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"Two days ago I had a fight with two men, and I've been lying here ever since. They did me up, so that I knew I'd got to die if no help came. And I knew that was just about as likely as a snowstorm, but I couldn't help bankin' on the possibility. So I laid here two days and threw rocks at the coyote that came and sat on that heap of stones and waited for me to die. This morning I drank the last of the water and I said to myself that if n.o.body came by the time the sun was straight above that peak yonder I'd put a bullet into my heart. I had two left, and I used one on the coyote that had been a-settin' on that rock watchin' me the whole morning. I was bound he shouldn't pick my bones, he'd been so sa.s.sy and so sure about it. You'll find his carca.s.s down the canyon a ways. That tired my arm and I waited and rested a spell before I tried it on myself. But I was weaker than I thought and I couldn't hold the gun steady, and the bullet didn't go where I meant it to. But I'm bleedin' to death."
"The two men--what became of them? I reckon they're the ones we're lookin' for!" exclaimed Nick.
"Are you? Well, I guess you'll find 'em scattered down the canyon, or else up there," and he pointed to the mountain side above. "They couldn't get very far."
"Did you kill 'em?" asked Tom anxiously. "You've spoiled a job we've come here for if you did."
The man scanned Tom's face again and a light of recognition broke into his eyes. "I reckon I did," he replied complacently. "Anyway, I hope so."
"What was the matter? Did they do you up?"
"Well, I'll tell you about the whole business. My name's Bill Frank, and I've been here in the mountains since--well, a long time, huntin'
for the lost d.i.c.k Winter's mine. I found it, too. It was right in here behind me, but he'd worked it clean out. I reckon it was nothin' but a pocket, but a mighty big, rich one, and then the vein had pinched. So then I went to work and hunted for the gold he'd taken out. I found it all, or all he told me about. You see, I knew d.i.c.k. I was with him when he died, and he told me what he'd got. There was a Dutch oven and a pail and a coffee pot, all full of lumps, and two tomato cans full of little ones, and a whisky flask full of dust, and a gunny sack full of ore that was just lousy with gold. Much good it will do me now, or them other fellows, either, d.a.m.n their souls! Well, I'd hid the coffee pot and the pail and the Dutch oven and the whisky flask and one tomato can down by the spring, where I had my camp. I knew pretty well where the rest of it was, after I'd found that much, and I came up here two days ago, in the morning, and looked around till I found the gunny sack. I brought it here and threw it inside this place, which poor d.i.c.k Winters had blasted out, never dreamin' of such a thing as that anybody would show up. Then I went away again to find the other tomato can, and when I came back two men were here packin' out my sack of ore."
"What did they look like?" Nick exclaimed.
"One was tall and thin and youngish like, with a bad look, and the other was short and stout and a good deal older, and he had a red, round face."
"The d.a.m.ned, ornery scrubs! They're the ones we're after," Tom exclaimed, jumping up. "You didn't kill 'em, stranger?" he added pleadingly.
"I guess I did. I sure reckon you'll find 'em scattered promiscuous down the canyon. I drew my gun and told 'em to drop it, that it was mine. They began to shoot, and so did I, and I backed 'em out, and made 'em drop the sack, and started 'em on the run. They couldn't shoot as well as I could, and I know I hit one of 'em in the head and the other one mighty near the heart. I poked my head out for a last blaze at 'em, to make sure of my work, and the short one, he let drive at me and took me in the lung, and that's the one that did me up. But they'd broken one leg before."
"Can't you-all pull through if we tote you out of here?" asked Nick.
Bill Frank shook his head. His breath was beginning to fail and his voice sank to a whisper with each sentence.
"No; I'm done for. You can't do nothin' for me." Then he turned to Tom. "Pardner, I did you a bad trick when I saw you before, though I had to do it. And when I told you good-bye I said I hoped that if I ever saw you again I could treat you whiter than I did that time.
Well, I've got the chance now. That tomato can and that gunny sack are over there behind your pardner, and you and him can have 'em. The other tomato can and the whisky flask and the coffee pot and the pail and the Dutch oven are under some big rocks behind a boulder south from the spring, if them two thieves didn't carry 'em away, and you and your pardner can have it all. The trail takes you to the spring."
Tom was staring at him in wide-eyed amazement, trying to recall his face. Nick exclaimed hurriedly:
"Hold on, pard! Ain't you-all got some folks somewhere who ought to have this? Tell us where they are and we'll see that they get it."
The man shook his head. His breath was labored, and he spoke with difficulty as he whispered: "There ain't anybody who'd care whether I'm dead or alive, except to get that gold, and I'd rather you'd have it. You're white, anyway, and you've treated me white, both of you, and I've always been sorry I had to play Thomson Tuttle here that mean trick, because he was a gentleman about it, and sand clean through."
Tom was still staring at him. "Stranger," he said, "you've got the advantage of me. I can't remember that I've ever set eyes on you before."
The death glaze was coming in the man's eyes and his failing whisper struggled to get past his stiffening lips.
"I held you up, and held a gun on you-all one night, last spring, up near the White Sands."
"Oh, that time!" Tom exclaimed. "That was all right. I reckoned you-all had good reason for it."
Bill Frank nodded. "Yes," he whispered, "we had to--in the wagon--"
Some of his words were unintelligible, but a sudden flash of inspiration leaped through Nick's mind.
"Did you have Will Whittaker's body? Who killed him? Tom, the whisky, quick! We must keep him alive till he can tell!"
The man's lips were moving and Nick put his ear close to them and thought he caught the word "not," but he was not sure. Bill Frank's head moved from side to side, but whether he meant to shake it, or whether it was the death agony, they could not tell. Tom put the flask to his lips, but he could not swallow, and in another moment the death rattle sounded in his throat.
