Wonderment which got nowhere.
The sheriff’s car returned before Fairchild
reached the bottom of the grade, and again stopped
to survey the scene of defeat, while Fairchild once
more told his story, deleting items which, to him,
appeared unnecessary for consumption by officers of
the law. Carefully the sheriff surveyed the winding
road before him and scratched his head.
“Don’t guess it would
have made much difference which way he went,”
came ruefully at last, “I never saw a fellow
turn loose with so much speed on a mountain road.
We never could have caught him!”
“Dangerous character?”
Fairchild hardly knew why he asked the question.
The sheriff smiled grimly.
“If it was the fellow we were
after, he was plenty dangerous. We were trailing
him on word from Denver-described the car
and said he ’d pulled a daylight hold-up on
a pay-wagon for the Smelter Company-so
when the car went through Golden, we took up the trail
a couple of blocks behind. He kept the same
speed for a little while until one of my deputies
got a little anxious and took a shot at a tire.
Man, how he turned on the juice! I thought
that thing was a jack rabbit the way it went up the
hill! We never had a chance after that!”
“And you ’re sure it was the same person?”
The sheriff toyed with the gear shift.
“You never can be sure about
nothing in this business,” came finally.
“But there ’s this to think about:
if that fellow was n’t guilty of something,
why did he run?”
“It might have been a kid in a stolen machine,”
came from the back seat.
“If it was, we ’ve
got to wait until we get a report on it. I guess
it’s us back to the office.”
The automobile went its way then,
and Fairchild his, still wondering; the sheriff’s
question, with a different gender, recurring again
and again:
“If she was n’t guilty of something, why
did she run?”
And why had she? More, why had
she been willing to give ten dollars in payment for
the mere changing of a tire? And why had she
not offered some explanation of it all? It was
a problem which almost wiped out for Robert Fairchild
the zest of the new life into which he was going,
the great gamble he was about to take. And so
thoroughly did it engross him that it was not until
a truck had come to a full stop behind him, and a
driver mingled a shout with the tooting of his horn,
that he turned to allow its passage.
“Did n’t hear you, old
man,” he apologized. “Could you give
a fellow a lift?”
“Guess so.” It was
friendly, even though a bit disgruntled; “hop
on.”
And Fairchild hopped, once more to
sit on the tailboard, swinging his legs, but this
time his eyes saw the ever-changing scenery without
noticing it. In spite of himself, Fairchild found
himself constantly staring at a vision of a pretty
girl in a riding habit, with dark-brown hair straying
about equally dark-brown eyes, almost frenzied in her
efforts to change a tire in time to elude a pursuing
sheriff. Some way, it all did n’t blend.
Pretty girls, no doubt, could commit infractions
of the law just as easily as ones less gifted with
good looks. Yet if this particular pretty girl
had held up a pay wagon, why did n’t the telephoned
notice from Denver state the fact, instead of referring
to her as a man? And if she had n’t committed
some sort of depredation against the law, why on earth
was she willing to part with ten dollars, merely to
save a few moments in changing a tire and thus elude
a sheriff? If there had been nothing wrong, could
not a moment of explanation have satisfied any one
of the fact? Anyway, were n’t the officers
looking for a man instead of for a woman? And
yet:
“If she was n’t guilty of something, why
did she run?”
It was too much for any one, and Fairchild
knew it. Yet he clung grimly to the mystery
as the truck clattered on, mile after mile, while
the broad road led along the sides of the hills, finally
to dip downward and run beside the bubbling Clear
Creek,-clear no longer in the memory of
the oldest inhabitant; but soiled by the silica from
ore deposits that, churned and rechurned, gave to
the stream a whitish, almost milk-like character,
as it twisted in and out of the tortuous canon on
its turbulent journey to the sea. But Fairchild
failed to notice either that or the fact that ancient,
age-whitened water wheels had begun to appear here
and there, where gulch miners, seekers after gold
in the silt of the creek’s bed, had abandoned
them years before; that now and then upon the hills
showed the gaunt scars of mine openings,-reminders
of dreams of a day long past; or even the more important
fact that in the distance, softened by the mellowing
rays of a dying sun, a small town gradually was coming
into view. A mile more, then the truck stopped
with a jerk.
“Where you bound for, pardner?”
Fairchild turned absently, then grinned in embarrassment.
“Ohadi.”
“That’s it, straight ahead. I turn
off here. Stranger?”
“Yep.”
“Miner?”
Fairchild shrugged his shoulders and
nodded noncommittally. The truck driver toyed
with his wheel.
“Just thought I ’d ask.
Plenty of work around here for single and double
jackers. Things are beginning to look up a bit-at
least in silver. Gold mines ain’t doing
much yet-but there ’s a good deal
happening with the white stuff.”
“Thanks. Do you know a good place to stop?”
