They started forward then, making
their way through the slime and silt of the drift
flooring, slippery and wet from years of flooding.
From above them the water dripped from the seep-soaked
hanging-wall, which showed rough and splotchy in the
gleam of the carbides and seemed to absorb the light
until they could see only a few feet before them as
they clambered over water-soaked timbers, disjointed
rails of the little tram track which once had existed
there, and floundered in and out of the greasy pockets
of mud which the floating ties of the track had left
behind. On-on-they stopped.
Progress had become impossible.
Before them, twisted and torn and piled about in
muddy confusion, the timbers of the mine suddenly showed
in a perfect barricade, supplanted from behind by piles
of muck and rocky refuse which left no opening to
the chamber of the stope beyond. Harry’s
carbide went high in the air, and he slid forward,
to stand a moment in thought before the obstacle.
At place after place he surveyed it, finally to turn
with a shrug of his shoulders.
“It’s going to mean more
’n a month of the ’ardest kind of work,
Boy,” came his final announcement. “’Ow
it could ’ave caved in like that is more
than I know. I ’m sure we timbered it good.”
“And look-”
Fairchild was beside him now, with his carbide-“how
everything’s torn, as though from an explosion.”
“It seems that wye. But
you can’t tell. Rock ’as an awful
way of churning up things when it decides to turn
loose. All I know is we ’ve got a
job cut out for us.”
There was only one thing to do,-turn
back. Fifteen minutes more and they were on
the surface, making their plans; projects which entailed
work from morning until night for many a day to come.
There was a track to lay, an extra skip to be lowered,
that they might haul the muck and broken timbers from
the cave-in to the shaft and on out to the dump.
There were stulls and mill-stakes and laggs to cut
and to be taken into the shaft. And there was
good, hard work of muscle and brawn and pick and shovel,
that muck might be torn away from the cave-in, and
good timbers put in place, to hold the hanging wall
from repeating its escapade of eighteen years before.
Harry reached for a new axe and indicated another.
“We ’ll cut ties first,” he announced.
And thus began the weeks of effort,
weeks in which they worked with crude appliances;
weeks in which they dragged the heavy stulls and other
timbers into the tunnel and then lowered them down
the shaft to the drift, two hundred feet below, only
to follow them in their counter-balanced bucket and
laboriously pile them along the sides of the drift,
there to await use later on. Weeks in which they
worked in mud and slime, as they shoveled out the
muck and with their gad hooks tore down loose portions
of the hanging wall to form a roadbed for their new
tram. Weeks in which they cut ties, in which
they crawled from their beds even before dawn, nor
returned to Mother Howard’s boarding house until
long after dark; weeks in which they seemed to lose
all touch with the outside world. Their whole
universe had turned into a tunnel far beneath the
surface of the earth, a drift leading to a cave-in,
which they had not yet begun to even indent with excavations.
It was a slow, galling progress, but
they kept at it. Gradually the tram line began
to take shape, pieced together from old portions of
the track which still lay in the drift and supplemented
by others bought cheaply at that graveyard of miner’s
hopes,-the junk yard in Ohadi. At
last it was finished; the work of moving the heavy
timbers became easier now as they were shunted on
to the small tram truck from which the body had been
dismantled and trundled along the rails to the cave-in,
there to be piled in readiness for their use.
And finally-
A pick swung in the air, to give forth
a chunky, smacking sound, as it struck water-softened,
spongy wood. The attack against the cave-in had
begun, to progress with seeming rapidity for a few
hours, then to cease, until the two men could remove
the debris which they had dug out and haul it by slow,
laborious effort to the surface. But it was a
beginning, and they kept at it.
A foot at a time they tore away the
old, broken, splintered timbers and the rocky refuse
which lay piled behind each shivered beam; only to
stop, carry away the muck, and then rebuild.
And it was effort,-effort which strained
every muscle of two strong men, as with pulleys and
handmade, crude cranes, they raised the big logs and
propped them in place against further encroachment
of the hanging wall. Cold and damp, in the moist
air of the tunnel they labored, but there was a joy
in it all. Down here they could forget Squint
Rodaine and his chalky-faced son; down here they could
feel that they were working toward a goal and lay
aside the handicap which humans might put in their
path.
Day after day of labor and the indentation
upon the cave-in grew from a matter of feet to one
of yards. A week. Two. Then, as Harry
swung his pick, he lurched forward and went to his
knees. “I ’ve gone through!”
he announced in happy surprise. “I ’ve
gone through. We ’re at the end of it!”
Up went Fairchild’s carbide.
Where the pick still hung in the rocky mass, a tiny
hole showed, darker than the surrounding refuse.
He put forth a hand and clawed at the earth about
the tool; it gave way beneath his touch, and there
was only vacancy beyond. Again Harry raised
his pick and swung it with force. Fairchild joined
him. A moment more and they were staring at
a hole which led to darkness, and there was joy in
Harry’s voice as he made a momentary survey.
“It’s fairly dry be’ind
there,” he announced. “Otherwise
we ’d have been scrambling around in water up
to our necks. We ’re lucky there, any’ow.”
Again the attack and again the hole
widened. At last Harry straightened.
“We can go in now,” came
finally. “Are you willing to go with me?”
“Of course. Why not?”
The Cornishman’s hand went to his mustache.
“I ain’t tickled about what we ’re
liable to find.”
“You mean ?”
But Harry stopped him.
“Let’s don’t talk about it till
we ’ave to. Come on.”
