Down the Slope - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"I'm blest if there isn't Joe! What's up now, I wonder?"
This question was soon answered. The approaching miner cried while yet some distance away:
"What are you comin' back so soon for?"
"There was no reason why we should stay longer," and without sparing himself in the slightest, Bill explained what a blunder had been committed.
"Well, you'd better go to Blacktown agin, or else take the train for New York."
"Why?"
"The cas.h.i.+er has been swearin' out a warrant for Fred's arrest, an'
it'll be served the minute he gets back."
"A warrant for me?" Fred cried in alarm. "What have I done?"
"The fool thinks you know where the money is, an' that you made the arrangements with Sam, before he left, to get away with it."
"Mr. Wright won't allow such a thing."
"The letter he wrote seems to have made the cas.h.i.+er's neck stiffer than it was yesterday, an' I don't reckon it would do much good to depend on any officer of the company."
"I'll give that feller a piece of my mind," Bill cried angrily, and Joe replied:
"Don't do it yet a while. He told Donovan this noon that you'd gone with Fred to put the cash in a safe place, so it may be that the constable would like to see you by this time."
"Why, where does he think it was?"
"Buried on the mountain somewhere, an' if he sends men out to see if any diggin' has been done lately, the vein will surely be found."
"I'll go back any way!" Bill cried after a short pause. "Such as him shan't call me a thief."
"Now, look here, matey, what will be the good of gettin' yourself in jail? I've told Fred's mother jest how the matter stands, an' she believes as I do, that it'll be better to hang off a while in the hope something will turn up."
"An' have the constables chasin' us all over the country."
"It ain't certain they'll do that."
"But it may never be known positively who took the money," Fred added.
"If you're both so anxious to go to jail, wait till it is proved Sam is a thief, an' then show up to the constable. Things can't be worse for holdin' on a few days."
"'Cordin' to your own figgerin' there's a chance the coal will be found."
"I'll take care of that business while you an' Fred keep out of sight.
With what I had, an' what could be borrowed, I've got two hundred an'
twenty dollars. You shall take the odd money, an' the balance I'll plank down as a first payment on the land."
"Do you know who owns it?"
"A farmer who lived five or six miles the other side of Blacktown."
"That's correct, an' the sooner you see him the better."
"Will you agree to keep away from Farley's?"
"Yes," Bill said slowly, as if angry with himself for making the promise. "Fred an' me'll sneak 'round 'till the trade's made for this side the mountain, an' then figger up what it's best to do."
"Where can I see you to-morrow?"
"Right here. We'll stay in the woods a night or two."
"Have you got anything to eat?"
"No; but it's an easy matter to buy all we want."
"Take this money in case it is necessary to leave on the jump, an' I'll go on."
Handing his mate the twenty dollars, Joe went at a sharp gait toward Blacktown, and Bill said, with a shrug of the shoulders:
"So we're both thieves 'cordin' to the cas.h.i.+er's ideas; but wait 'till we get the land secured, an' I'll give that young man a lesson such as won't be very pleasant."
"Do you really mean to sleep in the woods?"
"Why not? It's warm weather, an' we'll be pretty nigh as well off there as at home."
"Then we'd better be looking for a good place. If mother hadn't sent word that I was to stay away, I'd go to Farley's this minute an' let them arrest me, for it seems as if we act guilty by running off."
"That's jest my idee, lad; but we'll obey orders a day or two."
A short distance to the right was a thickly-wooded grove, and here the two soon found what would serve very well as a camp.
A small cleared s.p.a.ce, almost entirely screened from view by bushes, afforded all the protection which might be needed, and Bill threw himself on the ground.
"I reckon we can go without supper," he said, with forced cheerfulness, "an' there'll be no bother about lockin' the doors."
"It won't be long before I'm asleep. Walking around so much has tired me more than a full day's work in the breaker."
"Don't keep awake on my account. The sooner your eyes are closed the sooner you'll forget that there's a chance of bein' sent to jail."
With his head pillowed on some dry leaves Fred had no difficulty in summoning slumber; but Bill tossed to and fro on the hard bed without the slightest desire for sleep.
The boy was dreaming of the frightful hours spent in the short slope after the explosion, when he was awakened by the pressure of a hand on his mouth.
It was dark, save for the twinkling stars, and silent, except when the leaves were swayed by the gentle wind.
"Don't speak," Bill whispered as he removed his hand. "I can see the light of a fire over there to the right, an' it's well for us to know who are campin' so near."