Bennington de Laney sat on the pile of rocks at the entrance to the

Holy Smoke shaft. Across his knees lay the thirty-calibre rifle. His

face was very white and set. Perhaps he was thinking of his return to

New York in disgrace, of his interview with Bishop, of his inevitable

meeting with a multitude of friends, who would read in the daily papers

the accounts of his incompetence--criminal incompetence, they would

call it.

The shadows were beginning to lengthen across the slope of the

hill. Up the gulch cow bells tinkled, up the hill birds sang, and

through the little hollows twilight flowed like a vapour. The wild

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roses on the hillside were blooming--late in this high altitude. The

pines were singing their endless song. But Bennington de Laney was

looking upon none of these softer beauties of the Hills. Rather he

watched intently the lower gulch with its flood-wracked, water-twisted

skeleton laid bare. Could it be that in the destruction there figured

forth he caught the symbol of his own condition? That the dreary gloom

of that ruin typified the chaos of sombre thoughts that occupied his

own remorseful mind? If so, the fancy must have absorbed him. The

moments slipped by one by one, the shadows grew longer, the bird songs

louder, and still the figure with the rifle sat motionless, his face

white and still, watching the lower gulch.

Or could it be that Bennington de Laney waited for some one, and that

therefore his gaze was so fixed? It would seem so. For when the beat of

hoofs became audible, the white face quickened into alertness, and the

motionless figure stirred somewhat.

The rider came in sight, rising and falling in a steady, unhesitating

lope. He swung rapidly to the left, and ascended the knoll. Opposite

the shaft of the Holy Smoke lode he reined in his bronco and

dismounted. The rider was Jim Fay.

Bennington de Laney did not move. He looked up at the newcomer with

dull resignation. "He takes it hard, poor fellow!" thought Fay.

"Well, what's to be done?" asked the Easterner in a strained voice. "I

suppose you know all about it, or you wouldn't be here."

"Yes, I know all about it," said Fay gently. "You mustn't take it so

hard. Perhaps we can do something. We'll be able to save one or two

claims, any way, if we're quick about it."

"I've heard something about patenting claims," went on de Laney in the

same strange, dull tones; "could that be done?"

"No. You have to do five hundred dollars' worth of work, and advertise

for sixty days. There isn't time."

"That settles it. I don't know what we can do then."

"Well, that depends. I've come to help do something. We've got to get

an everlasting hustle on us, that's all; and I'm afraid we are

beginning a little behindhand in the race. You ought to have hunted me

up at once."




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