The Pike's Peak Rush; Or, Terry in the New Gold Fields

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The Pike's Peak Rush; Or, Terry in the New Gold Fields Page 14

by Edwin L. Sabin


  CHAPTER XII

  PANNING THE "GOLDEN PRIZE"

  The Golden Prize property appeared to be a very snug proposition. It waslocated about a mile up Gregory Gulch, and right in the midst of things.There was a good enough dug-out, set partly into the slope at the bottomof one of the rocky hills in the gulch, with log walls surrounding thesingle room and a sod roof. It contained a rusty stove (better than afireplace) and a bunk and a slab table and a slab stool, all on a dirtfloor. The cooking utensils were hung on the wall. The door, of splitlogs, like puncheons, swung by leather hinges and fastened with a woodenpin and latch-string.

  But the mine of course was the most important. That was really the firstthing to be inspected. Archie showed it rather proudly, although it didnot look very imposing, being only a deep trench into the hillside justbeyond the cabin.

  Down the shallow side draw that helped to form the hill ran a smallstream of muddy water, which finally joined the main drainage stream,below.

  "You see," said Archie, "I have to carry all my dirt to that stream soas to wash for the gold, and, gee! but it's hard work. About breaks myback. The digging and the climbing up and down are too much for me. Afellow ought to lead the water nearer, some way."

  "Why didn't you?" asked Terry.

  "I did think of digging a ditch, but that's an awful job, and I'd haveto squat with a gold-pan just the same. I suppose if I'd stayed here I'dhave built a sluice or hired one built. I couldn't build it myself,because the boards are too heavy to handle. And anyway, I want to goout. I can't breathe up here. I don't feel as good as when I came in,and mostly I just sit and puff. I felt lots better down on the plains.If I can't work the mine, what's the use in having it? But I'd a heaprather give it to you fellows than sell it to strangers."

  "We won't take it, but we'll work it for you, on shares," again assertedHarry.

  Archie stubbornly shook his head--and his thin cheeks were crimson.

  "Nope. You can share together but you can't share with me. You work itand keep all you find; I owe it to you. I'm so tickled I can hardlysee."

  "Where do we begin?" cried Terry, excited. "Which is the best spot,Archie?"

  "I'll show you in the morning. I'll show you everything," panted Archie,"before I go. We'll wash out some color, anyway."

  "We'd better get our stuff unpacked before dark, Terry," reminded Harry."The mine will keep. We know it's there. Whew, but this is a big strokeof luck. Doesn't seem as though we'd earned it."

  Dusk settled early in the gulch, and by the time they had stowed theirstuff away, and Jenny had been turned out to browse among the rocks andpines on the hillside, most of the camps in the gulch had ceased theirwork of the day and had changed to the work of the evening. Smoke waswelling from chimneys and from open fires, far and near; wood was beingchopped and men and women were cooking. The gulch suddenly seemedcheerful and homelike: a miraculous contrast with the dark timber risingabove on all sides, where the wild animals, bear and bobcats and elk andwolves, probably sniffed in astonishment.

  Harry made a big batch of flap-jacks and a pot of coffee; Shep curled ina corner and snuggled for comfortable sleep; the air outside was chill,but within was warm, and a candle that Archie produced gave light enoughto eat by.

  Archie was awarded the bunk, for a good rest. Harry and Terry spreadtheir beds on the floor. They were used to sleeping on the ground, butTerry found it hard to go to sleep. He wanted to talk--he fairly itchedto be out with spade and pan, digging gold from "their" mine. Think ofit! A mine, a genuine gold mine, at last! Now they could pay his fatherback easy, and also show him and George how to get rich.

  "I know how you feel," said Archie, from the bunk. "They say that whenGregory discovered his lode after tracing it for miles, and found fourdollars in his first pan, he kept his partner awake till three o'clockin the morning, talking, and he was still talking at breakfast time."

  "Wonder how he discovered it," hazarded Terry.

  "He just started in on lower Clear Creek, at the Platte, and keptpanning, and panning, on up, until above this gulch the gold quit. Thenhe turned into this gulch, because it seemed to yield the most color,and the gold was the coarsest, and he kept panning and panning until thecolor quit again. Then he knew he'd come to the place where the goldbelow was washed from. So he went back to the Platte and got a partner;and they sized up the natural lay of the gulch, at the highest spotwhere the color had quit--and they struck rich diggin's with the veryfirst spadeful. That was the sixth of May. After they'd located a lot ofground for themselves and their friends the news got out, and now lookat the mob!"

  "Well, I'll bet we've got something just as good," declared Terry,confidently.

  Immediately after a hurried breakfast they started in to pan their ownclaim, under the direction of Archie.

  "I've always found the most gold in that spot there," he instructed."There was another spot, where I panned first, but it's quit on me.Expect, though, you'll find a lot of 'em. Let's dig and try out some ofthe dirt in our pans."

  Into the spot Terry plunged the spade. The dirt was gravelly andsoft--two strokes of the blade were more than enough to loosensufficient for the three pans. The pans were sheet-iron and about thesize and shape of a large milk-pan. In a moment they three were trailingdown to the little creek, each with some two inches of the dirt in thebottom of his pan. They squatted to fill the pans with water, andcarefully twirled to slop it out again along with the dirt that ought tofloat off.

  This was an anxious process. Archie finished first, because he was inpractice.

  "I didn't get anything this time," he announced, gaily. "But I don'tcare. I'm going out."

  Terry's dirt had practically all flowed off. He picked out the bits ofgravel--they were only pebbles and flakes of rock. He peered foryellow--yes, there it was! A glint mingled with a seam of coarse sand.

  "I've got some!" he yelled. "See here? I've got some!"

