It was as though the shades of the
past had come to life again, to repeat in the twentieth
century a happening of the nineteenth. There
was only one difference-no form of a dead
man now lay against the foot wall, to rest there more
than a score of years until it should come to light,
a pile of bones in time-shredded clothing. And
as he thought of it, Fairchild remembered that the
earthly remains of “Sissie” Larsen had
lain within almost a few feet of the spot where he
had drilled the prospect hole into the foot wall,
there to discover the ore that promised bonanza.
But this time there was nothing and
no clue to the mystery of Harry’s disappearance.
Fairchild suddenly strengthened with an idea.
Perhaps, after all, he had been on the other side
of the cave-in and had hurried on out of the mine.
But in that event, would he not have waited for his
return, to tell him of the accident? Or would
he not have proceeded down to the Sampler to bring
the news if he had not cared to remain at the tunnel
opening? However, it was a chance, and Fairchild
took it. Once more he crawled through the hole
that he had made in the cave-in and sought the outward
world. Then he hurried down Kentucky Gulch and
to the Sampler. But Harry had not been there.
He went through town, asking questions, striving
his best to shield his anxiety, cloaking his queries
under the cover of cursory remarks. Harry had
not been seen. At last, with the coming of night,
he turned toward the boarding house, and on his arrival.
Mother Howard, sighting his white face, hurried to
him.
“Have you seen Harry?” he asked.
“No-he has n’t been here.”
It was the last chance. Clutching
fear at his heart, he told Mother Howard of the happenings
at the mine, quickly, as plainly as possible.
Then once more he went forth, to retrace his steps
to the Blue Poppy, to buck the wind and the fine snow
and the high, piled drifts, and to go below.
But the surroundings were the same: still the
cave-in, with its small hole where he had torn through
it, still the ragged hanging wall where Harry had
fired the last shots of dynamite in his investigations,
still the trampled bit of fuse with its cap attached.
Nothing more. Gingerly Fairchild picked up the
cap and placed it where a chance kick could not explode
it. Then he returned to the shaft.
Back into the black night, with the
winds whistling through the pines. Back to wandering
about through the hills, hurrying forward at the sight
of every faint, dark object against the snow, in the
hope that Harry, crippled by the cave-in, might have
some way gotten out of the shaft. But they were
only boulders or logs or stumps of trees. At
midnight, Fairchild turned once more toward town and
to the boarding house. But Harry had not appeared.
There was only one thing left to do.
This time, when Fairchild left Mother
Howard’s, his steps did not lead him toward
Kentucky Gulch. Instead he kept straight on up
the street, past the little line of store buildings
and to the courthouse, where he sought out the sole
remaining light in the bleak, black building,-Sheriff
Bardwell’s office. That personage was nodding
in his chair, but removed his feet from the desk and
turned drowsily as Fairchild entered.
“Well?” he questioned, “what’s
up?”
“My partner has disappeared.
I want to report to you-and see if I can
get some help.”
“Disappeared? Who?”
“Harry Harkins. He ’s
a big Cornishman, with a large mustache, very red
face, about sixty years old, I should judge-”
“Wait a minute,” Bardwell’s
eyes narrowed. “Ain’t he the fellow
I arrested in the Blue Poppy mine the night of the
Old Times dance?”
“Yes.”
“And you say he ’s disappeared?”
“I think you heard me!”
Fairchild spoke with some asperity. “I
said that he had disappeared, and I want some help
in hunting for him. He may be injured, for all
I know, and if he ’s out here in the mountains
anywhere, it’s almost sure death for him unless
he can get some aid soon. I-”
But the sheriff’s eyes still remained suspiciously
narrow.
“When does his trial come up?”
“A week from to-morrow.”
“And he ’s disappeared.”
A slow smile came over the other man’s lips.
“I don’t think it will help much to start
any relief expedition for him. The thing to
do is to get a picture and a general description and
send it around to the police in the various parts of
the country! That ’ll be the best way
to find him!”
Fairchild’s teeth gritted, but
he could not escape the force of the argument, from
the sheriff’s standpoint. For a moment
there was silence, then the miner came closer to the
desk.
“Sheriff,” he said as
calmly as possible, “you have a perfect right
to give that sort of view. That’s your
business-to suspect people. However,
I happen to feel sure that my partner would stand trial,
no matter what the charge, and that he would not seek
to evade it in any way. Some sort of an accident
happened at the mine this afternoon-a cave-in
or an explosion that tore out the roof of the tunnel-and
I am sure that my partner is injured, has made his
way out of the mine, and is wandering among the hills.
