The Cross Cut
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Courtney Ryley Cooper >> The Cross Cut
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"When's it to be?"
"A week from to-morrow night. Are you going to be here that long?"
She realized the slip of her tongue and colored slightly. Fairchild,
recovered now, reached into a pocket and carefully fingered the bills
there. Then, with a quick motion, as he drew them forth, he covered a
ten-dollar bill with a one-dollar note and thrust them forward.
"Yes, I 'll take the ticket."
She handed it to him, thanked him, and reached for the money. As it
passed into her hand, a corner of the ten-dollar bill revealed itself,
and she hastily thrust it toward him as though to return money paid by
mistake. Just as quickly, she realized his purpose and withdrew her
hand.
"Oh!" she exclaimed, almost in a whisper, "I understand." She flushed
and stood a second hesitant, flustered, her big eyes almost childish as
they looked up into his. "You--you must think I 'm a cad!" Then she
whirled and left the store, and a slight smile came to the lips of
Robert Fairchild as he watched her hurrying across the street. He had
won a tiny victory, at least.
Not until she had rounded a corner and disappeared did Fairchild leave
his point of vantage. Then, with a new enthusiasm, a greater desire
than ever to win out in the fight which had brought him to Ohadi, he
hurried to the courthouse and the various technicalities which must be
coped with before he could really call the Blue Poppy mine his own.
It was easier than he thought. A few signatures, and he was free to
wander through town to where idlers had pointed out Kentucky gulch and
to begin the steep ascent up the narrow road on a tour of prospecting
that would precede the more legal and more safe system of a surveyor.
The ascent was almost sheer in places, for in Kentucky gulch the hills
huddled close to the little town and rose in precipitous inclines
almost before the city limits had been reached. Beside the road a
small stream chattered, milk-white from the silica deposits of the
mines, like the waters of Clear Creek, which it was hastening to join.
Along the gullies were the scars of prospect holes, staring like dark,
blind eyes out upon the gorge;--reminders of the lost hopes of a day
gone by. Here and there lay some discarded piece of mining machinery,
rust-eaten and battered now, washed down inch by inch from the higher
hill where it had been abandoned when the demonetization of silver
struck, like a rapier, into the hearts of grubbing men, years before.
It was a canon of decay, yet of life, for as he trudged along, the roar
of great motors came to Fairchild's ears; and a moment later he stepped
aside to allow the passage of ore-laden automobile trucks, loaded until
the springs had flattened and until the engines howled with their
compression as they sought to hold back their burdens on the steep
grade. And it was as he stood there, watching the big vehicles travel
down the mountain side, that Fairchild caught a glimpse of a human
figure which suddenly darted behind a clump of scrub pine and skirted
far to one side, taking advantage of every covering. A new beat came
into Fairchild's heart. He took to the road again, plodding upward
apparently without a thought of his pursuer, stopping to stare at the
bleak prospect holes, or to admire the pink-white beauties of the snowy
range in the far distance, seemingly a man entirely bereft of
suspicion. A quarter of a mile he went, a half. Once, as the road
turned beside a great rock, he sought its shelter and looked back. The
figure still was following, running carefully now along the bank of the
stream in an effort to gain as much ground as possible before the
return of the road to open territory should bring the necessity of
caution again.
A mile more, then, again in the shelter of rocks, he swerved and sought
a hiding place, watching anxiously from his concealment for evidences
of discovery. There were none. The shadower came on, displaying more
and more caution as he approached the rocks, glancing hurriedly about
him as he moved swiftly from cover to cover. Closer--closer--then
Fairchild repressed a gasp. The man was old, almost white-haired, with
hard, knotted hands which seemed to stand out from his wrists; thin and
wiry with the resiliency that outdoor, hardened muscles often give to
age, and with a face that held Fairchild almost hypnotized. It was
like a hawk's; hook-beaked, colorless, toneless in all expressions save
that of a malicious tenacity; the eyes were slanted until they
resembled those of some fantastic Chinese image, while just above the
curving nose a blue-white scar ran straight up the forehead,--Squint
Rodaine!
So he was on the trail already! Fairchild watched him pass, sneak
around the corner of the rocks, and stand a moment in apparent
bewilderment as he surveyed the ground before him. A mumbling curse
and he went on, his cautious gait discarded, walking briskly along the
rutty, boulder-strewn road toward a gaping hole in the hill, hardly a
furlong away. There he surveyed the ground carefully, bent and stared
hard at the earth, apparently for a trace of footprints, and finding
none, turned slowly and looked intently all about him. Carefully he
approached the mouth of the tunnel and stared within. Then he
straightened, and with another glance about him, hurried off up a gulch
leading away from the road, into the hills. Fairchild lay and watched
him until he was out of sight, and he knew instinctively that a
surveyor would only cover beaten territory now. Squint Rodaine, he
felt sure, had pointed out to him the Blue Poppy mine.
