Deadwood Dick, The Prince of the Road Part 19
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The one was an elderly man of portly figure, and the other a young, dandyish fellow, evidently the elder's son, for they resembled each other in every feature. We make no difficulty to recognizing them as the same precious pair whom Outlaw d.i.c.k captured from the stage, only to lose them again through the treachery of two of his own band.
Both looked considerably the worse for wear, and the gaunt, hungry expression on their features, as the morning sunlight shone down upon them, declared in a language more adequate than words, that they were beginning to suffer the first pangs of starvation.
"We cannot hold out at this rate much longer!" the elder Filmore cried, as he watched the bustle in the valley below. "I'm as empty as a collapsed balloon, and what's more, we're in no prospects of immediate relief."
Filmore, the younger, groaned aloud in agony of spirit.
"Curse the Black Hills and all who have been fools enough to inhabit them, anyhow!" he growled, savagely; "just let me get back in the land of civilization again, and you can bet your bottom dollar I'll know enough to stay there."
"Bah! this little rough experience will do you good. If we only had a square meal or two and a basket of sherry, I should feel quite at home. Nothing but a fair prospect of increasing our individual finances would ever have lured me into this outlandish place. But money, you know, is the root of all--"
"Evil!" broke in the other, "and after three months' wild-goose-chase you are just as dest.i.tute of the desired root as you were at first."
"True, but we have at least discovered one of the shrubs at the bottom of which grows the root."
"You refer to Deadwood d.i.c.k?"
"I do. He is here in the valley, and he must never leave it alive.
While we have the chance we must strike the blow that will forever silence his tongue."
"Yes; but what about the girl? She will be just as much in the way, if not a good deal more so."
"We can manage her all right when the proper time arrives. d.i.c.k is our game, now."
"He may prove altogether too much game. But, now that we are counting eggs, how much of the 'lay' is to be mine, when this boy and girl are finished?" he queried.
"How much? Well, that depends upon circ.u.mstances. The girl _may_ fall to you."
"The girl? Bah! I'd rather be excused."
The day pa.s.sed without incident in the mines. The work went steadily on, the sounds of the crusher making strange music for the mountain echoes to mock.
Occasionally the crack of a rifle announced that either a road-agent or a Ute miner had risked a shot at a mountain sheep, bird, or deer.
Generally their aim was attended with success, though sometimes they were unable to procure the slaughtered game.
Redburn, on account of his clear-headedness and business tact, had full charge of both mines, the "General" working under him in the shaft, and Fearless Frank in the quartz mine.
When questioned about his duel with Harris by Redburn, McKenzie had very little to say; he seemed pained when approached on the subject; would answer no questions concerning the past; was reserved and at times singularly haughty.
During the day Anita and Alice took a stroll through the valley, but the latter had been warned, and fought shy of the quartz mine; so there was no encounter between Anita and Fearless Frank.
Deadwood d.i.c.k joined them as they were returning to the cabin, loaded down with flowers--flowers of almost every color and perfume.
"This is a beautiful day," he remarked, pulling up a daisy, as he walked gracefully along. "One rarely sees so many beauties centered in one little valley like this--beautiful landscape and mountain scenery, beautiful flowers beneath smiling skies, and lovely women, the chief center of attraction among all."
"Indeed!" and Alice gave him a coquettish smile; "you are flattering, sir road-agent. You, at least, are not beautiful, in that horrible black suit and villainous mask. You remind me of a picture I have seen somewhere of the devil in disguise; all that is lacking is the horns, tail and cloven-foot."
d.i.c.k broke out into a burst of laughter--it was one of those wild, terrible laughs of his, so peculiar to hear from one who was evidently young in years.
Both of the girls were terrified, and would have fled had he not detained them.
"Ha, ha!" he said, stepping in front of them, "do not be frightened; don't go, ladies. That's only the way I express my amus.e.m.e.nt at anything."
"Then, for mercy's sake, don't get amused again," said Alice, deprecatingly. "Why, dear me, I thought the Old Nick and all his couriers had pounced down upon us."
"Well, how do you know but what he has? _I_ may be his Satanic majesty, or one of his envoys."
"I hardly think so; you are too much an earthly being for that. Come, now, take off that detestable mask and let me see what you look like."
"No, indeed! I would not remove this mask, except on conditions, for all the gold yon toiling miners are finding, which, I am satisfied, is no small amount."
"You spoke of conditions. What are they?"
"Some time, perhaps, I will tell you, lady, but not now. See! my men are signaling to me, and I must go. Adieu, ladies;" and in another moment he had wheeled, and was striding back toward camp.
In their concealment the two Filmores witnessed this meeting between d.i.c.k and the two girls.
"So there are females here, eh?" grunted the elder, musingly. "From observation I should say that Prince d.i.c.k was a comparative stranger here."
"That is my opinion," groaned Clarence, his thoughts reverting to his empty stomach. "Did you hear that laugh a moment ago? It was more like the screech of a lunatic than anything else."
"Yes; he is a young tiger. There is no doubt of that to my mind."
"And we shall have to keep on the alert to take him. He came to the cabin last night. If he does to-night we can mount him!"
Before night the elder Filmore succeeded in capturing a wild goose that had strayed down with the stream from somewhere above. This was killed, dressed and half cooked by a brushwood fire which they hazarded in a fissure in the hillside whereto they had hidden. This fowl they almost ravenously devoured, and thus thoroughly satisfied their appet.i.tes. They now felt a great deal better, ready for the work in hand--of capturing and slaying the dare-devil Deadwood d.i.c.k.
As soon as it was dark they crept, like the prowling wolves they were, down into the valley, and positioned themselves midway between the cabin and the road-agent's camp, but several yards apart, with a la.s.so held above the gra.s.s between them, to serve as a "trip-up."
The sky had become overcast with dense black clouds, and the gloom to the valley was quite impenetrable. From their concealment the two Filmores could hear Redburn, Alice and the "General" singing up at the cabin, and it told them to be on their guard, as d.i.c.k might now come along at any moment.
Slowly the minutes dragged by, and both were growing impatient, when the firm tread of "the Prince" was heard swiftly approaching. Quickly the la.s.so was drawn taut. d.i.c.k, not dreaming of the trap, came boldly along, tripped, and went sprawling to the ground. The next instant his enemies were on him, each with a long murderous knife in hand.
CHAPTER XV.
TO THE RESCUE!
The suddenness of the onslaught prevented Deadwood d.i.c.k from raising a hand to defend himself, and the two strong men piling their combined weights upon him, had the effect to render him utterly helpless. He would have yelled to apprise his comrades of his fate, but Alexander Filmore, ready for the emergency, quickly thrust a cob of wood into his mouth, and bound it there with strong strings.
The young road-agent was a prisoner.
"Hal ha!" leered the elder Filmore, peering down into the masked face--"ha! ha! my young eaglet; so I have you at last, have I? After repeated efforts to get you in my power, I have at last been rewarded with success, eh? Ha! ha! the terrible scourge of the Black Hills lies here at my feet, mine to do with as I shall see fit."
Deadwood Dick, The Prince of the Road Part 19
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Deadwood Dick, The Prince of the Road Part 19 summary
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