“May God be merciful to him
and to us all.”
-The
Advocate of Arras.
“Better come along and share
my guilty splendor,” urged Adam Forbes, toe
to stirrup.
Charlie See shook his head. “Not
none. Here I rest. Gold is nothing to me.
I’ve got no time for frivolity. I want but
little here below and want that little now. Say,
Adam-don’t you never carry a gun?”
“Naw. I take a rifle, of
course, for reindeer, snow dear, dear me and antelope-but
I haven’t packed a gun for two years. No
need of it here. Well, if you won’t side
me, you won’t. I’m sorry, but you
see how it is about me going right now,” said
Adam, swinging into the saddle. “The water
in that little tank of mine won’t last long,
and there may not be any more rains this fall.
So long! You just make yourself at home.”
“Good luck, Adam. And you
might wish me the same. While you’re gone,
I may want to make a little journey from bad to worse.”
Adam gathered up his lead rope.
“Good luck, Charlie.” But a troubled
look came to his eyes as he passed through the gate;
in his heart he thought his friend rode late and vainly
from Selden Hill.
The pack horse jogged alongside, his
friendly head at Adam’s knee. It was earliest
morning and they were still in the fresh cool shadow
of the low eastern hills. Farther north the enormous
bulk of Timber Mountain loomed monstrous in the sky,
and there the shadows were deep and dense, impenetrably
black; there night lingered visible, brighter than
in all the wide arc to westward, bench-land and mighty
hill were drenched with sparkling sun.
Adam rode with a pleasant jingling
of spurs. He passed through Garfield town, or
town-to-be, remodeled from the old San Ysidro, the
bare and grassless Mexican plaza changed to
the square of a Kansas town, by tree and hard-won
turf; blacksmith shop and school, with a little store
and post office, clustered for company on one side:
business would fill up the three blank sides-like
Columbus or Cherryvale. For there is no new thing
beneath the kindly sun. Not otherwise, far from
the plains of windy Troy, did Priam’s son build
and copy, in the wild hills of Epirus:
The little Troy,
the castle Pergamus,
The river Xanthus, and
the Scaean gate.
Fringing the townlet, new gristmill
and new factory stood where the mother ditch was bridged.
Beyond the bridge the roads forked. From the
right hand a steep canyon came plunging to the valley,
winding dark between red-brown hills. This canyon
was Redgate; here turned the climbing road to Upham;
and Adam Forbes followed the Redgate road.
At the summit he turned to the left
across a corner of MacCleod’s Park; he crossed
a whorl of low ridges at the head of Apache Canyon
and came to Hidden Tanks-a little limestone
basin, now brimming with rainwater, perhaps a dozen
barrels in all. Adam had fenced this in with
a combination of stone wall and cedar brush, to keep
cattle out. He now climbed to a little low cliff
near by. There he had cached his outfit in a
little cupboard of a cave, the floor of it shoulder
high to him where he stood. Here he unpacked.
He added to the cache his little store of sugar, coffee,
rice, bacon and flour, all packed in five or ten pound
baking-powder cans against the ravages of mice, gray
squirrels and trade rats. The little deep cave
gave protection against larger pests and shelter from
rain. He rolled up his bedding, lifted it into
the mouth of the cave and shoved it back.
Two empty five-gallon kegs were left
of his pack; he had not dared to leave them in the
cache, to fall apart in the dry and sun-parched air.
These kegs he filled at the tanks and slung on the
pack saddle; with them he made his way to the hill
of his hopes. It was close by; he had hidden
there his pick, shovel and the broad shallow basin
used for panning gold. He hobbled the horses;
by ten o’clock, or a little later, he was deep
in the interrupted task of a month before.
Freakish chance had timed that interruption
to halt him on the very brink of success. Before
he had taken out a dozen pans he was in rich dirt.
