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"Yes, it is just what I wish to do, to render some valuable service to the Government."
"When shall we start?"
"I will start to-night, but you, pard, must remain here in possession of our mines."
"As you wish, pard; but will you be gone long?"
"Not a day longer than is necessary, pard."
"Well, success go with you," was Lucas Langley's response, and the two men began to make preparations for the start of the one with information of where the retreat of the outlaw band could be found.
Andrew Seldon did not care to take a packhorse, for he wished to make all the time possible, and when the sun went down he was ready for the trail, and, with Lucas Langley accompanying him, he started down the canon to steal by the robbers' camp.
CHAPTER XXVIII.
THE LONE TRAIL.
Well supplied with food and ammunition, having plenty of blankets along, for the nights were cold, and mounted upon the best one of their horses, Andrew Seldon felt ready to cope with whatever he might have to encounter in the way of hardships and dangers.
m.u.f.flers had been prepared for the hoofs of his horse, that he might leave no trail and make no sound in pa.s.sing the robber camp, while a muzzle was carried for the nose of the animal, to prevent his neighing and thus betraying his presence to foes.
After crossing the narrow ridge, the m.u.f.flers and muzzle were tied on, and the two men stole along, leading the horse, until they came in sight of the camp-fires. Only two were burning now, and about them only a few men were visible.
The two men slipped by unseen with their horse, some eighth of a mile distant from the camp, and having seen his pard to safety, Lucas Langley bade him farewell, with many good wishes for his success, and started upon his return.
Mounting then, Andrew Seldon set off on his lonely and perilous mission.
He ascended the hazardous trail, stripped his horse of his trappings upon reaching the deadly cliff which he had to pa.s.s around, and got safely by with the animal. Then he brought his saddle and trappings around, led the horse to the top of the canon rim, and, mounting, set off for Fort Faraway, taking the trail that must lead him by the deserted camp where he had killed Black-heart Bill in a duel, and where the desperado rested in his grave after his tumultuous life of evil.
By rapid riding he reached the deserted camp soon after midnight, and, dismounting, prepared to go into camp.
There was the best of water and gra.s.s there, and, to be merciful to his horse, Andrew Seldon did not allow his own feelings to cause him to camp elsewhere when the animal would be the sufferer.
Having watered his horse and staked him out to feed, he sat down upon a log near the wickiup and ate his cold supper quietly.
Then he lighted his pipe and began to smoke with a strange calmness of mien, when it is remembered that there, within a few yards of him, at the base of the quaking aspen whose white trunk looked ghostly in the moonlight, was the grave of the man he had killed, the man who had been his boyhood friend, and afterward his bitterest foe.
Laying aside his pipe, he spread his blankets in the wickiup, and then walked quietly toward the quaking aspen.
There was the mound that marked the last resting-place of Hugh Mayhew, whose deeds of wickedness had won for him the name of Black-heart Bill.
What thoughts crowded upon him as he stood there gazing upon the little mound of earth, knowing that only a few feet below the surface the dead face of his one-time friend was upturned toward him, who can tell?
For some time he stood there, his arms folded upon his broad breast, and his head bowed. At last, a sigh found its way between his set teeth, and he turned away.
Reaching the wickiup, he paused, and mused aloud:
"Well, I am making a bold venture to dare go to the fort from which I fled on the day appointed for my execution, fled to live on here in the wilderness, believed to be dead, yet living, my own name cast aside, and living under that of one I never knew in life.
"How strange this life is, its bitterness, sorrows, realities, and romance, and how strange, indeed, has been my career. Well, what will the end be, I wonder?
"I am taking my life in my hands to venture to the fort, but I must save that poor girl, run down those outlaws, and I can only do it through Buffalo Bill. Now to turn in, for I must get some rest, and will, even in this weird spot."
CHAPTER XXIX.
TO WELCOME THE FAIR GUEST.
The miners of Last Chance were too much excited over the expected ransom of Celeste Seldon, and the thought of soon having a young and beautiful girl in the mining-camps, to devote themselves to steady work, after the situation was known to them.
Then, too, they were greatly disturbed at the mysterious disappearance of Bernard Brandon, the young man whose mind had been destroyed by his wound, and which they could not comprehend, for not the slightest trace had been found of him, with all their searching.
The fact that they had been robbed, and also Celeste Seldon, was another disturbing element, and so it was that little work was done in the mines during the time following Harding's arrival and the day set for Doctor d.i.c.k to go out with the ransom money for the young girl whom they all so longed to welcome in their frontier home.
Landlord Larry had set the example of having things spruced up for her coming, and the miners had quickly followed his example, having put their cabins in better condition.
A cabin which the landlord was having built for his own especial use, apart from the hotel, was hastened to completion, and then the very best the hotel could supply was put in it as furniture and to make it attractive to the fair visitor, who was to be regarded as the guest of Last Chance.
At last, the eventful day arrived for the ransom to be paid, and the miners had all taken a peep into the quarters of Celeste Seldon, to see how attractive it was.
Doctor d.i.c.k had furnished a number of things, and the miners who had any pretty robes, or souvenirs, did likewise, until it would have been a callous heart, indeed, that would not be touched by their devotion to one whom they had never seen.
The question of an attempt to capture the road-agents had been fully discussed, but dismissed upon the advice of Landlord Larry, Doctor d.i.c.k, and Harding, who represented the danger that the girl would be in, at the hands of the merciless masked chief.
That Doctor d.i.c.k was the right man to send out with the ransom all felt a.s.sured, for if there was any trickery on the part of the road-agents, he was the one to meet it.
Doctor d.i.c.k had even offered to go out upon horseback alone, but it was thought best that the coach should be sent for the visitor, and Harding should drive, he having met her.
The miners, however, arranged to meet her with a delegation at the entrance to the valley, and escort her to the hotel.
Every man was to be dressed in his best, and, in honor of the occasion, the saloons were to be all closed.
When, at last, the day arrived, Harding mounted his box and gathered up his reins, Doctor d.i.c.k following to a seat by his side a moment after.
The bag containing the gold to be paid in ransom was placed between their feet, Landlord Larry gave the word to go, and the coach rolled away at a rapid pace, followed by the wildest cheering.
The doctor was fixed up in his most magnificent attire. His jewels shone with more than accustomed l.u.s.ter, and there was an expression upon his face that boded no good for the road-agents if they meant treachery in their dealings.
Harding was also rigged out in his finest, and wore a pleased look at the prospect of meeting Celeste again, upon whom he considered that he held a special claim, and yet, underlying all, was an anxiety that some hitch might occur in gaining her release that would destroy all prospect of seeing her.
The coach had been cleaned up to look its best, and a United States flag floated from a staff fastened upon the rear.