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PAGE 4

The Wife Of Chino
by [?]

Felice made an excuse of asking thus for her mail each night that Lockwood came from town, and for a month they kept up appearances; but after that they dropped even that pretense, and as often as he met her Lockwood dismounted and walked by her side till the light in the cabin came into view through the chaparral.

At length Lockwood made a mighty effort. He knew how very far he had gone beyond the point where between the two landmarks called right and wrong a line is drawn. He contrived to keep away from Felice. He sent one of the men into town for the mail, and he found reasons to be in the mine itself whole half-days at a time. Whenever a moment’s leisure impended, he took his shotgun and tramped the mine ditch for leagues, looking for quail and gray squirrels. For three weeks he so managed that he never once caught sight of Felice’s black hair and green eyes, never once heard the sound of her singing.

But the madness was upon him none the less, and it rode and roweled him like a hag from dawn to dark and from dark to dawn again, till in his complete loneliness, in the isolation of that simple, primitive life, where no congenial mind relieved the monotony by so much as a word, morbid, hounded, tortured, the man grew desperate–was ready for anything that would solve the situation.

Once every two weeks Lockwood “cleaned up and amalgamated”–that is to say, the mill was stopped and the “ripples” where the gold was caught were scraped clean. Then the ore was sifted out, melted down, and poured into the mould, whence it emerged as the “brick,” a dun-coloured rectangle, rough-edged, immensely heavy, which represented anywhere from two to six thousand dollars. This was sent down by express to the smelting-house.

But it was necessary to take the brick from the mine to the express office at Iowa Hill.

This duty devolved upon Lockwood and Chino Zavalla. Hicks had from the very first ordered that the Spaniard should accompany the superintendent upon this mission. Zavalla was absolutely trustworthy, as honest as the daylight, strong physically, cool-headed, discreet, and–to Hicks’s mind a crowning recommendation–close-mouthed. For about the mine it was never known when the brick went to town or who took it. Hicks had impressed this fact upon Zavalla. He was to tell nobody that he was delegated to this duty. “Not even”–Hicks had leveled a forefinger at Chino, and the cold eyes drove home the injunction as the steam-hammer drives the rivet–“not even your wife.” And Zavalla had promised. He would have trifled with dynamite sooner than with one of Hicks’s orders.

So the fortnightly trips to town in company with Lockwood were explained in various fashions to Felice. She never knew that the mail-bag strapped to her husband’s shoulders on those occasions carried some five thousand dollars’ worth of bullion.

On a certain Friday in early June Lockwood had amalgamated, and the brick, duly stamped, lay in the safe in the office. The following night he and Chino, who was relieved from mine duty on these occasions, were to take it in to Iowa Hill.

Late Saturday afternoon, however, the engineer’s boy brought word to Chino that the superintendent wanted him at once. Chino found Lockwood lying upon the old lounge in the middle room of the office, his foot in bandages.

“Here’s luck, Chino,” he exclaimed, as the Mexican paused on the threshold. “Come in and–shut the door,” he added in a lower voice.

Dios!” murmured Chino. “An accident?”

“Rather,” growled Lockwood. “That fool boy, Davis’s kid–the car-boy, you know–ran me down in the mine. I yelled at him. Somehow he couldn’t stop. Two wheels went over my foot–and the car loaded, too.”

Chino shuddered politely.

“Now here’s the point,” continued Lockwood. “Um–there’s nobody round outside there? Take a look, Chino, by the window there. All clear, eh? Well, here’s the point. That brick ought to go in to-night just the same, hey?”