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'Firebrand' Trevison Part 20

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Corrigan laughed. "Appoint a receiver to operate the mine, pending the Supreme Court decision. Appoint Braman. Graney has no case, anyway. There is no record or deed."

"There is no need of haste," Lindman cautioned; "you can't get mining machinery here for some time yet."

Corrigan laughed, dragging the Judge to a window, from which he pointed out some flat-cars standing on a siding, loaded with lumber, machinery, corrugated iron, shutes, cables, trucks, "T" rails, and other articles that the Judge did not recognize.

The Judge exclaimed in astonishment. Corrigan grunted.

"I ordered that stuff six weeks ago, in antic.i.p.ation of my victory in your court. You can see how I trusted in your honesty and perspicacity. I'll have it on the ground tomorrow--some of it today. Of course I want to proceed legally, and in order to do that I'll have to have the court order this morning. You do whatever is necessary."



At daylight he was in the laborers' camp, skirting the railroad at the edge of town, looking for Carson. He found the big Irishman in one of the larger tent-houses, talking with the cook, who was preparing breakfast amid a smother of smoke and the strong mingled odors of frying bacon and coffee. Corrigan went only to the flap of the tent, motioning Carson outside.

Walking away from the tent toward some small frame buildings down the track, Corrigan said:

"There are several carloads of material there," pointing to the flat-cars which he had shown to the Judge. "I've hired a mining man to superintend the erection of that stuff--it's mining machinery and material for buildings. I want you to place as many of your men as you can spare at the disposal of the engineer; his name's Pickand, and you'll find him at the cars at eight o'clock. I'll have some more laborers sent over from the dam. Give him as many men as he wants; go with him yourself, if he wants you."

"What are ye goin' to mine?"

"Coal."

"Where?"

"I've been looking over the land with Pickand; he says we'll sink a shaft at the base of the b.u.t.te below the mesa, where you are laying tracks now.

We won't have to go far, Pickand says. There's coal--thick veins of it--running back into the wall of the b.u.t.te."

"All right, sir," said Carson. But he scratched his head in perplexity, eyeing Corrigan sidelong. "Ye woudn't be sayin' that ye'll be diggin' for coal on the railroad's right av way, wud ye?"

"No!" snapped Corrigan.

"Thin it will be on Trevison's land. Have ye bargained wid him for it?"

"No! Look here, Carson. Mind your own business and do as you're told!"

"I'm elicted, I s'pose; but it's a job I ain't admirin' to do. If ye've got half the sinse I give ye credit for havin', ye'll be lettin' that mon Trevison alone--I'd a lot sooner smoke a segar in that shed av dynamite than to cross him!"

Corrigan smiled and turned to look in the direction in which the Irishman was pointing. A small, flat-roofed frame building, sheathed with corrugated iron, met his view. Crude signs, large enough to be read hundreds of feet distant, were affixed to the walls:

"CAUTION. DYNAMITE."

"Do you keep much of it there?"

"Enough for anny blastin' we have to do. There's plenty--half a ton, mebbe."

"Who's got the key?"

"Meself."

Corrigan returned to town, breakfasted, mounted a horse and rode out to the dam, where he gave orders for some laborers to be sent to Carson. At nine o'clock he was back in Manti talking with Pickand, and watching the d.i.n.ky engine as it pulled the loaded flat-cars westward over the tracks.

He left Pickand and went to his office in the bank building, where he conferred with some men regarding various buildings and improvements in contemplation, and shortly after ten, glancing out of a window, he saw a buckboard stop in front of the _Castle_ hotel. Corrigan waited a little, then closed his desk and walked across the street. Shortly he confronted Hester Harvey in her room. He saw from her downcast manner that she had failed. His face darkened.

"Wouldn't work, eh? What did he say?"

The woman was hunched down in her chair, still wearing the cloak that she had worn in Trevison's office; the collar still up, the front thrown open.

Her hair was disheveled; dark lines were under her eyes; she glared at Corrigan in an abandon of savage dejection.

"He turned me down--cold." Her laugh held the bitterness of self-derision.

"I'm through, there, Jeff."

"h.e.l.l!" cursed the man. She looked at him, her lips curving with amused contempt.

"Oh, you're all right--don't worry. That's all you care about, isn't it?"

