One works quickly when prodded by
the pique of curiosity. And in spite of all
that omens could foretell, in spite of the dull, gloomy
life which had done its best to fashion a matter-of-fact
brain for Robert Fairchild, one sentence in that letter
had found an echo, had started a pulsating something
within him that he never before had known:
“-It is the blood of an adventurer.”
And it seemed that Robert Fairchild
needed no more than the knowledge to feel the tingle
of it; the old house suddenly became stuffy and prison-like
as he wandered through it. Within his pocket
were two envelopes filled with threats of the future,
defying him to advance and fight it out,-whatever
it might be. Again and again pounded through
his head the fact that only a night of travel intervened
between Indianapolis and St. Louis; within twelve
hours he could be in the office of Henry Beamish.
And then-
A hurried resolution. A hasty
packing of a traveling bag and the cashing of a check
at the cigar store down on the corner. A wakeful
night while the train clattered along upon its journey.
Then morning and walking of streets until office
hours. At last:
“I ’m Robert Fairchild,”
he said, as he faced a white-haired, Cupid-faced man
in the rather dingy offices of the Princess Building.
A slow smile spread over the pudgy features of the
genial appearing attorney, and he waved a fat hand
toward the office’s extra chair.
“Sit down, Son,” came
casually. “Need n’t have announced
yourself. I ’d have known you-just
like your father, Boy. How is he?” Then
his face suddenly sobered. “I ’m
afraid your presence is the answer. Am I right?”
Fairchild nodded gravely. The
old attorney slowly placed his fat hands together,
peaking the fingers, and stared out of the window to
the grimy roof and signboards of the next building.
“Perhaps it’s better so,”
he said at last. “We had n’t seen
each other in ten years-not since I went
up to Indianapolis to have my last talk with him.
Did he get any cheerier before-he went?”
“No.”
“Just the same, huh? Always waiting?”
“Afraid of every step on the veranda, of every
knock at the door.”
Again the attorney stared out of the window.
“And you?”
“I?” Fairchild leaned forward in his
chair. “I don’t understand.”
“Are you afraid?”
“Of what?”
The lawyer smiled.
“I don’t know. Only-”
and he leaned forward-“it’s
just as though I were living my younger days over
this morning. It doesn’t seem any time
at all since your father was sitting just about where
you are now, and gad, Boy, how much you look like
he looked that morning! The same gray-blue,
earnest eyes, the same dark hair, the same strong shoulders,
and good, manly chin, the same build-and
look of determination about him. The call of
adventure was in his blood, and he sat there all enthusiastic,
telling me what he intended doing and asking my advice-although
he would n’t have followed it if I had given
it. Back home was a baby and the woman he loved,
and out West was sudden wealth, waiting for the right
man to come along and find it. Gad!” White-haired
old Beamish chuckled with the memory of it. “He
almost made me throw over the law business that morning
and go out adventuring with him! Then four years
later,” the tone changed suddenly, “he
came back.”
“What then?” Fairchild
was on the edge of his chair. But Beamish only
spread his hands.
“Truthfully, Boy, I don’t
know. I have guessed-but I won’t
tell you what. All I know is that your father
found what he was looking for and was on the point
of achieving his every dream, when something happened.
Then three men simply disappeared from the mining camp,
announcing that they had failed and were going to
hunt new diggings. That was all. One of
them was your father-”
“But you said that he ’d found-”
“Silver, running twenty ounces
to the ton on an eight-inch vein which gave evidences
of being only the beginning of a bonanza! I know,
because he had written me that, a month before.”
“And he abandoned it?”
“He ’d forgotten what
he had written when I saw him again. I did n’t
question him. I did n’t want to-his
face told me enough to guess that I would n’t
learn. He went home then, after giving me enough
money to pay the taxes on the mine for the next twenty
years, simply as his attorney and without divulging
his whereabouts. I did it. Eight years
or so later, I saw him in Indianapolis. He gave
me more money-enough for eleven or twelve
years-”
“And that was ten years ago?”
Robert Fairchild’s eyes were reminiscent.
“I remember-I was only a kid.
He sold off everything he had, except the house.”
Henry Beamish walked to his safe and
fumbled there a moment, to return at last with a few
slips of paper.
“Here ’s the answer,”
he said quietly, “the taxes are paid until 1922.”