Noon found him shaken from the poise and mastery of
years. Abandoning the patient and systematic
follow-up system, he pushed on up the hill, sampling
at random, and finding each sample richer. The
scant supply of water was nearly gone, the gold frenzy
clutched at his heart. By sighting, he roughly
developed the lines showing the probable limit of
pay dirt, as marked by the monuments of his earlier
labor; he noted the intersection of those lines, and
there began a feverish panning with his remnant of
water. He found gold in flakes, in scales, in
millet-seed grains-in grains like rice at
last! He had tracked down a pocket to make history
with, to count time from. And the last of his
water was used.
Adam sat down, trembling to think
his find had been unprotected by the shadow of a claim
for the last month; reflected then that it had lain
unclaimed for some thousands of years, and with the
reflection pulled himself together and managed a grin
at his own folly.
He went back to his saddle. Tucked
in the saddle pockets was a goodly lunch, but he did
not touch that. He untied his coat and took out
two printed location notices, several crumply sheets
of blank paper and a pencil. He filled in the
blanks as the location notice of the Goblin Gold Mine-original
notice and copy. On the blank paper he wrote out
four more notices, two originals and two copies, for
the Nine Bucks Placer Claim and the Please Hush.
For the Goblin Gold he wrote himself as locator, Charles
See and Howard Lull as witnesses; he reserved this
for the highest and richest claim. For the next
below, Charles See was locator, Forbes and Lull were
witnesses; and the third was assigned to Howard Lull,
with See and Forbes to bear witness.
Adam paced off the three claims adjoining
each other and built a stone monument at each corner,
with a larger monument for the location-papers at
the center of each claim; the central monument of
the Goblin Gold about where he had made the last panning.
And then, even as he started to slip the first location
notice in its monument, he lifted up his eyes and
saw, across the tangled ridges, three men riding up
from the deeps of Apache Canyon.
The cool judgment that had brought
him safe through a thousand dangers was warped now
by the fever and frenzy of gold lust; his canny instinct
against disaster failed him in his need. There
must be no shadow of irregularity on these claims,
his hot brain reasoned; his find was too rich for
chance-taking in the matter of mythical witnesses;
yonder, by happy and unlooked for chance, were witnesses
indeed; he must have their names to his location notices,
and then he would get the copies to Hillsboro for
recording at the earliest; he would mail them in Garfield
post office that very afternoon.
He reversed his pencil and erased
the names of his fictitious witnesses; he saddled
his horse and rode to intercept the three horsemen,
half a mile away now, trailing slowly across the park
toward MacCleod’s Tanks. He waved them
to stop. As he drew near he knew two of the men-Jody
Weir, of Hillsboro, and Big Ed Caney, a deputy sheriff
from Dona Ana County; two men he trusted not at all.
Time was he would have deemed this conjunction sinister;
to-day, madness was upon him. The third was a
stranger. Each man had a blanket and a bulging
slicker tied behind his saddle. Evidently they
carried rations for several days’ camping.
“Hello, Adam!”
“You’re another-three
of ’em. Got any water in those canteens?
If I was to do a piece of wishin’, right now,
I’d mention water first off. This is sure
one old scorcher of a day! She’s a weather
breeder. Rain before morning, sure as snakes.
I see thunder-heads peeping up over the Black Range,
right now.”
Caney handed over a canteen.
“Drink hearty! You shore look like you’d
been working, Adam.”
Adam drank deep before replying.
“Working is right. Prospecting.
Tired of farming-need a change. Say,
I want you fellows to witness some location notices
for me. Ride over on the next ridge and I can
point out where the claims lay so you can swear to
’em-or ride over with me if you got
time. I was just doing a little forgery when
I saw your dust, for I wasn’t expectin’
to see a man up this way-not ever.
I do reckon this is the lonesomest place in the world.”
“Adam, meet my friend,”
said Jody. “Mr. Forbes, Mr. Hales.
Now, Adam, no need for us to go over to your layout,
is there? We can see your silly monuments.
That’s enough. No particular odds anyway,
is it? I reckon half the notices on record have
ghost signatures to ’em. Just as good as
any. Nobody’ll ever know the difference.”
“Sure, that’s all right-but
seein’ you happened along so slick, I thought
I’d get your John Hancocks. Sign on the
dotted line, please-where I rubbed out
my forgeries.”
