ten miles distant, which Uncle Jim had never
seen, and Uncle Billy had not visited for years, the
statement was probably true; nevertheless, Uncle Billy
retorted:
“Ye kin never tell how these
things will pan out. Why, only this mornin’
I was taking a turn round Shot Up Hill, that ye know
is just rotten with quartz and gold, and I couldn’t
help thinkin’ how much it was like my olé
claim at Angel’s. I must take a day off
to go on there and strike a pick in it, if only for
luck.”
Suddenly he paused and said, “Strange,
ain’t it, you should speak of it to-night?
Now I call that queer!”
He laid down his cards and gazed mysteriously
at his companion. Uncle Jim knew perfectly that
Uncle Billy had regularly once a week for many years
declared his final determination to go over to Angel’s
and prospect his claim, yet nevertheless he half responded
to his partner’s suggestion of mystery, and
a look of fatuous wonder crept into his eyes.
But he contented himself by saying cautiously, “You
spoke of it first.”
“That’s the more sing’lar,”
said Uncle Billy confidently. “And I’ve
been thinking about it, and kinder seeing myself thar
all day. It’s mighty queer!” He got
up and began to rummage among some torn and coverless
books in the corner.
“Where’s that ‘Dream Book’
gone to?”
“The Carson boys borrowed it,”
replied Uncle Jim. “Anyhow, yours wasn’t
no dream only a kind o’ vision, and
the book don’t take no stock in visions.”
Nevertheless, he watched his partner with some sympathy,
and added, “That reminds me that I had a dream
the other night of being in ‘Frisco at a small
hotel, with heaps o’ money, and all the time
being sort o’ scared and bewildered over it.”
“No?” queried his partner
eagerly yet reproachfully. “You never let
on anything about it to me! It’s mighty
queer you havin’ these strange feelin’s,
for I’ve had ’em myself. And only
to-night, comin’ up from the spring, I saw two
crows hopping in the trail, and I says, ’If I
see another, it’s luck, sure!’ And you’ll
think I’m lyin’, but when I went to the
wood-pile just now there was the third one sittin’
up on a log as plain as I see you. Tell ’e
what folks ken laugh but that’s just
what Jim Filgee saw the night before he made the big
strike!”
They were both smiling, yet with an
underlying credulity and seriousness as singularly
pathetic as it seemed incongruous to their years and
intelligence. Small wonder, however, that in their
occupation and environment living daily
in an atmosphere of hope, expectation, and chance,
looking forward each morning to the blind stroke of
a pick that might bring fortune they should
see signs in nature and hear mystic voices in the
trackless woods that surrounded them. Still less
strange that they were peculiarly susceptible to the
more recognized diversions of chance, and were gamblers
on the turning of a card who trusted to the revelation
of a shovelful of upturned earth.
It was quite natural, therefore, that
they should return from their abstract form of divination
to the table and their cards. But they were scarcely
seated before they heard a crackling step in the brush
outside, and the free latch of their door was lifted.
A younger member of the camp entered. He uttered
a peevish “Halloo!” which might have passed
for a greeting, or might have been a slight protest
at finding the door closed, drew the stool from which
Uncle Jim had just risen before the fire, shook his
wet clothes like a Newfoundland dog, and sat down.
Yet he was by no means churlish nor coarse-looking,
and this act was rather one of easy-going, selfish,
youthful familiarity than of rudeness. The cabin
of Uncles Billy and Jim was considered a public right
or “common” of the camp. Conferences
between individual miners were appointed there.
“I’ll meet you at Uncle Billy’s”
was a common tryst. Added to this was a tacit
claim upon the partners’ arbitrative powers,
or the equal right to request them to step outside
if the interviews were of a private nature. Yet
there was never any objection on the part of the partners,
and to-night there was not a shadow of resentment
of this intrusion in the patient, good-humored, tolerant
eyes of Uncles Jim and Billy as they gazed at their
guest. Perhaps there was a slight gleam of relief
in Uncle Jim’s when he found that the guest
was unaccompanied by any one, and that it was not
a tryst. It would have been unpleasant for the
two partners to have stayed out in the rain while their
guests were exchanging private confidences in their
cabin. While there might have been no limit to
their good will, there might have been some to their
capacity for exposure.
Uncle Jim drew a huge log from beside
the hearth and sat on the driest end of it, while
their guest occupied the stool. The young man,
without turning away from his discontented, peevish
brooding over the fire, vaguely reached backward for
the whiskey-bottle and Uncle Billy’s tin cup,
to which he was assisted by the latter’s hospitable
hand. But on setting down the cup his eye caught
sight of the pill-box.
“Wot’s that?” he said, with gloomy
scorn. “Rat poison?”
“Quinine pills agin
ager,” said Uncle Jim. “The newest
thing out. Keeps out damp like Injin-rubber!
Take one to follow yer whiskey. Me and Uncle
Billy wouldn’t think o’ settin’ down,
quiet like, in the evening arter work, without ’em.
Take one ye ‘r’ welcome!
We keep ’em out here for the boys.”
Accustomed as the partners were to
adopt and wear each other’s opinions before
folks, as they did each other’s clothing, Uncle
Billy was, nevertheless, astonished and delighted
at Uncle Jim’s enthusiasm over his pills.
The guest took one and swallowed it.
“Mighty bitter!” he said,
glancing at his hosts with the quick Californian suspicion
of some practical joke. But the honest faces of
the partners reassured him.
“That bitterness ye taste,”
said Uncle Jim quickly, “is whar the thing’s
gittin’ in its work. Sorter sickenin’
the malaria and kinder water-proofin’
the insides all to onct and at the same lick!
Don’t yer see? Put another in yer vest
pocket; you’ll be cryin’ for ’em
like a child afore ye get home. Thar! Well,
how’s things agoin’ on your claim, Dick?
Boomin’, eh?”
The guest raised his head and turned
it sufficiently to fling his answer back over his
shoulder at his hosts. “I don’t know
what you’d call’ boomin’,’”
he said gloomily; “I suppose you two men sitting
here comfortably by the fire, without caring whether
school keeps or not, would call two feet of backwater
over one’s claim ‘boomin’;’
I reckon you’d consider a hundred and fifty
feet of sluicing carried away, and drifting to thunder
down the South Fork, something in the way of advertising
to your old camp! I suppose YOU’d think
it was an inducement to investors! I shouldn’t
wonder,” he added still more gloomily, as a
sudden dash of rain down the wide-throated chimney
dropped in his tin cup “and it would
be just like you two chaps, sittin’ there gormandizing
over your quinine if yer said this rain
that’s lasted three weeks was something to be
proud of!”
It was the cheerful and the satisfying
custom of the rest of the camp, for no reason whatever,
to hold Uncle Jim and Uncle Billy responsible for
its present location, its vicissitudes, the weather,
or any convulsion of nature; and it was equally the
partners’ habit, for no reason whatever, to
accept these animadversions and apologize.
“It’s a rain that’s
soft and mellowin’,” said Uncle Billy gently,
“and supplin’ to the sinews and muscles.
