Wunpost Part 10
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"How's this for a mule?" he enquired ingenuously, "cost me five hundred dollars in Barstow. Fastest walker in the West--picked him out on purpose--and my pack mule can carry four hundred. How much did you lose on the Stinging Lizard?"
"I lost over thirty thousand dollars, with the road work and all,"
answered Eells with ponderous exact.i.tude, and Wunpost laughed again.
"Thirty thousand!" he echoed. "I wish it was a million! But you can't say that I didn't warn you!"
"Warn me!" raged Eells, "you did nothing of the kind. It was a deliberate attempt to defraud me."
"Aw, cripes," scoffed Wunpost, "you can't win all the time--why don't you take your medicine like a sport? Didn't I name the danged hole The Stinging Lizard? Well, there was your warning--but you got stung!"
He laughed heartily at the joke and looked up the street, ignoring the staring crowd.
"Well, got to go!" he said. "Where _is_ that road you built--like to go up and take a look at it!"
"It extends up Jail Canyon," returned the banker grimly. "I understand Mr. Campbell is using it."
"Pretty work!" exclaimed Wunpost, "won't be wasted, anyhow. That'll come in right handy for Cole. Why didn't you buy the old ha.s.sayamper out?"
"He won't sell!" grumbled Eells, "say, come in here a minute--I've got something I want to talk over."
He led the way into his inner office, where an electric fan was running, and Wunpost took off his big, black hat to loll before the breeze.
"Pretty nice," he p.r.o.nounced, "they've got lots of 'em in Los. But I never suffered so much from heat in my life--the poor fools all wear _coats_! Gimme the desert, every time!"
"So you've come back to stay, eh?" inquired Eells unsociably, "I thought you'd left these parts."
"Yep--left and came back," replied Wunpost lightly. "Say, how much do you want for that contract? You might as well release me, because it'll never buy _you_ anything--you've got all the mines you'll get."
"I'll never release you!" answered Judson Eells firmly. "It's against my principles to do it."
"Aw, put a price on it," burst out Wunpost bluffly, "you know you haven't got any principles. You're out for the dough, the same as the rest of us, and you figure you'll make more by holding on. But I'm here to tell you that I'm getting too slick for you and you might as well quit while you're lucky."
"Not for any money," responded Judson Eells solemnly, "I am in this as a matter of principle."
"Ahhr, principle!" scoffed Wunpost. "You're the crookedest dog that ever drew up a contract--and then talk to me about _principle_! Why don't you say what you mean and call it your system--like they use trying to break the roulette wheel? But I'm telling you your system is played out. I'll never locate another claim as long as I live, unless I'm released from that contract; so where do you figure on any more Willie Meenas? All you'll get will be Stinging Lizards."
He burst out into taunting laughter but Judson Eells sat dumb, his heavy lower lip drawn up grimly.
"That's all right," he said at last, "I have reason to believe that you have located a very rich mine--and the only way you personally can ever get a dollar out of it, is to come through and give me half!"
"The only way, eh?" jeered Wunpost, "well, where did I get the price to buy that swell pair of mules? Did I give you one half, or even a smell?
Not much--and I got this, besides."
He slapped a wad of bills that he drew from his pocket, and Eells knew they were a part of his payment--the purchase price of the salted Stinging Lizard--but he only looked them over and scowled.
"Nothing doing, eh?" observed Wunpost rising up to go, "you won't sell that contract for no price. Going to follow me up, eh, and find this hidden treasure, and skin me out of it, too? Well, hop to it, Mr. Eells, and after you've got a bellyful perhaps you'll listen to reason. You got stung good and plenty when you bought the Stinging Lizard and I figure I'm pretty well heeled. Got two new mules, beside my other animals, and an eight hundred dollar watch-dog to keep me company; and I'm going to come back inside of a month with my mules loaded down with gold. Do you reckon your pet rabbit, Mr. Phillip F. Flappum, can make me come through with any part of it? Well, I consulted a lawyer before I left Los Angeles and he said--decidedly not! Your contract calls for claims, wherever located, but I haven't got any claim. This ore that I bring in may be dug from some claim, and then again it may be high-graded from some mine; but you've got to find that claim and prove that it exists before you can call for a cent. You've got to prove, by grab, where I got that gold, before you can claim that it's yours--and that's something you never can do. I'm going to say I _stole_ it and if you sue for any part of it you make yourself out a thief!"
