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The Collected Western Classics & Adventures Novels. William MacLeod RaineЧитать онлайн книгу.

The Collected Western Classics & Adventures Novels - William MacLeod Raine


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eat?” he breathed thickly.

      It had been part of the play that each member of their little party should carry a dinner-pail just like an ordinary miner. Wherefore she had hers still in her hand.

      “Yes, and I have a candle here. Have you another match?”

      He lit the candle with a shaking hand.

      “Gimme that bucket,” he ordered gruffly, and began to devour ravenously the food he found in it, tearing at sandwiches and gulping them down like a hungry dog.

      “What day is this?” he stopped to ask after he had stayed the first pangs.

      She told him Tuesday.

      “I ain’t eaten since Saturday,” he told her. “I figured it was a week. There ain’t any days in this place—nothin’ but night. Can’t tell one from another.”

      “It’s terrible,” she agreed.

      His appetite was wolfish. She could see that he was spent, so weak with hunger that he had reeled against the wall as she handed him the dinner-pail. Pallor was on the sunken face, and exhaustion in the trembling hands and unsteady gait.

      “I’m about all in, what with hunger and all I been through. I thought I was out of my head when I heard you holler.” He snatched up the candle from the place where he had set it and searched her face by its flame. “How come you down here? You didn’t come alone. What you doin’ here?” he demanded suspiciously.

      “I came down with Mr. Dunke and a friend to look over his mine. I had never been in one before.”

      “Dunke!” A spasm of rage swept the man’s face. “You’re a friend of his, are you? Where is he? If you came with him how come you to be roaming around alone?”

      “I got lost. Then my light went out.”

      “So you’re a friend of Dunke, that damned double-crosser! He’s a millionaire, you think, a big man in this Western country. That’s what he claims, eh?” Struve shook a fist into the air in a mad burst of passion. “Just watch me blow him higher’n a kite. I know what he is, and I got proof. The Judas! I keep my mug shut and do time while he gets off scot-free and makes his pile. But you listen to me, ma’am. Your friend ain’t nothin’ but an outlaw. If he got his like I got mine he’d be at Yuma to-day. Your brother could a-told you. Dunke was at the head of the gang that held up that train. We got nabbed, me and Jim. Burch got shot in the Catalinas by one of the rangers, and Smith died of fever in Sonora. But Dunke, curse him, he sneaks out and buys the officers off with our plunder. That’s what he done—let his partners get railroaded through while he sails out slick and easy. But he made one mistake, Mr. Dunke did. He wrote me a letter and told me to keep mum and he would fix it for me to get out in a few months. I believed him, kept my mouth padlocked, and served seven years without him lifting a hand for me. Then, when I make my getaway he tries first off to shut my mouth by putting me out of business. That’s what your friend done, ma’am.”

      “Is this true?” asked the girl whitely.

      “So help me God, every word of it.”

      “He let my brother go to prison without trying to help him?”

      “Worse than that. He sent him to prison. Jim was all right when he first met up with Dunke. It was Dunke that got him into his wild ways and led him into trouble. It was Dunke took him into the hold-up business. Hadn’t been for him Jim never would have gone wrong.”

      She made no answer. Her mind was busy piecing out the facts of her brother’s misspent life. As a little girl she remembered her big brother before he went away, good-natured, friendly, always ready to play with her. She was sure he had not been bad, only fatally weak. Even this man who had slain him was ready to testify to that.

      She came back from her absorption to find Struve outlining what he meant to do.

      “We’ll go back this passage along the way you came. I want to find Mr. Dunke. I allow I’ve got something to tell him he will be right interested in hearing.”

      He picked up the candle and led the way along the tunnel. Margaret followed him in silence.

      Chapter XI.

       The Southerner Takes a Risk

       Table of Contents

      The convict shambled forward through the tunnel till he came to a drift which ran into it at a right angle.

      “Which way now?” he demanded.

      “I don’t know.”

      “Don’t know,” he screamed. “Didn’t you just come along here? Do you want me to get lost again in this hell-hole?”

      The stricken fear leaped into his face. He had forgotten her danger, forgotten everything but the craven terror that engulfed him. Looking at him, she was struck for the first time with the thought that he might be on the verge of madness.

      His cry still rang through the tunnel when Margaret saw a gleam of distant light. She pointed it out to Struve, who wheeled and fastened his eyes upon it. Slowly the faint yellow candle-rays wavered toward them. A man was approaching through the gloom, a large man whom she presently recognized as Dunke. A quick gasp from the one beside her showed that he too knew the man. He took a dozen running steps forward, so that in his haste the candle flickered out.

      “That you, Miss Margaret?” the mine-owner called.

      Neither she nor Struve answered. The latter had stopped and was waiting tensely his enemy’s approach. When he was within a few yards of the other Dunke raised his candle and peered into the blackness ahead of him.

      “What’s the matter? Isn’t it you, Miss Peggy?”

      “No, it ain’t. It’s your old pal, Nick Struve. Ain’t you glad to see him, Joe?”

      Dunke looked him over without a word. His thin lips set and his gaze grew wall-eyed. The candle passed from right to left hand.

      Struve laughed evilly. “No, I’m not going to pay you that way—not yet; nor you ain’t going to rid yourself of me either. Want to know why, Mr. Millionaire Dunke, what used to be my old pal? Want to know why it ain’t going to do you any good to drop that right hand any closeter to your hip pocket?”

      Still Dunke said nothing, but the candle-glow that lit his face showed an ugly expression.

      “Don’t you whip that gun out, Joe Dunke. Don’t you! ‘Cause why? If you do you’re a goner.”

      “What do you mean?”

      “I mean that I kept the letter you wrote me seven years ago, and have put it where it will do you no good if anything happens to me. That’s why you won’t draw that gun, Joe Dunke. If you do it will send you to Yuma. Millionaire you may be, but that won’t keep you from wearing stripes.”

      Struve’s voice rang exultantly. From the look in the face of his old comrade in crime who had prospered at his expense, as he chose to think, he saw that for the time being he had got the whip-hand.

      There was a long silence before Dunke asked hoarsely:

      “What do you want?”

      “I want you to hide me. I want you to get me out of this country. I want you to divvy up with me. Didn’t we grub-stake you with the haul from the Overland? Don’t we go share and share alike, the two of us that’s left? Ain’t that fair and square? You wouldn’t want to do less than right by an old pal, cap, you that are so respectable and proper now. You ain’t forgot the man that lay in the ditch with you the night we held up the flyer, the man that rode beside you when you shot—”

      “For God’s sake don’t rake up forgotten scrapes. We were all young together then. I’ll do what’s right by you, but you got to keep your mouth shut and let


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