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<h2> 13 </h2>
<p>It was afternoon before Joan could trust herself sufficiently to go out
again, and when she did she saw that she attracted very little attention
from the bandits.</p>
<p>Kells had a springy step, a bright eye, a lifted head, and he seemed to be
listening. Perhaps he was—to the music of his sordid dreams. Joan
watched him sometimes with wonder. Even a bandit—plotting gold
robberies, with violence and blood merely means to an end—built
castles in the air and lived with joy!</p>
<p>All that afternoon the bandits left camp in twos and threes, each party
with pack burros and horses, packed as Joan had not seen them before on
the border. Shovels and picks and old sieves and pans, these swinging or
tied in prominent places, were evidence that the bandits meant to assume
the characters of miners and prospectors. They whistled and sang. It was a
lark. The excitement had subsided and the action begun. Only in Kells,
under his radiance, could be felt the dark and sinister plot. He was the
heart of the machine.</p>
<p>By sundown Kells, Pearce, Wood, Jim Cleve, and a robust, grizzled bandit,
Jesse Smith, were left in camp. Smith was lame from his ride, and Joan
gathered that Kells would have left camp but for the fact that Smith
needed rest. He and Kells were together all the time, talking endlessly.
Joan heard them argue a disputed point—would the men abide by
Kells's plan and go by twos and threes into the gold-camp, and hide their
relations as a larger band? Kells contended they would and Smith had his
doubts.</p>
<p>“Jack, wait till you see Alder Creek!” ejaculated Smith, wagging his
grizzled head. “Three thousand men, old an' young, of all kinds—gone
gold—crazy! Alder Creek has got California's '49 and' '51 cinched to
the last hole!” And the bandit leader rubbed his palms in great glee.</p>
<p>That evening they all had supper together in Kell's cabin. Bate Wood
grumbled because he had packed most of his outfit. It so chanced that Joan
sat directly opposite Jim Cleve, and while he ate he pressed her foot with
his under the table. The touch thrilled Joan. Jim did not glance at her,
but there was such a change in him that she feared it might rouse Kells's
curiosity. This night, however, the bandit could not have seen anything
except a gleam of yellow. He talked, he sat at table, but did not eat.
After supper he sent Joan to her cabin, saying they would be on the trail
at daylight. Joan watched them awhile from her covert. They had evidently
talked themselves out, and Kells grew thoughtful. Smith and Pearce went
outside, apparently to roll their beds on the ground under the porch roof.
Wood, who said he was never a good sleeper, smoked his pipe. And Jim Cleve
spread blankets along the wall in the shadow and and lay down. Joan could
see his eyes shining toward the door. Of course he was thinking of her.
But could he see her eyes? Watching her chance, she slipped a hand from
behind the curtain, and she knew Cleve saw it. What a comfort that was!
Joan's heart swelled. All might yet be well. Jim Cleve would be near her
while she slept. She could sleep now without those dark dreams—without
dreading to awaken to the light. Again she saw Kells pacing the room,
silent, bent, absorbed, hands behind his back, weighted with his burden.
It was impossible not to feel sorry for him. With all his intelligence and
cunning power, his cause was hopeless. Joan knew that as she knew so many
other things without understanding why. She had not yet sounded Jesse
Smith, but not a man of all the others was true to Kells. They would be of
his Border Legion, do his bidding, revel in their ill-gotten gains, and
then, when he needed them most, be false to him.</p>
<p>When Joan was awakened her room was shrouded in gray gloom. A bustle sound
from the big cabin, and outside horses stamped and men talked.</p>
<p>She sat alone at breakfast and ate by lantern-light. It was necessary to
take a lantern back to her cabin, and she was so long in her preparations
there that Kells called again. Somehow she did not want to leave this
cabin. It seemed protective and private, and she feared she might not find
such quarters again. Besides, upon the moment of leaving she discovered
that she had grown attached to the place where she had suffered and
thought and grown so much.</p>
<p>Kells had put out the lights. Joan hurried through the cabin and outside.
The gray obscurity had given way to dawn. The air was cold, sweet, bracing
with the touch of mountain purity in it. The men, except Kells, were all
mounted, and the pack-train was in motion. Kells dragged the rude door
into position, and then, mounting, he called to Joan to follow. She
trotted her horse after him, down the slope, across the brook and through
the wet willows, and out upon the wide trail. She glanced ahead,
discerning that the third man from her was Jim Cleve; and that fact, in
the start for Alder Creek, made all the difference in the world.</p>
<p>When they rode out of the narrow defile into the valley the sun was rising
red and bright in a notch of the mountains. Clouds hung over distant
peaks, and the patches of snow in the high canons shone blue and pink.