  Archie looked in.

  "That's right. Let me finish it for you. I'll flirt that sand out."

  So he did, with a dexterous twirl that sent part of the sand out and therest against the sides, and left the heavier yellow in the middle.

  "Reckon I've landed a little, myself," remarked Harry.

  He had! Perhaps a trifle more than Terry, and the two pans togetherweren't enough to cover the point of the knife-blade with which theyscraped the yellow up and carefully deposited it in Father Richards' oldbuckskin bag, brought for the purpose.

  "Gold's worth $21 an ounce and that's about a pennyweight, I guess,"encouraged Archie. "Ninety cents--but it's a beginning. Of course, whereyou dug I'd been digging before. You'll find a better place. You see,I've already taken out $80. So go ahead and keep panning, and I'lltravel."

  Archie had arranged to leave with a wagon outfit who were disgustedbecause they'd discovered nothing. The two new proprietors of the GoldenPrize stopped operations long enough to bid him good-bye, and watch himtrudge away, his pack on his back.

  "When you want some of your gold, come back or let us know," calledHarry, after.

  "It's all yours," he retorted. "That's why I bought the mine."

  "Jiminy!" exclaimed Terry. "That's big pay for what little we did--justgiving him a drink of water and toting him in a cart."

  The next few pans didn't yield anything at all; then Harry made a"strike," as he called it, and scraped out as much yellow as would covera finger-nail. He'd got the dirt from a new spot, "for luck," and fromthe same spot Terry managed to extract about as much.

  "We'll have to try about," counseled Harry, "until we find spots likethose of Archie's. We've got a lot of space yet."

  As Archie had said, this digging and panning was hard work. At everystroke the spades clinked against rock--a boulder or a ledge--and tochip away with a pick was about as bad. And then, to trudge back andforth with the pans! But Harry hit upon the idea of dumping the dirtupon a piece of gunny sacking and thus carrying several spadesful at atime, to be panned.

  They scarcely stoppe
d for dinner, and by evening had greatly widened thetrench. When they knocked off for supper and sleep the buckskin sackwas apparently as flat and as light as in the early morning, and theywere mud from soles to waist. But nevertheless, the sack contained gold!Peeking in, one might see it!

  "We'll have to get a pair of scales," proclaimed Harry. "And we'll haveto go about this more scientifically. Panning's too slow."

  "How much did we find, do you think?" invited Terry.

  "Five dollars' worth, maybe--and we're hungry enough to eat fivedollars' worth of grub. But that's all right. We're just starting in,and we own all the ground from the cabin to that little creek, and fromhalf-way up the hill down to the bottom. Hooray!" He grabbed Terry andthey war-danced, while Shep barked gladly.

  "I'd rather dig gold than potatoes, wouldn't you, now?" demanded Terry."We're liable to make a hundred dollars 'most any day. We haven't donemuch more than scratch."

  "What do you want for supper?" asked Harry. "Let's celebrate withantelope steak and apple pie."

  "Sure!" cheered Terry. "We don't have to save on grub."

  They were sitting down, on the stool and the edge of the bunk, to asumptuous supper, when a step and a grunting sounded outside, Shepgrowled, and into the half-open doorway was thrust an inquiring face. Itwas the red face of Pat Casey.

  "Good evenin' to yez," he proffered, blinking.

  "Come in, come in. Glad to see you. Sit and have a bite." And Harrychanged from the stool to the bunk-edge beside Terry.

  Pat, muddy like everybody else, clumped in, agrin.

  "Sure, Oi've had my supper, but Oi'll set a bit," he answered. "Oi'vebeen a-lookin' for yez. An' are yez at home already?"

  "Yes, sir-ee," pronounced Harry, triumphantly. "Here we are."

  "An' have yez located? 'Tis the sick boy's property, ain't it? Oi sawhim goin' out this mornin'."

  "All ours now, till he comes back again; cabin, claim, everything."

  "And we're to have all we find," added Terry. "We've panned over fivedollars already and we're only learning. He took out $80, but there'sthe whole claim left yet: tons of it! We're going to put in a sluice anddo a lot other improving and fix things up right."

  "B' gorry, mebbe yez have a bonanzy," congratulated Pat. "Gold is whereyez find it. Oi've washed out a matter o' wan dollar an' sixty-sivencints meself, but didn't Oi tell yez we'd all be rich together, some o'these days?" He sniffed and gazed over the table. "Faith, is that a pie?A genuyine pie?"

  "That's what. Have a piece, Pat?"

  "'Tis wan thing Oi can't refuse," admitted Pat, modestly. "'Speciallyapple pie."

  Harry cut him a generous piece, and having dissected it with his knifeinto large mouthfuls, he accepted the invitation to finish the half;Harry and Terry ate the other half.

  "Ye made it?" he inquired, of Harry. "Glory be! Sure, now, Oi wish yewere in the business. Couldn't ye make me a pie, occasional? Oi'll payye two dollars apiece annytime."

  "Can't promise that yet, Pat," laughed Harry. "But whenever we have apie you're welcome to help us eat it."

  "Not me," protested Pat. "A rale apple pie is worth two dollars of annyman's money; an' if that ain't enough Oi'll pay ye more."

  But of course pie was a small item in comparison with a gold mine thatmight yield $100 a day, under proper management. However, Pat lightedhis short black pipe and spent the evening, and they all talked gold,gold, gold.

  "I think," said Harry, after Pat had left, with much good-will andanother reference to pie, and the two partners prepared for bed, "thattomorrow we'll make a tour around the camp, to see what other folks aredoing, and then we'll know how to go about it the quickest way. Panningis too slow for _us_."

 

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