2016년 9월 25일 일요일

Digging for Gold 29

Digging for Gold 29


“Or anything else he can lay hands on,” said Grant, with a laugh.
 
They walked over to the mining-camp, put Stockton into possession of the
claims, and introduced him to a miner, who agreed to sell him a cradle
on instalments.
 
“Now, Grant,” said Tom, “we’ll go to bed, for we may have a long walk
before us to-morrow.”
 
 
 
 
CHAPTER XXVII.
PAUL CRAMBO.
 
 
Full of hope, Grant and Tom arrived at the cabin of the old man who had
promised them his claim.
 
“How are you feeling this morning?” inquired Grant, when they were
admitted.
 
“Rather stiff, but better than yesterday. Is this your friend?”
 
“Yes. His name is Tom Cooper.”
 
The old man scrutinized him closely.
 
“It’s a good face,” he said. “You can trust him.”
 
“I do.”
 
Tom looked well pleased.
 
“You have come to ask me to keep my promise.”
 
“Yes. Your offer was a very kind one. On the strength of it we have
given our claims at Howe’s Gulch to a stranger, who came to our cabin
last night penniless.”
 
“Then I shall be helping him, too. Are you ready to go to work at once?”
 
“Yes; that’s our hope.”
 
“The place where I made my pile is fifteen miles away. Are you good for
a long walk?”
 
“I am,” answered Grant.
 
“I will try to keep up with you,” said Tom Cooper, smiling.
 
“My claim was on a creek at the base of a hill, about a mile from a
village called Eldora. In the pocket of yonder coat I have drawn,
roughly, a plan of the place, which will be a sufficient guide.”
 
“May I keep the paper?” asked Grant.
 
“Certainly.”
 
“If we start now, Grant, we can get there before night.”
 
“Go, then, and may success attend you.”
 
“Can’t we do anything for you before we go, sir?”
 
“No, thank you. One thing, however, I will ask. In a month, let me know
how you are getting along. I look upon you as my successors. I hope you
may be as fortunate as I was.”
 
The two friends set out with stout hearts, in excellent spirits. The
walk was long and fatiguing, but there is nothing like hope to sweeten
toil. About midway they sat down under a tree, and ate, with hearty
appetite, the lunch they had taken the precaution to carry with them.
 
“I wish there was more,” said Grant wistfully.
 
“Your appetite seems improving.”
 
“There’s nothing like a good walk to make a fellow feel hungry. I wonder
how Stockton is getting along.”
 
“He will make something at any rate. I pity Silverthorn if ever our
long-legged friend gets hold of him.”
 
After an hour they resumed their walk, and about four o’clock they
reached their destination. They visited the location of the claim, and
surveyed it with a guarded manner, not wishing to draw attention to it.
 
They fell in with a thin man, of medium stature, who talked in a
drawling tone. He seemed to have a considerable share of curiosity.
 
“Where might you be from, strangers?” he inquired.
 
“We might be from China, but we aint,” said Tom.
 
“Is that a joke?” asked their new acquaintance, puzzled.
 
“Yes; it’s an attempt at a joke.”
 
“I reckon you don’t want to tell.”
 
“Oh, yes; we’re entirely willing. We came from Howe’s Gulch.”
 
“So? Did you strike it rich there?”
 
“No; we struck it poor,” said Grant, with a smile. “We found ourselves
headed for the poorhouse, so we switched off.”
 
“I was at Howe’s Gulch myself a year ago.”
 
“Did you have luck?”
 
“Not much. I paid expenses.”
 
“Are you mining now?”
 
“No; I’m farming. I live just out of the villageme and Mrs. Crambo, and
a boy that’s working for us.”
 
“How far from here?”
 
“About a mile.”
 
“How would you like a couple of boarders?”
 
“Are you going to stay ’round here?“
 
“We mayfor a while.”
 
“Come to the house, then, and speak to Mrs. Crambo. If she’s agreeable,
I am.”
 
They accompanied their new friend to a plain, but comfortable house,
looking not unlike a New England farm-house. Mrs. Crambo was a pleasant
looking woman, weighing at least fifty pounds more than her lord and
master. She was evidently the “better man of the two,” being active and
energetic, while he was slow and seemed to find exertion difficult.
 
“If you are willing to set up a hotel, Mrs. Crambo,” said her husband,
“I bring you two boarders for a starter.”
 
“I shouldn’t mind a little company,” she said pleasantly. “How long have
you been out here?”
 
“Not long enough to make our fortunes,” answered Tom.
 
“Do you expect to make them out here?” she asked shrewdly.
 
“We would like to. Perhaps Mr. Crambo will put us in the way of doing
it.”
 
“Do you hear that, Paul?” she said, laughing.
 
Mr. Crambo scratched his head.
 
“I haven’t made my own yet,” he answered slowly.
 
“If it rained gold pieces, you wouldn’t pick up enough to keep you going
for three months. You know you are shiftless, Paul.”
 
“Well, perhaps I am, Martha. I can’t get up and hustle like you.”
 
“No, you’re not one of the hustling kind. Well, gentlemen, if you want
to stay with us awhile, and don’t object to seven dollars a week each,
we’ll try to accommodate you. When do you want to begin?”
 
“Right off,” answered Tom, upon whose olfactories the savory smell of
dinner, cooking in the next room, made an agreeable impression. “The
terms are satisfactory.”
 
So it happened that Tom and Grant became inmates of the Crambo
household. The first meal satisfied them that their hostess was a most
accomplished cook, and the supper seemed to them delicious.
 
“Have you had any gold-digging near here?” asked Tom.
 
“Not much. There was an old man who had a claim somewhere near where I
met you, but I don’t think he made much. Finally he got discouraged and
went away. That’s a good while since.”
 
“Evidently he doesn’t suspect anything,” thought Grant. “All the better.
We shan’t have any competitors.”
 
“Then you don’t think he took much gold away with him?” he said aloud.
 
“No. I guess he wasn’t calc’lated for a gold miner.”
 
“He might have taken a lesson of you, Paul,” suggested Mrs. Crambo.
 
“I never had a good claim,” answered the master of the house. “If I had
I’d have done as well as the next man.”
 
“It depends on who the next man was,” said his wife.
 
“There aint any more money in mining,” said Crambo dogmatically. “All
the claims are petering out.”
 
“I guess you are the one that’s petered out.”
 
“Perhaps you’d like to go into the business yourself, Mrs. C.”
 
“No, thank you. I’ve all I can do to take care of you and the farm. Help
yourself to the doughnuts, Mr. Cooper.”
 
“Thank you,” said Tom. “I haven’t eaten a doughnut before, since I left
home. Your doughnuts can’t be beat.”
 
Mrs. Crambo was pleased with this tribute to her cooking, and was very
gracious to her new boarders. After supper she showed them to a chamber
on the second floor, well and comfortably furnished.
 
“You two gentlemen will have to room together,” she said. “This is the only room I have to spare.”

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