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PAGE 6

The Grub-Staker
by [?]

“Let me see ut. I do not believe ut.”

He untied the blanket, and as the corners unrolled, disclosing the red-brown mass, even her unskilled eyes could see the gleaming grains of pure metal. She fell on her knees and crossed herself.

“Praise be to Mary! Where did ye find ut–and how?”

“Not a word about that. I’m scared. If any one should find it while I am away they could steal thousands of dollars. Why, it’s like a pocket in a placer! Get me every sack you can. Give me grub–and hide this. There are tons of it! This is the best of it. We are rich–rich as Jews, Maggie!”

They worked swiftly. The widow emptied a cracker-barrel and put the ore at the bottom, and then tumbled the crackers in on top of the ore. She set out some cold meat and bread and butter, and while Bidwell ate she brought out every rag that could serve as a sack.

“I’ll have more for ye to-morrow. I wish I c’u’d go wid ye, Sherm. I’d like to set me claws at work at that dirt.”

“I need help, but I am afraid to have a man. Well, I must be off. Good-by. I’ll be back to-night with another load. I guess old Sherm is worth a kiss yet–eh–Maggie!”

“Be off wid ye. Can’t ye see the dawn is comin’?” A moment later she ran up to him and gave him a great hug. “There–now haste ye!”

“Be silent!”

“As the grave itself!” she replied, and turned to brush up the cracker-crumbs. “That Chinese divil has sharp eyes,” she muttered.

IV

It was inevitable that the golden secret should escape. Others besides the Chinese cook had sharp eyes, and the Widow Delaney grew paler and more irritable as the days wore on. She had a hunted look. She hardly ever left her kitchen, it was observed, and her bedroom door had a new lock. Every second night Bidwell, gaunt and ragged, and furtive as a burglar, brought a staggering mule-load of the richest ore and stowed it away under the shanty floor and in the widow’s bedroom. Luckily miners are sound sleepers, or the two midnight marauders would have been discovered on the second night.

One day John, the cook, seized the cracker-barrel, intending to put it into a different corner. He gave it a slight wrench, looked a little surprised, and lifted a little stronger. It did not budge. He remarked:

“Klackels belly hebby. No sabbe klackels allee same deese.”

Let that alone!” screamed Mrs. Delaney. “Phwat will ye be doin’ nixt, ye squint-eyed monkey? I’ll tell ye whin to stir things about.”

The startled Chinaman gave way in profound dismay. “Me goin’ s’eep lound klackel-ballell, you sabbe?”

“Well, I’ll do the sweepin’ there. I nailed that barrel to the flure apurpis. L’ave it alone, will ye?”

This incident decided her. That night, when Bidwell came, she broke out:

“Sherm, I cannot stand this anny longer. I’m that nairvous I can’t hear a fly buzz widout hot streaks chasin’ up and down me spine like little red snakes. And man, luk at yersilf. Why, ye’re hairy as a go-at and yer eyes are loike two white onions. I say stop, Sherm dear!”

“What’ll we do?” asked Bidwell in alarm.

“Do? I’ll tell ye phwat we’ll do. We’ll put our feets down and say, ‘Yis, ’tis true, we’ve shtruck ut, and it’s ours.’ Then I’ll get a team from Las Animas and load the stuff in before the face and eyes of the world, and go wid it to sell it, whilst you load y’r gun an’ stand guard over the hole in the ground. I’m fair crazy wid this burglar’s business. We’re both as thin as quakin’ asps and full as shaky. You go down the trail this minute and bring a team and a strong wagon–no wan will know till ye drive in. Now go!”

Bidwell was ruled by her clear and sensible words, and rode away into the clear dark of the summer’s night with a feeling that it was all a dream–a vision such as he had often had while prospecting in the mountains; but, as day came on and he looked back upon the red hole he had made in the green hillside, the reality of it all came to pinch his heart and make him gasp. His storehouse, his well of golden waters, was unguarded, and open to the view of any one who should chance to look that way. He beat his old mule to a gallop in the frenzy of the moment.