He slammed his hand on Eells' desk and slammed the door when he went out and mounted his big mule with a swagger. The citizens of Blackwater made way for him promptly, though many a lip curled in scorn, and he rode out of town sitting sideways in his saddle while he did a little jig in his stirrups. He had come into town and bearded their leading citizen and now he was on his way. If any wished to follow, that was their privilege as free citizens, and their efforts might lead them to a mine; but on the other hand they might lead them up some very rocky canyons and down through Death Valley in summer. But there was one man he knew would follow, for the stakes were high and Judson Eells was not to be denied--it was up to Lynch, who had claimed to be so bad, to prove himself a tracker and a desert-man.
Wunpost rode along slowly until the sun went down, for the heat-haze hung black over the Sink, and that evening about midnight he entered Jail Canyon on a road that was graded like a boulevard. It swung around the point well up above the creek, and then on along the wash to Corkscrew Gorge, and as he paused below the house Wunpost chuckled to himself as he thought of his boasts to Wilhelmina. He had bet her two months before that, without turning his hand over or spending a cent of money, he could build her father a road; and now here it was, laid out like a highway--a proof that his system would work. She had chosen to scoff when he had made his big talk; but here he was back with his clothes full of money, and Judson Eells had kindly built the road. He looked up at the moon, where it rose swimming through the haze, and laughed until he shook; then he camped and waited for day.
The dawn came in a wave of heat, preceding the sun like the breath from a furnace; and Wunpost woke up suddenly to hear his wilted terrier barking furiously as he raced towards the house. There was a moment of silence, then the spit and yell of a cat and as Wunpost stood grinning his dog came slinking back licking the blood from a scratch across his nose. He was a fullblooded fox terrier, but small and white and trembly; and the baby-blue in his eyes pleaded of youth and inexperience as he crouched before his stern master.
"Come here!" commanded Wunpost but as he reached down to slap him a voice called his name from above.
"_Don't_ whip him!" it begged and Wunpost withheld his hand for Wilhelmina had been much in his mind. She came dancing down the trail, her curls tumbling about her face and down over the perennial bib-overalls, and when the pup saw her he left his scowling master and crept meechingly to take refuge at her feet.
"He was chasing Red," she dimpled, "and you know how fierce he is--why, Red isn't afraid of a wildcat! Where have you been? We've all been looking for you!"
"I've been in Los Angeles," responded Wunpost with a sigh, "but, by grab, I never thought that this dog of mine would get licked by an old yaller cat!"
"He isn't yellow--he's red!" corrected Wilhelmina briskly, "the desert makes all yellow cats red; but where'd you get your dog? And oh, yes; isn't it fine--how do you like our new road? They had it built up to your mine!"
"So I hear," returned Wunpost with a grim twinkle in his eye, "what do you think of my system now?"
"Why, what system?" asked Billy, staring blankly into his face, and Wunpost pulled down his lip. Was it possible that this fly-away had taken his words so lightly that she had forgotten his exposition and prophecy? Did she think that this road had come there by accident and not by deep-laid design? He called back his dog and made him lie down behind him and then he changed the subject.
"How's your father getting along?" he asked after a silence, "has he s.h.i.+pped out any ore? Well say, you tell 'im to get a move on. There's liable to be a cloudburst and wash the whole road out, and then where'd you be with your home stake?"
"Well, I guess there hasn't been one for over twelve years," answered Billy snapping her fingers enticingly to his dog, "and besides, it's so hot the trucks can't gull up the canyon--it makes their radiators boil.
But we've got it all sacked and when Father gets his payment I'm going inside, to school. Isn't it fine, after all they said about Dad--calling him crazy and everything else--and now his mine is worth lots and lots of money! I knew all the time he would win! And Eells has been up here and offered us forty thousand dollars, but Father wouldn't even consider it."
She stepped over boldly and picked up the dog, who wriggled frantically and tried to lick her face, and Wunpost stood mumbling to himself. So now it was her father who was getting all the credit for this wonderful stroke of luck; and he and the others who had called old Cole crazy were proven by the event to be fools. And yet he had packed ore for over two weeks to salt the Stinging Lizard for Eells!
"Put your mules in the corral and come up to breakfast!" cried Billy starting off for the house; and then she dropped his dog, which ran capering along behind her--and Wunpost had named it Good Luck! If she stole his dog on top of everything else, he would learn about women from her.
