The Claim Jumpers Read online

Page 6


  He glanced at his shoulder.

  Fay listened to this speech quietly and with patience. "What do you intend to do?" he asked, when the other had quite finished.

  "I don't know yet. If you'll say nothing down below-and I'm sure you will not-I'll contrive some way of keeping this procession down the hole, and of feeding them, and then I'll relocate the claims myself."

  "With one arm?"

  "Yes, with one arm!" cried Bennington fiercely; "with no arms at all, if need be!" he broke off suddenly, with the New Yorker's ingrained instinct of repression. "I beg your pardon. I mean I'll do as well as I can, of course."

  "How about the woman-Arthur's wife? She'll give you trouble."

  "She has locked herself in her cabin already. I will assist her to continue the imprisonment."

  Fay laughed outright. "And you expect, with one arm and wounded, to feed four people, keep them in confinement, and at the same time to relocate eighteen claims lying scattered all over the hills! Well, you're optimistic, to say the least."

  "I'll do the best I can," repeated Bennington doggedly.

  "And you won't ask help of a friend ready to give it?"

  "Not as a friend."

  "Well," Fay chuckled, apparently not displeased, "you're an obstinate young man, or rather a pig-headed young man, but I don't know as that counts against you. I'll help you out, anyway-if not as a friend, then as an enemy. You see, I have my marching orders from someone else, and you haven't anything to do with it."

  Bennington bowed coldly, but his immense relief flickered into his face in spite of himself. "What should we do first?" he asked formally.

  "Sit here and wait for the kids," responded Jim.

  "Who are the kids?"

  "Friends of mine-trustworthy."

  Jim rearranged Bennington's coverings and lit a pipe. "Tell us about it," said he.

  "There isn't much to tell. I knew I had to do something, so I just held them up and made them get down the shaft. I didn't know what I was going to do next, but I was glad to have them out of the way to get time to think."

  "Who plugged you?" inquired Fay, motioning with the mouthpiece of his pipe toward the wounded shoulder.

  "That was Arthur. He had a little gun in his coat pocket and he shot from inside the pocket. I'd made them drop all the guns they had, I thought."

  "Did you take a crack at him then?" asked Fay, interested.

  "Oh, no. I just covered him and made him shell out. As a matter of fact I don't believe any one of them knew I was hit."

  Fay smoked on in silence, glancing from time to time with satisfaction at the youth opposite. During the passage of these events the day had not far advanced. The shadow of Harney had not yet reached out to the edge of the hills.

  "Hullo! The kids!" said Fay suddenly.

  Two pedestrians emerged from the lower gulch and bent their steps toward the camp. As they came nearer, Bennington, with a gasp of surprise, recognised the Leslies.

  The sprightly youths were dressed just alike, in knickerbockers and Norfolk jackets of dark brown plaid, and small college caps to match-an outfit which Bennington had always believed would attract too vivid attention in this country. As they came nearer he saw that the jackets were fitted with pockets of great size. In the pockets were sketch books and bulging articles. They caught sight of the two figures on the ore heap simultaneously.

  "Behold our attentive host!" cried Jeems. "He is now in the act of receiving us with all honour!"

  Bennington's face fairly shone with pleasure at the encounter. "Hullo fellows! Hullo there!" he cried out delightedly again and again, and rose slowly to his feet. This disclosed the fact of his injury, and the brothers ran forward, with real sympathy and concern expressed on their lively countenances. There ensued a rapid fire of questions and answers. The Leslies proved to be already familiar with the details of the attempt to jump the claims, and understood at once Fay's brief account of the present situation, over which they rejoiced in the well-known Leslie fashion. They exploded in genuine admiration of Bennington's adventure, and praised that young man enthusiastically. Bennington could feel, even before this, that he stood on a different footing than formerly with these self-reliant young men. They treated him as familiarly as ever, but with a new respect. The truth is, their astuteness in reading character, which is as essentially an attribute of the artistic temperament in black and white as in words and phrases, had shown them already that their old acquaintance had grown from boy to man since last they had met. They knew this even before they learned of its manifestation. So astounding was the change that they gave it credit, perhaps, for being more thorough than it was. After the situation had been made plain, Bennington reverted to the unexpectedness of their appearance.

  "But you haven't told me yet how you happen to be here," he suggested. "I'd as soon have expected to see Ethel Henry coming up the gulch!"

  "Didn't you get our letters?" cried Bert in astonishment.

  "No, I haven't received any letters. Did you write?"