“Any good, your mines?” asked Jody as
they signed.
“Might be-will be,
likely enough. Just struck pay dirt to-day.
Lots of room if you want to try a whirl-all
round my claims, any direction except down.”
“Not to-day, I guess. Say,
Forbes-you ain’t seen any strangers
this way, have you? Mexicans, mebbe?”
“Not any. But I just come
up from the river. Hills might be full of people,
for all I know. Water all round, after these rains.”
“Look, now,” said Jody.
“We’re doin’ a little man hunt-and
if you’re hangin’ round here prospectin’,
you may be able to give us a straight tip. Keep
your eye peeled. There’ll be a piece of
money in it for you if you can help us out.”
“Give it a name. But see
here, Caney-this isn’t Dona Ana County,
you know. You’re over the line.”
“I’m not doing this official,”
said Caney. “Neither is Hales, here, though
he is a deputy in Socorro County. We’re
private cits in this man’s county-playin’
a hunch. Here’s the lay: There’s
been a heap of stealing saddles for a business lately-saddles
and other truck, but saddles, wholesale, most particular.
Got so it wasn’t safe for a man to leave a saddle
on a horse at night, down round Las Cruces.”
“They got Bill McCall’s
saddle in Mesilla three months ago,” broke in
Jody, laughing. “So Bill, he went and broke
a bronc backward. Yes, sir! Broke him to
be saddled and mounted from the wrong side. Only
left-handed horse in the world, I reckon. Then
Bill slips off down to Mesilla, ties his horse in
front of Isham Holt’s house about dark, and
filters inside to jolly Miss Valeria. Pretty soon
Bill heard a tur’ble row outside, and when he
went out he found a Mex boy rollin’ round in
the street and a-holdin’ both hands to his belly.
Claimed he had the cramps, he did-but that’s
why we’re rather looking for Mexicans.”
“We figured they were a regular
gang, scattered up and down, hurrying the stuff along
by relays, and likely taking it down in old Mexico
to dispose of,” said Caney. “Then
we hear that saddles are being missed up in Socorro
County too. So Hales and me gets our wise heads
together. Here is our hugeous hunch: This
is lonesome country here, the big roads dodge the
river from San Marcial to Rincon, ’count of it
being so rough, so thieves wouldn’t go by the
Jornada nor yet take the big west-side roads through
Palomas or Hillsboro. No, sir. They just
about follow the other side of the river, where nobody
lives, as far down as Engle Ferry. There or thereabouts
they cross over, climb up Mescal Canyon and ooze out
through the rough country east of Caballo Mountain.
Then they either come through by MacCleod’s and
cross the river here again, or they keep on down below
Rincon to Barela Bosque. Maybe they save up till
they get a wagonload of saddles, cover them up with
a tarp or maybe some farm truck, and drive whistlin’
down the big road to El Paso.”
“Anyhow,” said Hales,
“the Cattle Association has offered an even
thousand for information leading to conviction, and
we’re going to watch the passes and water holes-here
and at Hadley Spring and Palomas Gap. If you
help get the thousand, you help spend it. That’s
right, ain’t it, boys?”
The others nodded.
“Go with you, you mean?”
“No. You stay here-so
long as you’re here anyway-while we
ride up the line. That way, one of us can go
on and watch Mescal. We was one man shy before,”
said Caney. “Does it go?”
“It goes.”
“Take your silly location papers
then, and we’ll ride. We’re going
across to have a look for tracks in Deadman first.”
He jerked his chin toward a notch in the hills, halfway
between the head of Apache Canyon and the head of
Redgate. “Then we’ll go up by MacCleod’s
Tank and on through to the Jornada and up the east
side of Timber Mountain.”
“Me, I reckon I’ll post
my notice and then go mail the copies to the recorder’s
office,” said Adam. “Thank’ee,
gentlemen. Adios!”
Jody Weir pulled up his horse behind the first hill.