Did ye ever notice, Jim” ostentatiously
to his partner “did ye ever notice
that you get inter a kind o’ sweaty lather workin’
in it? Sorter openin’ to the pores!”
“Fetches ’em every time,”
said Uncle Billy. “Better nor fancy soap.”
Their guest laughed bitterly.
“Well, I’m going to leave it to you.
I reckon to cut the whole concern to-morrow, and ‘lite’
out for something new. It can’t be worse
than this.”
The two partners looked grieved, albeit
they were accustomed to these outbursts. Everybody
who thought of going away from Cedar Camp used it
first as a threat to these patient men, after the fashion
of runaway nephews, or made an exemplary scene of
their going.
“Better think twice afore ye go,” said
Uncle Billy.
“I’ve seen worse weather
afore ye came,” said Uncle Jim slowly. “Water
all over the Bar; the mud so deep ye couldn’t
get to Angel’s for a sack o’ flour, and
we had to grub on pine nuts and jackass-rabbits.
And yet we stuck by the camp, and here
we are!”
The mild answer apparently goaded
their guest to fury. He rose from his seat, threw
back his long dripping hair from his handsome but querulous
face, and scattered a few drops on the partners.
“Yes, that’s just it. That’s
what gets me! Here you stick, and here you are!
And here you’ll stick and rust until you starve
or drown! Here you are, two men who
ought to be out in the world, playing your part as
grown men, stuck here like children ‘playing
house’ in the woods; playing work in your wretched
mud-pie ditches, and content. Two men not so old
that you mightn’t be taking your part in the
fun of the world, going to balls or theatres, or paying
attention to girls, and yet old enough to have married
and have your families around you, content to stay
in this God-forsaken place; old bachelors, pigging
together like poorhouse paupers. That’s
what gets me! Say you like it? Say you
expect by hanging on to make a strike and
what does that amount to? What are your
chances? How many of us have made, or are making,
more than grub wages? Say you’re willing
to share and share alike as you do have
you got enough for two? Aren’t you actually
living off each other? Aren’t you grinding
each other down, choking each other’s struggles,
as you sink together deeper and deeper in the mud
of this cussed camp? And while you’re doing
this, aren’t you, by your age and position here,
holding out hopes to others that you know cannot be
fulfilled?”
Accustomed as they were to the half-querulous,
half-humorous, but always extravagant, criticism of
the others, there was something so new in this arraignment
of themselves that the partners for a moment sat silent.
There was a slight flush on Uncle Billy’s cheek,
there was a slight paleness on Uncle Jim’s.
He was the first to reply. But he did so with
a certain dignity which neither his partner nor their
guest had ever seen on his face before.
“As it’s our fire
that’s warmed ye up like this, Dick Bullen,”
he said, slowly rising, with his hand resting on Uncle
Billy’s shoulder, “and as it’s our
whiskey that’s loosened your tongue, I reckon
we must put up with what ye ‘r’ saying,
just as we’ve managed to put up with our own
way o’ living, and not quo’ll with ye under
our own roof.”
The young fellow saw the change in
Uncle Jim’s face and quickly extended his hand,
with an apologetic backward shake of his long hair.
“Hang it all, old man,” he said, with
a laugh of mingled contrition and amusement, “you
mustn’t mind what I said just now. I’ve
been so worried thinking of things about myself,
and, maybe, a little about you, that I quite forgot
I hadn’t a call to preach to anybody least
of all to you. So we part friends, Uncle Jim,
and you too, Uncle Billy, and you’ll forget
what I said. In fact, I don’t know why I
spoke at all only I was passing your claim
just now, and wondering how much longer your old sluice-boxes
would hold out, and where in thunder you’d get
others when they caved in! I reckon that sent
me off. That’s all, old chap!”
Uncle Billy’s face broke into
a beaming smile of relief, and it was his hand
that first grasped his guest’s; Uncle Jim quickly
followed with as honest a pressure, but with eyes
that did not seem to be looking at Bullen, though
all trace of resentment had died out of them.
He walked to the door with him, again shook hands,
but remained looking out in the darkness some time
after Dick Bullen’s tangled hair and broad shoulders
had disappeared.
Meantime, Uncle Billy had resumed
his seat and was chuckling and reminiscent as he cleaned
out his pipe.
“Kinder reminds me of Jo Sharp,
when he was cleaned out at poker by his own partners
in his own cabin, comin’ up here and bedevilin’
us about it! What was it you lint him?”
But Uncle Jim did not reply; and Uncle
Billy, taking up the cards, began to shuffle them,
smiling vaguely, yet at the same time somewhat painfully.
“Arter all, Dick was mighty cut up about what
he said, and I felt kinder sorry for him. And,
you know, I rather cotton to a man that speaks his
mind. Sorter clears him out, you know, of all
the slumgullion that’s in him. It’s
just like washin’ out a pan o’ prospecting:
you pour in the water, and keep slushing it round
and round, and out comes first the mud and dirt, and
then the gravel, and then the black sand, and then it’s
all out, and there’s a speck o’ gold glistenin’
at the bottom!”
“Then you think there was
suthin’ in what he said?” said Uncle Jim,
facing about slowly.
An odd tone in his voice made Uncle
Billy look up. “No,” he said quickly,
shying with the instinct of an easy pleasure-loving
nature from a possible grave situation. “No,
I don’t think he ever got the color! But
wot are ye moonin’ about for? Ain’t
ye goin’ to play? It’s mor’
’n half past nine now.”
Thus adjured, Uncle Jim moved up to
the table and sat down, while Uncle Billy dealt the
cards, turning up the Jack or right bower but
without that exclamation of delight which always
accompanied his good fortune, nor did Uncle Jim respond
with the usual corresponding simulation of deep disgust.
Such a circumstance had not occurred before in the
history of their partnership. They both played
in silence a silence only interrupted by
a larger splash of raindrops down the chimney.
“We orter put a couple of stones
on the chimney-top, edgewise, like Jack Curtis does.
It keeps out the rain without interferin’ with
the draft,” said Uncle Billy musingly.
“What’s the use if”
“If what?” said Uncle Billy quietly.
“If we don’t make it broader,” said
Uncle Jim half wearily.
They both stared at the chimney, but
Uncle Jim’s eye followed the wall around to
the bunks. There were many discolorations on the
canvas, and a picture of the Goddess of Liberty from
an illustrated paper had broken out in a kind of damp,
measly eruption. “I’ll stick that
funny handbill of the ‘Washin’ Soda’
I got at the grocery store the other day right over
the Liberty gal. It’s a mighty perty woman
washin’ with short sleeves,” said Uncle
Billy. “That’s the comfort of them
picters, you kin always get somethin’ new, and
it adds thickness to the wall.”
Uncle Jim went back to the cards in
silence. After a moment he rose again, and hung
his overcoat against the door.
“Wind’s comin’ in,” he said
briefly.
