Part 19 (1/2)

Bruce turned to him:

”No, don't go. I've just come from Ore City and I may be able to tell your friend something that he wants to know. Where _is_ your placer ground, Sprudell?”

Sprudell sat down in his office chair, toying with a desk-fixture, while Bruce shoved both hands in his trousers' pockets and waited for him to speak.

”Burt,” he said finally, ”I regret this unpleasantness, but the fact is you did not comply with the law--you have never recorded and you are located out.”

”So you've taken advantage of the information with which I trusted you to jump my ground?” Bruce's eyes blazed into Sprudell's.

”The heirs could not be found, you were given up for dead, and in any event I've not exceeded my rights.”

”You have no rights upon that ground!” Bruce answered hotly, ”My locations were properly made in 'Slim's' name and my own. The sampling and the cabin and the tunnel count for a.s.sessment work. I had not abandoned the claim.”

”Nevertheless, my engineer informs me----”

”Your engineer?” A light dawned.

”Wilburt Dill--pity you did not meet him, a bright young chap--”

”I met him,” Bruce answered grimly. ”I shall hope to meet him again.”

”No doubt you will,” Sprudell taunted, ”if you happen to be there when we're putting up the plant. As I was saying, Mr. Dill's telegram, which came last night, informs me that he has carried out my instructions, and therefore, individually, and as the President of the Bitter Root Placer Mining Company, I now control one hundred and sixty acres of ground up and down the river, including the bar upon which your cabin stands.”

Sprudell's small, red mouth curved in its tantalizing smile.

”You'll never hold it!” Bruce said furiously.

”The days of gun-plays have gone by,” Sprudell reminded him. ”And you haven't got the price to fight me in the courts. You'd better lay down before you start and save yourself the worry. What can you do? You have no money, no influence, no brains to speak of,” he sneered insultingly, ”or you wouldn't be down there doing what you are. You haven't a single a.s.set but your muscle, and in the open market that's worth about three-fifty a day.”

Bruce stood like a mute, the blood burning in his face. Even toward ”Slim” he never had felt such choking, speechless rage as this.

”You Judas Iscariot!” he said when he could speak. ”You betrayed my hospitality--my trust. Next to a cache robber you're the meanest kind of a thief I've ever known. I've read your story in the newspaper, and so has the old man who saved your rotten life. We know you for the lying braggart that you are. You made yourself out a hero when you were a weakling and a coward.

”You're right--you tell the truth when you twit me with the fact that I have no money no influence, perhaps no brains--not a single a.s.set, as you say, but brute strength; yet somehow, I'll beat you!” He stepped closer and looking deep into the infantile blue eyes that had grown as hard as granite, reiterated--”_Somehow I'm going to win!_”

To say that Abe Cone and Mr. Herman Florsheim departed is not enough--they faded, vanished, without a sound.

Sprudell's eyes quailed a little beneath the fierce intensity of Bruce's gaze, but for a moment only.

”I've heard men talk like that before.” He shrugged a shoulder and looked Bruce up and down--at his coat too tight across the chest, at his sleeves, too short for his length of arm, at his clumsy miner's shoes, as though to emphasize the gulf which lay between Bruce's condition and his own. Then with his eyes bright with vindictiveness and his hateful smile of confidence upon his lips, he stood in his setting of affluence and power waiting for Bruce to go, that he might close the door.

XII

THORNS--AND A FEW ROSES

Helen Dunbar was exercising that doubtful economy, walking to save car-fare, when she saw Mae Smith with her eyes fixed upon her in deadly purpose making a bee-line across the street. If there was any one thing more needed to complete her depression it was a meeting with Mae Smith.

She stopped and waited, trying to think what it was Mae Smith resembled when she hurried like that. A penguin! that was it--Mae Smith walked exactly like a penguin. But Helen did not smile at the comparison, instead, she continued to look somberly and critically at the woman who approached. When Helen was low spirited, as now, Mae Smith always rose before her like a spectre. She saw herself at forty another such pa.s.se newspaper woman trudging from one indifferent editor to another peddling ”s.p.a.ce.” And why not? Mae Smith had been young and good-looking once, also a local celebrity in her way when she had signed a column in a daily. But she had grown stale with the grind, and having no special talent or personality had been easily replaced when a new Managing Editor came. Now, though chipper as a sparrow, she was always in need of a small loan.

As Helen stood on the corner, in her tailor-made, which was the last word in simplicity and good lines, the time looked very remote when she, too, would be peddling s.p.a.ce in a $15 gown, that had faded in streaks, but Helen had no hallucinations concerning her own ability. She knew that she had no great apt.i.tude for her work and realized that her success was due more often to the fact that she was young, well-dressed, and attractive than to any special talent. This was all very well now, while she got results, but what about the day when _her_ shoes spread over the soles and turned over at the heels, and she bought _her_ blouse ”off the pile?” When her dollar gloves were shabby and would not b.u.t.ton at the wrist? What about the day when she was too dispirited to dress her hair becomingly, but combed it straight up at the back, so that her ”scolding locks” hung down upon her coat-collar, and her home-trimmed hat rode carelessly on one ear?