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"Sure of it."
"Why Doctor d.i.c.k?"
"Waal, ef you gets kilt no other man in or out o' Last Chance will have ther grit to drive ther old death-trap, for thet hea.r.s.e you is sittin'
on is no more."
"It is an unlucky old vehicle, I admit, pard; but I'll be going," and Harding drove on once more.
He had not seen a soul at the Dead Line. All was as quiet at that dread spot as the forms of those who had lost their lives there.
Only the stockmen at the station greeted him on the way, and at night he came to the halting-cabin a little ahead of time.
He had the same story to tell at each one of the relay-stations, about the fate of old Huck, and an ominous shake of the head from those who listened convinced him that they expected him to be the next victim.
The next morning he rolled into W---- a few minutes ahead of time, and the stage-agent seemed surprised to see a new man upon the box.
He heard what Harding had to say of old Huck, listened to his report of his uneventful run, and received from him the way-bill of what he carried.
"You have done well, Mr. Harding, and I hope we will hear no more of these attacks, so that you may escape, for, if they make a victim of you, I do not know who we can look to unless it be that fearless fellow, Doctor d.i.c.k."
"And his practise, mining interests, and gambling occupy him so thoroughly that he will not drive again, sir, I am sure."
"Not unless no other can be found, for he is just the man to step in then in open defiance of danger."
"Yes, he is just what you say of him, sir."
"Now, how is that poor pa.s.senger who was crazed by a shot from the road-agents?"
"Aimlessly wandering about Last Chance, sir, harmless and to be pitied."
"Well, I have received letters asking about him, and had to make a report of the circ.u.mstances. It will be upon your return trip that you will have to be watchful."
"I will be, sir, never fear," was the cheery response.
The news of the mysterious disappearance of the old driver soon spread about W----, and people gathered about the stage-office to have a look at the brave fellow who had, in the face of the past experience, brought the coach through.
The agent had told Harding that if the mails had gone through nothing had been taken, for no freight had been sent and no pa.s.sengers were along on that trip.
As they had found nothing to take, the road-agents had doubtless visited their vengeance upon old Huck, especially to repay him for having run the gantlet on a former occasion.
There were pa.s.sengers booked for Last Chance by stage, but when it became known that old Huck had been killed, as all supposed he must have been, they concluded they were in no great hurry to reach the mining-camps and could wait a while longer.
So Harding discovered that he would have to return with an empty coach, as far as pa.s.sengers were concerned.
He showed no disappointment, however, at having to return alone, and was told by the agent that he was to carry back considerable money and a valuable mail.
"All right, sir, I'll do my best to go through in safety," he said, and he grasped the outstretched hand of the agent, who said:
"I feel as though I was shaking hands with a man about to die."
"Now, I don't feel that way in the least," was the laughing response, and Harding sprang up to the box, seized the reins, cracked his whip when he got the word, and was off.
The crowd gathered there cheered him, of course, but a generally sad expression rested upon every face as they looked upon the brave young miner who had taken his life in his hand to drive what was now called the death-trap.
Having halted for the night at the way cabin, Harding pushed on the next morning with the first glimmer of dawn, and reached the third relay at noon.
There was then one more relay and the run into Last Chance, which in good weather could readily be made before sunset. He pa.s.sed the last relay, and the stock-tender said, as he was about to start:
"Good-by, pard, and do you know I kinder feels as if yer was a dead man already?"
"Don't you believe it, for I am worth a dozen dead men, old man," was the laughing response, and Harding drove on, with the Dead Line rising in his mind before him.
He drove more rapidly than was the schedule-time, and when he came into the pa.s.s, with the Dead Line just ahead, he had half an hour to spare.
The horses p.r.i.c.ked up their ears, as though they knew the doomed place well, and the leaders gave a snort as they beheld a form ahead. It was a man leaning against the cross erected in memory of Bud Benton.
That Harding also saw the form was certain, for his eyes were riveted upon the spot. As he drew nearer, the man moved away from the cross and advanced down into the trail.
Still Harding made no move to halt, to rush by, or appeared to take notice of him. The man placed himself by the side of the trail, and stood as still as a statue, after making a slight sign, as it appeared.
The answer of Harding to this sign was to shake his head.
On rolled the coach, and when it neared the silent form, without any command to do so, Harding drew hard upon the reins, pressed his foot heavily upon the brake, and brought the coach to a standstill, the horses, which had before drawn it through the deadly dangers it had pa.s.sed at that spot, showing a restless dread and expectancy of the cracking of revolvers.
But there was no weapon drawn either by the man on the side of the trail, or by Harding, and neither seemed to dread the other.
The reason for this was that the one who had awaited the coming of the coach at the Dead Line was none other than old Huckleberry.
CHAPTER XVII.
A SECRET KEPT.
Just fifteen minutes before the time of arrival set for the coach by schedule, Hal Harding drove up to the hotel at Last Chance.
From his entering the valley, and pa.s.sing the first mine, he had been followed by cheer after cheer, until when he reached Landlord Larry's tavern there were many there to swell the chorus of welcome.
Larry greeted him most warmly, and when he saw what a valuable freight he had brought through with him, he told him that he was deserving of the highest praise.
Harding received the honors heaped upon him in a modest manner, and when asked by Landlord Larry if he had seen any road-agents, answered:
"Not one."
"All quiet along the trail, then?"