But he did not follow the direction given by his pursuer. Squint
Rodaine was in the hills. Squint Rodaine might return, and the
consciousness of caution bade that Fairchild not be there when he came
back. Hurriedly he descended the rocks once more to turn toward town
and toward Mother Howard's boarding house. He wanted to tell her what
he had seen and to obtain her help and counsel.
Quickly he made the return trip, crossing the little bridge over the
turbulent Clear Creek and heading toward the boarding house. Half a
block away he halted, as a woman on the veranda of the big, squarely
built "hotel" pointed him out, and the great figure of a man shot
through the gate, shouting, and hurried toward him.
A tremendous creature he was, with red face and black hair which seemed
to scramble in all directions at once, and with a mustache which
appeared to scamper in even more directions than his hair. Fairchild
was a large man; suddenly he felt himself puny and inconsequential as
the mastodonic thing before him swooped forward, spread wide the big
arms and then caught him tight in them, causing the breath to puff over
his lips like the exhaust of a bellows.
A release, then Fairchild felt himself lifted and set down again. He
pulled hard at his breath.
"What's the matter with you?" he exclaimed testily. "You 've made a
mistake!"
"I 'm blimed if I 'ave!" bellowed a tornado-like voice. "Blime! You
look just like 'im!"
"But you 're mistaken, old man!"
Fairchild was vaguely aware that the spray-like mustache was working
like a dust-broom, that snappy blue eyes were beaming upon him, that
the big red nose was growing redder, while a tremendous paw had seized
his own hand and was doing its best to crush it.
"Blimed if I 'ave!" came again. "You're your Dad's own boy! You look
just like 'im! Don't you know me?"
He stepped back then and stood grinning, his long, heavily muscled arms
hanging low at his sides, his mustache trying vainly to stick out in
more directions than ever. Fairchild rubbed a hand across his eyes.
"You 've got me!" came at last. "I--"
"You don't know me? 'Onest now, don't you? I 'm Arry! Don't you know
now? 'Arry from Cornwall!"
CHAPTER VII
It came to Fairchild then,--the sentence in his father's letter
regarding some one who would hurry to his aid when he needed him, the
references of Beamish, and the allusion of Mother Howard to a faithful
friend. He forgot the pain as the tremendous Cornishman banged him on
the back, he forgot the surprise of it all; he only knew that he was
laughing and welcoming a big man old enough in age to be his father,
yet young enough in spirit to want to come back and finish a fight he
had seen begun, and strong enough in physique to stand it. Again the
heavy voice boomed:
"You know me now, eh?"
"You bet! You 're Harry Harkins!"
"'Arkins it is! I came just as soon as I got the cablegram!"
"The cablegram?"
"Yeh." Harry pawed at his wonderful mustache. "From Mr. Beamish, you
know. 'E sent it. Said you 'd started out 'ere all alone. And I
could n't stand by and let you do that. So 'ere I am!"
"But the expense, the long trip across the ocean, the--"
"'Ere I am!" said Harry again. "Ain't that enough?"
They had reached the veranda now, to stand talking for a moment, then
to go within, where Mother Howard awaited, eyes glowing, in the parlor.
Harry flung out both arms.
"And I still love you!" he boomed, as he caught the gray-haired,
laughing woman in his arms. "Even if you did run me off and would n't
go back to Cornwall!"
Red-faced, she pushed him away and slapped his cheek playfully; it was
like the tap of a light breeze against granite. Then Harry turned.
"'Ave you looked at the mine?"
The question brought back to Fairchild the happenings of the morning
and the memory of the man who had trailed him. He told his story,
while Mother Howard listened, her arms crossed, her head bobbing, and
while Harry, his big grin still on his lips, took in the details with
avidity. Then for a moment a monstrous hand scrambled vaguely about in
the region of the Cornishman's face, grasping a hair of that radiating
mustache now and then and pulling hard at it, at last to drop,--and the
grin faded.
"Le 's go up there," he said quietly.
This time the trip to Kentucky gulch was made by skirting town; soon
they were on the rough, narrow roadway leading into the mountains.
