Hardly realizing what he was doing
or why he was doing it, Fairchild seized Anita in
his arms, and raising her to his breast as though she
were a child, rushed out through the cross-cut and
along the cavern to the fissure, there to find Harry
awaiting them.
“Put ’er in first!”
said the Cornishman anxiously. “The farther
the safer. Did you ’ear anything more?”
Fairchild obeyed, shaking his head
in a negative to Harry’s question, then squeezed
into the fissure, edging along beside Anita, while
Harry followed.
“What is it?” she asked anxiously.
“Harry heard some sort of noise
from above, as if the earth was crumbling. He
’s afraid the whole mine ’s going to cave
in again.”
“But if it does?”
“We can get out this way-somehow.
This connects up with a spring-hole; it leads out
by Crazy Laura’s house.”
“Ugh!” Anita shivered. “She
gives me the creeps!”
“And every one else; what’s doing, Harry?”
“Nothing. That’s the funny part
of it!”
The big Cornishman had crept to the
edge of the fissure and had stared for a moment toward
the cross-cut leading to the stope. “If
it was coming, it ought to ’ave showed
up by now. I ’m going back. You stay
’ere.”
“But-”
“Stay ’ere, I said.
And,” he grinned in the darkness, “don’t
let ’im ’old your ’and, Miss Richmond.”
“Oh, you go on!” But she laughed.
And Harry laughed with her.
“I know ’im. ’E ’s got
a wye about ’im.”
“That’s what you said about Miss Richmond
once!”
“Have you two been talking about me?”
“Often.” Then there
was silence-for Harry had left the fissure
to go into the stope and make an investigation.
A long moment and he was back, almost creeping, and
whispering as he reached the end of the fissure.
“Come ’ere-both of you!
Come ’ere!”
“What is it?”
“Sh-h-h-h-h-h. Don’t
talk too loud. We ’ve been blessed
with luck already. Come ’ere.”
He led the way, the man and woman
following him. In the stope the Cornishman crawled
carefully to the staging, and standing on tiptoes,
pressed his ear against the vein above him. Then
he withdrew and nodded sagely.
“That’s what it is!” came his announcement
at last. “You can ’ear it!”
“But what?”
“Get up there and lay your ear
against that vein. See if you ’ear anything.
And be quiet about it. I ’m scared to
make a move, for fear somebody ’ll ’ear
me.”
Fairchild obeyed. From far away,
carried by the telegraphy of the earth-and
there are few conductors that are better-was
the steady pound, pound, pound of shock after shock
as it traveled along the hanging wall. Now and
then a rumble intervened, as of falling rock, and
scrambling sounds, like a heavy wagon passing over
a bridge.
Fairchild turned, wondering, then reached for Anita.
“You listen,” he ordered,
as he lifted her to where she could hear. “Do
you get anything?”
The girl’s eyes shone.
“I know what that is,”
she said quickly. “I ’ve heard
that same sort of thing before-when you
’re on another level and somebody ’s working
above. Is n’t that it, Mr. Harkins?”
Harry nodded.
“That’s it,” came
tersely. Then bending, he reached for a pick,
and muffling the sound as best he could between his
knees, knocked the head from the handle. Following
this, he lifted the piece of hickory thoughtfully
and turned to Fairchild. “Get yourself
one,” he ordered. “Miss Richmond,
I guess you ’ll ’ave to stay ’ere.
I don’t see ’ow we can do much else with
you.”
“But can’t I go along-wherever
you ’re going?”
“There’s going to be a
fight,” said Harry quietly. “And
I ’m going to knock somebody’s block off!”
“But-I ’d rather
be there than here. I-I don’t
have to get in it. And-I ’d
want to see how it comes out. Please !”
she turned to Fairchild-“won’t
you let me go?”
“If you ’ll stay out of danger.”
“It’s less danger for
me there than-than home. And I ’d
be scared to death here. I wouldn’t if
I was along with you two, because I know-”
and she said it with almost childish conviction-“that
you can whip ’em.”
Harry chuckled.
“Come along, then. I ’ve
got a ’unch, and I can’t sye it now.
But it ’ll come out in the wash. Come
along.”
He led the way out through the shaft
and into the blizzard, giving the guard instructions
to let no one pass in their absence. Then he
suddenly kneeled.
“Up, Miss Richmond. Up
on my back. I ’m ’efty-and
we ’ve got snowdrifts to buck.”
She laughed, looked at Fairchild as
though for his consent, then crawled to the broad
back of Harry, sitting on his shoulders like a child
“playing horse.”
