Stories in Light and Shadow by Bret Harte (classic books for 10 year olds txt) đ
That morning, however, there was a slight stir among those who, with their knitting, were waiting their turn in the outer office as the vice-consul ushered the police inspector into the consul's private office. He was in uniform, of course, and it took him a moment to recover from his habitual stiff, military salute,--a little stiffer than that of the actual soldier.
It was a matter of importance! A stranger had that morning been arrested in the town and identified as a military desert
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The guest raised his head and turned it sufficiently to fling his answer back over his shoulder at his hosts. âI donât know what YOUâD callâ boominâ,ââ he said gloomily; âI suppose you two men sitting here comfortably by the fire, without caring whether school keeps or not, would call two feet of backwater over oneâs claim âboominâ;â I reckon YOUâD consider a hundred and fifty feet of sluicing carried away, and drifting to thunder down the South Fork, something in the way of advertising to your old camp! I suppose YOUâd think it was an inducement to investors! I shouldnât wonder,â he added still more gloomily, as a sudden dash of rain down the wide-throated chimney dropped in his tin cupââand it would be just like you two chaps, sittinâ there gormandizing over your quinineâif yer said this rain thatâs lasted three weeks was something to be proud of!â
It was the cheerful and the satisfying custom of the rest of the camp, for no reason whatever, to hold Uncle Jim and Uncle Billy responsible for its present location, its vicissitudes, the weather, or any convulsion of nature; and it was equally the partnersâ habit, for no reason whatever, to accept these animadversions and apologize.
âItâs a rain thatâs soft and mellowinâ,â said Uncle Billy gently, âand supplinâ to the sinews and muscles. Did ye ever notice, Jimââ ostentatiously to his partnerââdid ye ever notice that you get inter a kind oâ sweaty lather workinâ in it? Sorter openinâ to the pores!â
âFetches âem every time,â said Uncle Billy. âBetter nor fancy soap.â
Their guest laughed bitterly. âWell, Iâm going to leave it to you. I reckon to cut the whole concern to-morrow, and âliteâ out for something new. It canât be worse than this.â
The two partners looked grieved, albeit they were accustomed to these outbursts. Everybody who thought of going away from Cedar Camp used it first as a threat to these patient men, after the fashion of runaway nephews, or made an exemplary scene of their going.
âBetter think twice afore ye go,â said Uncle Billy.
âIâve seen worse weather afore ye came,â said Uncle Jim slowly. âWater all over the Bar; the mud so deep ye couldnât get to Angelâs for a sack oâ flour, and we had to grub on pine nuts and jackass-rabbits. And yetâwe stuck by the camp, and here we are!â
The mild answer apparently goaded their guest to fury. He rose from his seat, threw back his long dripping hair from his handsome but querulous face, and scattered a few drops on the partners. âYes, thatâs just it. Thatâs what gets me! Here you stick, and here you are! And here youâll stick and rust until you starve or drown! Here you are,âtwo men who ought to be out in the world, playing your part as grown men,âstuck here like children âplaying houseâ in the woods; playing work in your wretched mud-pie ditches, and content. Two men not so old that you mightnât be taking your part in the fun of the world, going to balls or theatres, or paying attention to girls, and yet old enough to have married and have your families around you, content to stay in this God-forsaken place; old bachelors, pigging together like poorhouse paupers. Thatâs what gets me! Say you LIKE it? Say you expect by hanging on to make a strikeâand what does that amount to? What are YOUR chances? How many of us have made, or are making, more than grub wages? Say youâre willing to share and share alike as you doâhave you got enough for two? Arenât you actually living off each other? Arenât you grinding each other down, choking each otherâs struggles, as you sink together deeper and deeper in the mud of this cussed camp? And while youâre doing this, arenât you, by your age and position here, holding out hopes to others that you know cannot be fulfilled?â
Accustomed as they were to the half-querulous, half-humorous, but always extravagant, criticism of the others, there was something so new in this arraignment of themselves that the partners for a moment sat silent. There was a slight flush on Uncle Billyâs cheek, there was a slight paleness on Uncle Jimâs. He was the first to reply. But he did so with a certain dignity which neither his partner nor their guest had ever seen on his face before.
âAs itâs OUR fire thatâs warmed ye up like this, Dick Bullen,â he said, slowly rising, with his hand resting on Uncle Billyâs shoulder, âand as itâs OUR whiskey thatâs loosened your tongue, I reckon we must put up with what ye ârâ saying, just as weâve managed to put up with our own way oâ living, and not quoâll with ye under our own roof.â
The young fellow saw the change in Uncle Jimâs face and quickly extended his hand, with an apologetic backward shake of his long hair. âHang it all, old man,â he said, with a laugh of mingled contrition and amusement, âyou mustnât mind what I said just now. Iâve been so worried thinking of things about MYSELF, and, maybe, a little about you, that I quite forgot I hadnât a call to preach to anybodyâleast of all to you. So we part friends, Uncle Jim, and you too, Uncle Billy, and youâll forget what I said. In fact, I donât know why I spoke at allâonly I was passing your claim just now, and wondering how much longer your old sluice-boxes would hold out, and where in thunder youâd get others when they caved in! I reckon that sent me off. Thatâs all, old chap!â
Uncle Billyâs face broke into a beaming smile of relief, and it was HIS hand that first grasped his guestâs; Uncle Jim quickly followed with as honest a pressure, but with eyes that did not seem to be looking at Bullen, though all trace of resentment had died out of them. He walked to the door with him, again shook hands, but remained looking out in the darkness some time after Dick Bullenâs tangled hair and broad shoulders had disappeared.
