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The Pike's Peak Rush.
by Edwin L. Sabin.
CHAPTER I
TO THE MOUNTAINS OF GOLD
"Twenty-five thousand people--and more on the way! Think of that!"
exclaimed Mr. Richards, Terry's father.
It was an evening in early April, 1859, and spring had come to the Richards ranch, up the Valley of the Big Blue, Kansas Territory.
Excitement had come, too, for Harry (Harry Revere, that is, the clever, boyish Virginia school-teacher who was a regular member of the family) had been down to the town of Manhattan, south on the Kansas River and the emigrant trail there, and had brought back some Kansas City and St.
Louis papers. They were br.i.m.m.i.n.g with the news of a tremendous throng of gold-seekers swarming to cross the plains for the new gold fields, discovered only last year, in the Pike's Peak country of the Rocky Mountains.
"Do you suppose it's true, Ralph? So many?" appealed Mrs. Richards, doubting.
"Whew!" gasped Terry--the third man in the family. At least, he worked as hard as any man.
"I believe it," a.s.serted Harry. "Manhattan's jammed and the trail in both directions is a sight!"
"So are Kansas City and Leavenworth, according to the dispatches,"
laughed Terry's father. "People from the east are flocking across Iowa, to the Missouri River, and the steamboats up from St. Louis are loaded to the guards--everybody bound for the Pike's Peak country and the Cherry Creek diggin's there. It beats the California rush of Forty-nine and Fifty."
"But twenty-five thousand, Ralph!" Mother Richards protested.
"Yes, and the papers say there'll be a hundred thousand before summer's over."
"Oh, Pa! Can't we go?" pleaded Terry.
"And quit the ranch?"
"But if we don't go now all the gold will be found."
"I think it would be sinful to leave this good ranch and go clear out there, with nothing certain," voiced his mother, anxiously. "You know it almost killed your father. He'd never have got home, if it hadn't been for you."
"That was when he was coming back, and we wouldn't need to come back,"
argued Terry. "And he fetched some gold, too, didn't he?"
"And hasn't recovered yet!" triumphed Mother Richards. "He couldn't possibly stand another long overland trip--and I don't want to stand it, either. Why, we're just nicely settled, all together again, on our own farm."
"Well, some of us ought to go," persisted Terry. "I'd a heap rather dig gold than plant it.'
"I notice you aren't extra fond of digging potatoes, though," slily remarked Harry. "You say it makes your back ache!"
"Digging gold's different," retorted Terry. "Besides, we've a gold mine already, haven't we? The one dad discovered. If we don't get there soon somebody else will dig everything out of it and we'll have only a hole."
"That will be a cellar for us, anyway, to put a house over," mused Harry, who always saw opportunities.
"I don't lay much store on that claim of mine," confessed Terry's father. "The country'll be over-run, and if the spot was worth anything it's probably jumped, or will be jumped very quickly. And I don't remember where it is."
"But what a rush!" faltered Mrs. Richards, glancing through the paper.
"The news does say twenty-five thousand people about to cross the plains and more coming. I do declare! I'm sure some of them will suffer dreadfully."
"Yes; they'll earn their way, all right," agreed Father Richards. "It's a tough region, yonder at the mountains--and the more people, the tighter the living, till they raise other crops than gold."
"Then that's the reason why we ought to be starting--so as to get in ahead," persisted Terry. "This ranching's awful slow, and it's toler'ble hard work, too. Putting stuff in and taking it out again."
"You can't expect to 'take stuff out' unless you do put some in, first, can you?" demanded his father. "That's the law of life. But if you think you can dodge hard work, go on and try."
"Where?" blurted Terry.
"Anywhere. To the Pike's Peak country. You have my permission." And his father's blue eyes twinkled.
"Oh, Ralph!" protested Terry's mother, aghast. "Don't joke about it."
"Aw, I can't go alone," stammered Terry, taken aback.
"I'm not joking," a.s.serted Father Richards. "But he'll have to find his own outfit, like other gold-seekers. Then he can go, and we'll follow when we can."
Mother Richards dropped the paper.
"Ralph! Have you the fever again? Oh, dear!"
Gold-fever she meant, of course. Father Richards smiled, and rubbed his hair where it showed a white streak over the wound received when on their road out from the Missouri River, a year ago, to settle on the ranch, he had been knocked off his horse in fording Wildcat Creek, and had disappeared for months. Only by great good fortune had Terry found him, wandering in, through a blizzard, from the Pike's Peak gold fields; and had brought him home in time for a merry Christmas.
"Not 'again.' Don't know as I'd call it gold-fever, exactly. But I feel a bit like Terry does--I want to join the crowd. It was the same way, in coming to Kansas. We thought this was to be the West; and now there's another West. This ranch can be made to pay--I'm certain it can if we're able to hold on long enough and weather the droughts and gra.s.shoppers and low prices. But----"
"Harry and Terry and I made it pay," reminded Mother Richards, with a flash of pride.
"Yes, you all did bravely. But you managed it by cutting and selling the timber. The timber won't last forever, and the gra.s.shoppers may! This is rather a lonely life, for you, yet, up in here. Out at the mountains, though, they've founded those two towns, Denver and Auraria, and probably others; and I believe opportunities will be more there than here."
"Do you intend to sell the ranch?" asked Mrs. Richards, a little pale.
She loved the ranch, which she had helped to make.
"We'll talk that over. I wouldn't sell unless you consented. It's your place; you and Terry and Harry've done most of the work."
"But you said I could go right away, Pa; didn't you?" enthused Terry.
"Then I'll take the wagon and Buck and Spot, and Shep--and Harry; and----"
"Hold on," bade his father. "Not quite so fast. I said you're to find your own outfit. If we sell the ranch, you'll have to leave part of it as a sample to show to customers. Those oxen are valuable. Oxen'll be as good as gold, in this country. The rush across the plains will sweep up every kind of work critter. If you take Buck and Spot, how'll anybody on this ranch do the ploughing? And if you take the wagon, what'll become of the hauling?"
"And if you take Harry, who'll help your father and me?" chimed in his mother.
"Shucks!" bemoaned Terry. "There's the old mare, and the colt--and a cow--and----"
"And a half-buffalo, and a tame turkey, and a yellow mule twenty years of age if she's a day," completed his father. "Buck and Spot beat the lot of them put together. No, sir; I'll not spare those oxen, for any wild-goose chase across to the mountains. But I'll tell you what you can do. You can have Harry, and find the rest of your come-along."