Smith in the lead turned westward up the valley. Horses trooped after the
cavalcade and had to be driven back. There were also cattle in the valley,
and all these Kells left behind like an honest rancher who had no fear for
his stock. Deer stood off with long ears pointed forward, watching the
horses go by. There were flocks of quail, and whirring grouse, and
bounding jack-rabbits, and occasionally a brace of sneaking coyotes. These
and the wild flowers, and the waving meadow-grass, the yellow-stemmed
willows, and the patches of alder, all were pleasurable to Joan's eyes and
restful to her mind.</p>
<p>Smith soon led away from this valley up out of the head of a ravine,
across a rough rock-strewn ridge, down again into a hollow that grew to be
a cañon. The trail was bad. Part of the time it was the bottom of a
boulder-strewn brook where the horses slipped on the wet, round stones.
Progress was slow and time passed. For Joan, however, it was a relief; and
the slower they might travel the better she would like it. At the end of
that journey there were Gulden and the others, and the gold-camp with its
illimitable possibilities for such men.</p>
<p>At noon the party halted for a rest. The camp site was pleasant and the
men were all agreeable. During the meal Kells found occasion to remark to
Cleve:</p>
<p>“Say youngster, you've brightened up. Must be because of our prospects
over here.”</p>
<p>“Not that so much,” replied Cleve. “I quit the whisky. To be honest,
Kells, I was almost seeing snakes.”</p>
<p>“I'm glad you quit. When you're drinking you're wild. I never yet saw the
man who could drink hard and keep his head. I can't. But I don't drink
much.”</p>
<p>His last remark brought a response in laughter. Evidently his companions
thought he was joking. He laughed himself and actually winked at Joan.</p>
<p>It happened to be Cleve whom Kells told to saddle Joan's horse, and as
Joan tried the cinches, to see if they were too tight to suit her, Jim's
hand came in contact with hers. That touch was like a message. Joan was
thrilling all over as she looked at Jim, but he kept his face averted.
Perhaps he did not trust his eyes.</p>
<p>Travel was resumed up the cañon and continued steadily, though leisurely.
But the trail was so rough, and so winding, that Joan believed the
progress did not exceed three miles an hour. It was the kind of travel in
which a horse could be helped and that entailed attention to the lay of
the ground. Before Joan realized the hours were flying, the afternoon had
waned. Smith kept on, however, until nearly dark before halting for camp.</p>
<p>The evening camp was a scene of activity, and all except Joan had work to
do. She tried to lend a hand, but Wood told her to rest. This she was glad
to do. When called to supper she had almost fallen asleep. After a long
day's ride the business of eating precluded conversation. Later, however,
the men began to talk between puffs on their pipes, and from the talk no
one could have guessed that here was a band of robbers on their way to a
gold camp. Jesse Smith had a sore foot and he was compared to a tenderfoot
on his first ride. Smith retaliated in kind. Every consideration was shown
Joan, and Wood particularly appeared assiduous in his desire for her
comfort. All the men except Cleve paid her some kind attention; and he, of
course, neglected her because he was afraid to go near her. Again she felt
in Red Pearce a condemnation of the bandit leader who was dragging a girl
over hard trails, making her sleep in the open, exposing her to danger and
to men like himself and Gulden. In his own estimate Pearce, like every one
of his kind, was not so slow as the others.</p>
<p>Joan watched and listened from her blankets, under a leafy tree, some few
yards from the camp-fire. Once Kells turned to see how far distant she
was, and then, lowering his voice, he told a story. The others laughed.