They started up the mountain side,
skirting the big gullies and edging about the highest
drifts, taking advantage of the cover of the pines,
and bending against the force of the blizzard, which
seemed to threaten to blow them back, step for step.
No one spoke; instinctively Fairchild and Anita had
guessed Harry’s conclusions. The nearest
mine to the Blue Poppy was the Silver Queen, situated
several hundred feet above it in altitude and less
than a furlong away. And the metal of the Silver
Queen and the Blue Poppy, now that the strike had been
made, had assayed almost identically the same.
It was easy to make conclusions.
They reached the mouth of the Silver
Queen. Harry relieved Anita from her position
on his shoulders, and then reconnoitered a moment before
he gave the signal to proceed. Within the tunnel
they went, to follow along its regular, rising course
to the stope where, on that garish day when Taylor
Bill and Blindeye Bozeman had led the enthusiastic
parade through the streets, the vein had shown.
It was dark there-no one was at work.
Harry unhooked his carbide from his belt, lit it and
looked around. The stope was deeper now than
on the first day, but not enough to make up for the
vast amount of ore which had been taken out of the
mine in the meanwhile. On the floor were tons
of the metal, ready for tramming. Harry looked
at them, then at the stope again.
“It ain’t coming from
’ere!” he announced. “It’s-”
then his voice dropped to a whisper-“what’s
that?”
Again a rumbling had come from the
distance, as of an ore car traveling over the tram
tracks. Harry extinguished his light, and drawing
Anita and Fairchild far to the end of the stope, flattened
them and himself on the ground. A long wait,
while the rumbling came closer, still closer; then,
in the distance, a light appeared, shining from a side
of the tunnel. A clanging noise, followed by
clattering sounds, as though of steel rails hitting
against each other. Finally the tramming once
more,-and the light approached.
Into view came an ore car, and behind
it loomed the great form of Taylor Bill as he pushed
it along. Straight to the pile of ore he came,
unhooked the front of the tram, tripped it and piled
the contents of the car on top of the dump which already
rested there. With that, carbide pointing the
way, he turned back, pushing the tram before him.
Harry crept to his feet.
“We ’ve got to follow!”
he whispered. “It’s a blind entrance
to the tunnel som’eres.”
They rose and trailed the light along
the tracks, flattening themselves against the timbers
of the tunnel as the form of Taylor Bill, faintly
outlined in the distance, turned from the regular track,
opened a great door in the side of the tunnel, which,
to all appearances, was nothing more than the ordinary
heavy timbering of a weak spot in the rocks, pulled
it far back, then swerved the tram within. Then,
he stopped and raised a portable switch, throwing
it into the opening. A second later the door
closed behind him, and the sound of the tram began
to fade in the distance. Harry went forward,
creeping along the side of the tunnel, feeling his
way, stopping to listen now and then for the sound
of the fading ore car. Behind him were Fairchild
and Anita, following the same procedure. And
all three stopped at once.
The hollow sound was coming directly
to them now. Harry once more brought out his
carbide to light it for a moment and to examine the
timbering.
“It’s a good job!”
he commented. “You could n’t tell
it five feet off!”
“They ’ve made
a cross-cut!” This time it was Anita’s
voice, plainly angry in spite of its whispering tones.
“No wonder they had such a wonderful strike,”
came scathingly. “That other stope down
there-”
“Ain’t nothing but a salted
proposition,” said Harry. “They ’ve
cemented up the top of it with the real stuff and every
once in a while they blow a lot of it out and cement
it up again to make it look like that’s the
real vein.”
“And they ’re working
our mine!” Red spots of anger were flashing
before Fairchild’s eyes.
“You ’ve said it!
That’s why they were so anxious to buy us out.
And that’s why they started this two-million-dollar
stock proposition, when they found they could n’t
do it. They knew if we ever ’it that vein
that it would n’t be any time until they ’d
be caught on the job. That’s why they ’re
ready to pull out-with somebody else ’s
million. They ’re getting at the end of
their rope. Another thing; that explains them
working at night.”
Anita gritted her teeth.
“I see it now-I can
get the reason. They ’ve been telephoning
Denver and holding conferences and all that sort of
thing. And they planned to leave these two men
behind here to take all the blame.”
“They’ll get enough of
it!” added Harry grimly. “They ’re
miners. They could see that they were making
a straight cross-cut tunnel on to our vein.
They ain’t no children, Blindeye and Taylor Bill.
And ’ere ’s where they start getting
their trouble.”
He pulled at the door and it yielded
grudgingly. The three slipped past, following
along the line of the tram track in the darkness,
Harry’s pick handle swinging beside him as they
sneaked along. Rods that seemed miles; at last
lights appeared in the distance. Harry stopped
to peer ahead. Then he tossed aside his weapon.
