of his hand. âIâve found it in the ground!â he said. He was wild with excitement. I asked him if it were real gold. He said he didnât know but that heâd see if it were good enough to buy a drink with. So he went downtown.â
Silver nodded. âThatâs what killed him, then,â he declared. âWhen Feeley paid with gold dust, like a fool, the whisper about it came to Christian. He put his men on Feeleyâs trail. They found the place where the gold was washed. When Feeley came back to town, they followed him down and killed him so that he couldnât go back to his diggings. I donât suppose thereâs any doubt about that. It was after the first time that Feeley brought you this gold?â
âIt was the next evening. He went down to the saloon, the Round-up Bar, and Pudge took the dust in payment for drinks, all right. Joe Feeley was half-crazy, when he came back and told me that. He said that he was going to wash a cool million out of the ground and marry me, and all that sort of thing. He was crazy.â
âWhat about you?â asked Silver.
She shook her head. âGold is catching,â she said. âI was excited, too. I went to the dance with him in a fever. But I knew all the time that I didnât want to marry him. After the dance, that night, he wouldnât wait for the morning. He rolled his blanket and went off in the dark to get back to his cabin. I asked him where the place was where heâd found gold.
âHe liked me, all right, but he didnât like me well enough to tell me that. He only laughed. âYou donât care about the place,â he said. âAll youâll need to care about is the gold that comes out of it. Iâm going to buy you. Iâm going to put you in one side of a scales and weigh you down with gold that I stack in the other side. Understand that?â Thatâs the way he was talking. He was on fire. He told me that money wasnât money, unless it came out of the ground. He said that it was dirty stuff and there was murder on every penny of it, except what came out of the ground.â
âPoor Feeley,â said Silver. âIâm sorry about him. If I only knew where that claim is â well, Iâd be able to find some of Christianâs men there, I suppose. And if I could find the men, I could trail them home, and if I trailed them home, Iâd be fairly close to Taxi â if heâs still above ground. Sally, come out and point the way for me. Iâm going up to that shanty.â
âItâll be hard to find the place where he washed the gold, though,â said the girl. âIâve been up there three times, since poor Joe was killed. I know the lie of the land, up there, and Iâve searched everywhere. I couldnât find a trace.â
She put the gold into the handkerchief, knotted it, and offered it to Silver.
âTake it,â she said. âI donât want it around me. Whenever I see it on the shelf, I think of poor Joe Feeleyâs face laughing and wrinkling up to the eyes. He was hard as steel, but he was a good fellow.â
Silver made a gesture as though to refuse that gift, but presently he changed his mind and without a word dropped it into his pocket.
Parade took him swiftly over the flat of the Horseshoe plain and up the slope of the mountain. There were seventeen hands of Parade, but the wild years when he had run free, leading a herd, had made him as wisefooted as a mountain goat. He knew by a glance the rocks that would slide under foot and those which would remain firm. He knew how to zigzag up the steepest slopes and just that throw of the foot, coming downhill, which puts the frog of the hoof against slippery ground. He needed all of these arts before he brought Jim Silver to the cabin.
It was hardly worthy of the name. It was a mere lean-to that was propped against a rocky bank and it was made of a queer mixture of
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