Pearce followed with another, and he, too, took care that Joan could not
hear. They grew closer for the mirth, and Smith, who evidently was a jolly
fellow, set them to roaring. Jim Cleve laughed with them.</p>
<p>“Say, Jim, you're getting over it,” remarked Kells.</p>
<p>“Over what?”</p>
<p>Kells paused, rather embarrassed for a reply, as evidently in the humor of
the hour he had spoken a thought better left unsaid. But there was no more
forbidding atmosphere about Cleve. He appeared to have rounded to
good-fellowship after a moody and quarrelsome drinking spell.</p>
<p>“Why, over what drove you out here—and gave me a lucky chance at
you,” replied Kells, with a constrained laugh.</p>
<p>“Oh, you mean the girl?... Sure, I'm getting over that, except when I
drink.”</p>
<p>“Tell us, Jim,” said Kells, curiously.</p>
<p>“Aw, you'll give me the laugh!” retorted Cleve.</p>
<p>“No, we won't unless your story's funny.”</p>
<p>“You can gamble it wasn't funny,” put in Red Pearce.</p>
<p>They all coaxed him, yet none of them, except Kells, was particularly
curious; it was just that hour when men of their ilk were lazy and
comfortable and full fed and good-humored round the warm, blazing
camp-fire.</p>
<p>“All right,” replied Cleve, and apparently, for all his complaisance, a
call upon memory had its pain. “I'm from Montana. Range-rider in winter
and in summer I prospected. Saved quite a little money, in spite of a
fling now and then at faro and whisky.... Yes, there was a girl, I guess
yes. She was pretty. I had a bad case over her. Not long ago I left all I
had—money and gold and things—in her keeping, and I went
prospecting again. We were to get married on my return. I stayed out six
months, did well, and got robbed of all my dust.”</p>
<p>Cleve was telling this fabrication in a matter-of-fact way, growing a
little less frank as he proceeded, and he paused while he lifted sand and
let it drift through his fingers, watching it curiously. All the men were
interested and Kells hung on every word.</p>
<p>“When I got back,” went on Cleve, “my girl had married another fellow.
She'd given him all I left with her. Then I got drunk. While I was drunk
they put up a job on me. It was her word that disgraced me and run me out
of town.... So I struck west and drifted to the border.”</p>
<p>“That's not all,” said Kells, bluntly.</p>
<p>“Jim, I reckon you ain't tellin' what you did to thet lyin' girl an' the
feller. How'd you leave them?” added Pearce.</p>
<p>But Cleve appeared to become gloomy and reticent.</p>
<p>“Wimmen can hand the double-cross to a man, hey, Kells?” queried Smith,
with a broad grin.</p>
<p>“By gosh! I thought you'd been treated powerful mean!” exclaimed Bate
Wood, and he was full of wrath.</p>
<p>“A treacherous woman!” exclaimed Kells, passionately. He had taken Cleve's
story hard. The man must have been betrayed by women, and Cleve's story
had irritated old wounds.</p>
<p>Directly Kells left the fire and repaired to his blankets, near where Joan
lay. Probably he believed her asleep, for he neither looked nor spoke.
Cleve sought his bed, and likewise Wood and Smith. Pearce was the last to
leave, and as he stood up the light fell upon his red face, lean and bold
like an Indian's. Then he passed Joan, looking down upon her and then upon
the recumbent figure of Kells; and if his glance was not baleful and
malignant, as it swept over the bandit, Joan believed her imagination must
be vividly weird, and running away with her judgment.</p>
<p>The next morning began a day of toil. They had to climb over the mountain
divide, a long, flat-topped range of broken rocks. Joan spared her horse
to the limit of her own endurance. If there were a trail Smith alone knew
it, for none was in evidence to the others. They climbed out of the
notched head of the cañon, and up a long slope of weathered shale that let
the horses slide back a foot for every yard gained, and through a
labyrinth of broken cliffs, and over bench and ridge to the height of the
divide. From there Joan had a magnificent view. Foot-hills rolled round
heads below, and miles away, in a curve of the range, glistened Bear Lake.
The rest here at this height was counteracted by the fact that the
altitude affected Joan. She was glad to be on the move again, and now the
travel was downhill, so that she could ride. Still it was difficult, for
horses were more easily lamed in a descent. It took two hours to descend
the distance that had consumed all the morning to ascend. Smith led
through valley after valley between foot-hills, and late in the afternoon
halted by a spring in a timbered spot.</p>
<p>Joan ached in every muscle and she was too tired to care what happened
round the camp-fire. Jim had been close to her all day and that had kept
up her spirit. It was not yet dark when she lay down for the night.</p>
<p>“Sleep well, Dandy Dale,” said Kells, cheerfully, yet not without pathos.
“Alder Creek to-morrow!... Then you'll never sleep again!”</p>
<p>At times she seemed to feel that he regretted her presence, and always
this fancy came to her with mocking or bantering suggestion that the
costume and mask she wore made her a bandit's consort, and she could not
escape the wildness of this gold-seeking life. The truth was that Kells
saw the insuperable barrier between them, and in the bitterness of his
love he lied to himself, and hated himself for the lie.</p>
<p>About the middle of the afternoon of the next day the tired cavalcade rode
down out of the brush and rock into a new, broad, dusty road. It was so
new that the stems of the cut brush along the borders were still white.