“There ’s only two of
’em-Blindeye and Taylor Bill.
I could whip ’em both myself but I ’ll
take the big ’un. You-”
he turned to Fairchild-“you get Blindeye.”
“I ’ll get him.”
Anita stopped and groped about for a stone.
“I ’ll be ready with something
in case of accident,” came with determination.
“I ’ve got a quarter of a million
in this myself!”
They went on, fifty yards, a hundred.
Creeping now, they already were within the zone of
light, but before them the two men, double-jacking
at a “swimmer”, had their backs turned.
Onward-until Harry and Fairchild were
within ten feet of the “high-jackers”,
while Anita waited, stone in hand, in the background.
Came a yell, high-pitched, fiendish, racking, as
Harry leaped forward. And before the two “high-jackers”
could concentrate enough to use their sledge and drill
as weapons, they were whirled about, battered against
the hanging wall, and swirling in a daze of blows
which seemed to come from everywhere at once.
Wildly Harry yelled as he shot blow after blow into
the face of an ancient enemy. High went Fairchild’s
voice as he knocked Blindeye Bozeman staggering for
the third time against the hanging wall, only to see
him rise and to knock him down once more. And
from the edge of the zone of light came a feminine
voice, almost hysterical with the excitement of it
all, the voice of a girl who, in her tensity, had
dropped the piece of stone she had carried, to stand
there, hands clenched, figure doubled forward, eyes
blazing, and crying:
“Hit him again! Hit him again! Hit
him again-for me!”
And Fairchild hit, with the force
of a sledge hammer. Dizzily the sandy-haired
man swung about in his tracks, sagged, then fell,
unconscious. Fairchild leaped upon him, calling
at the same time to the girl:
“Find me a rope! I ’ll
truss his hands while he ’s knocked out!”
Anita leaped into action, to kneel
at Fairchild’s side a moment later with a hempen
strand, as he tied the man’s hands behind his
back. There was no need to worry about Harry.
The yells which were coming from farther along the
stope, the crackling blows, all told that Harry was
getting along exceedingly well. Glancing out
of a corner of his eye, Fairchild saw now that the
big Cornishman had Taylor Bill flat on his back and
was putting on the finishing touches. And then
suddenly the exultant yells changed to ones of command.
“Talk English! Talk English,
you bloody blighter! ’Ear me, talk English!”
“What’s he mean?” Anita bent close
to Fairchild.
“I don’t know-I
don’t think Taylor Bill can talk anything else.
Put your finger on this knot while I tighten it.
Thanks.”
Again the command had come from farther on:
“Talk English! ’Ear
me-I’ll knock the bloody ’ell
out of you if you don’t. Talk English-like
this: ’Throw up your ‘ands!’
’Ear me?”
Anita swerved swiftly and went to
her feet. Harry looked up at her wildly, his
mustache bristling like the spines of a porcupine.
“Did you ’ear ’im
sye it?” he asked. “No? Sye
it again!”
“Throw up your ’ands!”
came the answer of the beaten man on the ground.
Anita ran forward.
“It’s a good deal like
it,” she answered. “But the tone
was higher.”
“Raise your tone!” commanded
Harry, while Fairchild, finishing his job of tying
his defeated opponent, rose, staring in wonderment.
Then the answer came:
“That’s it-that’s it.
It sounded just like it!”
And Fairchild remembered too,-the
English accent of the highwayman on the night of the
Old Times Dance. Harry seemed to bounce on the
prostrate form of his ancient enemy.
“Bill,” he shouted, “I
’ve got you on your back. And I ’ve
got a right to kill you. ’Onest I ’ave.
And I ’ll do it too-unless you start
talking. I might as well kill you as not.-It’s
a penitentiary offense to ’it a man underground
unless there ’s a good reason. So I ’m
ready to go the ’olé route.
So tell it-tell it and be quick about it.
Tell it-was n’t you him?”
“Him-who?” the voice was weak,
frightened.
“You know ’oo-the
night of the Old Times dance! Didn’t you
pull that ’old-up?”
There was a long silence. Finally:
“Where’s Rodaine?”
“In Center City.”
It was Anita who spoke. “He ’s getting
ready to run away and leave you two to stand the brunt
of all this trouble.”
Again a silence. And again Harry’s voice:
“Tell it. Was n’t you the man?”
Once more a long wait. Finally:
“What do I get out of it?”
Fairchild moved to the man’s side.
“My promise and my partner’s
promise that if you tell the whole truth, we ’ll
do what we can to get you leniency. And you might
as well do it; there ’s little chance of you
getting away otherwise. As soon as we can get
to the sheriff’s office, we ’ll have Rodaine
under arrest, anyway. And I don’t think
that he ’s going to hurt himself to help you.