“Yes,” said Uncle Billy
cheerfully, “but it wouldn’t seem nat’ral
if there wasn’t that crack in the door to let
the sunlight in o mornin’s. Makes a kind
o’ sundial, you know. When the streak o’
light’s in that corner, I says ‘six o’clock!’
when it’s across the chimney I say ‘seven!’
and so ’tis!”
It certainly had grown chilly, and
the wind was rising. The candle guttered and
flickered; the embers on the hearth brightened occasionally,
as if trying to dispel the gathering shadows, but always
ineffectually. The game was frequently interrupted
by the necessity of stirring the fire. After
an interval of gloom, in which each partner successively
drew the candle to his side to examine his cards, Uncle
Jim said:
“Say?”
“Well!” responded Uncle Billy.
“Are you sure you saw that third crow on the
wood-pile?”
“Sure as I see you now and a darned
sight plainer. Why?”
“Nothin’, I was just thinkin’.
Look here! How do we stand now?”
Uncle Billy was still losing.
“Nevertheless,” he said cheerfully, “I’m
owin’ you a matter of sixty thousand dollars.”
Uncle Jim examined the book abstractedly.
“Suppose,” he said slowly, but without
looking at his partner, “suppose, as it’s
gettin’ late now, we play for my half share
of the claim agin the limit seventy thousand to
square up.”
“Your half share!” repeated Uncle Billy,
with amused incredulity.
“My half share of the claim, of
this yer house, you know, one half of all
that Dick Bullen calls our rotten starvation property,”
reiterated Uncle Jim, with a half smile.
Uncle Billy laughed. It was a
novel idea; it was, of course, “all in the air,”
like the rest of their game, yet even then he had an
odd feeling that he would have liked Dick Bullen to
have known it. “Wade in, old pard,”
he said. “I’m on it.”
Uncle Jim lit another candle to reinforce
the fading light, and the deal fell to Uncle Billy.
He turned up Jack of clubs. He also turned a little
redder as he took up his cards, looked at them, and
glanced hastily at his partner. “It’s
no use playing,” he said. “Look here!”
He laid down his cards on the table. They were
the ace, king and queen of clubs, and Jack of spades, or
left bower, which, with the turned-up Jack
of clubs, or right bower, comprised
all the winning cards!
“By jingo! If we’d
been playin’ four-handed, say you an’ me
agin some other ducks, we’d have made ‘four’
in that deal, and h’isted some money eh?”
and his eyes sparkled. Uncle Jim, also, had a
slight tremulous light in his own.
“Oh no! I didn’t
see no three crows this afternoon,” added Uncle
Billy gleefully, as his partner, in turn, began to
shuffle the cards with laborious and conscientious
exactitude. Then dealing, he turned up a heart
for trumps. Uncle Billy took up his cards one
by one, but when he had finished his face had become
as pale as it had been red before. “What’s
the matter?” said Uncle Jim quickly, his own
face growing white.
Uncle Billy slowly and with breathless
awe laid down his cards, face up on the table.
It was exactly the same sequence in hearts,
with the knave of diamonds added. He could again
take every trick.
They stared at each other with vacant
faces and a half-drawn smile of fear. They could
hear the wind moaning in the trees beyond; there was
a sudden rattling at the door. Uncle Billy started
to his feet, but Uncle Jim caught his arm. “Don’t
leave the cards! It’s only
the wind; sit down,” he said in a low awe-hushed
voice, “it’s your deal; you were two before,
and two now, that makes your four; you’ve only
one point to make to win the game. Go on.”
They both poured out a cup of whiskey,
smiling vaguely, yet with a certain terror in their
eyes. Their hands were cold; the cards slipped
from Uncle Billy’s benumbed fingers; when he
had shuffled them he passed them to his partner to
shuffle them also, but did not speak. When Uncle
Jim had shuffled them methodically he handed them back
fatefully to his partner. Uncle Billy dealt them
with a trembling hand. He turned up a club.
“If you are sure of these tricks you know you’ve
won,” said Uncle Jim in a voice that was scarcely
audible. Uncle Billy did not reply, but tremulously
laid down the ace and right and left bowers.
He had won!
A feeling of relief came over each,
and they laughed hysterically and discordantly.
Ridiculous and childish as their contest might have
seemed to a looker-on, to each the tension had been
as great as that of the greatest gambler, without
the gambler’s trained restraint, coolness, and
composure. Uncle Billy nervously took up the cards
again.
“Don’t,” said Uncle
Jim gravely; “it’s no use the
luck’s gone now.”
“Just one more deal,” pleaded his partner.
Uncle Jim looked at the fire, Uncle
Billy hastily dealt, and threw the two hands face
up on the table. They were the ordinary average
cards. He dealt again, with the same result.
“I told you so,” said Uncle Jim, without
looking up.
It certainly seemed a tame performance
after their wonderful hands, and after another trial
Uncle Billy threw the cards aside and drew his stool
before the fire. “Mighty queer, warn’t
it?” he said, with reminiscent awe. “Three
times running. Do you know, I felt a kind o’
creepy feelin’ down my back all the time.
Criky! what luck! None of the boys would believe
it if we told ’em least of all that
Dick Bullen, who don’t believe in luck, anyway.
Wonder what he’d have said! and, Lord! how he’d
have looked! Wall! what are you starin’
so for?”
Uncle Jim had faced around, and was
gazing at Uncle Billy’s good-humored, simple
face. “Nothin’!” he said briefly,
and his eyes again sought the fire.
“Then don’t look as if
you was seein’ suthin’ you give
me the creeps,” returned Uncle Billy a little
petulantly. “Let’s turn in, afore
the fire goes out!”
The fateful cards were put back into
the drawer, the table shoved against the wall.
The operation of undressing was quickly got over,
the clothes they wore being put on top of their blankets.
Uncle Billy yawned, “I wonder what kind of a
dream I’ll have tonight it oughter
be suthin’ to explain that luck.”
This was his “good-night” to his partner.
In a few moments he was sound asleep.
Not so Uncle Jim. He heard the
wind gradually go down, and in the oppressive silence
that followed could detect the deep breathing of his
companion and the far-off yelp of a coyote. His
eyesight becoming accustomed to the semi-darkness,
broken only by the scintillation of the dying embers
of their fire, he could take in every detail of their
sordid cabin and the rude environment in which they
had lived so long. The dismal patches on the
bark roof, the wretched makeshifts of each day, the
dreary prolongation of discomfort, were all plain to
him now, without the sanguine hope that had made them
bearable. And when he shut his eyes upon them,
it was only to travel in fancy down the steep mountain
side that he had trodden so often to the dreary claim
on the overflowed river, to the heaps of “tailings”
that encumbered it, like empty shells of the hollow,
profitless days spent there, which they were always
waiting for the stroke of good fortune to clear away.
He saw again the rotten “sluicing,” through
whose hopeless rifts and holes even their scant
daily earnings had become scantier. At last he
arose, and with infinite gentleness let himself down
from his berth without disturbing his sleeping partner,
and wrapping himself in his blanket, went to the door,
which he noiselessly opened. From the position
of a few stars that were glittering in the northern
sky he knew that it was yet scarcely midnight; there
were still long, restless hours before the day!