But that road had been traveled by a multitude.</p>
<p>Out across the valley in the rear Joan saw a canvas-topped wagon, and she
had not ridden far on the road when she saw a bobbing pack-burros to the
fore. Kells had called Wood and Smith and Pearce and Cleve together, and
now they went on in a bunch, all driving the pack-train. Excitement again
claimed Kells; Pearce was alert and hawk-eyed; Smith looked like a hound
on a scent; Cleve showed genuine feeling. Only Bate Wood remained proof to
the meaning of that broad road.</p>
<p>All along, on either side, Joan saw wrecks of wagons, wheels, harness,
boxes, old rags of tents blown into the brush, dead mules and burros. It
seemed almost as if an army had passed that way. Presently the road
crossed a wide, shallow brook of water, half clear and half muddy; and on
the other side the road followed the course of the brook. Joan heard Smith
call the stream Alder Creek, and he asked Kells if he knew what muddied
water meant. The bandit's eyes flashed fire. Joan thrilled, for she, too,
knew that up-stream there were miners washing earth for gold.</p>
<p>A couple of miles farther on creek and road entered the mouth of a wide
spruce-timbered gulch. These trees hid any view of the slopes or floor of
the gulch, and it was not till several more miles had been passed that the
bandit rode out into what Joan first thought was a hideous slash in the
forest made by fire. But it was only the devastation wrought by men. As
far as she could see the timber was down, and everywhere began to be
manifested signs that led her to expect habitations. No cabins showed,
however, in the next mile. They passed out of the timbered part of the
gulch into one of rugged, bare, and stony slopes, with bunches of sparse
alder here and there. The gulch turned at right angles and a great gray
slope shut out sight of what lay beyond. But, once round that obstruction,
Kells halted his men with short, tense exclamation.</p>
<p>Joan saw that she stood high up on the slope, looking down upon the
gold-camp. It was an interesting scene, but not beautiful. To Kells it
must have been so, but to Joan it was even more hideous than the slash in
the forest. Here and there, everywhere, were rude dugouts, little huts of
brush, an occasional tent, and an occasional log cabin; and as she looked
farther and farther these crude habitations of miners magnified in number
and in dimensions till the white and black broken, mass of the town choked
the narrow gulch.</p>
<p>“Wal, boss, what do you say to thet diggin's?” demanded Jesse Smith.</p>
<p>Kells drew a deep breath. “Old forty-niner, this beats all I ever saw!”</p>
<p>“Shore I've seen Sacramento look like thet!” added Bate Wood.</p>
<p>Pearce and Cleve gazed with fixed eyes, and, however different their
emotions, they rivaled each other in attention.</p>
<p>“Jesse, what's the word?” queried Kells, with a sharp return to the
business of the matter.</p>
<p>“I've picked a site on the other side of camp. Best fer us,” he replied.</p>
<p>“Shall we keep to the road?”</p>
<p>“Certain-lee,” he returned, with his grin.</p>
<p>Kells hesitated, and felt of his beard, probably conjecturing the
possibilities of recognition.</p>
<p>“Whiskers make another man of you. Reckon you needn't expect to be known
over here.”</p>
<p>That decided Kells. He pulled his sombrero well down, shadowing his face.
Then he remembered Joan and made a slight significant gesture at her mask.</p>
<p>“Kells, the people in this here camp wouldn't look at an army ridin'
through,” responded Smith. “It's every man fer hisself. An' wimmen, say!
there's all kinds. I seen a dozen with veils, an' them's the same as
masks.” Nevertheless, Kells had Joan remove the mask and pull her sombrero
down, and instructed her to ride in the midst of the group. Then they
trotted on, soon catching up with the jogging pack-train.</p>
<p>What a strange ride that was for Joan! The slope resembled a magnified
ant-hill with a horde of frantic ants in action. As she drew closer she
saw these ants were men, digging for gold. Those near at hand could be
plainly seen—rough, ragged, bearded men and smooth-faced boys.
Farther on and up the slope, along the waterways and ravines, were miners
so close they seemed almost to interfere with one another. The creek
bottom was alive with busy, silent, violent men, bending over the water,
washing and shaking and paddling, all desperately intent upon something.