She laughed harshly at the quickened light in his eyes. "You'd see me sacrifice myself; you wouldn't give me a word of sympathy. That's you!

That's the way of all men. Give, give, give! That's the masculine chorus--the hunting-song of the human wolf-pack!"

"Don't talk like that--it ain't like you, kid. You were always the gamest little dame I ever knew." He essayed to take the hand that was twisted in the folds of her cloak, but she drew it away from him in a fury. And the eagerness in his eyes betrayed the insincerity of his attempt at consolation; she saw it--the naked selfishness of his look--and sneered at him.

"You want the good news, eh? The good for you? That's all you care about.

After you get it, I'll get the husks of your pity. Well, here it is. I've poisoned them both--against each other. I told him she was against him in this land business. And it hurt me to see how gamely he took it, Jeff!"

her voice broke, but she choked back the sob and went on, hoa.r.s.ely: "He didn't make a whimper. Not even when I told him you were going to marry her--that you were engaged. But there was a fire in those eyes of his that I would give my soul to see there for me!"

"Yes--yes," said the man, impatiently.

"Oh, you devil!" she railed at him. "I've made him think it was a frame-up between you and her--to get information out of him; I told him that she had strung him along for a month or so--amusing herself. And he believes it."

"Good!"

"And I've made her believe that he sent for me," she went on, her voice leaping to cold savagery. "I stayed all night at his place, and I went back to the Bar B in the morning--this morning--and made Rosalind Benham think--Ha, ha! She ordered me away from the house--the hussy! She's through with him--any fool could tell that. But it's different with him, Jeff. He won't give her up; he isn't that kind. He'll fight for her--and he'll have her!"

The eager, pleased light died out of Corrigan's face, his lips set in an ugly pout. But he contrived to smile as he got up.

"You've done well--so far. But don't give him up. Maybe he'll change his mind. Stay here--I'll stake you to the limit." He laid a roll of bills on a stand--she did not look at them--and approached her in a second endeavor to console her. But she waved him away, saying: "Get out of here--I want to think!" And he obeyed, looking back before he closed the door.

"Selfish?" he muttered, going down the street. "Well, what of it? That's a human weakness, isn't it? Get what you want, and to h.e.l.l with other people!"

Trevison had gone to his room for a much-needed rest. He had watched Hester Harvey go with no conscious regret, but with a certain grim pity, which was as futile as her visit. But, lying on the bed he fought hard against the bitter scorn that raged in him over the contemplation of Rosalind Benham's duplicity. He found it hard to believe that she had been duping him, for during the weeks of his acquaintance with her he had studied her much--with admiration-weighted prejudice, of course, since she made a strong appeal to him--and he had been certain, then, that she was as free from guile as a child--excepting any girl's natural artifices by which she concealed certain emotions that men had no business trying to read. He had read some of them--his business or not--and he had imagined he had seen what had fired his blood--a reciprocal affection. He would not have declared himself, otherwise.

He went to sleep, thinking of her. He awoke about noon, to see Barkwell standing at his side, shaking him.

"Have you got any understandin' with that railroad gang that they're to do any minin' on the Diamond K range?"

"No."

"Well, they're gettin' ready to do it. Over at the b.u.t.te near the railroad cut. I pa.s.sed there a while ago an' quizzed the big guy--Corrigan--about a gang workin' there. He says they're goin' to mine coal. I asked him if he had your permission an' he said he didn't need it. I reckon they ain't none shy on gall where that guy come from!"

Trevison got out of bed and buckled on his cartridge belt and pistol. "The boys are working the Willow Creek range," he said, sharply. "Get them, tell them to load up with plenty of cartridges, and join me at the b.u.t.te."

He heard Barkwell go leaping down the stairs, his spurs striking the step edges, and a few minutes later, riding n.i.g.g.e.r out of the corral he saw the foreman racing away in a dust cloud. He followed the bed of the river, himself, going at a slow lope, for he wanted time to think--to gain control of the rage that boiled in his veins. He conquered it, and when he came in sight of the b.u.t.te he was cool and deliberate, though on his face was that "mean" look that Carson had once remarked about to his friend Murphy, partly hidden by the "tiger" smile which, the Irishman had discovered, preceded action, ruthless and swift.

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'Firebrand' Trevison Part 20 summary

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