In the feverish state into which he had gradually worked
himself it seemed to him impossible to wait the coming
of the dawn.
But he was mistaken. For even
as he stood there all nature seemed to invade his
humble cabin with its free and fragrant breath, and
invest him with its great companionship. He felt
again, in that breath, that strange sense of freedom,
that mystic touch of partnership with the birds and
beasts, the shrubs and trees, in this greater home
before him. It was this vague communion that
had kept him there, that still held these world-sick,
weary workers in their rude cabins on the slopes around
him; and he felt upon his brow that balm that had nightly
lulled him and them to sleep and forgetfulness.
He closed the door, turned away, crept as noiselessly
as before into his bunk again, and presently fell
into a profound slumber.
But when Uncle Billy awoke the next
morning he saw it was late; for the sun, piercing
the crack of the closed door, was sending a pencil
of light across the cold hearth, like a match to rekindle
its dead embers. His first thought was of his
strange luck the night before, and of disappointment
that he had not had the dream of divination that he
had looked for. He sprang to the floor, but as
he stood upright his glance fell on Uncle Jim’s
bunk. It was empty. Not only that, but his
blankets Uncle Jim’s own particular
blankets were gone!
A sudden revelation of his partner’s
manner the night before struck him now with the cruelty
of a blow; a sudden intelligence, perhaps the very
divination he had sought, flashed upon him like lightning!
He glanced wildly around the cabin. The table
was drawn out from the wall a little ostentatiously,
as if to catch his eye. On it was lying the stained
chamois-skin purse in which they had kept the few grains
of gold remaining from their last week’s “clean
up.” The grains had been carefully divided,
and half had been taken! But near it lay the little
memorandum-book, open, with the stick of pencil lying
across it. A deep line was drawn across the page
on which was recorded their imaginary extravagant
gains and losses, even to the entry of Uncle Jim’s
half share of the claim which he had risked and lost!
Underneath were hurriedly scrawled the words:
“Settled by your luck,
last night, old pard. James Foster.”
It was nearly a month before Cedar
Camp was convinced that Uncle Billy and Uncle Jim
had dissolved partnership. Pride had prevented
Uncle Billy from revealing his suspicions of the truth,
or of relating the events that preceded Uncle Jim’s
clandestine flight, and Dick Bullen had gone to Sacramento
by stage-coach the same morning. He briefly gave
out that his partner had been called to San Francisco
on important business of their own, that indeed might
necessitate his own removal there later. In this
he was singularly assisted by a letter from the absent
Jim, dated at San Francisco, begging him not to be
anxious about his success, as he had hopes of presently
entering into a profitable business, but with no further
allusions to his precipitate departure, nor any suggestion
of a reason for it. For two or three days Uncle
Billy was staggered and bewildered; in his profound
simplicity he wondered if his extraordinary good fortune
that night had made him deaf to some explanation of
his partner’s, or, more terrible, if he had
shown some “low” and incredible intimation
of taking his partner’s extravagant bet as real
and binding. In this distress he wrote to Uncle
Jim an appealing and apologetic letter, albeit somewhat
incoherent and inaccurate, and bristling with misspelling,
camp slang, and old partnership jibes. But to
this elaborate epistle he received only Uncle Jim’s
repeated assurances of his own bright prospects, and
his hopes that his old partner would be more fortunate,
single-handed, on the old claim. For a whole week
or two Uncle Billy sulked, but his invincible optimism
and good humor got the better of him, and he thought
only of his old partner’s good fortune.
He wrote him regularly, but always to one address a
box at the San Francisco post-office, which to the
simple-minded Uncle Billy suggested a certain official
importance. To these letters Uncle Jim responded
regularly but briefly.
From a certain intuitive pride in
his partner and his affection, Uncle Billy did not
show these letters openly to the camp, although he
spoke freely of his former partner’s promising
future, and even read them short extracts. It
is needless to say that the camp did not accept Uncle
Billy’s story with unsuspecting confidence.
On the contrary, a hundred surmises, humorous or serious,
but always extravagant, were afloat in Cedar Camp.
The partners had quarreled over their clothes Uncle
Jim, who was taller than Uncle Billy, had refused
to wear his partner’s trousers. They had
quarreled over cards Uncle Jim had discovered
that Uncle Billy was in possession of a “cold
deck,” or marked pack. They had quarreled
over Uncle Billy’s carelessness in grinding up
half a box of “bilious pills” in the morning’s
coffee. A gloomily imaginative mule-driver had
darkly suggested that, as no one had really seen Uncle
Jim leave the camp, he was still there, and his bones
would yet be found in one of the ditches; while a
still more credulous miner averred that what he had
thought was the cry of a screech-owl the night previous
to Uncle Jim’s disappearance, might have been
the agonized utterance of that murdered man.
It was highly characteristic of that camp and,
indeed, of others in California that nobody,
not even the ingenious theorists themselves, believed
their story, and that no one took the slightest pains
to verify or disprove it. Happily, Uncle Billy
never knew it, and moved all unconsciously in this
atmosphere of burlesque suspicion. And then a
singular change took place in the attitude of the
camp towards him and the disrupted partnership.
Hitherto, for no reason whatever, all had agreed to
put the blame upon Billy possibly because
he was present to receive it. As days passed that
slight reticence and dejection in his manner, which
they had at first attributed to remorse and a guilty
conscience, now began to tell as absurdly in his favor.
Here was poor Uncle Billy toiling though the ditches,
while his selfish partner was lolling in the lap of
luxury in San Francisco! Uncle Billy’s
glowing accounts of Uncle Jim’s success only
contributed to the sympathy now fully given in his
behalf and their execration of the absconding partner.
It was proposed at Biggs’s store that a letter
expressing the indignation of the camp over his heartless
conduct to his late partner, William Fall, should
be forwarded to him. Condolences were offered
to Uncle Billy, and uncouth attempts were made to
cheer his loneliness. A procession of half a
dozen men twice a week to his cabin, carrying their
own whiskey and winding up with a “stag dance”
before the premises, was sufficient to lighten his
eclipsed gayety and remind him of a happier past.
“Surprise” working parties visited his
claim with spasmodic essays towards helping him, and
great good humor and hilarity prevailed. It was
not an unusual thing for an honest miner to arise from
an idle gathering in some cabin and excuse himself
with the remark that he “reckoned he’d
put in an hour’s work in Uncle Billy’s
tailings!” And yet, as before, it was very improbable
if any of these reckless benefactors really believed
in their own earnestness or in the gravity of the situation.
Indeed, a kind of hopeful cynicism ran through their
performances. “Like as not, Uncle Billy
is still in ‘cahoots’ [i. e., shares] with
his old pard, and is just laughin’ at us as
he’s sendin’ him accounts of our tomfoolin’.”