They had not time to look up. They were ragged, unkempt, barearmed and
bare-legged, every last one of them with back bent. For a mile or more
Kells's party trotted through this part of the diggings, and everywhere,
on rocky bench and gravel bar and gray slope, were holes with men picking
and shoveling in them. Some were deep and some were shallow; some long
trenches and others mere pits. If all of these prospectors were finding
gold, then gold was everywhere. And presently Joan did not need to have
Kells tell her that all of these diggers were finding dust. How silent
they were—how tense! They were not mechanical. It was a soul that
drove them. Joan had seen many men dig for gold, and find a little now and
then, but she had never seen men dig when they knew they were going to
strike gold. That made the strange difference.</p>
<p>Joan calculated she must have seen a thousand miners in less than two
miles of the gulch, and then she could not see up the draws and washes
that intersected the slope, and she could not see beyond the camp.</p>
<p>But it was not a camp which she was entering; it was a tent-walled town, a
city of squat log cabins, a long, motley, checkered jumble of structures
thrown up and together in mad haste. The wide road split it in the middle
and seemed a stream of color and life. Joan rode between two lines of
horses, burros, oxen, mules, packs and loads and canvas-domed wagons and
gaudy vehicles resembling gipsy caravans. The street was as busy as a
beehive and as noisy as a bedlam. The sidewalks were rough-hewn planks and
they rattled under the tread of booted men. There were tents on the ground
and tents on floors and tents on log walls. And farther on began the lines
of cabins-stores and shops and saloons—and then a great, square,
flat structure with a flaring sign in crude gold letters, “Last Nugget,”
from which came the creak of fiddles and scrape of boots, and hoarse mirth.
Joan saw strange, wild-looking creatures—women that made her shrink;
and several others of her sex, hurrying along, carrying sacks or buckets,
worn and bewildered-looking women, the sight of whom gave her a pang. She
saw lounging Indians and groups of lazy, bearded men, just like Kells's
band, and gamblers in long, black coats, and frontiersmen in fringed
buckskin, and Mexicans with swarthy faces under wide, peaked sombreros;
and then in great majority, dominating that stream of life, the lean and
stalwart miners, of all ages, in their check shirts and high boots, all
packing guns, jostling along, dark-browed, somber, and intent. These last
were the workers of this vast beehive; the others were the drones, the
parasites.</p>
<p>Kell's party rode on through the town, and Smith halted them beyond the
outskirts, near a grove of spruce-trees, where camp was to be made.</p>
<p>Joan pondered over her impression of Alder Creek. It was confused; she had
seen too much. But out of what she had seen and heard loomed two
contrasting features: a throng of toiling miners, slaves to their lust for
gold and actuated by ambitions, hopes, and aims, honest, rugged, tireless
workers, but frenzied in that strange pursuit; and a lesser crowd, like
leeches, living for and off the gold they did not dig with blood of hand
and sweat of brow.</p>
<p>Manifestly Jesse Smith had selected the spot for Kells's permanent
location at Alder Creek with an eye for the bandit's peculiar needs. It
was out of sight of town, yet within a hundred rods of the nearest huts,
and closer than that to a sawmill. It could be approached by a shallow
ravine that wound away toward the creek. It was backed up against a rugged
bluff in which there was a narrow gorge, choked with pieces of weathered
cliff; and no doubt the bandits could go and come in that direction. There
was a spring near at hand and a grove of spruce-trees. The ground was
rocky, and apparently unfit for the digging of gold.</p>
<p>While Bate Wood began preparations for supper, and Cleve built the fire,
and Smith looked after the horses, Kells and Pearce stepped off the ground
where the cabin was to be erected. They selected a level bench down upon
which a huge cracked rock, as large as a house, had rolled. The cabin was
to be backed up against this stone, and in the rear, under cover of it, a
secret exit could be made and hidden. The bandit wanted two holes to his
burrow.</p>
<p>When the group sat down to the meal the gulch was full of sunset colors.
And, strangely, they were all some shade of gold. Beautiful golden veils,
misty, ethereal, shone in rays across the gulch from the broken ramparts;
and they seemed so brilliant, so rich, prophetic of the treasures of the
hills. But that golden sunset changed. The sun went down red, leaving a
sinister shadow over the gulch, growing darker and darker. Joan saw Cleve
thoughtfully watching this transformation, and she wondered if he had
caught the subtle mood of nature. For whatever had been the hope and
brightness, the golden glory of this new Eldorado, this sudden uprising
Alder Creek with its horde of brave and toiling miners, the truth was that
Jack Kells and Gulden had ridden into the camp and the sun had gone down
red. Joan knew that great mining-camps were always happy, rich, free,
lucky, honest places till the fame of gold brought evil men. And she had
not the slightest doubt that the sun of Alder Creek's brief and glad day
had set forever.</p>
<p>Twilight was stealing down from the hills when Kells announced to his
party: “Bate, you and Jesse keep camp. Pearce, you look out for any of the
gang. But meet in the dark!... Cleve, you can go with me.” Then he turned
to Joan. “Do you want to go with us to see the sights or would you rather
stay here?”</p>
<p>“I'd like to go, if only I didn't look so—so dreadful in this suit,”
she replied.</p>
<p>Kells laughed, and the camp-fire glare lighted the smiling faces of Pearce
and Smith.</p>
<p>“Why, you'll not be seen. And you look far from dreadful.”</p>
<p>“Can't you give me a—a longer coat?” faltered Joan.</p>
<p>Cleve heard, and without speaking he went to his saddle and unrolled his
pack. Inside a slicker he had a gray coat. Joan had seen it many a time,
and it brought a pang with memories of Hoadley. Had that been years ago?