Silently they crawled through the
opening, the silt and fine rock rattling about them
as they did so, to come upon fairly dry earth on the
other side, and to start forward. Under the rays
of the carbides, they could see that the track here
was in fairly good condition; the only moisture being
that of a natural seepage which counted for little.
The timbers still stood dry and firm, except where
dripping water in a few cases had caused the blocks
to become spongy and great holes to be pressed in
them by the larger timbers which held back the tremendous
weight from above. Suddenly, as they walked along.
Harry took the lead, holding his lantern far ahead
of him, with one big hand behind it, as though for
a reflector. Then, just as suddenly, he turned.
“Let’s go out,” came shortly.
“Why?”
“It’s there!” In the light of the
lantern,
Harry’s face was white, his big lips livid.
“Let’s go-”
But Fairchild stopped him.
“Harry,” he said, and
there was determination in his voice, “if it’s
there-we ’ve got to face it.
I ’ll be the one who will suffer. My
father is gone. There are no accusations where
he rests now; I ’m sure of that. If-if
he ever did anything in his life that wasn’t
right, he paid for it. We don’t know what
happened, Harry-all we are sure of is that
if it’s what we ’re-we ’re
afraid of, we ’ve gone too far now to turn
back. Don’t you think that certain people
would make an investigation if we should happen to
quit the mine now?”
“The Rodaines!”
“Exactly. They would scent
something, and within an hour they ’d be down
in here, snooping around. And how much worse
would it be for them to tell the news-than
for us!”
“Nobody ’as to tell it-”
Harry was staring at his carbide flare-“there
’s a wye.”
“But we can’t take it,
Harry. In my father’s letter was the statement
that he made only one mistake-that of fear.
I ’m going to believe him-and in
spite of what I find here, I ’m going to hold
him innocent, and I ’m going to be fair and
square and aboveboard about it all. The world
can think what it pleases-about him and
about me. There ’s nothing on my conscience-and
I know that if my father had not made the mistake
of running away when he did, there would have been
nothing on his.”
Harry shook his head.
“’E could n’t do
much else, Boy. Rodaine was stronger in some
ways then than he is now. That was in different
days. That was in times when Squint Rodaine
could ’ave gotten a ’undred men together
quicker ’n a cat’s wink and lynched a
man without ’im ’aving a trial or anything.
And if I ’d been your father, I ’d ’ave
done the same as ’e did. I ’d ’ave
run too-’e ’d ’ave
paid for it with ’is life if ’e didn’t,
guilty or not guilty. And-”
he looked sharply toward the younger man-“you
say to go on?”
“Go on,” said Fairchild,
and he spoke the words between tightly clenched teeth.
Harry turned his light before him, and once more
shielded it with his big hand. A step-two,
then:
“Look-there-over by the
footwall!”
Fairchild forced his eyes in the direction
designated and stared intently. At first it
appeared only like a succession of disjointed, broken
stones, lying in straggly fashion along the footwall
of the drift where it widened into the stope, or upward
slant on the vein. Then, it came forth clearer,
the thin outlines of something which clutched at the
heart of Robert Fairchild, which sickened him, which
caused him to fight down a sudden, panicky desire to
shield his eyes and to run,-a heap of age-denuded
bones, the scraps of a miner’s costume still
clinging to them, the heavy shoes protruding in comically
tragic fashion over bony feet; a huddled, cramped skeleton
of a human being!
They could only stand and stare at
it,-this reminder of a tragedy of a quarter
of a century agone. Their lips refused to utter
the words that strove to travel past them; they were
two men dumb, dumb through a discovery which they
had forced themselves to face, through a fact which
they had hoped against, each more or less silently,
yet felt sure must, sooner or later, come before them.
And now it was here.
And this was the reason that twenty
years before Thornton Fairchild, white, grim, had
sought the aid of Harry and of Mother Howard.
This was the reason that a woman had played the part
of a man, singing in maudlin fashion as they traveled
down the center of the street at night, to all appearances
only three disappointed miners seeking a new field.
And yet-
“I know what you ’re thinking.”
It was Harry’s voice, strangely hoarse and
weak. “I ’m thinking the same thing.
But it must n’t be. Dead men don’t
alwyes mean they ’ve died-in
a wye to cast reflections on the man that was with
’em. Do you get what I mean? You’ve
said-” and he looked hard into the
cramped, suffering face of Robert Fairchild-“that
you were going to ’old your father innocent.
So ’m I. We don’t know, Boy, what went
on ’ere. And we ’ve got to ’ope
for the best.”
Then, while Fairchild stood motionless
and silent, the big Cornishman forced himself forward,
to stoop by the side of the heap of bones which once
had represented a man, to touch gingerly the clothing,
and then to bend nearer and hold his carbide close
to some object which Fairchild could not see.
At last he rose and with old, white features, approached
his partner.
“The appearances are against
us,” came quietly. “There ’s
a ’olé in ’is skull that a jury ’ll
say was made by a single jack. It ’ll seem
like some one ’ad killed ’im, and then
caved in the mine with a box of powder. But
’e ’s gone, Boy-your father-I
mean. ’E can’t defend ’imself.
We ’ve got to take ’is part.”
“Maybe-” Fairchild
was grasping at the final straw-“maybe
it’s not the person we believe it to be at all.
It might be somebody else-who had come
in here and set off a charge of powder by accident
and-”
But the shaking of Harry’s head
stifled the momentary ray of hope.
“No. I looked. There
was a watch-all covered with mold and mildewed.
I pried it open. It’s got Larsen’s
name inside!”