Will you help me to find him?”
The sheriff wheeled about in his chair
and studied a moment. Then he rose.
“Guess I will,” he announced.
“It can’t do any harm to look for him,
anyway.”
Half an hour later, aided by two deputies
who had been summoned from their homes, Fairchild
and the sheriff left for the hills to begin the search
for the missing Harry. Late the next afternoon,
they returned to town, tired, their horses almost
crawling in their dragging pace after sixteen hours
of travel through the drifts of the hills and gullies.
Harry had not been found, and so Fairchild reported
when, with drooping shoulders, he returned to the
boarding house and to the waiting Mother Howard.
And both knew that this time Harry’s disappearance
was no joke, as it had been before. They realized
that back of it all was some sinister reason, some
mystery which they could not solve,-for
the present at least. That night, Fairchild faced
the future and made his resolve.
There was only a week now until Harry’s
case should come to trial. Only a week until
the failure of the defendant to appear should throw
the deeds of the Blue Poppy mine into the hands of
the court, to be sold for the amount of the bail.
And in spite of the fact that Fairchild now felt
his mine to be a bonanza, unless some sort of a miracle
could happen before that time, the mine was the same
as lost. True, it would go to the highest bidder
at a public sale and any money brought in above the
amount of bail would be returned to him. But
who would be that bidder? Who would get the
mine-perhaps for twenty or twenty-five
thousand dollars, when it now was worth millions?
Certainly not he. Already he and Harry had borrowed
from Mother Howard all that she could lend them.
True she had friends; but none could produce from
twenty to two hundred thousand dollars for a mine,
simply on his word. And unless something should
happen to intervene, unless Harry should return, or
in some way Fairchild could raise the necessary five
thousand dollars to furnish a cash bond and again recover
the deeds of the Blue Poppy, he was no better off
than before the strike was made. Long he thought,
finally to come to his conclusion, and then, with
the air of a gambler who has placed his last bet to
win or lose, he went to bed.
But morning found him awake long before
the rest of the house was stirring. Downtown
he hurried, to eat a hasty breakfast in the all-night
restaurant, then to start on a search for men.
The first workers on the street that morning found
Fairchild offering them six dollars a day. And
by eight o’clock, ten of them were at work in
the drift of the Blue Poppy mine, working against
time that they might repair the damage which had been
caused by the cave-in.
It was not an easy task. That
day and the next and the next after that, they labored.
Then Fairchild glanced at the progress that was being
made and sought out the pseudo-foreman.
“Will it be finished by night?” he asked.
“Easily.”
“Very well. I may need
these men to work on a day and night shift, I ’m
not sure. I ’ll be back in an hour.”
Away he went and up the shaft, to
travel as swiftly as possible through the drift-piled
road down Kentucky Gulch and to the Sampler.
There he sought out old Undertaker Chastine, and with
him went to the proprietor.
“My name is Fairchild, and I
’m in trouble,” he said candidly.
“I ’ve brought Mr. Chastine in with
me because he assayed some of my ore a few days ago
and believes he knows what it’s worth.
I ’m working against time to get five thousand
dollars. If I can produce ore that runs two
hundred dollars to the ton, and if I ’ll sell
it to you for one hundred seventy-five dollars a ton
until I can get the money I need, provided I can get
the permission of the court,-will you put
it through for me?”
The Sampler owner smiled.
“If you ’ll let me see
where you ’re getting the ore.” Then
he figured a moment. “That ’d be
thirty or forty ton,” came at last. “We
could handle that as fast as you could bring it in
here.”
But a new thought had struck Fairchild,-a
new necessity for money.
“I ’ll give it to you
for one hundred fifty dollars a ton, providing you
do the hauling and lend me enough after the first day
or so to pay my men.”
“But why all the excitement-and the
rush?”
“My partner ’s Harry Harkins.
He ’s due for trial Friday, and he ’s
disappeared. The mine is up as security.
You can see what will happen unless I can substitute
a cash bond for the amount due before that time.
Is n’t that sufficient?”
“It ought to be. But as
I said, I want to see where the ore comes from.”
“You ’ll see in the morning-if
I ’ve got it,” answered Fairchild
with a new hope thrilling in his voice. “All
that I have so far is an assay of some drill scrapings.
I don’t know how thick the vein is or whether
it’s going to pinch out in ten minutes after
we strike it. But I ’ll know mighty soon.”
Every cent that Robert Fairchild possessed
in the world was in his pockets,-two hundred
dollars. After he had paid his men for their
three days of labor, there would be exactly twenty
dollars left. But Fairchild did not hesitate.