Cleve handed this coat to Joan.</p>
<p>“Thank you,” she said.</p>
<p>Kells held the coat for her and she slipped into it. She seemed lost. It
was long, coming way below her hips, and for the first time in days she
felt she was Joan Randle again.</p>
<p>“Modesty is all very well in a woman, but it's not always becoming,”
remarked Kells. “Turn up your collar.... Pull down your hat—farther—There!
If you won't go as a youngster now I'll eat Dandy Dale's outfit and get
you silk dresses. Ha-ha!”</p>
<p>Joan was not deceived by his humor. He might like to look at her in that
outrageous bandit costume; it might have pleased certain vain and
notoriety-seeking proclivities of his, habits of his California road-agent
days; but she felt that notwithstanding this, once she had donned the long
coat he was relieved and glad in spite of himself. Joan had a little rush
of feeling. Sometimes she almost liked this bandit. Once he must have been
something very different.</p>
<p>They set out, Joan between Kells and Cleve. How strange for her! She had
daring enough to feel for Jim's hand in the dark and to give it a squeeze.
Then he nearly broke her fingers. She felt the fire in him. It was indeed
a hard situation for him. The walking was rough, owing to the uneven road
and the stones. Several times Joan stumbled and her spurs jangled. They
passed ruddy camp-fires, where steam and smoke arose with savory odors,
where red-faced men were eating; and they passed other camp-fires, burned
out and smoldering. Some tents had dim lights, throwing shadows on the
canvas, and others were dark. There were men on the road, all headed for
town, gay, noisy and profane.</p>
<p>Then Joan saw uneven rows of lights, some dim and some bright, and
crossing before them were moving dark figures. Again Kells bethought
himself of his own disguise, and buried his chin in his scarf and pulled
his wide-brimmed hat down so that hardly a glimpse of his face could be
seen. Joan could not have recognized him at the distance of a yard.</p>
<p>They walked down the middle of the road, past the noisy saloons, past the
big, flat structure with its sign “Last Nugget” and its open windows,
where shafts of light shone forth, and all the way down to the end of
town. Then Kells turned back. He scrutinized each group of men he met. He
was looking for members of his Border Legion. Several times he left Cleve
and Joan standing in the road while he peered into saloons. At these brief
intervals Joan looked at Cleve with all her heart in her eyes. He never
spoke. He seemed under a strain. Upon the return, when they reached the
Last Nugget, Kells said:</p>
<p>“Jim, hang on to her like grim death! She's worth more than all the gold
in Alder Creek!”</p>
<p>Then they started for the door.</p>
<p>Joan clung to Cleve on one side, and on the other, instinctively with a
frightened girl's action, she let go Kells's arm and slipped her hand in
his. He seemed startled. He bent to her ear, for the din made ordinary
talk indistinguishable. That involuntary hand in his evidently had pleased
and touched him, even hurt him, for his whisper was husky.</p>
<p>“It's all right—you're perfectly safe.”</p>
<p>First Joan made out a glare of smoky lamps, a huge place full of smoke and
men and sounds. Kells led the way slowly. He had his own reason for
observance. There was a stench that sickened Joan—a blended odor of
tobacco and rum and wet sawdust and smoking oil. There was a noise that
appeared almost deafening—the loud talk and vacant laughter of
drinking men, and a din of creaky fiddles and scraping boots and
boisterous mirth. This last and dominating sound came from an adjoining
room, which Joan could see through a wide opening. There was dancing, but
Joan could not see the dancers because of the intervening crowd. Then her
gaze came back to the features nearer at hand. Men and youths were lined
up to a long bar nearly as high as her head. Then there were excited
shouting groups round gambling games. There were men in clusters, sitting
on upturned kegs, round a box for a table, and dirty bags of gold-dust
were in evidence. The gamblers at the cards were silent, in strange
contrast with the others; and in each group was at least one dark-garbed,
hard-eyed gambler who was not a miner. Joan saw boys not yet of age,
flushed and haggard, wild with the frenzy of winning and cast down in
defeat. There were jovial, grizzled, old prospectors to whom this scene
and company were pleasant reminders of bygone days. There were desperados
whose glittering eyes showed they had no gold with which to gamble.</p>
<p>Joan suddenly felt Kells start and she believed she heard a low, hissing
exclamation. And she looked for the cause. Then she saw familiar dark
faces; they belonged to men of Kells's Legion. And with his broad back to
her there sat the giant Gulden. Already he and his allies had gotten
together in defiance of or indifference to Kells's orders. Some of them
were already under the influence of drink, but, though they saw Kells,
they gave no sign of recognition. Gulden did not see Joan, and for that
she was thankful. And whether or not his presence caused it, the fact was
that she suddenly felt as much of a captive as she had in Cabin Gulch, and
feared that here escape would be harder because in a community like this
Kells would watch her closely.</p>
<p>Kells led Joan and Cleve from one part of the smoky hall to another, and
they looked on at the games and the strange raw life manifested there. The
place was getting packed with men. Kells's party encountered Blicky and
Beady Jones together. They passed by as strangers. Then Joan saw Beard and
Chick Williams arm in arm, strolling about, like roystering miners.
