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Laughing Bill Hyde
by
The first frosts of autumn had arrived before Laughing Bill returned to town with the announcement that he had struck a prospect. Doctor Thomas was at first incredulous, then amazed; finally, when the true significance of those tiny yellow grains came home to him, his enthusiasm burst all bounds. He was for at once closing his office and joining actively in his partner’s work, but Bill would not hear to such a thing.
“Stick to the pills and powders, Doc,” he counseled. “You know that game and I know this. It’s my strike and I don’t want no amachoors butting in. I got options on the whole creek–she’s eclipsed for fair–’cause I don’t like neighbors. You shut your trap till spring and sit tight, then we’ll roll our packs, stomp on the fire, and call the dog. Old Home Week for us.”
“But, Billy, we can’t work out that claim in one winter,” protested the physician.
“How d’you know we can’t? Mebbe it’s just a pocket.”
“We’ll find other pockets. We have the whole creek–“
“Say, how much d’you need to satisfy you?” Bill inquired, curiously.
“I–don’t know. A hundred thousand dollars, perhaps.”
“A hundred thousand! Whew! You got rich tastes! This ain’t no bonanza.”
“But if it’s any good at all it will net us that much, probably more.”
Bill considered briefly, then he announced: “All right, bo, I got your idea. When I hand you a hundred thousand iron men we quit–no questions, no regrets; Is that it? But you’ve hiked the limit on me; I dunno’s I’ll make good.”
By the time snow flew the tent on Eclipse Creek had been replaced by a couple of warm shacks, provisions had been bought, and a crew hired. Work commenced immediately, and it continued throughout the winter with Bill in charge. The gravel was lean-looking stuff, but it seemed to satisfy the manager, and whenever Thomas came out from town he received encouraging reports from his partner. Hyde ceased playing solitaire long enough to pan samples in his tub of snow water. Now had the younger man been an experienced placer miner he might have noted with suspicion that whenever Bill panned he chewed tobacco–a new habit he had acquired–and not infrequently he spat into the tub of muddy water. But Thomas was not experienced in the wiles and artifices of mine-salters, and the residue of yellow particles left in the pan was proof positive that the claim was making good. It did strike him as strange, however, that when he selected a pan of dirt and washed it unassisted he found nothing. At such times Bill explained glibly enough that no pay dump carried steady values, and that an inexperienced sampler was apt to get “skunked” under the best of circumstances. Concentrates lay in streaks and pockets, he declared. Then to prove his assertions Bill would help his partner pan, and inasmuch as he wore long finger-nails, underneath which colors of gold could be easily concealed, it was not surprising that he succeeded in finding a prospect where the doctor had failed. For fear Thomas should still entertain some lingering doubts, Bill occasionally sent him down into the shaft alone, to sample the pay streak, but in each instance he took pains to go down beforehand with a shot-gun and some shells of his own loading and to shoot a few rounds into the face of the thawed ground.
The winter passed quickly enough, Bill’s only concern arising from the fact that his strike had become common knowledge, and that men were clamoring to buy or to lease a part of the creek. It was a tiny creek, and he had it safely tied up under his options, therefore he was in a position to refuse every offer. By so doing he gained the reputation of being a cautious, cagey man and difficult to deal with.
Bill paid off his crew out of the first spring cleanup, from the dust he had managed to dump into the sluices at night. Thereafter he sent the gold to town by Doctor Thomas, who came after it regularly. When he closed down the works, in June, he and his partner held bank deposit slips for a trifle over one hundred thousand dollars. Rumor placed their profits at much more.