“Fellers, that man has made
a strike! Didya see his face-all sweat
and dust? Adam Forbes is not the man to rustle
like that in this broiling sun unless he was worked
up about something. He didn’t act natural,
nohow. He drawls his talk along, as a usual thing-but
to-day he spoke up real crisp and peart. I tell
you now, Forbes has found the stuff!”
“I noticed he didn’t seem
noways keen for us to go help post his papers,”
said Caney.
“Humph! I began noticin’
before that,” said Toad Hales. “Us
signing as witnesses-that got my eye.
Usually it makes no never minds about a witness to
a mining claim. They sign up John Smith, Robinson
Crusoe or Jesse James, and let it go at that.
Mighty strict and law-abiding all of a sudden, he
was! And going to record his papers the day of
discovery-when he has ninety days for it?
It’s got all the earmarks of a regular old he-strike!
I move we take rounders on him and go look-see.”
“Cowboy-you done said something.”
They slipped back furtively, making
a detour, riding swiftly under cover of shielding
hills; they peeped over a hill crest beyond Adam’s
claims just in time to see him riding slowly away in
the direction of Redgate.
“Gone to mail his notices to
Hillsboro!” snarled Jody. “Some hurry!
Come on, you-let’s look into this.”
They found pick and pan, stacked with
the empty water kegs by the location monument of the
Goblin Gold; they scraped up a small pan of dirt from
one of the shallow holes of Adam’s making; they
poured in water from their canteens; Caney did the
washing. He poured off the lighter dirt, he picked
out the pebbles, he shook the residue with a gentle
oscillating movement; he poured the muddy water cautiously,
he shook the pan again.
“Sufferin’ tomcats!”
yelled Hales. “Gold as big as wheat!”
Caney’s face went whitey-green;
he completed the washing with a last dexterous flirt
and set down the pan with trembling hands.
“Look at that!”
Jody’s eyes were popping from
his head. “A pocket! Even if it plays
out in a day-a day’s work would make
us rich for life!”
“Us-hell!”
said Caney. “We get the crumbs and leavings.
Adam Forbes knows what he’s about. He’s
got the cream. Outside of his claims the whole
damn mountain won’t be worth hell room!”
Jody turned his eyes slowly toward
Redgate. “If we’d only known we might
have horned in. Three of us-why, sooner
than lose it all and get himself killed to boot, we
might have split this fifty-fifty.”
“We’ll split this thirty-thirty!”
Caney sprang to his feet. “Have you got
the guts for it? Jody, this is your country-can
we head him off?”
“If he goes round by the head
of Redgate Canyon-and if we don’t
stay here talking-we can cut across through
Deadman. There’s a pass where Deadman and
Redgate bend close together. It won’t be
a long shot-two hundred yards.”
“Three shots! Come on!”
Hales swung on his horse. “We’ve all
got our rifles. Three shots! Come on!”
He jabbed the spurs home.
It was not until they had passed the
park that the others overtook Hales.
“Here, you, Hales-don’t
kill your horse!” said Jody Weir. “If
he beats us to the pass we’re not done yet.
He’ll come back to-night. He said so.”
“You cussed fool! If he
once gets those location notices in the mail we might
as well let him go. We couldn’t take the
chances and get by with it.”
“That’s just it,”
said Jody. “Hi! Caney! Ride up
alongside. Slow up, Hales! Listen, both
of you. Even if he gets those papers in the mail,
the recorder need never see them. All I have to
do is to say the word. I’m on the inside-sure
and safe.”
“Sure?”
“Sure and safe. If he beats
us to the gap and comes back-well, you
stop Adam’s mouth and I’ll be responsible
for the papers. They’ll never be recorded
in this world!”
“Where’s your stand-in? At Garfield?”
“Never you mind my stand-in.
That’s my lookout. A letter posted at Garfield
to-night goes to Rincon by buckboard to-morrow; it
lays over in Rincon to-morrow night, goes out on the
High Line to Nutt on the nine-fifteen day after to-morrow,
takes the branch line to Lake Valley, and goes from
Lake to Hillsboro by stage. It don’t get
to Hillsboro till two in the afternoon, day after
to-morrow. It takes as long from Garfield to
Hillsboro as from Chicago. After-after-if
we turn the trick-we can come back and
post location notices for ourselves. Then we
can beat it on a bee line for Hillsboro and record
’em.”