Williams telegraphed a keen, fleeting glance at Kells, then went on, to be
lost in the crowd. Handy Oliver brushed by Kells, jostled him, apparently
by accident, and he said, “Excuse me, mister!” There were other familiar
faces. Kells's gang were all in Alder Creek and the dark machinations of
the bandit leader had been put into operation. What struck Joan forcibly
was that, though there were hilarity and comradeship, they were not
manifested in any general way. These miners were strangers to one another;
the groups were strangers; the gamblers were strangers; the newcomers were
strangers; and over all hung an atmosphere of distrust. Good fellowship
abided only in the many small companies of men who stuck together. The
mining-camps that Joan had visited had been composed of an assortment of
prospectors and hunters who made one big, jolly family. This was a gold
strike, and the difference was obvious. The hunting for gold was one
thing, in its relation to the searchers; after it had been found, in a
rich field, the conditions of life and character changed. Gold had always
seemed wonderful and beautiful to Joan; she absorbed here something that
was the nucleus of hate. Why could not these miners, young and old, stay
in their camps and keep their gold? That was the fatality. The pursuit was
a dream—a glittering allurement; the possession incited a lust for
more, and that was madness. Joan felt that in these reckless, honest
miners there was a liberation of the same wild element which was the
driving passion of Kells's Border Legion. Gold, then, was a terrible
thing.</p>
<p>“Take me in there,” said Joan, conscious of her own excitement, and she
indicated the dance-hall.</p>
<p>Kells laughed as if at her audacity. But he appeared reluctant.</p>
<p>“Please take me—unless—” Joan did not know what to add, but
she meant unless it was not right for her to see any more. A strange
curiosity had stirred in her. After all, this place where she now stood
was not greatly different from the picture imagination had conjured up.
That dance-hall, however, was beyond any creation of Joan's mind.</p>
<p>“Let me have a look first,” said Kells, and he left Joan with Cleve.</p>
<p>When he had gone Joan spoke without looking at Cleve, though she held fast
to his arm.</p>
<p>“Jim, it could be dreadful here—all in a minute!” she whispered.</p>
<p>“You've struck it exactly,” he replied. “All Alder Creek needed to make it
hell was Kells and his gang.”</p>
<p>“Thank Heaven I turned you back in time!... Jim, you'd have—have
gone the pace here.”</p>
<p>He nodded grimly. Then Kells returned and led them back through the room
to another door where spectators were fewer. Joan saw perhaps a dozen
couples of rough, whirling, jigging dancers in a half-circle of watching
men. The hall was a wide platform of boards with posts holding a canvas
roof. The sides, were open; the lights were situated at each end-huge,
round, circus tent lamps. There were rude benches and tables where reeling
men surrounded a woman. Joan saw a young miner in dusty boots and
corduroys lying drunk or dead in the sawdust. Her eyes were drawn back to
the dancers, and to the dance that bore some semblance to a waltz. In the
din the music could scarcely be heard. As far as the men were concerned
this dance was a bold and violent expression of excitement on the part of
some, and for the rest a drunken, mad fling. Sight of the women gave
Joan's curiosity a blunt check. She felt queer. She had not seen women
like these, and their dancing, their actions, their looks, were beyond her
understanding. Nevertheless, they shocked her, disgusted her, sickened
her. And suddenly when it dawned upon her in unbelievable vivid suggestion
that they were the wildest and most terrible element of this dark stream
of humanity lured by gold, then she was appalled.</p>
<p>“Take me out of here!” she besought Kells, and he led her out instantly.