And so the winter passed and the rains,
and the days of cloudless skies and chill starlit
nights began. There were still freshets from the
snow reservoirs piled high in the Sierran passes,
and the Bar was flooded, but that passed too, and
only the sunshine remained. Monotonous as the
seasons were, there was a faint movement in the camp
with the stirring of the sap in the pines and cedars.
And then, one day, there was a strange excitement
on the Bar. Men were seen running hither and thither,
but mainly gathering in a crowd on Uncle Billy’s
claim, that still retained the old partners’
names in “The Fall and Foster.” To
add to the excitement, there was the quickly repeated
report of a revolver, to all appearance aimlessly
exploded in the air by some one on the outskirts of
the assemblage. As the crowd opened, Uncle Billy
appeared, pale, hysterical, breathless, and staggering
a little under the back-slapping and hand-shaking
of the whole camp. For Uncle Billy had “struck
it rich” had just discovered a “pocket,”
roughly estimated to be worth fifteen thousand dollars!
Although in that supreme moment he
missed the face of his old partner, he could not help
seeing the unaffected delight and happiness shining
in the eyes of all who surrounded him. It was
characteristic of that sanguine but uncertain life
that success and good fortune brought no jealousy
nor envy to the unfortunate, but was rather a promise
and prophecy of the fulfillment of their own hopes.
The gold was there Nature but yielded up
her secret. There was no prescribed limit to
her bounty. So strong was this conviction that
a long-suffering but still hopeful miner, in the enthusiasm
of the moment, stooped down and patted a large boulder
with the apostrophic “Good old gal!”
Then followed a night of jubilee,
a next morning of hurried consultation with a mining
expert and speculator lured to the camp by the good
tidings; and then the very next night to
the utter astonishment of Cedar Camp Uncle
Billy, with a draft for twenty thousand dollars in
his pocket, started for San Francisco, and took leave
of his claim and the camp forever!
When Uncle Billy landed at the wharves
of San Francisco he was a little bewildered.
The Golden Gate beyond was obliterated by the incoming
sea-fog, which had also roofed in the whole city, and
lights already glittered along the gray streets that
climbed the grayer sand-hills. As a Western man,
brought up by inland rivers, he was fascinated and
thrilled by the tall-masted seagoing ships, and he
felt a strange sense of the remoter mysterious ocean,
which he had never seen. But he was impressed
and startled by smartly dressed men and women, the
passing of carriages, and a sudden conviction that
he was strange and foreign to what he saw. It
had been his cherished intention to call upon his old
partner in his working clothes, and then clap down
on the table before him a draft for ten thousand dollars
as his share of their old claim. But in
the face of these brilliant strangers a sudden and
unexpected timidity came upon him. He had heard
of a cheap popular hotel, much frequented by the returning
gold-miner, who entered its hospitable doors which
held an easy access to shops and emerged
in a few hours a gorgeous butterfly of fashion, leaving
his old chrysalis behind him. Thence he inquired
his way; hence he afterwards issued in garments glaringly
new and ill fitting. But he had not sacrificed
his beard, and there was still something fine and
original in his handsome weak face that overcame the
cheap convention of his clothes. Making his way
to the post-office, he was again discomfited by the
great size of the building, and bewildered by the
array of little square letter-boxes behind glass which
occupied one whole wall, and an equal number of opaque
and locked wooden ones legibly numbered. His
heart leaped; he remembered the number, and before
him was a window with a clerk behind it. Uncle
Billy leaned forward.
“Kin you tell me if the man
that box 690 b’longs to is in?”
The clerk stared, made him repeat
the question, and then turned away. But he returned
almost instantly, with two or three grinning heads
besides his own, apparently set behind his shoulders.
Uncle Billy was again asked to repeat his question.
He did so.
“Why don’t you go and
see if 690 is in his box?” said the first clerk,
turning with affected asperity to one of the others.
The clerk went away, returned, and
said with singular gravity, “He was there a
moment ago, but he’s gone out to stretch his
legs. It’s rather crampin’ at first;
and he can’t stand it more than ten hours at
a time, you know.”
But simplicity has its limits.
Uncle Billy had already guessed his real error in
believing his partner was officially connected with
the building; his cheek had flushed and then paled
again. The pupils of his blue eyes had contracted
into suggestive black points. “Ef you’ll
let me in at that winder, young fellers,” he
said, with equal gravity, “I’ll show yer
how I kin make you small enough to go in a box
without crampin’! But I only wanted to
know where Jim Foster lived.”
At which the first clerk became perfunctory
again, but civil. “A letter left in his
box would get you that information,” he said,
“and here’s paper and pencil to write
it now.”
Uncle Billy took the paper and began
to write, “Just got here. Come and see
me at” He paused. A brilliant
idea had struck him; He could impress both his old
partner and the upstarts at the window; he would put
in the name of the latest “swell” hotel
in San Francisco, said to be a fairy dream of opulence.
He added “The Oriental,” and without folding
the paper shoved it in the window.
“Don’t you want an envelope?” asked
the clerk.
“Put a stamp on the corner of
it,” responded Uncle Billy, laying down a coin,
“and she’ll go through.” The
clerk smiled, but affixed the stamp, and Uncle Billy
turned away.
But it was a short-lived triumph.
The disappointment at finding Uncle Jim’s address
conveyed no idea of his habitation seemed to remove
him farther away, and lose his identity in the great
city. Besides, he must now make good his own
address, and seek rooms at the Oriental. He went
thither. The furniture and decorations, even in
these early days of hotel-building in San Francisco,
were extravagant and over-strained, and Uncle Billy
felt lost and lonely in his strange surroundings.
But he took a handsome suite of rooms, paid for them
in advance on the spot, and then, half frightened,
walked out of them to ramble vaguely through the city
in the feverish hope of meeting his old partner.
At night his inquietude increased; he could not face
the long row of tables in the pillared dining-room,
filled with smartly dressed men and women; he evaded
his bedroom, with its brocaded satin chairs and its
gilt bedstead, and fled to his modest lodgings at
the Good Cheer House, and appeased his hunger at its
cheap restaurant, in the company of retired miners
and freshly arrived Eastern emigrants. Two or
three days passed thus in this quaint double existence.
Three or four times a day he would enter the gorgeous
Oriental with affected ease and carelessness, demand
his key from the hotel-clerk, ask for the letter that
did not come, go to his room, gaze vaguely from his
window on the passing crowd below for the partner
he could not find, and then return to the Good Cheer
House for rest and sustenance. On the fourth
day he received a short note from Uncle Jim; it was
couched in his usual sanguine but brief and businesslike
style. He was very sorry, but important and profitable
business took him out of town, but he trusted to return
soon and welcome his old partner. He was also,
for the first time, jocose, and hoped that Uncle Billy
would not “see all the sights” before he,
Uncle Jim, returned. Disappointing as this procrastination
was to Uncle Billy, a gleam of hope irradiated it:
the letter had bridged over that gulf which seemed
to yawn between them at the post-office. His old
partner had accepted his visit to San Francisco without
question, and had alluded to a renewal of their old
intimacy. For Uncle Billy, with all his trustful
simplicity, had been tortured by two harrowing doubts:
one, whether Uncle Jim in his new-fledged smartness
as a “city” man such as he
saw in the streets would care for his rough
companionship; the other, whether he, Uncle Billy,
ought not to tell him at once of his changed fortune.