Both were silent for the most part, and the expression on Harry's face
told that he was living again the days of the past, days when men were
making those pock-marks in the hills, when the prospector and his pack
jack could be seen on every trail, and when float ore in a gulley meant
riches waiting somewhere above. A long time they walked, at last to
stop in the shelter of the rocks where Fairchild had shadowed his
pursuer, and to glance carefully ahead. No one was in sight. Harry
jabbed out a big finger.
"That's it," he announced, "straight a'ead!"
They went on, Fairchild with a gripping at his throat that would not
down. This had been the hope of his father--and here his father had
met--what? He swerved quickly and stopped, facing the bigger man.
"Harry," came sharply, "I know that I may be violating an unspoken
promise to my father. But I simply can't stand it any longer. What
happened here?"
"We were mining--for silver."
"I don't mean that--there was some sort of tragedy."
Harry chuckled,--in concealment, Fairchild thought, of something he did
not want to tell him.
"I should think so! The timbers gave way and the mine caved in!"
"Not that! My father ran away from this town. You and Mother Howard
helped him. You didn't come back. Neither did my father. Eventually
it killed him."
"So?" Harry looked seriously and studiously at the young man. "'E did
n't write me of'en."
"He did n't need to write you. You were here with him--when it
happened."
"No--" Harry shook his head. "I was in town."
"But you knew--"
"What's Mother Howard told you?"
"A lot--and nothing."
"I don't know any more than she does."
"But--"
"Friends did n't ask questions in those days," came quietly. "I might
'ave guessed if I 'd wanted to--but I did n't want to."
"But if you had?"
Harry looked at him with quiet, blue eyes.
"What would you guess?"
Slowly Robert Fairchild's gaze went to the ground. There was only one
possible conjecture: Sissie Larsen had been impersonated by a woman.
Sissie Larsen had never been seen again in Ohadi.
"I--I would hate to put it into words," came finally. Harry slapped
him on the shoulder.
"Then don't. It was nearly thirty years ago. Let sleeping dogs lie.
Take a look around before we go into the tunnel."
They reconnoitered, first on one side, then on the other. No one was
in sight. Harry bent to the ground, and finding a pitchy pine knot,
lighted it. They started cautiously within, blinking against the
darkness.
A detour and they avoided an ore car, rusty and half filled, standing
on the little track, now sagging on moldy ties. A moment more of
walking and Harry took the lead.
"It's only a step to the shaft now," he cautioned. "Easy--easy--look
out for that 'anging wall--" he held the pitch torch against the roof
of the tunnel and displayed a loose, jagged section of rock, dripping
with seepage from the hills above. "Just a step now--'ere it is."
The outlines of a rusty "hoist", with its cable leading down into a
slanting hole in the rock, showed dimly before them,--a massive,
chunky, deserted thing in the shadows. About it were clustered drills
that were eaten by age and the dampness of the seepage; farther on a
"skip", or shaft-car, lay on its side, half buried in mud and muck from
the walls of the tunnel. Here, too, the timbers were rotting; one
after another, they had cracked and caved beneath the weight of the
earth above, giving the tunnel an eerie aspect, uninviting, dangerous.
Harry peered ahead.
"It ain't as bad as it looks," came after a moment's survey. "It's
only right 'ere at the beginning that it's caved. But that does n't do
us much good."
"Why not?" Fairchild was staring with him, on toward the darkness of
the farther recesses. "If it is n't caved in farther back, we ought to
be able to repair this spot."
But Harry shook his head.
"We did n't go into the vein 'ere," he explained. "We figured we 'ad
to 'ave a shaft anyway, sooner or later. You can't do under'and
stoping in a mine--go down on a vein, you know. You 've always got to
go up--you can't get the metal out if you don't. That's why we dug
this shaft--and now look at it!"
He drew the flickering torch to the edge of the shaft and held it
there, staring downward. Fairchild beside him. Twenty feet below
there came the glistening reflection of the flaring flame. Water!
Fairchild glanced toward his partner.
"I don't know anything about it," he said at last. "But I should think
that would mean trouble."
"Plenty!" agreed Harry lugubriously. "That shaft's two 'unnerd feet
deep and there 's a drift running off it for a couple o' 'unnerd feet
more before it 'its the vein. Four 'unnerd feet of water. 'Ow much
money 'ave you got?"
"About twenty-five hundred dollars."
Harry reached for his waving mustache, his haven in time of storm.
Thoughtfully he pulled at it, staring meanwhile downward. Then he
grunted.
