“Here, sir,” responded Bailley, who was one of Mr. Davenport’s cowboys. “I remember of giving Mr. Davenport that receipt. I wanted it to—to——”
“Go on a spree with,” interrupted Mr. Chisholm. “Well, you got it, didn’t you? The next is also a receipt. And so is the next one, and the next one. In fact I don’t see anything but receipts here.”
Mr. Chisholm continued to call out the names of the payees of the receipts, some containing money paid to the cowboys, some relating to supplies of various kinds purchased at the store, handing each one to[120] some man who stood near him to see if he was right, until he had but few papers left in the bundle. The longer he read the more astonished he became, until finally he turned the pocket-book upside down to show that it was empty.
“That’s all,” said he. “There is nothing but receipts in it. What is your pleasure with the pocket-book? Shall it go to this man who has not grieved any over Mr. Davenport’s death——”
“I don’t want it,” said Henderson, who was paler now than when he was looking into Mr. Chisholm’s six-shooter. “The pocket-book I wanted contains papers that relate to me. I have nothing whatever to do with the receipts.”
“Or shall it go to the boy who has done nothing but mourn for him ever since he was brought in?” said Mr. Chisholm, paying no heed1 to the interruption. “Of course the money goes with it.”
“Now you’re talking,” said Henderson, brightening a little. “Give me the money and let this boy have the pocket-book. It’s[121] mine, and I don’t see why you should want to keep it from me.”
“And you say you never saw this boy before?” said Mr. Chisholm.
“Never in my life,” returned Henderson. “When I saw that boy come by me and go into the wagon2 I was dumfounded.”
“Bob, you say you have seen this man before?”
“I used to see him every day in St. Louis,” replied Bob, who was very much cast down. “He used to live at our house.”
“He is very much mistaken. He never saw me. I have never been in St. Louis in my life.”
“Seeing that Henderson is next of kin,” said one of the farmers, stepping forward, “I think the money ought to go to him.”
“And the pocket-book to Bob?” added Mr. Chisholm.
“Why, in course. I think so.”
“Is that in form of a resolution?”
“Well, yes.”
“Can I get a second to it?”
The answer that came up from four hundred[122] throats was enough to show Bob that all his hopes of winning the money was gone, even before the motion was put; but put it was, and it was carried unanimously.
“Now all opposed say ‘No’!” said Mr. Chisholm.
There was no one at all who answered. Those who didn’t vote wanted to think the matter over before giving their decision. Mr. Chisholm had placed his hand in his pocket and brought out the roll of bills, which he gave to Henderson, and at the same time he laid the pocket-book on Bob’s knee. The latter’s hands closed about it as though it had contained the will he had expected to find there. He didn’t care a cent for the money—he would have given it all to have his father back to him, but the pocket-book was something that Mr. Davenport had handled. He would cherish it as long as he lived.
“There’s somebody in camp who has removed that pocket-book that I wanted to see,” said Henderson, as he clutched the bills and thrust them into his pocket. “I know my brother well enough to understand his[123] business, and when he saw his end coming he didn’t let the matter drop here. He has got a will somewhere.”
“Lem! Frank!” shouted Mr. Chisholm.
The two cowboys instantly stepped forward.
“You were the first to get to Mr. Davenport when he fell off his horse?” continued our leader.
“We were,” answered the two cowboys, in concert.
“Did you watch carefully to see that nobody else touched him?”
“Yes, sir, we did. We knew he had that pocket-book.”
“Was the guard that was placed over him a reliable person?”
“There’s none better. Mebbe you’ll say we took it!” said Frank, seeing that Henderson gazed at him with a smile of disbelief on his face. “You say that once an’ you won’t say it again!”
“I am not saying anybody took it,” said Henderson. “I am simply saying that it is gone. Anybody can say that, I suppose?”
[124]
“Yes; but you say what you had on your mind an’ see how you will come out! We know a story worth a dozen of yours.”
“Easy, easy!” said Mr. Chisholm, catching3 Frank by the arm. “This matter is settled for the time being. Now we will go to bed and sleep on it. Maybe it will look different to us in the morning.”
