PAGE 5
The Stampede
by
“You look like hell,” said Buck, laughing weakly. His mirth relaxed his nerves suddenly, till he giggled and hiccoughed hysterically. Nor could he stop for many minutes, the while Crowley stared at him apathetically from a lined and shrunken countenance, his features standing out skeleton-like. The younger man evidenced the strain even more severely, for his flesh was tender, and he had traveled the last hours on pure nerve. His jaws were locked and corded, however, while his drooping eyes shone unquenchably.
Eventually they rounded a bluff on to a cabin nestling at the mouth of a dark valley. Near it men were working with a windlass, so, stumbling to them, they spoke huskily.
“Sorry we ‘ain’t got room inside,” the stranger replied, “but three of the boys is down with scurvy, and we’re all cramped up. Plenty more folks coming, I s’pose, eh?”
The two had sunk on to the wet ground and did not answer. Buck fell with his pack still on, utterly lost, and the miner was forced to drag the bundle from his shoulders. As he rolled him up he was sleeping heavily.
Crowley awakened while the sun was still golden; his joints aching excruciatingly. They had slept four hours. He boiled tea on the miners’ stove and fried a pan of salt pork, but was too tired to prepare anything else, so they drank the warm bacon-grease clear with their tea.
As Buck strove to arise, his limbs gave way weakly, so that he fell, and it took him many moments to recover their use.
“Where’s the best chance, pardner?” they inquired of the men on the dump.
“Well, there ain’t none very close by. We’ve got things pretty well covered.”
“How’s that? There’s only six of you; you can’t hold but six claims, besides discovery.”
“Oh yes, we can! We’ve got powers of attorney; got ’em last fall in St. Michael; got ’em recorded, too.”
Crowley’s sunken eyes blazed.
“Them’s no good. We don’t recko’nize ’em in this district. One claim is enough for any man if it’s good, and too much if it’s bad.”
“What district you alludin’ at?” questioned the other, ironically. “You’re in the Skookum District now. It takes six men to organize. Well! We organized. We made laws. We elected a recorder. I’m it. If you don’t like our rules, yonder is the divide. We’ve got the U. S. government back of us. See!”
Crowley’s language became purely local, but the other continued unruffled.
“We knew you-all was coming, so we sort of loaded up. If there’s any ground hereabouts that we ain’t got blanketed, it’s purely an oversight. There’s plenty left farther out, though,” and he swept them a mocking gesture. “Help yourselves and pass up for more. I’ll record ’em.”
“What’s the fee?”
“Ten dollars apiece.”
Crowley swore more savagely.
“You done a fine job of hoggin’, didn’t you? It’s two and a half everywhere else.”
But the recorder of the Skookum District laughed carelessly and resumed his windlass. “Sorry you ain’t pleased. Maybe you’ll learn to like it.”
As they turned away he continued: “I don’t mind giving you a hunch, though. Tackle that big creek about five miles down yonder. She prospected good last fall, but you’ll have to go clean to her head, ’cause we’ve got everything below.”
Eight hours later, by the guiding glare of the Northern Lights, the two stumbled back into camp, utterly broken.
They had followed the stream for miles and miles to find it staked by the powers of attorney of the six. Coming to the gulch’s head, to be sure, they found vacant ground, but refused to claim such unpromising territory. Then the endless homeward march through the darkness! Out of thickets and through drifts they burst, while fatigue settled on them like some horrid vampire from the darkness. Every step being no longer involuntary became a separate labor, requiring mental concentration. They were half dead in slumber as they walked, but their stubborn courage and smoldering rage at the men who had caused this drove them on. They suffered silently, because it takes effort to groan, and they hoarded every atom of endurance.