“Yeh. Mother Howard’s
Boarding House. Everybody goes there, sooner
or later. You ’ll see it on the left-hand
side of the street before you get to the main block.
Good old girl; knows how to treat anybody in the
mining game from operators on down. She was here
when mining was mining!”
Which was enough recommendation for
Mother Howard. Fairchild lifted his bag from
the rear of the vehicle, waved a farewell to the driver
and started into the village. And then-for
once-the vision of the girl departed, momentarily,
to give place to other thoughts, other pictures, of
a day long gone.
The sun was slanting low, throwing
deep shadows from the hills into the little valley
with its chattering, milk-white stream, softening the
scars of the mountains with their great refuse dumps;
reminders of hopes of twenty years before and as bare
of vegetation as in the days when the pick and gad
and drill of the prospector tore the rock loose from
its hiding place under the surface of the ground.
Nature, in the mountainous country, resents any outrage
against her dignity; the scars never heal; the mine
dumps of a score of years ago remain the same, without
a single shrub or weed or blade of grass growing in
the big heaps of rocky refuse to shield them.
But now it was all softened and aglow
with sunset. The deep red buildings of the Argonaut
tunnel-a great, criss-crossing hole through
the hills that once connected with more than thirty
mines and their feverish activities-were
denuded of their rust and lack of repair. The
steam from the air-compressing engine, furnishing the
necessary motive power for the drills that still worked
in the hills, curled upward in billowy, rainbow-like
coloring. The scrub pines of the almost barren
mountains took on a fluffier, softer tone; the jutting
rocks melted away into their own shadows, it was a
picture of peace and of memories.
And it had been here that Thornton
Fairchild, back in the nineties, had dreamed his dreams
and fought his fight. It had been here-somewhere
in one of the innumerable canons that led away from
the little town on every side-that Thornton
Fairchild had followed the direction of “float
ore” to its resting place, to pursue the vagrant
vein through the hills, to find it at last, to gloat
over it in his letters to Beamish and then to-what?
A sudden cramping caught the son’s
heart, and it pounded with something akin to fear.
The old foreboding of his father’s letter had
come upon him, the mysterious thread of that elusive,
intangible Thing, great enough to break the will and
resistance of a strong man and turn him into a weakling-silent,
white-haired-sitting by a window, waiting
for death. What had it been? Why had it
come upon his father? How could it be fought?
All so suddenly, Robert Fairchild had realized that
he was in the country of the invisible enemy, there
to struggle against it without the slightest knowledge
of what it was or how it could be combated.
His forehead felt suddenly damp and cold. He
brushed away the beady perspiration with a gesture
almost of anger, then with a look of relief, turned
in at a small white gate toward a big, rambling building
which proclaimed itself, by the sign on the door, to
be Mother Howard’s Boarding House.
A moment of waiting, then he faced
a gray-haired, kindly faced woman, who stared at him
with wide-open eyes as she stood, hands on hips, before
him.
“Don’t you tell me I don’t
know you!” she burst forth at last.
“I ’m afraid you don’t.”
“Don’t I?” Mother
Howard cocked her head. “If you ain’t
a Fairchild, I ’ll never feed another miner
corned beef and cabbage as long as I live. Ain’t
you now?” she persisted, “ain’t you
a Fairchild?”
The man laughed in spite of himself. “You
guessed it.”
“You ’re Thornton Fairchild’s
boy!” She had reached out for his handbag,
and then, bustling about him, drew him into the big
“parlor” with its old-fashioned, plush-covered
chairs, its picture album, its glass-covered statuary
on the old, onyx mantel. “Did n’t
I know you the minute I saw you? Land, you’re
the picture of your dad! Sakes alive, how is
he?”
There was a moment of silence.
Fairchild found himself suddenly halting and boyish
as he stood before her.
“He ’s-he ’s gone, Mrs.
Howard.”
“Dead?” She put up both
hands. “It don’t seem possible.
And me remembering him looking just like you, full
of life and strong and-”
“Our pictures of him are a good
deal different. I-I guess you knew
him when everything was all right for him. Things
were different after he got home again.”
Mother Howard looked quickly about
her, then with a swift motion closed the door.
“Son,” she asked in a
low voice, “did n’t he ever get over it?”
“It?” Fairchild felt
that he stood on the threshold of discoveries.
“What do you mean?”
“Didn’t he ever tell you anything, Son?”
“No. I-”
“Well, there was n’t any
need to.” But Mother Howard’s sudden
embarrassment, her change of color, told Fairchild
it was n’t the truth. “He just had
a little bad luck out here, that was all. His-his
mine pinched out just when he thought he ’d struck
it rich-or something like that.”
“Are you sure that is the truth?”
For a second they faced each other,
Robert Fairchild serious and intent, Mother Howard
looking at him with eyes defiant, yet compassionate.
Suddenly they twinkled, the lips broke from their
straight line into a smile, and a kindly old hand reached
out to take him by the arm.