But, like all weak, unreasoning men, he clung desperately
to a detail he could not forego his old
idea of astounding Uncle Jim by giving him his share
of the “strike” as his first intimation
of it, and he doubted, with more reason perhaps, if
Jim would see him after he had heard of his good fortune.
For Uncle Billy had still a frightened recollection
of Uncle Jim’s sudden stroke for independence,
and that rigid punctiliousness which had made him
doggedly accept the responsibility of his extravagant
stake at euchre.
With a view of educating himself for
Uncle Jim’s company, he “saw the sights”
of San Francisco as an overgrown and somewhat
stupid child might have seen them with
great curiosity, but little contamination or corruption.
But I think he was chiefly pleased with watching the
arrival of the Sacramento and Stockton steamers at
the wharves, in the hope of discovering his old partner
among the passengers on the gang-plank. Here,
with his old superstitious tendency and gambler’s
instinct, he would augur great success in his search
that day if any one of the passengers bore the least
resemblance to Uncle Jim, if a man or woman stepped
off first, or if he met a single person’s questioning
eye. Indeed, this got to be the real occupation
of the day, which he would on no account have omitted,
and to a certain extent revived each day in his mind
the morning’s work of their old partnership.
He would say to himself, “It’s time to
go and look up Jim,” and put off what he was
pleased to think were his pleasures until this act
of duty was accomplished.
In this singleness of purpose he made
very few and no entangling acquaintances, nor did
he impart to any one the secret of his fortune, loyally
reserving it for his partner’s first knowledge.
To a man of his natural frankness and simplicity this
was a great trial, and was, perhaps, a crucial test
of his devotion. When he gave up his rooms at
the Oriental as not necessary after his
partner’s absence he sent a letter,
with his humble address, to the mysterious lock-box
of his partner without fear or false shame. He
would explain it all when they met. But he sometimes
treated unlucky and returning miners to a dinner and
a visit to the gallery of some theatre. Yet while
he had an active sympathy with and understanding of
the humblest, Uncle Billy, who for many years had
done his own and his partner’s washing, scrubbing,
mending, and cooking, and saw no degradation in it,
was somewhat inconsistently irritated by menial functions
in men, and although he gave extravagantly to waiters,
and threw a dollar to the crossing-sweeper, there
was always a certain shy avoidance of them in his
manner. Coming from the theatre one night Uncle
Billy was, however, seriously concerned by one of
these crossing-sweepers turning hastily before them
and being knocked down by a passing carriage.
The man rose and limped hurriedly away; but Uncle
Billy was amazed and still more irritated to hear
from his companion that this kind of menial occupation
was often profitable, and that at some of the principal
crossings the sweepers were already rich men.
But a few days later brought a more
notable event to Uncle Billy. One afternoon in
Montgomery Street he recognized in one of its smartly
dressed frequenters a man who had a few years before
been a member of Cedar Camp. Uncle Billy’s
childish delight at this meeting, which seemed to
bridge over his old partner’s absence, was, however,
only half responded to by the ex-miner, and then somewhat
satirically. In the fullness of his emotion,
Uncle Billy confided to him that he was seeking his
old partner, Jim Foster, and, reticent of his own good
fortune, spoke glowingly of his partner’s brilliant
expectations, but deplored his inability to find him.
And just now he was away on important business.
“I reckon he’s got back,” said the
man dryly. “I didn’t know he had
a lock-box at the post-office, but I can give you his
other address. He lives at the Presidio, at Washerwoman’s
Bay.” He stopped and looked with a satirical
smile at Uncle Billy. But the latter, familiar
with Californian mining-camp nomenclature, saw nothing
strange in it, and merely repeated his companion’s
words.
“You’ll find him there!
Good-by! So long! Sorry I’m in a hurry,”
said the ex-miner, and hurried away.
Uncle Billy was too delighted with
the prospect of a speedy meeting with Uncle Jim to
resent his former associate’s supercilious haste,
or even to wonder why Uncle Jim had not informed him
that he had returned. It was not the first time
that he had felt how wide was the gulf between himself
and these others, and the thought drew him closer to
his old partner, as well as his old idea, as it was
now possible to surprise him with the draft.
But as he was going to surprise him in his own boarding-house probably
a handsome one Uncle Billy reflected that
he would do so in a certain style.
He accordingly went to a livery stable
and ordered a landau and pair, with a negro coachman.
Seated in it, in his best and most ill-fitting clothes,
he asked the coachman to take him to the Presidio,
and leaned back in the cushions as they drove through
the streets with such an expression of beaming gratification
on his good-humored face that the passers-by smiled
at the equipage and its extravagant occupant.
To them it seemed the not unusual sight of the successful
miner “on a spree.” To the unsophisticated
Uncle Billy their smiling seemed only a natural and
kindly recognition of his happiness, and he nodded
and smiled back to them with unsuspecting candor and
innocent playfulness. “These yer ’Frisco
fellers ain’t all slouches, you bet,”
he added to himself half aloud, at the back of the
grinning coachman.
Their way led through well-built streets
to the outskirts, or rather to that portion of the
city which seemed to have been overwhelmed by shifting
sand-dunes, from which half-submerged fences and even
low houses barely marked the line of highway.
The resistless trade-winds which had marked this change
blew keenly in his face and slightly chilled his ardor.
At a turn in the road the sea came in sight, and sloping
towards it the great Cemetery of Lone Mountain, with
white shafts and marbles that glittered in the sunlight
like the sails of ships waiting to be launched down
that slope into the Eternal Ocean. Uncle Billy
shuddered. What if it had been his fate to seek
Uncle Jim there!
“Dar’s yar Presidio!”
said the negro coachman a few moments later, pointing
with his whip, “and dar’s yar Wash’woman’s
Bay!”
Uncle Billy stared. A huge quadrangular
fort of stone with a flag flying above its battlements
stood at a little distance, pressed against the rocks,
as if beating back the encroaching surges; between
him and the fort but farther inland was a lagoon with
a number of dilapidated, rudely patched cabins or
cottages, like stranded driftwood around its shore.
But there was no mansion, no block of houses, no street,
not another habitation or dwelling to be seen!
Uncle Billy’s first shock of
astonishment was succeeded by a feeling of relief.
He had secretly dreaded a meeting with his old partner
in the “haunts of fashion;” whatever was
the cause that made Uncle Jim seek this obscure retirement
affected him but slightly; he even was thrilled with
a vague memory of the old shiftless camp they had both
abandoned. A certain instinct he knew
not why, or less still that it might be one of delicacy made
him alight before they reached the first house.
Bidding the carriage wait, Uncle Billy entered, and
was informed by a blowzy Irish laundress at a tub
that Jim Foster, or “Arkansaw Jim,” lived
at the fourth shanty “beyant.” He
was at home, for “he’d shprained his fût.”
