登陆注册
19290100000021

第21章

As Mr. Fleming glanced up from the paper, mammy put a small cardboard box in his hand. For an instant he hesitated to open it, not knowing how far mammy was intrusted with the secret. To his great relief she said briskly: "Well, dar! now dat job's done gone and often my han's, I allow to quit and jest get off dis yer camp afo' ye kin shake a stick. So don't tell me nuffin I ain't gotter tell when I goes back."Fleming understood. "You can tell her I thank her--and--I'll attend to it," he said vaguely; "that is--I"--"Hold dar! that's just enuff, honey--no mo'! So long to ye and youse folks."He watched her striding away toward the main road, and then opened the box.

It contained three flakes of placer or surface gold, weighing in all about a quarter of an ounce. They could easily have slipped into the interstices of the broken pan and not have been observed by him. If this was the result of the washing of a single pan--and he could now easily imagine that other flakes might have escaped--what-- But he stopped, dazed and bewildered at the bare suggestion.

He gazed upon the vanishing figure of "mammy." Could she--could Katinka--have the least suspicion of the possibilities of this discovery? Or had Providence put the keeping of this secret into the hands of those who least understood its importance? For an instant he thought of running after her with a word of caution; but on reflection he saw that this might awaken her suspicion and precipitate a discovery by another.

His only safety for the present was silence, until he could repeat his experiment. And that must be done quickly.

How should he get away without his partners' knowledge of his purpose? He was too loyal to them to wish to keep this good fortune to himself, but he was not yet sure of his good fortune.

It might be only a little "pocket" which he had just emptied; it might be a larger one which another trial would exhaust.

He had put up no "notice;" he might find it already in possession of Katinka's father, or any chance prospector like himself. In either case he would be covered with ridicule by his partners and the camp, or more seriously rebuked for his carelessness and stupidity. No! he could not tell them the truth; nor could he lie.

He would say he was called away for a day on private business.

Luckily for him, the active imagination of his partners was even now helping him. The theory of the "tinker" and the "pan" was indignantly rejected by his other partner. His blushes and embarrassment were suddenly remembered by Faulkner, and by the time he reached his cabin, they had settled that the negro woman had brought him a love letter! He was young and good looking; what was more natural than that he should have some distant love affair?

His embarrassed statement that he must leave early the next morning on business that he could not at PRESENT disclose was considered amply confirmatory, and received with maliciously significant acquiescence. "Only," said Faulkner, "at YOUR age, sonny,"--he was nine months older than Fleming,--"I should have gone TO-NIGHT."Surely Providence was favoring him!

He was off early the next morning. He was sorely tempted to go first to the cabin, but every moment was precious until he had tested the proof of his good fortune.

It was high noon before he reached the fringe of forest. A few paces farther and he found the spring and outcrop. To avert his partners' suspicions he had not brought his own implements, but had borrowed a pan, spade, and pick from a neighbor's claim before setting out. The spot was apparently in the same condition as when he left it, and with a beating heart he at once set to work, an easy task with his new implements. He nervously watched the water overflow the pan of dirt at its edges until, emptied of earth and gravel, the black sand alone covered the bottom. A slight premonition of disappointment followed; a rich indication would have shown itself before this! A few more workings, and the pan was quite empty except for a few pin-points of "color," almost exactly the quantity he found before. He washed another pan with the same result. Another taken from a different level of the outcrop yielded neither more nor less! There was no mistake: it was a failure! His discovery had been only a little "pocket," and the few flakes she had sent him were the first and last of that discovery.

He sat down with a sense of relief; he could face his partners again without disloyalty; he could see that pretty little figure once more without the compunction of having incurred her father's prejudices by locating a permanent claim so near his cabin. In fact, he could carry out his partners' fancy to the letter!

He quickly heaped his implements together and turned to leave the wood; but he was confronted by a figure that at first he scarcely recognized. Yet--it was Katinka! the young girl of the cabin, who had sent him the gold. She was dressed differently--perhaps in her ordinary every-day garments--a bright sprigged muslin, a chip hat with blue ribbons set upon a coil of luxurious brown hair. But what struck him most was that the girlish and diminutive character of the figure had vanished with her ill-fitting clothes; the girl that stood before him was of ordinary height, and of a prettiness and grace of figure that he felt would have attracted anywhere.

