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The road-agent then took the bag, opened it, ran over the gold like one who knew its value, and then said:
"Yes, there is the amount here, no more, no less. Ask Miss Seldon if she has not been treated with marked respect."
"I can but answer yes, for I have been; but am I not to have my trunk and side-saddle?"
"Oh, yes, certainly," and the road-agent gave a signal, which was promptly answered by two men appearing in the edge of the pines.
They wore long black robes and red masks, also, and their appearance was proof that their leader had not come alone.
"Bring the baggage belonging to this lady, and her side-saddle and bridle, also," called out the leader.
The men disappeared, and Doctor d.i.c.k asked:
"Do you expect to keep up your lawless acts much longer without meeting the fate you deserve, Sir Outlaw?"
"Yes, for the money I get is worth taking big chances for, Doctor d.i.c.k, and, gambler that you are, you never do a better day's work than what sum this gold calls for."
"It is a long lane that has no turn, and the turn will come for you some day," said Harding.
A light laugh beneath the mask was the answer, and Celeste Seldon's face wore a clouded expression Harding was not slow to observe.
"Then I am free to go, sir?" and Celeste turned to the outlaw.
"You are, Miss Seldon," was the answer.
She turned to the coach, and Doctor d.i.c.k aided her into it, just as the two outlaws came up with the small leather trunk she had brought with her and her saddle and bridle.
Taking the back seat, Celeste leaned up in one corner, as though fatigued, and her baggage having been put on top, d.i.c.k and Harding mounted to the box, the outlaws attentively regarding them through the eye-holes in their masks.
"Remember, pards, I still drive this trail," said the driver, with an air of defiance as he gathered up the reins.
"I won't forget, Harding; but I advise you to keep in mind the story of the pitcher that went once too often to the well, for right here some day you may meet your fate."
"If I do, you will not find me flinch from it," was the plucky response, and the driver called to his horses, and the team moved on.
Looking back at the bend, the driver and Doctor d.i.c.k saw that the outlaws had already disappeared, while Celeste Seldon, gazing back also, noted the same fact, and murmured to herself:
"What yet is before me, I wonder?"
CHAPTER x.x.xI.
DOCTOR d.i.c.k TELLS THE NEWS.
When the coach had got well away from the Dead Line, Harding gave a deep sigh of relief, for the first time feeling that Celeste was safe, and would not be retaken by the outlaws.
"Well, Doc, she's safe now, and we didn't lose our scalps," he said.
"It is a cause of congratulation all round, Harding."
"Now, Doctor d.i.c.k, _you_ have got to tell the young lady about the poor crazy fellow."
"Did you not tell her?"
"That his wound had crazed him, yes; but that is not the worst of it."
"Ah, yes, you mean that he has been captured?"
"I cannot say that, Doc; but he has mysteriously disappeared."
"Well, you wish me to break the news to her?"
"I do, for I can't tell her what I know will hurt her, and it won't do for her to hear it from the men when she arrives in Last Chance."
"I guess you are right, pard, so draw up, and I'll take a seat inside the coach, and tell her the news."
"Be very gentle, Doc, for I have an idea she loves that young man."
"I'll break it to her as gently as I can," was the response, and as Harding drew rein a moment after, Doctor d.i.c.k sprang down from the box, and said:
"May I ride with you, Miss Seldon?"
"Certainly, sir, if you desire."
"I have something to talk to you about," said Doctor d.i.c.k, as he entered the coach and took the front seat.
"I shall be glad to hear what you have to say, sir, and I desire now to thank you for your very great kindness toward me, while you risked your life in coming out here to serve me."
"Do not speak of it, Miss Seldon, for the miners all chipped in and made up a purse for your ransom, while they are now anxiously awaiting your coming to give you a right royal welcome, for you will be the first lady who ever came to our camp."
"Indeed! this will be an honor; but do you mean that there are none of my s.e.x there?"
"Not one, only rough men, but with n.o.ble hearts many of them, so that you will be made to feel at once at home."
"How odd it will be, yet I have no hesitancy in going there, I a.s.sure you," and Celeste gazed into the face of the man before her with both interest and admiration.
"He is strangely handsome, a manly fellow, brave, intelligent, yet a dangerous foe, and I wonder what has brought such a man as he to this far-away land?" ran her thoughts.
"Miss Seldon, what I most wished to say to you I fear will deeply pain you," said Doctor d.i.c.k, after a pause.
"Let me hear it, sir, for I am becoming accustomed to being pained of late," and Celeste was perfectly calm.
"I was told by Harding, the driver, that you were on your way to Last Chance, to look up a friend who had come here on a mission for you, and who you had feared was in trouble?"
"Yes, and my fears were realized when I learned that the coach in which he was a pa.s.senger had been held up, I believe that is what you call it, by road-agents, and Mr. Brandon was so severely wounded in the head that his brain was turned."