Mr. Chisholm filled his pipe with great deliberation, and the four hundred men who had stood around to settle the case, taking it for granted that the court had adjourned4 until more evidence could be obtained, strolled off to their own camps. I was glad to see that very few of them went with Henderson. Although they had decided5 in his favor, giving him the money and Bob the receipts, somehow they didn’t feel right about it. But the question was, where was the will?
“Now, Frank, that will do,” said Lem, taking him by the arm and leading him away. “I know what you want to say, and whenever you get to talkin’ you let out some swear[125] words that don’t sound well. Mr. Chisholm is bossin’ this thing.”
“But he never asked us to tell our story,” continued Frank. “We uns could have knocked that fellow’s case higher than the moon.”
“An’ he never told his own,” said Elam.
“What good would it have done to tell everything we knew when there was no will to back it up?” said Mr. Chisholm, throwing back a brand upon the fire with which he had lighted his pipe. “When we get the will we’ll talk to him. Bob, did you ever know your father to have two pocket-books like the one you have got in your clothes?”
“No, sir. I never saw him have but the one,” said Bob, taking out the pocket-book and looking at it. “The man has got everything father owned. But, believe me, I don’t care for that. I am young and can easily make a living.”
Mr. Chisholm drew his hand hastily across his eyes, as I had seen him do before, and started off for his own camp, while the rest of us sat down to think the matter over. I never[126] saw men and boys so completely done up as we were, who were sitting around that fire, and I will venture to say that Bob thought less about the money than we did. He had been brought up in the belief that it was all his own, and now he had lost it. I tell you I felt sorry for him. He sat gazing into the fire for a short time, then spoke7 a few words to Elam, who went off and returned with his blankets. He made up a bed under the wagon and laid down there with Bob. Tom Mason was the second one who was badly perplexed8. He would gaze steadily9 into the fire, as if he there hoped to find a solution to some problem he was working out in his mind, and then at me, moving his lips, as he always did when anything troubled him, and finally he arose and gave me a nod, which I readily understood. I followed him through the willows10, and finally stood on the edge of the prairie, where the cattle, having got their fill of the water, were lying down. There were no sentries11 out to-night. A stampede was the last thing we had to fear.
“Say, Carlos, did you hear what Mr. Chisholm[127] had to say to Bob about his father having another pocket-book like the one he had in his clothes?” he whispered, after looking all around to make sure that there was no one within hearing. “Now, it has just occurred to me that perhaps there is another one, and that Mr. Davenport put it into his pocket.”
“But Bob says there isn’t any other,” said I, jumping at the conclusion. That very same thing had been running in my own mind, and I was anxious to hear what Tom thought about it. “It looks like the pocket-book that he slammed in his hands when he told us his story.”
“That may be; but I tell you he has got another,” said Tom earnestly. “The other one is hidden somewhere about the house.”
“I wish I was as certain of it as you are,” said I.
“Well, now, the only way we can find out is to go there and give everything a good overhauling12, when there is nobody there to prevent us,” said Tom.
“Don’t you suppose that Henderson has thought of that already?”
[128]
“Let him. Who cares? We will go there and give things another examination after he has left. I tell you, Carlos, it is our only chance,” insisted Tom. “And with that pocket-book in our hands we can carry the day, I bet you.”
“Do you mean to go without letting anybody know it?”
“Certainly. Henderson will wake up and find Bob here, and that is all he cares for. I don’t suppose he has taken a single glance at us. Will you go?”
“We’ll have to see Mr. Chisholm first.”
“Exactly. I don’t imagine that our horses can stand the trip——”
“They’ve got to stand it,” said I, for Tom was so anxious about the matter that I began to feel some of his enthusiasm. “If Mr. Chisholm thinks it safe I will go. But, Tom, we have men to deal with who are just as cunning as we are. I’ll bet you that we find that ranch13 overhauled14 when we get there.”
“They can’t travel faster than we can,” said Tom confidently.
“Yes, they can. They are working for[129] money now, and they will travel night and day.”
“Well, let’s go and see Mr. Chisholm. We can’t do anything as long as we stand talking here. I don’t know where his camp is; do you?”
