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"Well?" Warden said. "What do you know of me?"
Hill's eyes were as steel. He stood stiff as a soldier on parade. He answered curtly, without a hint of emotion. "I know enough to get you arrested when this--farce--is over."
"Oh, you call this a farce, do you?" Bill Warden's words came slowly from lips that strangely smiled. "And when does--the fun begin?"
Hill's harsh face was thrown into strong relief by the flare of the torch. It was as flint confronting the other man. "Do you really imagine that I regard this sort of Forty Thieves business seriously?" he said.
"I imagine it is pretty serious so far as you are concerned," said Warden. "You're in about the tightest hole you've ever been in in your life. And it's up to me to get you out--or to leave you. Do you understand that?"
"Oh, quite," said Fletcher Hill, sardonically. "But--let me tell you at the outset--you won't find me specially easy to bargain with on that count--Mr. Buckskin Bill."
Bill Warden threw up his head with a gesture of open defiance. "I'm not doing any--bargaining," he said. "And as to arresting me--afterwards--you can do as you please. But now--just now--you are in my power, and you're going to play my game. Got that?"
"I can see myself doing it," said Fletcher Hill.
"Yes, you will do it." A sudden deep note of savagery sounded in Warden's voice. "Not to save your own skin, Mr. Fletcher Hill, but for the sake of--something more valuable than that--something more precious even than your cussed pride. You'll do it for the sake of the girl you're going to marry. And you'll do it--now."
"Shall I?" said Fletcher Hill.
Bill Warden's hand suddenly came forth and gripped him by the shoulder.
"d.a.m.n you!" he said. "Do you think I want to save your life?"
The words were low, spoken with a concentrated pa.s.sion more terrible than open violence. He looked closely into Hill's eyes, and his own were flaming like the eyes of a baited animal.
Hill looked straight back at him without the stirring of an eyelid. "Take your hand off me!" he said.
It was the word of the superior officer. Warden's hand fell as it were mechanically. There followed a tense silence.
Warden made a sharp movement. "I did it to save your life," he said.
"You'd have died like a dog within ten seconds if I hadn't turned you back."
A curious expression crossed Hill's strong countenance. It was almost a smile of understanding. "I am--indebted to you--boss," he said, and with the words very calmly he took his revolver by the muzzle and held it out.
"I surrender to you--without conditions."
Bill Warden gave a sharp start of surprise. For an instant he hesitated, then in silence he took the weapon and dropped it into his pocket. A moment longer he looked Fletcher Hill straight in the eyes, then swung upon his heel.
"We'll get out of this infernal hole straight away," he said, and, stooping, gripped his fingers upon a ridge of stone that ran close to the floor. The stone swung inward under his grasp, leaving a dark aperture gaping at his feet. Bill glanced backwards at his prisoner.
The smile still hovered in the latter's eye. "After you, Mr. Buckskin Bill!" he said, ceremoniously.
And in silence Bill led the way.
CHAPTER XII
THE BOSS OF BARREN VALLEY
"Oh, my dear!" gasped Adela. "I've had the most terrifying adventure.
I thought I should never see you again. The men are all on strike, and they've sworn to kill Fletcher Hill, only no one knows where he is. What became of him? Has he got away?"
"I don't know," Dot said.
She sank into the nearest chair in the ill-lighted manager's office, and leaned her white face in her hand.
"Perhaps he has been murdered already," said Adela. "Mr. Harley is very anxious about him. He can't hold them. And--Dot--just think of it!--Warden--the man we saw yesterday, the sub-manager--is at their head.
I saw him myself. He had a revolver in his hand. You were with Fletcher Hill. You must know what became of him!"
"No, I don't know," said Dot. "We--parted--a long time ago."
"How odd you are!" said Adela. "Why, what is the matter? Are you going to faint?" She went to the girl and bent over her, frightened by her look.
"What is the matter, Dot? What has happened to you? You haven't been hurt?"
"I am--all right," Dot said, with an effort. "Did Mr. Harley bring you here?"
"Yes. And you? How did you get here?"
"He--brought me most of the way--Mr. Warden," Dot said. "He has gone now to save--Fletcher Hill."
"To shoot him, more likely," said Adela. "He has posted sentinels all round the mine to catch him. I wonder if we are safe here! Mr. Harley said it was a safe place. But I wonder. Shall we make a bolt for it, Dot?
Shall we? Shall we?"
"I shall stay here," Dot answered.
Adela was not even listening. "We are only two defenceless women, and there isn't a man to look after us. What shall we do if--Ah! Heavens!
What is that?"
A fearful sound had cut short her speculations--a fiendish yelling as of a pack of wolves leaping upon their prey. Dot sat up swiftly. Adela cowered in a corner.
The terrible noise continued, appalling in its violence. It swept like a wave towards the building, drowning the roar of the stream below. The girl at the table rose and went to the closed door. She gripped a revolver in her right hand. With her left she reached for the latch.
"Don't open it!" gasped Adela.
But Dot paid no heed. She lifted the latch and flung wide the door. Her slim figure stood outlined against the lamp-light behind her. Before her in a white glare of moonlight lay the vault-like entrance of the mine at the head of Barren Valley, and surging along the black, scarred side of the hill there came a yelling crowd of miners. They were making straight for the open door, but at the sight of the girl standing there they checked momentarily and the shouting died down.
She faced the foremost of them without a tremor. "What is it?" she demanded, in a clear, ringing voice. "What are you wanting?"
A man with the s.h.a.ggy face of a baboon answered her. "You've got that blasted policeman in there. You stick up that gun of yours and let us pa.s.s! We've got guns of our own, so that won't help."
She confronted him with scorn. "Do you imagine I'm afraid of you and your guns? There's no one here except another woman. Are you out to fight women to-night?"
"That's a lie!" he made prompt response. "You've got Fletcher Hill in there, or I'm a n.i.g.g.e.r. You let us pa.s.s!"
But still she blocked the way, her revolver pointing straight at him.
"Fletcher Hill is not here. And you won't come in unless Mr. Warden says so. He is not here either at present. But he is coming. And I will shoot any man who tries to force his way in first."