Uncle Billy hurried on, stopped before the door of
a shanty scarcely less rude than their old cabin,
and half timidly pushed it open. A growling voice
from within, a figure that rose hurriedly, leaning
on a stick, with an attempt to fly, but in the same
moment sank back in a chair with an hysterical laugh and
Uncle Billy stood in the presence of his old partner!
But as Uncle Billy darted forward, Uncle Jim rose
again, and this time with outstretched hands.
Uncle Billy caught them, and in one supreme pressure
seemed to pour out and transfuse his whole simple
soul into his partner’s. There they swayed
each other backwards and forwards and sideways by their
still clasped hands, until Uncle Billy, with a glance
at Uncle Jim’s bandaged ankle, shoved him by
sheer force down into his chair.
Uncle Jim was first to speak.
“Caught, b’ gosh! I mighter known
you’d be as big a fool as me! Look you,
Billy Fall, do you know what you’ve done?
You’ve druv me out er the streets whar I was
makin’ an honest livin’, by day, on three
crossin’s! Yes,” he laughed forgivingly,
“you druv me out er it, by day, jest because
I reckoned that some time I might run into your darned
fool face,” another laugh and a grasp
of the hand, “and then, b’gosh!
not content with ruinin’ my business by
day, when I took to it at night, you took
to goin’ out at nights too, and so put a stopper
on me there! Shall I tell you what else you did?
Well, by the holy poker! I owe this sprained
foot to your darned foolishness and my own, for it
was getting away from you one night after the
theatre that I got run into and run over!
“Ye see,” he went on,
unconscious of Uncle Billy’s paling face, and
with a naïveté, though perhaps not a delicacy, equal
to Uncle Billy’s own, “I had to play roots
on you with that lock-box business and these letters,
because I did not want you to know what I was up to,
for you mightn’t like it, and might think it
was lowerin’ to the old firm, don’t yer
see? I wouldn’t hev gone into it, but I
was played out, and I don’t mind tellin’
you now, old man, that when I wrote you that first
chipper letter from the lock-box I hedn’t eat
anythin’ for two days. But it’s all
right now,” with a laugh. “Then
I got into this business thinkin’
it nothin’ jest the very last thing and
do you know, old pard, I couldn’t tell anybody
but you and, in fact, I kept it jest
to tell you I’ve made nine hundred
and fifty-six dollars! Yes, sir, nine hundred
and fifty-six dollars! solid money,
in Adams and Co.’s Bank, just out er my trade.”
“Wot trade?” asked Uncle Billy.
Uncle Jim pointed to the corner, where
stood a large, heavy crossing-sweeper’s broom.
“That trade.”
“Certingly,” said Uncle Billy, with a
quick laugh.
“It’s an outdoor trade,”
said Uncle Jim gravely, but with no suggestion of
awkwardness or apology in his manner; “and thar
ain’t much difference between sweepin’
a crossin’ with a broom and raking over tailing
with a rake, only wot ye
get with a broom you have handed
to ye, and ye don’t have to pick
it up and Fish it out
er the wet rocks and sluice-gushin’; and
it’s a heap less tiring to the back.”
“Certingly, you bet!”
said Uncle Billy enthusiastically, yet with a certain
nervous abstraction.
“I’m glad ye say so; for
yer see I didn’t know at first how you’d
tumble to my doing it, until I’d made my pile.
And ef I hadn’t made it, I wouldn’t hev
set eyes on ye agin, old pard never!”
“Do you mind my runnin’
out a minit,” said Uncle Billy, rising.
“You see, I’ve got a friend waitin’
for me outside and I reckon” he
stammered “I’ll jest run out
and send him off, so I kin talk comf’ble to
ye.”
“Ye ain’t got anybody
you’re owin’ money to,” said Uncle
Jim earnestly, “anybody follerin’ you
to get paid, eh? For I kin jest set down right
here and write ye off a check on the bank!”
“No,” said Uncle Billy.
He slipped out of the door, and ran like a deer to
the waiting carriage. Thrusting a twenty-dollar
gold-piece into the coachman’s hand, he said
hoarsely, “I ain’t wantin’ that kerridge
just now; ye ken drive around and hev a private jamboree
all by yourself the rest of the afternoon, and then
come and wait for me at the top o’ the hill
yonder.”
Thus quit of his gorgeous equipage,
he hurried back to Uncle Jim, grasping his ten-thousand
dollar draft in his pocket. He was nervous, he
was frightened, but he must get rid of the draft and
his story, and have it over. But before he could
speak he was unexpectedly stopped by Uncle Jim.
“Now, look yer, Billy boy!”
said Uncle Jim; “I got suthin’ to say to
ye and I might as well clear it off my mind
at once, and then we can start fair agin. Now,”
he went on, with a half laugh, “wasn’t
it enough for me to go on pretendin’ I
was rich and doing a big business, and gettin’
up that lock-box dodge so as ye couldn’t find
out whar I hung out and what I was doin’ wasn’t
it enough for me to go on with all this play-actin’,
but you, you long-legged or nary cuss! must get
up and go to lyin’ and play-actin’, too!”
“Me play-actin’? Me lyin’?”
gasped Uncle Billy.
Uncle Jim leaned back in his chair
and laughed. “Do you think you could fool
me? Do you think I didn’t see through
your little game o’ going to that swell Oriental,
jest as if ye’d made a big strike and
all the while ye wasn’t sleepin’ or eatin’
there, but jest wrastlin’ yer hash and having
a roll down at the Good Cheer! Do you think I
didn’t spy on ye and find that out? Oh,
you long-eared jackass-rabbit!”
He laughed until the tears came into
his eyes, and Uncle Billy laughed too, albeit until
the laugh on his face became quite fixed, and he was
fain to bury his head in his handkerchief.
“And yet,” said Uncle
Jim, with a deep breath, “gosh! I was frighted jest
for a minit! I thought, mebbe, you had made
a big strike when I got your first letter and
I made up my mind what I’d do! And then
I remembered you was jest that kind of an open sluice
that couldn’t keep anythin’ to yourself,
and you’d have been sure to have yelled it out
to me the first thing. So I waited.
And I found you out, you old sinner!” He reached
forward and dug Uncle Billy in the ribs.
“What would you hev done?”
said Uncle Billy, after an hysterical collapse.
Uncle Jim’s face grew grave
again. “I’d hev I’d hev
cl’ared out! Out er ’Frisco! out
er Californy! out er Ameriky! I couldn’t
have stud it! Don’t think I would hev begrudged
ye yer luck! No man would have been gladder than
me.” He leaned forward again, and laid his
hand caressingly upon his partner’s arm “Don’t
think I’d hev wanted to take a penny of it but
I thar! I couldn’t hev stood
up under it! To hev had you, you that I
left behind, comin’ down here rollin’ in
wealth and new partners and friends, and arrive upon
me and this shanty and” he
threw towards the corner of the room a terrible gesture,
none the less terrible that it was illogical and inconsequent
to all that had gone before “and and that
broom!”