There was a cordial welcome at the house from Mrs. Campbell, who was radiant with joy over their good fortune; but Wunpost avoided the subject of the sale of his mine, for of course she must know it was salted. Anyone would know that after they had dug down a ways for Wunpost had simply quarried out a vein of rotten quartz and filled the resultant fissure with high grade. But there is something in Latin about _caveat emptor_, which is short for "Let the buyer beware!" and if Judson Eells was so foolish as to build his road first that was certainly no fault of Wunpost's. All he had done was to locate the hole, and then Judson Eells had jumped it; and if, as a result thereof, Wunpost had trimmed him of twenty thousand, that was nothing to what Eells had done to him. And yet every time he met Mrs. Campbell's eye he felt that she had her reservations about him. He was a mine-salter, a crook, the same as Eells was a crook; but she welcomed him all the same.
Perhaps she held it to his credit that he had given Billy a full half when he had discovered the Willie Meena Mine; but it might be, of course, that she was this way with everyone and simply tolerated him as she did Hungry Bill. He ate a good breakfast, but without saying much, and then he went back to his camp.
Wilhelmina tagged along, joyous as a child to have company and quite innocent of what is called maidenly reserve; and Wunpost dug down into his pack and gave her a bag of candy, at the same time patting her hand.
"Yours truly," he said, "sweets to the sweet, and all that. Say, what do you think this is?"
He held up a box, which might contain almost anything that was less than six inches square, and shook his head at all her guesses.
"Come on up to the lookout," he said at last and she followed along fearlessly behind him. There are maidens, of course, who would refuse to enter dark tunnels in the company of masterful young prospectors; but Wilhelmina had yet to learn both fear and feminine subterfuge and she made no pretty excuses. She was neither afraid of the dark, nor afflicted with vertigo, nor reminded of pressing home duties; and she was frankly interested both in the contents of the box and the ways of a man with a maid. He had given her some candy, and there was a gift in the little box--and once before he had made as if to kiss her; would he now, after bringing his lover's gifts, demand the customary tribute? And if so, should she permit it; and if not, why not?
It was very perplexing and yet Billy was determined not to evade any of the problems of life. All girls had their suitors; and yet few of them, she knew, were cast in the heroic mold of Wunpost. He was big and strong, with roving blue eyes and a smile that was both compelling and shy; and sometimes when he looked at her she felt a vague tumult, for of course he could kiss her if he would. When he had a.s.saulted Old Whiskers and seized Dusty Rhodes by the throat, in the contest over their mine, she had stood in awe of his violence; but except for that one time when he had attempted to steal a kiss, he had reserved his rough violence for his enemies. Yet--and somehow the thought thrilled her--it might be, after all, that he was shy; and that playful, bear-like hug was only his boyish way of hinting at the wish in his heart.
It might even be that he was secretly in love with her, as she had read of other lovers in books; and that all the time, unknown to her, he was wors.h.i.+ping her beauty from afar. For she was beautiful, she knew it--and others had told her so--and there are few girls indeed that have curling hair _and_ dimples, but Nature had given her both. And now if he did not kiss her, or speak from his heart, it would be because she was dressed like a boy; and she would have to lay aside her overalls forever. For no one can hope to retain everything in this world, and life is ours to be lived; and if worst came to worst, she might give up her freedom and consent to wear millinery and skirts. She sighed and followed on, and came safely to the portal which looked out on the great world below.
Wunpost sat down deliberately at the mouth of the tunnel, on the broad seat she had built along the wall, and handed Wilhelmina the package; and as she sank down beside him the panting fox terrier slumped down at her feet and wheezed. But Billy failed to notice this sign of affection, for as the package was broken open a dainty case was exposed and this in turn revealed a pair of gla.s.ses. Not ordinary, cheap field-gla.s.ses with rusty round barrels and lenses that refracted the colors of the rainbow; but exquisitely small ones, with square shoulders on the sides and quality showing in every line. She caught them up ecstatically and looked out across the Sink; and Wunpost let her gaze, though her focus was all wrong, while he made his little speech.
"Now," he said, "next time you see my dust you'll know whether it's a man or a dog."
"Oh, aren't they fine!" exclaimed Billy, swinging the gla.s.ses on Blackwater. "I can see every house in town. And there's a man on the trail--yes, and another one behind--I believe they're coming this way."
"Probably Pisen-face Lynch," observed Wunpost unconcernedly, "I expected him to be on my trail."
Wunpost Part 10
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Wunpost Part 10 summary
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