Robert Fairchild studied the receipts
carefully-futilely. They told him
nothing. The lawyer stood looking down upon him;
at last he laid a hand on his shoulder.
“Boy,” came quietly, “I
know just about what you ’re thinking.
I ’ve spent a few hours at the same kind
of a job myself, and I ’ve called old Henry
Beamish more kinds of a fool than you can think of
for not coming right out flat-footed and making Thornton
tell me the whole story. But some way, when
I ’d look into those eyes with the fire all
dead and ashen within them, and see the lines of an
old man in his young face, I-well, I guess
I ’m too soft-hearted to make folks suffer.
I just couldn’t do it!”
“So you can tell me nothing?”
“I ’m afraid that’s
true-in one way. In another I ’m
a fund of information. To-night you and I will
go to Indianapolis and probate the will-it’s
simple enough; I ’ve had it in my safe for
ten years. After that, you become the owner of
the Blue Poppy mine, to do with as you choose.”
“But-”
The old lawyer chuckled.
“Don’t ask my advice,
Boy. I have n’t any. Your father
told me what to do if you decided to try your luck-and
silver ’s at $1.29. It means a lot of
money for anybody who can produce pay ore-unless
what he said about the mine pinching out was true.”
Again the thrill of a new thing went
through Robert Fairchild’s veins, something
he never had felt until twelve hours before; again
the urge for strange places, new scenes, the fire
of the hunt after the hidden wealth of silver-seamed
hills. Somewhere it lay awaiting him; nor did
he even know in what form. Robert Fairchild’s
life had been a plodding thing of books and accounts,
of high desks which as yet had failed to stoop his
shoulders, of stuffy offices which had been thwarted
so far in their grip at his lung power; the long walk
in the morning and the tired trudge homeward at night
to save petty carfare for a silent man’s pettier
luxuries had looked after that. But the recoil
had not exerted itself against an office-cramped brain,
a dusty ledger-filled life that suddenly felt itself
crying out for the free, open country, without hardly
knowing what the term meant. Old Beamish caught
the light in the eyes, the quick contraction of the
hands, and smiled.
“You don’t need to tell
me, Son,” he said slowly. “I can
see the symptoms. You ’ve got the
fever-You ’re going to work that mine.
Perhaps,” and he shrugged his shoulders, “it’s
just as well. But there are certain things to
remember.”
“Name them.”
“Ohadi is thirty-eight miles
from Denver. That’s your goal. Out
there, they ’ll tell you how the mine caved in,
and how Thornton Fairchild, who had worked it, together
with his two men, Harry Harkins, a Cornishman, and
‘Sissie’ Larsen, a Swede, left town late
one night for Cripple Creek-and that they
never came back. That’s the story they
’ll tell you. Agree with it. Tell
them that Harkins, as far as you know, went back to
Cornwall, and that you have heard vaguely that Larsen
later followed the mining game farther out West.”
“Is it the truth?”
“How do I know? It ’s
good enough-people should n’t ask
questions. Tell nothing more than that-and
be careful of your friends. There is one man
to watch-if he is still alive. They
call him ‘Squint’ Rodaine, and he may
or may not still be there. I don’t know-I
’m only sure of the fact that your father hated
him, fought him and feared him. The mine tunnel
is two miles up Kentucky Gulch and one hundred yards
to the right. A surveyor can lead you to the
very spot. It’s been abandoned now for
thirty years. What you ’ll find there is
more than I can guess. But, Boy,” and
his hand clenched tight on Robert Fairchild’s
shoulder, “whatever you do, whatever you run
into, whatever friends or enemies you find awaiting
you, don’t let that light die out of your eyes
and don’t pull in that chin! If you find
a fight on your hands, whether it’s man, beast
or nature, sail into it! If you run into things
that cut your very heart out to learn-beat
’em down and keep going! And win!
There-that’s all the advice I know.
Meet me at the 11:10 train for Indianapolis.
Good-by.”
“Good-by-I ’ll
be there.” Fairchild grasped the pudgy
hand and left the office. For a moment afterward,
old Henry Beamish stood thinking and looking out over
the dingy roof adjacent. Then, somewhat absently,
he pressed the ancient electric button for his more
ancient stenographer.
“Call a messenger, please,”
he ordered when she entered, “I want to send
a cablegram.”