There was a dead silence in the room.
With it Uncle Billy seemed to feel himself again transported
to the homely cabin at Cedar Camp and that fateful
night, with his partner’s strange, determined
face before him as then. He even fancied that
he heard the roaring of the pines without, and did
not know that it was the distant sea.
But after a minute Uncle Jim resumed:
“Of course you’ve made a little raise
somehow, or you wouldn’t be here?”
“Yes,” said Uncle Billy
eagerly. “Yes! I’ve got” He
stopped and stammered. “I’ve got a few
hundreds.”
“Oh, oh!” said Uncle Jim
cheerfully. He paused, and then added earnestly,
“I say! You ain’t got left, over and
above your d d foolishness at the Oriental,
as much as five hundred dollars?”
“I’ve got,” said
Uncle Billy, blushing a little over his first deliberate
and affected lie, “I’ve got at least five
hundred and seventy-two dollars. Yes,”
he added tentatively, gazing anxiously at his partner,
“I’ve got at least that.”
“Je whillikins!”
said Uncle Jim, with a laugh. Then eagerly, “Look
here, pard! Then we’re on velvet!
I’ve got nine hundred; put your five
with that, and I know a little ranch that we can get
for twelve hundred. That’s what I’ve
been savin’ up for that’s my
little game! No more minin’ for me.
It’s got a shanty twice as big as our old cabin,
nigh on a hundred acres, and two mustangs. We
can run it with two Chinamen and jest make it howl!
Wot yer say eh?” He extended his hand.
“I’m in,” said Uncle
Billy, radiantly grasping Uncle Jim’s. But
his smile faded, and his clear simple brow wrinkled
in two lines.
Happily Uncle Jim did not notice it.
“Now, then, old pard,” he said brightly,
“we’ll have a gay old time to-night one
of our jamborees! I’ve got some whiskey
here and a deck o’ cards, and we’ll have
a little game, you understand, but not for ‘keeps’
now! No, siree; we’ll play for beans.”
A sudden light illuminated Uncle Billy’s
face again, but he said, with a grim desperation,
“Not to-night! I’ve got to go into
town. That fren’ o’ mine expects
me to go to the theayter, don’t ye see?
But I’ll be out to-morrow at sun-up, and we’ll
fix up this thing o’ the ranch.”
“Seems to me you’re kinder
stuck on this fren’,” grunted Uncle Jim.
Uncle Billy’s heart bounded
at his partner’s jealousy. “No but
I must, you know,” he returned, with a
faint laugh.
“I say it ain’t a her,
is it?” said Uncle Jim.
Uncle Billy achieved a diabolical
wink and a creditable blush at his lie.
“Billy?”
“Jim!”
And under cover of this festive gallantry
Uncle Billy escaped. He ran through the gathering
darkness, and toiled up the shifting sands to the
top of the hill, where he found the carriage waiting.
“Wot,” said Uncle Billy
in a low confidential tone to the coachman, “wot
do you ’Frisco fellers allow to be the best,
biggest, and riskiest gamblin’-saloon here?
Suthin’ high-toned, you know?”
The negro grinned. It was the
usual case of the extravagant spendthrift miner, though
perhaps he had expected a different question and order.
“Dey is de ‘Polka,’
de ‘El Dorado,’ and de ‘Arcade’
saloon, boss,” he said, flicking his whip meditatively.
“Most gents from de mines prefer de ‘Polka,’
for dey is dancing wid de gals frown in. But de
real prima facie place for gents who go for buckin’
agin de tiger and straight-out gamblin’ is de
‘Arcade.’”
“Drive there like thunder!”
said Uncle Billy, leaping into the carriage.
True to his word, Uncle Billy was
at his partner’s shanty early the next morning.
He looked a little tired, but happy, and had brought
a draft with him for five hundred and seventy-five
dollars, which he explained was the total of his capital.
Uncle Jim was overjoyed. They would start for
Napa that very day, and conclude the purchase of the
ranch; Uncle Jim’s sprained foot was a sufficient
reason for his giving up his present vocation, which
he could also sell at a small profit. His domestic
arrangements were very simple; there was nothing to
take with him there was everything to leave
behind. And that afternoon, at sunset, the two
reunited partners were seated on the deck of the Napa
boat as she swung into the stream.
Uncle Billy was gazing over the railing
with a look of abstracted relief towards the Golden
Gate, where the sinking sun seemed to be drawing towards
him in the ocean a golden stream that was forever pouring
from the Bay and the three-hilled city beside it.
What Uncle Billy was thinking of, or what the picture
suggested to him, did not transpire; for Uncle Jim,
who, emboldened by his holiday, was luxuriating in
an evening paper, suddenly uttered a long-drawn whistle,
and moved closer to his abstracted partner. “Look
yer,” he said, pointing to a paragraph he had
evidently just read, “just you listen to this,
and see if we ain’t lucky, you and me, to be
jest wot we air trustin’ to our own
hard work and not thinkin’ o’
‘strikes’ and ‘fortins.’
Jest unbutton yer ears, Billy, while I reel off this
yer thing I’ve jest struck in the paper, and
see what d d fools some men kin make o’
themselves. And that theer reporter wot wrote
it must hev seed it reely!”
Uncle Jim cleared his throat, and
holding the paper close to his eyes read aloud slowly:
“’A scene of excitement
that recalled the palmy days of ’49 was witnessed
last night at the Arcade Saloon. A stranger, who
might have belonged to that reckless epoch, and who
bore every evidence of being a successful Pike County
miner out on a “spree,” appeared at one
of the tables with a negro coachman bearing two heavy
bags of gold. Selecting a faro-bank as his base
of operations, he began to bet heavily and with apparent
recklessness, until his play excited the breathless
attention of every one. In a few moments he had
won a sum variously estimated at from eighty to a
hundred thousand dollars. A rumor went round the
room that it was a concerted attempt to “break
the bank” rather than the drunken freak of a
Western miner, dazzled by some successful strike.
To this theory the man’s careless and indifferent
bearing towards his extraordinary gains lent great
credence. The attempt, if such it was, however,
was unsuccessful. After winning ten times in succession
the luck turned, and the unfortunate “bucker”
was cleared out not only of his gains, but of his
original investment, which may be placed roughly at
twenty thousand dollars. This extraordinary play
was witnessed by a crowd of excited players, who were
less impressed by even the magnitude of the stakes
than the perfect sang-froid and recklessness of the
player, who, it is said, at the close of the game tossed
a twenty-dollar gold-piece to the banker and smilingly
withdrew. The man was not recognized by any of
the habitues of the place.’
“There!” said Uncle Jim,
as he hurriedly slurred over the French substantive
at the close, “did ye ever see such God-forsaken
foolishness?”
Uncle Billy lifted his abstracted
eyes from the current, still pouring its unreturning
gold into the sinking sun, and said, with a deprecatory
smile, “Never!”
Nor even in the days of prosperity
that visited the Great Wheat Ranch of “Fall
and Foster” did he ever tell his secret to his
partner.