They went through the gambling-hall and into the crowded street, back
toward camp.</p>
<p>“You saw enough,” said Kells, “but nothing to what will break out by and
by. This camp is new. It's rich. Gold is the cheapest thing. It passes
from hand to hand. Ten dollars an ounce. Buyers don't look at the scales.
Only the gamblers are crooked. But all this will change.”</p>
<p>Kells did not say what that change might be, but the click of his teeth
was expressive. Joan did not, however, gather from it, and the dark
meaning of his tone, that the Border Legion would cause this change. That
was in the nature of events. A great strike of gold might enrich the
world, but it was a catastrophe.</p>
<p>Long into the night Joan lay awake, and at times, stirring the silence,
there was wafted to her on a breeze the low, strange murmur of the
gold-camp's strife.</p>
<p>Joan slept late next morning, and was awakened by the unloading of lumber.
Teams were drawing planks from the sawmill. Already a skeleton framework
for Kells's cabin had been erected. Jim Cleve was working with the others,
and they were sacrificing thoroughness to haste. Joan had to cook her own
breakfast, which task was welcome, and after it had been finished she
wished for something more to occupy her mind. But nothing offered. Finding
a comfortable seat among some rocks where she would be inconspicuous, she
looked on at the building of Kells's cabin. It seemed strange, and somehow
comforting, to watch Jim Cleve work. He had never been a great worker.
Would this experience on the border make a man of him? She felt assured of
that.</p>
<p>If ever a cabin sprang up like a mushroom, that bandit rendezvous was the
one. Kells worked himself, and appeared no mean hand. By noon the roof of
clapboards was on, and the siding of the same material had been started.
Evidently there was not to a be a fireplace inside.</p>
<p>Then a teamster drove up with a wagon-load of purchases Kells had ordered.
Kells helped unload this and evidently was in search of articles.
Presently he found them, and then approached Joan, to deposit before her
an assortment of bundles little and big.</p>
<p>“There Miss Modestly,” he said. “Make yourself some clothes. You can shake
Dandy Dale's outfit, except when we're on the trail.... And, say, if you
knew what I had to pay for this stuff you'd think there was a bigger
robber in Alder Creek than Jack Kells.... And, come to think of it, my
name's now Blight. You're my daughter, if any one asks.” Joan was so
grateful to him for the goods and the permission to get out of Dandy
Dale's suit as soon as possible, that she could only smile her thanks.
Kells stared at her, then turned abruptly away. Those little unconscious
acts of hers seemed to affect him strangely. Joan remembered that he had
intended to parade her in Dandy Dale's costume to gratify some vain
abnormal side of his bandit's proclivities. He had weakened. Here was
another subtle indication of the deterioration of the evil of him. How far
would it go? Joan thought dreamily, and with a swelling heart, of her
influence upon this hardened bandit, upon that wild boy, Jim Cleve.</p>
<p>All that afternoon, and part of the evening in the campfire light, and all
of the next day Joan sewed, so busy that she scarcely lifted her eyes from
her work. The following day she finished her dress, and with no little
pride, for she had both taste and skill. Of the men, Bate Wood had been
most interested in her task; and he would let things burn on the fire to
watch her.</p>
<p>That day the rude cabin was completed. It contained one long room; and at
the back a small compartment partitioned off from the rest, and built
against and around a shallow cavern in the huge rock. This compartment was
for Joan. There were a rude board door with padlock and key, a bench upon
which blankets had been flung, a small square hole cut in the wall to
serve as a window. What with her own few belongings and the articles of
furniture that Kells bought for her, Joan soon had a comfortable room,
even a luxury compared to what she had been used to for weeks. Certain it
was that Kells meant to keep her a prisoner, or virtually so. Joan had no
sooner spied the little window than she thought that it would be possible
for Jim Cleve to talk to her there from the outside.</p>
<p>Kells verified Joan's suspicion by telling her that she was not to leave
the cabin of her own accord, as she had been permitted to do back in Cabin
Gulch; and Joan retorted that there she had made him a promise not to run
away, which promise she now took back. That promise had worried her. She
was glad to be honest with Kells. He gazed at her somberly.</p>
<p>“You'll be worse off it you do—and I'll be better off,” he said. And
then as an afterthought he added: “Gulden might not think you—a
white elephant on his hands!... Remember his way, the cave and the rope!”</p>
<p>So, instinctively or cruelly he chose the right name to bring shuddering
terror into Joan's soul.</p>
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