  "Did we write! Well, I should think so! We wrote three times, telling you we were coming and when to expect us. Jeems and I wondered why you didn't meet us. That explains it. Seems funny you didn't get any of those letters!"

  "No, I don't believe it is so funny after all," responded Bennington, who had been thinking it over. "I remember now that Davidson told the others he had been intercepting my letters from the Company, and I suppose he got yours too."

  "That's it, of course. I'll have to interview that Davidson later. Well, we used to train around here off and on, as I told you once, and this year Jeems and I thought we'd do our summer sketching here, and sort of revive old times. So we packed up and came."

  "I'm mighty glad you came, anyway," replied Bennington fervently.

  "So'm I. We're just in time to help foil the villain. As foilers Jeems and I are an artistic success. We have studied foiling under the best masters in the Bowery and Sixth Avenue theatres."

  "Where's Bill?" asked Jim suddenly.

  "Will be around in the morning. You're to report progress at once. Didn't dare to come up until after the row. Dreadful anxious though. Would have come if Jeems and I hadn't forbidden it."

  Bennington wondered vaguely who Bill might be, but he was beginning to feel a little tired from the excitement and his wound, so he said nothing.

  "The next thing is grub," remarked Fay, rising and gathering his pony's reins. "I'll mosey up to the shack and see about supper. You fellows can sit around and talk until I get organized."

  He turned to move away, leading his horse.

  "Hold on a minute, Jim," called Bert. "You might lend me your bronc, and I'll lope down and set Bill's mind easy. It won't take long."

  "Good scheme!" approved Jim heartily. "That's thoughtful of you, Bertie!"

  He dropped the reins where he stood, and the pony, with the usual well-trained Western docility, hung his head and halted. Bert arose and looked down the shaft.

  "Supper will be served shortly, gentlemen," he observed suavely. He turned toward the pony.

  "Bert," called Bennington in a different voice, "did you say you were going down the gulch?"

  "Yes."

  "Do you want to do something for me?"

  "Why, surely. What is it?"

  "Would you just as soon stop at the Lawtons' and tell Miss Lawton for me that it's all right! You'll find the Lawton house--"

  "Yes, I know where the Lawton house is," interrupted Bert, "but Miss Lawton, you said?"

  "Don't you remember, Bert," put in James, "there is a kid there-Maude, or something of that sort?"

  "No, no, not Maude," persisted Bennington, still more bashfully. "I mean Miss Lawton, the young lady."

  He felt that both the youths were looking keenly at him with dawning wonder and delight. "Hold on, Bert," interposed James, as the other was about to exclaim, "do you mean, Ben, the one you've been giving such a rush for the last two months?"

  "Miss Lawton and I are very
good friends," replied Bennington with dignity, wondering whence James had his information.

  Bert drew in his breath sharply, and opened his mouth to speak.

  "Hold on, Bert," interposed James again. "There are possibilities in this. Don't destroy artistic development by undue haste. What did you call the young lady, Ben?"

  "Miss Lawton, of course!"

  "Daughter of Bill Lawton?"

  "Why, yes."

  "Oh, my eye!" ejaculated James.

  "And you have eyes in your head!" he cried after a moment. "You have ears in your head! Blamed if you haven't everything in your head but brains! She's a good one! I didn't appreciate the subtlety of that woman before. Ben, you everlasting idiot, do you mean to tell me that you've seen that girl every day for the last two months, and don't know yet that she's too good to belong to Bill Lawton?"

  Bert began to laugh hysterically.

  "What do you mean!" cried Bennington.

  "What I say.She isn't Bill Lawton's daughter. Her name isn't Lawton at all. O glory! He don't even know her name!" James in his turn went into a fit of laughing. In uncontrollable excitement Bennington seized him with his sound hand.

  "What is it? Tell me! What is her name, then?"

  "O Lord! Don't squeeze so! I'll tell you! Letup!"

  James dashed the back of his hand across his eyes.

  "What is her name?" repeated Bennington fiercely.

  "Wilhelmina Fay. We call her Bill for short."

  "And Jim Fay?"

  "Is her brother."

  "And the Lawtons?"

  "They board there."

  Across Bennington's mind flashed vaguely a suspicion that turned him faint with mortification.

  "Who is this Jim Fay?" he asked.

  "He's Jim Fay-James Leicester Fay, of Boston."

  "Not--"

  "Yes, exactly. The Boston Fays."

  Bert swung himself into the saddle. "Better not say anything to Bill about the young 'un's shoulder," called after him the ever-thoughtful James.

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