“Don’t you stand there
and try to tell Mother Howard she don’t know
what she ’s talking about!” came in tones
of mock severity. “Hear me? Now,
you get up them steps and wash up for dinner.
Take the first room on the right. It’s
a nice, cheery place. And get that dust and grime
off of you. The dinner bell will ring in about
fifteen minutes, and they ’s always a rush for
the food. So hurry!”
In his room, Fairchild tried not to
think. His brain was becoming too crammed with
queries, with strange happenings and with the aggravating
mysticisms of the life into which his father’s
death had thrown him to permit clearness of vision.
Even in Mother Howard, he had not been able to escape
it; she told all too plainly, both by her actions and
her words, that she knew something of the mystery of
the past,-and had falsified to keep the
knowledge from him.
It was too galling for thought.
Robert Fairchild hastily made his toilet, then answered
the ringing of the dinner bell, to be introduced to
strong-shouldered men who gathered about the long tables;
Cornishmen, who talked an “h-less” language,
ruddy-faced Americans, and a sprinkling of English,
all of whom conversed about things which were to Fairchild
as so much Greek,-of “levels”
and “stopes” and “winzes”,
of “skips” and “manways” and
“raises”, which meant nothing to the man
who yet must master them all, if he were to follow
his ambition. Some ate with their knives, meeting
the food halfway from their plates; some acted and
spoke in a manner revealing a college education and
the poise that it gives. But all were as one,
all talking together; the operator no more enthusiastic
than the man whose sole recompense was the five dollars
a day he received for drilling powder holes; all happy,
all optimistic, all engrossed in the hopes and dreams
that only mining can give. And among them Mother
Howard moved, getting the latest gossip from each,
giving her views on every problem and incidentally
seeing that the plates were filled to the satisfaction
of even the hungriest.
As for Robert Fairchild, he spoke
but seldom, except to acknowledge the introductions
as Mother Howard made him known to each of his table
mates. But it was not aloofness; it was the fact
that these men were talking of things which Fairchild
longed to know, but failed, for the moment, to master.
From the first, the newcomer had liked the men about
him, liked the ruggedness, the mingling of culture
with the lack of it, liked the enthusiasm, the muscle
and brawn, liked them all,-all but two.
Instinctively, from the first mention
of his name, he felt they were watching him, two men
who sat far in the rear of the big dining room, older
than the other occupants, far less inviting in appearance.
One was small, though chunky in build, with sandy
hair and eyebrows; with weak, filmy blue eyes over
which the lids blinked constantly. The other,
black-haired with streaks of gray, powerful in his
build, and with a walrus-like mustache drooping over
hard lips, was the sort of antithesis naturally to
be found in the company of the smaller, sandy complexioned
man. Who they were, what they were, Fairchild
did not know, except from the general attributes which
told that they too followed the great gamble of mining.
But one thing was certain; they watched him throughout
the meal; they talked about him in low tones and ceased
when Mother Howard came near; they seemed to recognize
in him some one who brought both curiosity and innate
enmity to the surface. And more; long before
the rest had finished their meal, they rose and left
the room, intent, apparently, upon some important mission.
After that, Fairchild ate with less
of a relish. In his mind was the certainty that
these two men knew him-or at least knew
about him-and that they did not relish
his presence. Nor were his suspicions long in
being fulfilled. Hardly had he reached the hall,
when the beckoning eyes of Mother Howard signaled
to him. Instinctively he waited for the other
diners to pass him, then looked eagerly toward Mother
Howard as she once more approached.
“I don’t know what you
’re doing here,” came shortly, “but
I want to.”
Fairchild straightened. “There
is n’t much to tell you,” he answered
quietly. “My father left me the Blue Poppy
mine in his will. I ’m here to work it.”
“Know anything about mining?”
“Not a thing.”
“Or the people you ’re liable to have
to buck up against?”
“Very little.”
“Then, Son,” and Mother
Howard laid a kindly hand on his arm, “whatever
you do, keep your plans to yourself and don’t
talk too much. And what’s more, if you
happen to get into communication with Blindeye Bozeman
and Taylor Bill, lie your head off. Maybe you
saw ’em, a sandy-haired fellow and a big man
with a black mustache, sitting at the back of the
room?” Fairchild nodded. “Well,
stay away from them. They belong to ‘Squint’
Rodaine. Know him?”
She shot the question sharply. Again Fairchild
nodded.
“I ’ve heard the name. Who
is he?”
A voice called to Mother Howard from
the dining room. She turned away, then leaned
close to Robert Fairchild. “He ’s
a miner, and he ’s always been a miner.
Right now, he ’s mixed up with some of the
biggest people in town. He ’s always been
a man to be afraid of-and he was your father’s
worst enemy!”
Then, leaving Fairchild staring after
her, she moved on to her duties in the kitchen.