"And I ain't got more 'n five 'unnerd. It ain't enough. We 'll need
to repair this 'oist and put the skip in order. We 'll need to build
new track and do a lot of things. Three thousand dollars ain't enough."
"But we 'll have to get that water out of there before we can do
anything." Fairchild interposed. "If we can't get at the vein up here,
we 'll have to get at it from below. And how 're we going to do that
without unwatering that shaft?"
Again Harry pulled at his mustache.
"That's just what 'Arry 's thinking about," came his answer finally.
"Le 's go back to town. I don't like to stand around this place and
just look at water in a 'ole."
They turned for the mouth of the tunnel, sliding along in the greasy
muck, the torch extinguished now. A moment of watchfulness from the
cover of the darkness, then Harry pointed. On the opposite hill, the
figure of a man had been outlined for just a second. Then he had
faded. And with the disappearance of the watcher, Harry nudged his
partner in the ribs and went forth into the brighter light. An hour
more and they were back in town. Harry reached for his mustache again.
"Go on down to Mother 'Oward's," he commanded. "I 've got to wander
around and say 'owdy to what's left of the fellows that was 'ere when I
was. It's been twenty years since I 've been away, you know," he
added, "and the shaft can wait."
Fairchild obeyed the instructions, looking back over his shoulder as he
walked along toward the boarding house, to see the big figure of his
companion loitering up the street, on the beginning of his home-coming
tour. It was evident that Harry was popular. Forms rose from the
loitering places on the curbings in front of the stores, voices called
to him; even as the distance grew greater, Fairchild could hear the
shouts of greeting which were sounding to Harry as he announced his
return.
The blocks passed. Fairchild turned through the gate of Mother
Howard's boarding house and went to his room to await the call for
dinner. The world did not look exceptionally good to him; his
brilliant dreams had not counted upon the decay of more than a quarter
of a century, the slow, but sure dripping of water which had seeped
through the hills and made the mine one vast well, instead of the free
open gateway to riches which he had planned upon. True, there had been
before him the certainty of a cave-in, but Fairchild was not a miner,
and the word to him had been a vague affair. Now, however, it was
taking on a new aspect; he was beginning to realize the full extent of
the fight which was before him if the Blue Poppy mine ever were to turn
forth the silver ore he hoped to gain from it, if the letter of his
father, full of threats though it might be, were to be realized in that
part of it which contained the promise of riches in abundance.
Pitifully small his capital looked to Fairchild now. Inadequate--that
was certain--for the needs which now stood before it. And there was no
person to whom he could turn, no one to whom he could go, for more. To
borrow, one must have security; and with the exception of the faith of
the red-faced Harry, and the promise of a silent man, now dead, there
was nothing. It was useless; an hour of thought and Fairchild ceased
trying to look into the future, obeying, instead, the insistent
clanging of the dinner bell from downstairs. Slowly he opened the door
of his room, trudged down the staircase,--then stopped in bewilderment.
Harry stood before him, in all the splendor that a miner can know.
He had bought a new suit, brilliant blue, almost electric in its
flashiness, nor had he been careful as to style. The cut of the
trousers was somewhat along the lines of fifteen years before, with
their peg tops and heavy cuffs. Beneath the vest, a glowing,
watermelon-pink shirt glared forth from the protection of a purple tie.
A wonderful creation was on his head, dented in four places, each
separated with almost mathematical precision. Below the cuffs of the
trousers were bright, tan, bump-toed shoes. Harry was a complete
picture of sartorial elegance, according to his own dreams. What was
more, to complete it all, upon the third finger of his right hand was a
diamond, bulbous and yellow and throwing off a dull radiance like the
glow of a burnt-out arclight; full of flaws, it is true, off color to a
great degree, but a diamond nevertheless. And Harry evidently realized
it.
"Ain't I the cuckoo?" he boomed, as Fairchild stared at him. "Ain't I?
I 'ad to 'ave a outfit, and--
"It might as well be now!" he paraphrased, to the tune of the
age-whitened sextette from "Floradora." "And look at the sparkler!
Look at it!"
Fairchild could do very little else but look. He knew the value, even
in spite of flaws and bad coloring. And he knew something else, that
Harry had confessed to having little more than five hundred dollars.
"But--but how did you do it?" came gaspingly. "I thought--"
"Installments!" the Cornishman burst out. "Ten per cent. down and the
rest when they catch me. Installments!" He jabbed forth a heavy
finger and punched Fairchild in the ribs. "Where's Mother 'Oward?