No, I didn’t know where the camp was, but that made no difference to me. The only way I could find it was to look for it, and that I proceeded to do, leaving Tom outside on the prairie. We walked along the edge of the willows until we saw a light shining through them, and then I walked in. It proved to be Mr. Chisholm’s camp. There were a dozen men standing15 around in little groups talking about the incidents of Mr. Davenport’s death, and a little apart from all of them sat Mr. Chisholm, smoking, as usual.
“I guess Henderson didn’t feel very good over the decision we reached, giving him the money and Bob the receipts,” said one of the men. “Five hundred dollars is what he got, and that aint nothing to him. Where did he come from, anyhow?”
“He’s a speculator,” said another. “He[130] don’t do anything, but just buys and sells cattle. He’s got a nice little thing in having Mr. Davenport’s cattle, if they were only in good trim.”
“But that aint what he wants,” said a third. “Mr. Davenport has got some money somewhere in some bank or another, and he wants authority to draw it out.”
That was all I wanted to hear, so I stepped up to Mr. Chisholm and gave him a friendly nudge. Then I walked off to the place where I had left Tom Mason, and he followed along after me. I could see that he was very much depressed16, so after he had gone a short distance out of hearing of the men who stood at the fire, I said:
“Mr. Chisholm, Tom Mason thinks there is another pocket book.”
“There now,” said he, and he stopped as suddenly as though I had aimed a blow at him. “That thing has been running in my head, too. But what made Tom think of it?”
“Here he is, and he can explain the matter for himself,” I answered. “Now, Tom, give it to Mr. Chisholm just as you gave it to me.”
[131]
It did not take Tom long to do that. Tom was a good talker when he had anything on his mind, and he had Mr. Chisholm with him from the start. The man listened intently until he got through, and then gave Tom a slap on the back that I thought would have driven him into the ground.
“Them’s the very points that I have been running over in my own head ever since the court adjourned,” said he gleefully. “Now, how are you going to work it? Do you intend to go off without letting anybody know it? Remember that you have got some men to deal with that are just as smart as you are. There’s something about that Henderson that I don’t like any too well.”
“That is just what we intend to do,” replied Tom. “From some things I have heard of the man I don’t like him too well myself, and we can get to the house and give the things a thorough overhauling before he gets there. If we can find the pocket-book we’ll come back and tell you of it, and all you will have to do will be to go to that bank and stop the money.”
[132]
“But I don’t know where the bank is,” said Mr. Chisholm. “That’s what’s bothering of me now. It may be some bank in St. Louis.”
That was a set-back that Tom hadn’t thought of. He looked at me and then looked down at the ground.
“Never mind. You go on up to the house and search high and low for that pocket-book. Don’t leave a stone unturned that one can hide a pocket-book under, and when you get through come back and tell me what luck you have had. I guess if anybody can find it you can.”
“I think so too, Mr. Chisholm,” said I. “Tom’s the luckiest fellow I ever saw. He found the nugget when we had almost given up the search.”
“The nugget?” repeated Mr. Chisholm.
“Yes, sir; the one that Elam Storm lost fourteen years ago. He knew it was around there somewhere, but no one could tell him where it was. Tom in poking17 around and following what he considered to be a blind trail, stumbled onto it.”
[133]
“Why, I didn’t hear anything about that,” said Mr. Chisholm, casting a glance of admiration18 upon Tom. “Was there much into it?”
“It was as big as he could lift,” I replied. “Elam has got the most of it in a belt under his clothes. We came here to buy cattle, you know.”
“Well, I must hear all about that some day. Now you go and hunt for that pocket-book, and don’t you come back without it. Take plenty of grub along so that you will have something to eat, for if you don’t you will be up a stump19. Good-by, and good luck to you!”
Mr. Chisholm turned about and walked into the willows, and Tom and I stood and looked at each other. He had wished us good luck the same as if we were going on a day’s journey, and yet it would take us a week to go back to the ranch, and another week to get back to camp, to say nothing of the difficulties we would meet on the way. I didn’t mind it in the least, but I saw that Tom didn’t know what to think about it. When he got into a[134] place that he could not think his way out of, he turned to me.
“Is that all he has to say to us?” asked Tom.
“What more do you want?” I enquired20. “He has bid us good-by and told us to take plenty of provisions along, and that’s about all he can do. Now, Tom, can you saddle our horses without arousing anybody? If you can, I will go to the wagon and get some grub.”