So tell the truth; weren’t you the man who held
up the Old Times dance?”
Taylor Bill’s breath traveled slowly past his
bruised lips.
“Rodaine gave me a hundred dollars to pull it,”
came finally.
“And you stole the horse and everything-”
“And cached the stuff by the
Blue Poppy, so ’s I ’d get the blame?”
Harry wiggled his mustache fiercely. “Tell
it or I ’ll pound your ’ead into a jelly!”
“That’s about the size of it.”
But Fairchild was fishing in his pockets
for pencil and paper, finally to bring them forth.
“Not that we doubt your sincerity,
Bill,” he said sarcastically, “but I think
things would be a bit easier if you’d just write
it out. Let him up, Harry.”
The big Cornishman obeyed grudgingly.
But as he did so, he shook a fist at his bruised,
battered enemy.
“It ain’t against the
law to ’it a man when ’e ’s a criminal,”
came at last. The thing was weighing on Harry’s
mind. “I don’t care anyway if it
is-”
“Oh, there ’s nothing
to that,” Anita cut in. “I know all
about the law-father has explained it to
me lots of times when there ’ve been cases
before him. In a thing of this kind, you ’ve
got a right to take any kind of steps necessary.
Stop worrying about it.”
“Well,” and Harry stood
watching a moment as Taylor Bill began the writing
of his confession, “it’s such a relief
to get four charges off my mind, that I did n’t
want to worry about any more. Make hit fulsome,
Bill-tell just ’ow you did it!”
And Taylor Bill, bloody, eyes black,
lips bruised, obeyed. Fairchild took the bescrawled
paper and wrote his name as a witness, then handed
it to Harry and Anita for their signatures. At
last, he placed it in his pocket and faced the dolorous
high-jacker.
“What else do you know, Bill?”
“About what? Rodaine?
Nothing –except that we were in cahoots
on this cross-cut. There is n’t any use
denying it”-there had come to the
surface the inherent honor that is in every metal miner,
a stalwartness that may lie dormant, but that, sooner
or later, must rise. There is something about
taking wealth from the earth that is clean.
There is something about it which seems honest in its
very nature, something that builds big men in stature
and in ruggedness, and it builds an honor which fights
against any attempt to thwart it. Taylor Bill
was finding that honor now. He seemed to straighten.
His teeth bit at his swollen, bruised lips.
He turned and faced the three persons before him.
“Take me down to the sheriff’s
office,” he commanded. “I ’ll
tell everything. I don’t know so awful
much-because I ain’t tried to learn
anything more than I could help. But I ’ll
give up everything I ’ve got.”
“And how about him?”
Fairchild pointed to Blindeye, just regaining consciousness.
Taylor Bill nodded.
“He ’ll tell-he ’ll have
to.”
They trussed the big miner then, and
dragging Bozeman to his feet, started out of the cross-cut
with them. Harry’s carbide pointing the
way through the blind door and into the main tunnel.
Then they halted to bundle themselves tighter against
the cold blast that was coming from without.
On-to the mouth of the mine. Then
they stopped-short.
A figure showed in the darkness, on
horseback. An electric flashlight suddenly flared
against the gleam of the carbide. An exclamation,
an excited command to the horse, and the rider wheeled,
rushing down the mountain side, urging his mount to
dangerous leaps, sending him plunging through drifts
where a misstep might mean death, fleeing for the
main road again. Anita Richmond screamed:
“That’s Maurice!
I got a glimpse of his face! He ’s gotten
away-go after him somebody-go
after him!”
But it was useless. The horseman
had made the road and was speeding down it.
Rushing ahead of the others, Fairchild gained a point
of vantage where he could watch the fading black smudge
of the horse and rider as it went on and on along
the rocky road, finally to reach the main thoroughfare
and turn swiftly. Then he went back to join the
others.
“He ’s taken the Center
City road!” came his announcement. “Is
there a turn-off on it anywhere?”
“No.” Anita gave
the answer. “It goes straight through-but
he ’ll have a hard time making it there in this
blizzard. If we only had horses!”
“They would n’t do us
much good now! Climb on my back as you did on
Harry’s. You can handle these two men alone?”
This to his partner. The Cornishman grunted.
“Yes. They won’t start anything.
Why?”
“I ’m going to take Miss
Richmond and hurry ahead to the sheriff’s office.
He might not believe me. But he ’ll take
her word-and that ’ll be sufficient
until you get there with the prisoners. I ’ve
got to persuade him to telephone to Center City and
head off the Rodaines!”