To Farrell’s office he went and with him to
an interview, in chambers, with the judge. Then,
the necessary permission having been granted, he hurried
back to the mine and into the drift, there to find
the last of the muck being scraped away from beneath
the site of the cave-in. Fairchild paid off.
Then he turned to the foreman.
“How many of these men are game to take a chance?”
“Pretty near all of ’em-if
there ’s any kind of a gamble to it.”
“There ’s a lot of gamble.
I ’ve got just twenty dollars in my pocket-enough
to pay each man one dollar apiece for a night’s
work if my hunch doesn’t pan out. If it
does pan, the wages are twenty dollars a day for three
days, with everybody, including myself, working like
hell! Who’s game?”
The answer came in unison. Fairchild
led the way to the chamber, seized a hammer and took
his place.
“There ’s two-hundred-dollar
ore back of this foot wall if we can break in and
start a new stope,” he announced. “It
takes a six-foot hole to reach it, and we can have
the whole story by morning. Let’s go!”
Along the great length of the foot
wall, extending all the distance of the big chamber,
the men began their work, five men to the drills and
as many to the sledges, as they started their double-jacking.
Hour after hour the clanging of steel against steel
sounded in the big underground room, as the drills
bit deeper and deeper into the hard formation of the
foot wall, driving steadily forward until their contact
should have a different sound, and the muggy scrapings
bear a darker hue than that of mere wall-rock.
Hour after hour passed, while the drill-turners took
their places with the sledges, and the sledgers went
to the drills-the turnabout system of “double-jacking”-with
Fairchild, the eleventh man, filling in along the line
as an extra sledger, that the miners might be the
more relieved in their strenuous, frenzied work.
Midnight came. The first of the six-foot drills
sank to its ultimate depth. Then the second
and third and fourth: finally the fifth.
They moved on. Hours more of work, and the operation
had been repeated. The workmen hurried for the
powder house, far down the drift, by the shaft, lugging
back in their pockets the yellow, candle-like sticks
of dynamite, with their waxy wrappers and their gelatinous
contents together with fuses and caps. Crimping
nippers-the inevitable accompaniment of
a miner-came forth from the pockets of
the men. Careful tamping, then the men took their
places at the fuses.
“Give the word!” one of
them announced crisply as he turned to Fairchild.
“Each of us ’ll light one of these things,
and then I say we ’ll run! Because this
is going to be some explosion!”
Fairchild smiled the smile of a man
whose heart is thumping at its maximum speed.
Before him in the long line of the foot wall were
ten holes, “up-holes”, “downs”
and “swimmers”, attacking the hidden ore
in every direction. Ten holes drilled six feet
into the rock and tamped with double charges of dynamite.
He straightened.
“All right, men! Ready?”
“Ready!”
“Touch ’em off!”
The carbide lamps were held close
to the fuses for a second. Soon they were all
going, spitting like so many venomous, angry serpents-but
neither Fairchild nor the miners had stopped to watch.
They were running as hard as possible for the shaft
and for the protection that distance might give.
A wait that seemed ages. Then:
“One!”
“And two-and three!”
“There goes four and five-they went
together!”
“Six-seven-eight-nine-”
Again a wait, while they looked at
one another with vacuous eyes. A long interval
until the tenth.
“Two went together then!
I thought we ’d counted nine?” The foreman
stared, and Fairchild studied. Then his face
lighted.
“Eleven ’s right.
One of them must have set off the charge that Harry
left in there. All the better-it gives
us just that much more of a chance.”
Back they went along the drift tunnel
now, coughing slightly as the sharp smoke of the dynamite
cut their lungs. A long journey that seemed
as many miles instead of feet. Then with a shout,
Fairchild sprang forward, and went to his hands and
knees.
It was there before him-all
about him-the black, heavy masses of lead-silver
ore, a great, heaping, five-ton pile of it where it
had been thrown out by the tremendous force of the
explosion. It seemed that the whole great floor
of the cavern was covered with it, and the workmen
shouted with Fairchild as they seized bits of the precious
black stuff and held it to the light for closer examination.
“Look!” The voice of
one of them was high and excited. “You
can see the fine streaks of silver sticking out!
It’s high-grade and plenty of it!”
But Fairchild paid little attention.
He was playing in the stuff, throwing it in the air
and letting it fall to the floor of the cavern again,
like a boy with a new sack of marbles, or a child with
its building blocks. Five tons and the night
was not yet over! Five tons, and the vein had
not yet shown its other side!