They waited beside the dead man's body until every sign of life was extinct. They closed his eyes, straightened his limbs, and folded his hands upon his breast. Then said Tom:
"Nick, he was too white a man to leave for the coyotes. We must do something with him."
"You're sure right, Tommy. But what can we do? This sand ain't deep enough to keep 'em from diggin' him up, even if we bury him."
Tom looked about him and considered the situation a moment. "We'll have to rock him up in here, Nick, in d.i.c.k Winters' mine."
At one side of the wide, blasted out mouth of the deep crack in the mountain from which d.i.c.k Winters had taken his gold, and level with the bottom of the crevice, there was a long, oval hollow, half as wide as a man's body. The solid rock had cracked out of it after some giant-powder blast. They laid the body of Bill Frank in this shallow crypt and began to pile rocks around it. Suddenly Tom stopped, looked at Nick inquiringly, hesitated and cleared his throat.
"Say, Nick," he blurted out, "it ain't a square deal to put a fellow away like this. Somebody ought to say something over him."
"No, you bet it ain't a square deal," said Nick. "We wouldn't like it if it was one of us. But what can we do? There ain't no preacher here."
"I was thinkin', Nick," Tom hesitated and blushed a deep crimson, "I was sure thinkin' that maybe--well, I thought--that you-all could say something. You know you always can say something. You-all better say it, Nick." And without waiting for denial or protest Tom took off his hat and bent his head. Nick flashed a surprised look at his companion, waiting in reverent att.i.tude, hesitated an instant, and then doffed his hat, bent his head and began. And the good Lord who heard his prayer did not need to ask his pedigree, for the Irish intonation with which he rolled the words off his tongue in honey-like waves told his ancestry:
"Good Lord, sure and Ye'll rest this poor man's soul, for he was white clean through. Sure, and he was no coward, and no scrub, neither. But the other two--Ye'd better let them fry in their own fat till they're cracklin's. You bet, that is what they deserve, and we can prove it.
Amen."
They built a close wall of rock around Bill Frank's resting place high enough to reach the over-hanging rock, and so heavy and secure that no prowling coyote could reach the body, or even dislodge a single stone.
After it was all finished they decided that there ought to be something about the grave to show whose bones rested within it. Nick Ellhorn tore some blank paper from the bottom of a partly filled sheet which he found in his pocket and wrote the inscription:
"Here lies the body of Bill Frank, who was white clean through. He was done up by two of the d.a.m.nedest scrubs that ever died lying down. He killed them both before Tom Tuttle and Nick Ellhorn got sight of the color of their hair, which is the only thing we can't forgive him.
"P. S. and N. B.--This is the lost d.i.c.k Winters' mine, and there is nothing in it, except Bill Frank's body."
They emptied the nuggets of gold from the tomato can and put them in their pockets. Then they folded the paper and put it in the can, with a small stone to hold it in place. Tom found an unused envelope in his pocket, and Nick printed on it, in big capitals, "Bill Frank," and they pasted it, by means of the flap, on the front of the can. Then they made a place for the can midway of the stone wall, and fastened it in so that it would be held firmly in place by the surrounding stones.
There was an easy trail down one side of the canyon, which d.i.c.k Winters had made long before by removing the largest stones. A dribble of blood, dried on the sands, marked it all the way. Perhaps a mile down the gulch it came to a sudden stop in a great heap of debris, and a zigzag path started up the side of the canyon. The two men stopped, following the course of the shelving trail with their eyes, and as they looked there was a rattle of loose stone and sand, and some dark body rolled over the side of the gulch from the top of the path. Their hands flashed to their revolver b.u.t.ts, and stopped there, as they watched its downward course in wonder. They saw the arms and feet of a human form flung out aimlessly as the thing rolled from ledge to ledge, and they tried to catch a glimpse of the face as now and again the head hung over a rock and disclosed for a second the ghastly features. Down it came, with the cascade of loose pebbles before it, and lay still in the hot sand at their feet. It was Jim's lifeless and mangled body. Nick glanced to the rim of the canyon wall and saw the head of a coyote peering over.
"There's the beast that tumbled him down," he whispered, and raised his revolver, but before he could shoot, the thing disappeared.
At this point the canyon walls began to grow less steep, and d.i.c.k Winters had taken advantage of the sloping, shelving side to make a zigzag trail to the summit, in some places blasting the solid rock, and in others building out the pathway with great stones. Nick and Tom followed the path to the mountain side above, where little pools of dried blood made a trail which showed the way a wounded man had taken.
A little farther they found the body of Bill Haney, flat on its face, with arms spread out on either side. A coyote slunk away as they appeared, dragging its hinder parts uselessly.
"I reckon that's the one Bill Frank thought he killed," said Nick, as he put a bullet through its head.
They turned the body of Bill Haney over on its back and regarded it silently for some moments.
"Tommy," said Nick, "we ought to put these poor devils where the coyotes can't get 'em."
Tom looked away with disfavor in his face. "They might have got Emerson into a h.e.l.l of a sc.r.a.pe. Suppose anybody but us had found Wellesly the other day! Everybody would have believed that Emerson had ordered these two measly scamps to do what they did!"
"That's so," Nick replied, "but that's all straight now, and they are past doin' any more harm, and it ain't a square deal to let a fellow be eat up by coyotes."
Tom looked down into the dead, staring eyes and soberly replied: "I guess you're right, Nick, and I sure reckon Emerson would say we ought to do it."
They carried both bodies to the bottom of the canyon and up the b.l.o.o.d.y trail until they came to a steep-sided, narrow chasm which yawned into the wider gulch. There they put their burdens down, side by side, and decently straightened the limbs, folded the hands, and closed the eyes of the two dead men.