"Well, it's a start for the kid, anyway," Bud said, leaning back and

regarding the heap with eyes shining. "I helped him find it, and I kinda

feel as if I'm square with him now for not giving him my half the claim.

Twenty-three hundred would be a good price for a half interest, as the

claims stand, don't yuh think, Cash?"

"Yeah--well, I dunno's I'd sell for that. But on the showing we've got

so far--yes, five thousand, say, for the claims would be good money."

"Pretty good haul for a kid, anyway. He's got a couple of hundred

dollars in nuggets, right there on the bunk. Let's see, Lovins. Let Bud

have 'em for a minute."

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Then it was that Lovin Child revealed a primitive human trait. He would

not give up the gold. He held fast to one big nugget, spread his fat

legs over the remaining heap of them, and fought Bud's hand away with

the other fist.

"No, no, no! Tell a worl' no, no, no!" he remonstrated vehemently, until

Bud whooped with laughter.

"All right--all right! Keep your gold, durn it. You're like all the

rest--minute you get your paws on to some of the real stuff, you go

hog-wild over it."

Cash was pouring the fine gold back into the buck skin bag and the

baking-powder cans.

"Let the kid play with it," he said. "Getting used to gold when he's

little will maybe save him from a lot of foolishness over it when he

gets big. I dunno, but it looks reasonable to me. Let him have a few

nuggets if he wants. Familiarity breeds contempt, they say; maybe he

won't get to thinkin' too much of it if he's got it around under his

nose all the time. Same as everything else. It's the finding that hits

a feller hardest, Bud--the hunting for it and dreaming about it and not

finding it. What say we go up to the claim for an hour or so? Take the

kid along. It won't hurt him if he's bundled up good. It ain't cold

to-day, anyhow."

That night they discussed soberly the prospects of the claim and their

responsibilities in the matter of Lovin Child's windfall. They would

quietly investigate the history of old Nelson, who had died a pauper in

the eyes of the community, with all his gleanings of gold hidden away.

They agreed that Lovin Child should not start off with one grain of

gold that rightfully belonged to some one else--but they agreed the

more cheerfully because neither man believed they would find any close

relatives; a wife or children they decided upon as rightful heirs.

Brothers, sisters, cousins, and aunts did not count. They were

presumably able to look after themselves just as old Nelson had done.

Their ethics were simple enough, surely.




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