“Aha! So it’s at
Hillsboro post office you’re the solid Muldoon,
is it?”
Weir’s gun flashed to a level
with Caney’s breast. “That will be
all from you, Caney! Your next supposing along
those lines will be your last. Get me? Now
or ever! Keep your mouth closed, and Adam Forbes’
mouth. That’s your job.”
“Put up your gun, kid.
I can’t afford to be killed. I’m going
to be a howlin’ millionaire. I’ll
say no more, but I’m not sorry I spoke.
You bein’ so very earnest that way, I’m
satisfied you can deliver the goods. That is
what I want to know-for I tell you now,
I don’t expect to head Forbes off here.
He had too much start of us-unless he dilly-dallies
along the road or is delayed.”
“If he comes back, won’t
he bring a gang with him? If he does we’re
done,” said Hales. “That’s why
I’m willing to kill my horse to beat him to
it. You two seem more interested in chewing the
rag.”
“O, that’s all right!
Jody and me, we’ve come to a good understanding,”
said Caney smoothly. Jody Weir glanced carelessly
at the back of Hales’ head, his eyes wandered
till they met Caney’s eyes and held steadily
there for a moment; his brows arched a trifle.
“Well, here we are,” announced
Jody. “We’d better make the climb
afoot. The horses are about done and they’d
make too much noise anyway-floundering
about. It’s all slick rock.”
They took their rifles from the saddles,
they clambered up the steep pass, they peered over
cautiously.
“Hell! There’s two
of them!” said Caney. “Get ’em
both! Big stakes! This is the chance of
a lifetime!”
Below them on a little shelf of promontory
stood a saddled horse, a blue horse. A yearling
was hog-tied there, and a branding fire burned beside.
As they looked, a young man knelt over the yearling
and earmarked it. Close by, Adam Forbes slouched
in the saddle, leaning with both hands on the horn.
He gave a letter to the young man, who stuck it into
his shirt and then went back to the yearling.
He loosed the hogging-string. The yearling scrambled
to his feet, bawling defiance, intent on battle; the
young man grabbed the yearling’s tail and jerked
him round till his head faced down the canyon.
Adam Forbes made a pass with his horse and slapped
with his hat; the yearling fled.
“Wait! Wait!” whispered
Jody. “I know that man! That’s
Johnny Dines. Wait! Adam wants to get back
and feel that gold in his fingers. Ten to one
Dines is going across the river; I can guess his business;
he’s hunting for the John Cross. Adam gave
him the location-papers to mail. If Adam goes
back-there’s your scapegoat-Dines!
He’ll be the man that killed Forbes!”
“Friend of yours, Jody?”
“Damn him! If they both
start down the canyon, you fellows get Forbes.
I’ll get Dines myself. That’s the
kind of friend he is. Get your guns ready-they’ll
be going in a minute, one way or the other.”
“Curiously enough, I know Johnny
Dines myself,” muttered Hales. “Very
intelligent man, Dines. Very! I would take
a singular satisfaction in seeing young Dines hung.
To that laudable end I sure hope your Mr. Forbes will
not go down the canyon.”
“Well, he won’t!
Didn’t you see him give Dines the papers?”
said Caney. “Lay still! This is going
to match up like clockwork.”
The men below waved their hands to
each other in friendly fashion; Forbes jogged lazily
up the canyon; Dines stamped out the branding fire
and rode whistling on the riverward road.
“Weir, you’re dead sure
you can pull the trick about the papers? All
right, then-you and Hales go over there
and write out joint location papers in the names of
the three of us. Got a pencil? Yes?
Burn the old notices, and burn ’em quick.
Burn his kegs and turn his hobbled horse loose.