Won't I knock 'er eyes out?"
Fairchild laughed--he couldn't help it--in spite of the fact that five
hundred dollars might have gone a long way toward unwatering that
shaft. Harry was Harry--he had done enough in crossing the seas to
help him. And already, in the eyes of Fairchild, Harry was swiftly
approaching that place where he could do no wrong.
"You 're wonderful, Harry," came at last. The Cornishman puffed with
pride.
"I'm a cuckoo!" he admitted. "Where's Mother 'Oward? Where's Mother
'Oward? Won't I knock 'er eyes out, now?"
And he boomed forward toward the dining room, to find there men he had
known in other days, to shake hands with them and to bang them on the
back, to sight Blindeye Bozeman and Taylor Bill sitting hunched over
their meal in the corner and to go effusively toward them. "'Arry" was
playing no favorites in his "'ome-coming." "'Arry" was "'appy", and a
little thing like the fact that friends of his enemies were present
seemed to make little difference.
Jovially he leaned over the table of Bozeman and Bill, after he had
displayed himself before Mother Howard and received her sanction of his
selections in dress. Happily he boomed forth the information that
Fairchild and he were back to work the Blue Poppy mine and that they
already had made a trip of inspection.
"I 'm going back this afternoon," he told them. "There 's water in the
shaft. I 've got to figure a wye to get it out."
Then he returned to his table and Fairchild leaned close to him.
"Is n't that dangerous?"
"What?" Harry allowed his eyes to become bulbous as he whispered the
question. "Telling them two about what we 're going to do? Won't they
find it out anyway?"
"I guess that's true. What time are you going to the mine?"
"I don't know that I 'm going. And then I may. I 've got to kind of
sye 'ello around town first."
"Then I 'm not to go with you?"
Harry beamed at him.
"It's your day off, Robert," he announced, and they went on with their
meal.
That is, Fairchild proceeded. Harry did little eating. Harry was too
busy. Around him were men he had known in other days, men who had
stayed on at the little silver camp, fighting against the inevitable
downward course of the price of the white metal, hoping for the time
when resuscitation would come, and now realizing that feeling of joy
for which they had waited a quarter of a century. There were a
thousand questions to be answered, all asked by Harry. There was
gossip to relate and the lives of various men who had come and gone to
be dilated upon. Fairchild finished his meal and waited. But Harry
talked on. Bozeman and Bill left the dining room again to make a
report to the narrow-faced Squint Rodaine. Harry did not even notice
them. And as long as a man stayed to answer his queries, just so long
did Harry remain, at last to rise, brush a few crumbs from his
lightning-like suit, press his new hat gently upon his head with both
hands and start forth once more on his rounds of saying hello. And
there was nothing for Fairchild to do but to wait as patiently as
possible for his return.
The afternoon grew old. Harry did not come back. The sun set and
dinner was served. But Harry was not there to eat it. Dusk came, and
then, nervous over the continued absence of his eccentric partner,
Fairchild started uptown.
The usual groups were in front of the stores, and before the largest of
them Fairchild stopped.
"Do any of you happen to know a fellow named Harry Harkins?" he asked
somewhat anxiously. The answer was in the affirmative. A miner
stretched out a foot and surveyed it studiously.
"Ain't seen him since about five o'clock," he said at last. "He was
just starting up to the mine then."
"To the mine? That late? Are you sure?"
"Well--I dunno. May have been going to Center City. Can't say. All I
know is he said somethin' about goin' to th' mine earlier in th'
afternoon, an' long about five I seen him starting up Kentucky Gulch."
"Who 's that?" The interruption had come in a sharp, yet gruff voice.
Fairchild turned to see before him a man he recognized, a tall, thin,
wiry figure, with narrowed, slanting eyes, and a scar that went
straight up his forehead. He evidently had just rounded the corner in
time to hear the conversation. Fairchild straightened, and in spite of
himself his voice was strained and hard.
"I was merely asking about my partner in the Blue Poppy mine."
"The Blue Poppy?" the squint eyes narrowed more than ever. "You 're
Fairchild, ain't you? Well, I guess you 're going to have to get along
without a partner from now on."
"Get along without--?"
A crooked smile came to the other man's lips.
"That is, unless you want to work with a dead man. Harry Harkins got
drowned, about an hour ago, in the Blue Poppy shaft!"
CHAPTER VIII
The news caused Fairchild to recoil and stand gasping. And before he
could speak, a new voice had cut in, one full of excitement, tremulous,
anxious.
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