Fleming felt himself suddenly embarrassed,--a feeling that was not lessened when he noticed that her pretty lip was compressed and her eyebrows a little straightened as she gazed at him.

"Ye made a bee line for the woods, I see," she said coldly. "Iallowed ye might have been droppin' in to our house first.""So I should," said Fleming quickly, "but I thought I ought to first make sure of the information you took the trouble to send me." He hesitated to speak of the ill luck he had just experienced;he could laugh at it himself--but would she?

"And ye got a new pan?" she said half poutingly.

同类推荐
  • 佛说观自在菩萨母陀罗尼经

    佛说观自在菩萨母陀罗尼经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 示所犯者瑜伽法镜经

    示所犯者瑜伽法镜经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 仲景伤寒补亡论

    仲景伤寒补亡论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 指要钞

    指要钞

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 渚宫旧事

    渚宫旧事

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 佛说贫穷老公经之二

    佛说贫穷老公经之二

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 五方天地书

    五方天地书

    我的意志,贯穿命运长河;我的身躯,吞噬诸天万界。--------王風身怀五方天地书的王風,被仇敌追杀身死却意外回到六百年前,而这时一切才刚刚开始。诸子百府、魔神宫殿、五帝宝库、三皇秘藏、圣兽墓冢,诸多隐匿的惊天宝藏都在等着他。天才、鬼才、怪才、奇才,一个个终将被他踩在脚下。明里的、暗地的仇敌,统统都消灭于股掌之间。
  • 暗黑破坏神之德鲁伊

    暗黑破坏神之德鲁伊

    这是一个技能变异的德鲁伊带着一群妹子杀上毁灭王座的故事。(练笔之作,不好勿喷,每日定时更新一章,节假日爆发。)
  • 傲剑修神录

    傲剑修神录

    一块玉,引导着一个天生废材踏上慢慢修途…………且看他如何笑傲天武,缔造传说!
  • 超强护花保镖

    超强护花保镖

    他是现代都市的绝世高手,他是都市美女的守护天使!叶乐天一位不一样的保镖!美女的守护神!在都市演绎精彩的传奇故事!
  • 青瞳

    青瞳

    青瞳,这个名字很多时候都被我记起,连着记忆,带着疼痛,汹涌澎湃的把我包围。第一次见到青瞳,他在阳台上弹吉他,眼神寂寞苍凉,像那个喝了醉生梦死的东邪。他轻唱,歌音如一片响雷,声声的响在我的世界。一开始,我就知道这是一次畸形的倾慕,可是却像陷入泥潭般越陷越深。
  • 随时在你身边

    随时在你身边

    我是一颗孤独的白桦树岁月的锉刀赐予我满身的伤痕漫天的雪无情的落下随时伤害着我
  • 曾有你的心动

    曾有你的心动

    她是望族孤女,为了家族基业,妥协付出。他是名门之后,无欲无求的服从命令是他的天职。一纸婚约,两本证件,套牢了他们,也绑紧了两个家族。她心思纯洁,即使遭受背叛,依然坚信世间一切皆美好。他自有他梦中的濯清涟,却愿助她完成使命。他和她,抵抗着相爱,各持顽强,殊不知彼此就像两只刺猬。想要依靠,却刺痛了彼此,想要拥抱,却伤害了对方。在漫长的时光中,他们还是融入了彼此的骨血;当期限一到,站在天秤的两端,才发现这才是他们这一生最难承受的疼痛……【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 冥界神迹

    冥界神迹

    一个帝国永存的传说,一段少年忘却的记忆,一群消失十年的亡灵,......再重头,三尺寒芒手中剑,一阵屠尽天下威!可敢否,以我之血洗涤这污浊世间?众神在九天俯瞰世间,亡灵在云端歌唱,有一道声音在永恒回荡:宁可永劫受沉沦,不从诸圣求解脱!少年从永夜之中走出,却发现历史早已为他留白,他一步一步沿着先圣千年之前就已为他写好的剧本走下去,想回头,已是百年身!这是个背叛与欺骗的故事,世间生灵,苍生万物,各自冷眼众生,各自为营。而我...正在冷漠的创造着这个世界。
  • 唯美的四叶草正在开放

    唯美的四叶草正在开放

    女主们和三小只定了娃娃亲,会发生哪些趣事呢?快来看看吧