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The Passing Of Cock-Eye Blacklock
by
“Well, things went along sort of catch-as-catch-can like this for maybe three weeks, the Greaser shooting fish regular, an’ the Boss b’iling with rage, and laying plans to call his hand, and getting bluffed out every deal.
“And right here I got to interrupt, to talk some about the pup dog, Sloppy Weather. If he hadn’t got caught up into this Blacklock game, no one’d ever thought enough about him to so much as kick him. But after it was all over, we began to remember this same Sloppy an’ to recall what he was; no big job. He was just a worthless fool pup, yeller at that, everybody’s dog, that just hung round camp, grinning and giggling and playing the goat, as half-grown dogs will. He used to go along with the car-boys when they went swimmin’ in the resevoy, an’ dash along in an’ yell an’ splash round just to show off. He thought it was a keen stunt to get some gesabe to throw a stick in the resevoy so’s he could paddle out after it. They’d trained him always to bring it back an’ fetch it to whichever party throwed it. He’d give it up when he’d retrieved it, an’ yell to have it throwed again. That was his idea of fun–just like a fool pup.
“Well, one day this Sloppy Weather is off chasing jack-rabbits an’ don’t come home. Nobody thinks anything about that, nor even notices it. But we afterward finds out that he’d met up with Blacklock that day, an’ stopped to visit with him–sorry day for Cockeye. Now it was the very next day after this that Mary-go-round an’ the Boss plans another scout. I’m to go, too. It was a Wednesday, an’ we lay it out that the Cockeye would prob’ly shoot that day so’s to get his fish down to the railroad Thursday, so they’d reach Sacramento Friday–fish day, see. It wasn’t much to go by, but it was the high card in our hand, an’ we allowed to draw to it.
“We left Why-not afore daybreak, an’ worked over into the canon about sun-up. They was one big pool we hadn’t covered for some time, an’ we made out we’d watch that. So we worked down to it, an’ clumb up into our trees, an’ set out to keep guard.
“In about an hour we heard a shoot some mile or so up the creek. They’s no mistaking dynamite, leastways not to miners, an’ we knew that shoot was dynamite an’ nothing else. The Cock-eye was at work, an’ we shook hands all round. Then pretty soon a fish or so began to go by–big fellows, some of ’em, dead an’ floatin’, with their eyes popped ‘way out same as knobs–sure sign they’d been shot.
“The Boss took and grit his teeth when he see a three-pounder go by, an’ made remarks about Blacklock.
“”Sh!’ says Mary-go-round, sudden-like. ‘Listen!’
“We turned ear down the wind, an’ sure there was the sound of some one scrabbling along the boulders by the riverside. Then we heard a pup yap.
“‘That’s our man,’ whispers the Boss.
“For a long time we thought Cock-eye had quit for the day an’ had coppered us again, but byne-by we heard the manzanita crack on the far side the canon, an’ there at last we see Blacklock working down toward the pool, Sloppy Weather following an’ yapping and cayoodling just as a fool dog will.
“Blacklock comes down to the edge of the water quiet-like. He lays his big scoop-net an’ his sack–we can see it half full already–down behind a boulder, and takes a good squinting look all round, and listens maybe twenty minutes, he’s that cute, same’s a coyote stealing sheep. We lies low an’ says nothing, fear he might see the leaves move.
“Then byne-by he takes his stick of dynamite out his hip pocket–he was just that reckless kind to carry it that way–an’ ties it careful to a couple of stones he finds handy. Then he lights the fuse an’ heaves her into the drink, an’ just there’s where Cock-eye makes the mistake of his life. He ain’t tied the rocks tight enough, an’ the loop slips off just as he swings back his arm, the stones drop straight down by his feet, and the stick of dynamite whirls out right enough into the pool.