We will bring his tools as we come back, and hide ’em
in the rocks. Any old scrap of paper will do
us. Here’s some old letters. Use the
backs of them. After we get to Hillsboro we’ll
make copies to file.”
These directions came jerkily and
piecemeal as the conspirators scrambled down the hillside.
“Where’ll we join you?”
Caney paused with his foot in the
stirrup to give Jody Weir a black look.
“I’ll join you, young
fellow, and I’ll join you at our mine. Do
you know, I don’t altogether trust you?
I want to see those two sets of location papers with
my two eyes before we start. So you’ll have
lots of time. Don’t you make no mistakes.
And when we go, we go together. Then if we happen
to find Adam Forbes by the fire where he caught young
Dines stealin’ a maverick of his-”
“How’ll you manage that?
Forbes is halfway to the head of the canyon by now.”
“That’s your way to the
left, gentlemen. Take your time, now. I’m
in no hurry and you needn’t be, and our horses
are all tired from their run. And you want to
be most mighty sure you keep on going. For the
next half hour nobody’s going to know what I’m
doing but me and God-and we won’t
tell.”
Caney turned off to the right.
Fifteen minutes later he met Adam Forbes in a tangle
of red hills by the head of Redgate.
“Hi, Adam! We got ’em!”
he hailed jubilantly. “Caught ’em
with the goods. Two men and five saddles.
Both Mexicans.”
“They must have given you one
hell of a chase, judging from your horse.”
“They did. We spied ’em
jest over the divide at the head of Deadman.
There wasn’t any chance to head ’em off.
We woulda tagged along out of sight, but they saw
us first. They dropped their lead horses and
pulled out-but we got close enough to begin
foggin’ lead at ’em in a straight piece
of canyon, and they laid ’em down.”
“Know ’em?”
“Neither one. Old Mexico
men, I judge by the talk of ’em. Hales and
Jody took ’em on down Deadman-them
and the lead horses-while I come back for
you.”
“Me? Whadya want o’ me?”
“Why, you want to go down to
represent for yourself. You know that odd bit
of land, grown up to brush, that you bought of Miguel
Silva?”
“Took it on a bad debt. What of it?”
“Why, there’s an old tumbledown
shack on it, and they’ve been using that as
a store house, tha’sall. By their tell they
got eighteen assorted saddles hid there.”
“Well, I’m damned!”
said Adam, turning back. “That’s a
blame fine howdy-do, ain’t it? How long
have they been at this lay?”
“Four or five months. More’n
that south of here. But they just lately been
extendin’ and branchin’ out.”
“Making new commercial connections,
so to speak. Any of the Garfield gente
implicated?”
“One. Albino Villa Neuva.”
Adam nodded. “Always thought he was a bad
hombre, Albino.”
“They’re going to come
clean, these two,” said Caney cheerfully.
“We told ’em if they’d turn state’s
evidence they’d probable get off light.
Reckon we’re going to round up the whole gang.
Say, I thought you’d hiked on to Garfield.
I started back to your little old mine, cut into your
sign, and was followin’ you up.”
“Yes, I did start down all right.
But I met up with a lad down here a stretch and give
him my papers and shackled on back. Damn your
saddle thieves, anyway-I sure wanted to
go back and paw round that claim of mine. My
pack horse is back there hobbled, too.”
“Aw, nemmine your pack horse.
He’ll make out till mornin’.”
Ahead of them the wagon road was gouged
into the side of an overhang of promontory, under
a saddleback pass to northward. A dim trail curved
away toward the pass. Adam’s eye followed
the trail. Caney’s horse fell back a step.
“There’s where I found
my mail carrier,” said Adam; “up on top
of that little thumb. A Bar Cross waddy, he was-brandin’
a calf.”
Caney fired three times. The
muzzle of his forty-five was almost between Adam’s
shoulders. Adam fell sidewise to the left, he
clutched at his rifle, he pulled it with him as he
fell. His foot hung in the stirrup, his horse
dragged him for a few feet. Then his foot came
free. He rolled over once, and tried to pull his
rifle up. Then he lay still with his face in
the dust.