Back to work they went now, six of
the men drilling, Fairchild and the other four mucking
out the refuse, hauling it up the shaft, and then
turning to the ore that they might get it to the old,
rotting bins and into position for loading as soon
as the owner of the Sampler could be notified in the
morning and the trucks could fight their way through
the snowdrifts of Kentucky Gulch to the mine for loading.
Again through the hours the drills bit into the rock
walls, while the ore car clattered along the tram
line and while the creaking of the block and tackle
at the shaft seemed endless. In three days, approximately
forty tons of ore must come out of that mine,-and
work must not cease.
Morning, and in spite of the sleep-laden
eyes, the heavy aching in his head, the tired drooping
of the shoulders, Fairchild tramped to the boarding
house to notify Mother Howard and ask for news of Harry.
There had been none. Then he went on, to wait
by the door of the Sampler until Bittson, the owner,
should appear, and drag him away up the hill, even
before he could open up for the morning.
“There it is!” he exclaimed,
as he led him to the entrance of the chamber.
“There it is; take all you want of it and assay
it!”
Bittson went forward into the cross-cut,
where the men were drilling even at new holes, and
examined the vein. Already it was three feet
thick, and there was still ore ahead. One of
the miners looked up.
“Just finishing up on the cross-cut,”
he announced, as he nodded toward his drill.
“I ’ve just bitten into the foot
wall on the other side. Looks to me like the
vein ’s about five feet thick-as near
as I can measure it.”
“And-” Bittson
picked up a few samples, examined them by the light
of the carbides and tossed them away-“you
can see the silver sticking out. I caught sight
of a couple of pencil threads of it in one or two
of those samples. All right, Boy!” he turned
to Fairchild. “What was that bargain we
made?”
“It was based on two hundred
dollars a ton ore. This may run above-or
below. But whatever it is, I ’ll sell you
all you can handle for the next three days at fifty
dollars a ton under the assay price.”
“You ’ve said the
word. The trucks will be here in an hour if we
have to shovel a path all the way up Kentucky Gulch.”
He hurried away then, while Fairchild
and the men followed him into town and to their breakfast.
Then, recruiting a new gang on the promise of payment
at the end of their three-day shift, Fairchild went
back to the mine. But the word had spread, and
others were there before him.
Already a wide path showed up Kentucky
Gulch. Already fifteen or twenty miners were
assembled about the opening of the Blue Poppy tunnel,
awaiting permission to enter, the usual rush upon a
lucky mine to view its riches. Behind him, Fairchild
could see others coming from Ohadi to take a look
at the new strike, and his heart bounded with happiness
tinged with sorrow. Harry was not there to enjoy
it all; Harry was gone, and in spite of his every
effort, Fairchild had failed to find him.
All that morning they thronged down
the shaft of the Blue Poppy. The old method
of locomotion grew too slow; willing hands repaired
the hoist and sent volunteers for a gasoline engine
to run it, while in the meantime officials of curiosity
labored on the broken old ladder that once had encompassed
the distance from the bottom of the shaft to the top,
rehabilitating it to such an extent that it might be
used again. The drift was crowded with persons
bearing candles and carbides. The big chamber
was filled, leaving barely room for the men to work
with their drills at the final holes that would be
needed to clear the vein to the foot wall on the other
side and enable the miners to start upward on their
new stope. Fairchild looked about him proudly,
happily; it was his, his and Harry’s-if
Harry ever should come back again-the thing
he had worked for, the thing he had dreamed of, planned
for.
Some one brushed against him, and
there came a slight tug at his coat. Fairchild
looked downward to see passing the form of Anita Richmond.
A moment later she looked toward him, but in her
eyes there was no light of recognition, nothing to
indicate that she had just given him a signal of greeting
and congratulation. And yet Fairchild felt that
she had. Uneasily he walked away, following
her with his eyes as she made her way into the blackness
of the tunnel and toward the shaft. Then, absently,
he put his hand into his pocket.
Something there caused his heart to
halt momentarily,-a piece of paper.
He crumpled it in his hand, he rubbed his fingers
over it wonderingly; it had not been in his pocket
before she had passed him. Hurriedly he walked
to the far side of the chamber and there, pretending
to examine a bit of ore, brought the missive from its
place of secretion, to unfold it with trembling fingers,
then to stare at the words which showed before him:
“Squint Rodaine is terribly
worried about something. Has been on an awful
rampage all morning. Something critical is brewing,
but I don’t know what. Suggest you keep
watch on him. Please destroy this.”
That was all. There was no signature.
But Robert Fairchild had seen the writing of Anita
Richmond once before!