Meantime, Uncle Billy had resumed his seat and was chuckling and reminiscent as he cleaned out his pipe.
âKinder reminds me of Jo Sharp, when he was cleaned out at poker by his own partners in his own cabin, cominâ up here and bedevilinâ US about it! What was it you lint him?â
But Uncle Jim did not reply; and Uncle Billy, taking up the cards, began to shuffle them, smiling vaguely, yet at the same time somewhat painfully. âArter all, Dick was mighty cut up about what he said, and I felt kinder sorry for him. And, you know, I rather cotton to a man that speaks his mind. Sorter clears him out, you know, of all the slumgullion thatâs in him. Itâs just like washinâ out a pan oâ prospecting: you pour in the water, and keep slushing it round and round, and out comes first the mud and dirt, and then the gravel, and then the black sand, and thenâitâs all out, and thereâs a speck oâ gold glisteninâ at the bottom!â
âThen you think there WAS suthinâ in what he said?â said Uncle Jim, facing about slowly.
An odd tone in his voice made Uncle Billy look up. âNo,â he said quickly, shying with the instinct of an easy pleasure-loving nature from a possible grave situation. âNo, I donât think he ever got the color! But wot are ye mooninâ about for? Ainât ye goinâ to play? Itâs morâ ân half past nine now.â
Thus adjured, Uncle Jim moved up to the table and sat down, while Uncle Billy dealt the cards, turning up the Jack or right bowerâ but WITHOUT that exclamation of delight which always accompanied his good fortune, nor did Uncle Jim respond with the usual corresponding simulation of deep disgust. Such a circumstance had not occurred before in the history of their partnership. They both played in silenceâa silence only interrupted by a larger splash of raindrops down the chimney.
âWe orter put a couple of stones on the chimney-top, edgewise, like Jack Curtis does. It keeps out the rain without interferinâ with the draft,â said Uncle Billy musingly.
âWhatâs the use ifââ
âIf what?â said Uncle Billy quietly.
âIf we donât make it broader,â said Uncle Jim half wearily.
They both stared at the chimney, but Uncle Jimâs eye followed the wall around to the bunks. There were many discolorations on the canvas, and a picture of the Goddess of Liberty from an illustrated paper had broken out in a kind of damp, measly eruption. âIâll stick that funny handbill of the âWashinâ Sodaâ I got at the grocery store the other day right over the Liberty gal. Itâs a mighty perty woman washinâ with short sleeves,â said Uncle Billy. âThatâs the comfort of them picters, you kin always get somethinâ new, and it adds thickness to the wall.â
Uncle Jim went back to the cards in silence. After a moment he rose again, and hung his overcoat against the door.
âWindâs cominâ in,â he said briefly.
âYes,â said Uncle Billy cheerfully, âbut it wouldnât seem natâral if there wasnât that crack in the door to let the sunlight in o morninâs. Makes a kind oâ sundial, you know. When the streak oâ lightâs in that corner, I says âsix oâclock!â when itâs across the chimney I say âseven!â and so âtis!â
It certainly had grown chilly, and the wind was rising. The candle guttered and flickered; the embers on the hearth brightened occasionally, as if trying to dispel the gathering shadows, but always ineffectually. The game was frequently interrupted by the necessity of stirring the fire. After an interval of gloom, in which each partner successively drew the candle to his side to examine his cards, Uncle Jim said:â
âSay?â
âWell!â responded Uncle Billy.
âAre you sure you saw that third crow on the wood-pile?â
âSure as I see you nowâand a darned sight plainer. Why?â
âNothinâ, I was just thinkinâ. Look here! How do we stand now?â
Uncle Billy was still losing. âNevertheless,â he said cheerfully, âIâm owinâ you a matter of sixty thousand dollars.â
Uncle Jim examined the book abstractedly. âSuppose,â he said slowly, but without looking at his partner, âsuppose, as itâs gettinâ late now, we play for my half share of the claim agin the limitâseventy thousandâto square up.â
âYour half share!â repeated Uncle Billy, with amused incredulity.
âMy half share of the claim,âof this yer house, you know,âone half of all that Dick Bullen calls our rotten starvation property,â reiterated Uncle Jim, with a half smile.
Uncle Billy laughed. It was a novel idea; it was, of course, âall in the air,â like the rest of their game, yet even then he had an odd feeling that he would have liked Dick Bullen to have known it. âWade in, old pard,â he said. âIâm on it.â
Uncle Jim lit another candle to reinforce the fading light, and the deal fell to Uncle Billy. He turned up Jack of clubs. He also turned a little redder as he took up his cards, looked at them, and glanced hastily at his partner. âItâs no use playing,â he said. âLook here!â He laid down his cards on the table. They were the ace, king and queen of clubs, and Jack of spades,âor left bower,â which, with the turned-up Jack of clubs,âor right bower,â comprised ALL the winning cards!
âBy jingo! If weâd been playinâ four-handed, say you anâ me agin some other ducks, weâd have made âfourâ in that deal, and hâisted some moneyâeh?â and his eyes sparkled. Uncle Jim, also, had a slight tremulous light in his own.
âOh no! I didnât see no three crows this afternoon,â added Uncle Billy
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