Yes, Tom could do that, and he started off at once to carry out his part of the programme. The horses were hitched21 in the outer edge of the willows, and consequently he had nothing to do but to make two trips to the fire after our saddles and weapons; while I had to work in the presence of everybody, and there were two men around our camp fire that I did not want to know anything about it. They may have been all right, but Mr. Davenport had not taken them into his confidence and that made me suspicious of them. When I got within reach of the circle of light thrown out by our camp[135] fire I moved with cautious footsteps, for Elam and Bob were sleeping under the wagon, and threw aside the canvas covering before I stepped in. Merciful Heavens, what a sight there was presented to my gaze! Everything in the wagon had been pawed over, and furthermore, some of the things had been thrown upon the body of Mr. Davenport. It was some of that Henderson’s work, and showed how badly he felt over the death of his brother! If I had been in the humor to do it I could have had some shooting done in that camp inside of five minutes, but instead of that I sprang into the wagon and removed the articles of desecration22, and placed the blanket evenly over the figure as it was before.
“This is one thing I shall always blame myself for,” said I, under my breath. “I ought to have brought Mr. Chisholm here at once, and showed him what that man is capable of doing. I believe I could have turned the tables in short order without the long ride that is before me.”
So filled with rage that I could hardly see,[136] I proceeded to select the grub that was to do Tom and me during our ride to Mr. Davenport’s ranch and back: two slices of bacon and a bag to put them in, some meal, and a little salt. That was all we took with us. I lowered them to the ground and was about to follow them, when I saw that Frank was awake and looking at me. Placing my finger upon my lips I walked over and talked to him.
“Where are you fellows going?” he asked, in his ordinary tone of voice. “One would think you were going to skip the camp.”
“And so we are,” I replied, in a whisper. “Tom Mason and I are going after the missing pocket-book.”
“Carlos,” said he, in the same cautious whisper, “your head is level. I tell you that man has a pocket-book——”
“I know he has, and we are going after it,” said I, anxious to bring the interview to a close as soon as possible. “If we are missed don’t you say one word. I say, Frank, that Henderson is a mighty23 mean chap. When he went into the wagon looking for the pocket-book he threw the things all about. He[137] didn’t even take pains to see that they went on the floor, either.”
“The blamed skunk24!” said Frank, raising himself on his elbow. “You don’t mean to say that he threw them on——”
“Yes, I do. He threw them all over him. But it is too late to remedy the matter now. I put them off where they belong, and I only tell you this so that you can make him shut his mouth if he begins working his chin too much to-morrow.”
“Dog-gone you! why didn’t you tell me before you touched the things? I would have made him take them off himself. Well, good luck to you! Look everywhere for that pocket-book.”
If Tom had been there he wouldn’t have found any fault with Frank’s parting, for he threw into his grip all the strength that a strong man could. After I had received the assurance that he wouldn’t notice our absence on the morrow, I gathered up the provisions and started for the prairie. Tom was already there, and he was holding by the bridle25 the two horses which he had saddled, and our[138] weapons laid beside him on the ground. When I told him what work Henderson had made in the wagon he was utterly26 dumfounded.
“Why didn’t you tell somebody of it?” he asked.
“Because I put the things back where they belong,” I replied.
“Well, you ought not to have done it. That would have made me mad enough for anything.”
“Well, keep still, and let us mount our horses and go on. You can say more about it when we get further away.”
By this time I had given him some of the provisions, which I saw him fasten behind his saddle. I did the same with the others, and when I had gathered up my weapons we mounted and rode away into the darkness. I was satisfied that no one but Mr. Chisholm and Frank knew of our absence.
点击收听单词发音
1 heed | |
v.注意,留意;n.注意,留心 | |
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2 wagon | |
n.四轮马车,手推车,面包车;无盖运货列车 | |
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3 catching | |
adj.易传染的,有魅力的,迷人的,接住 | |
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4 adjourned | |
(使)休会, (使)休庭( adjourn的过去式和过去分词 ) | |
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5 decided | |
adj.决定了的,坚决的;明显的,明确的 | |
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6 sneaking | |
a.秘密的,不公开的 | |
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7 spoke | |
n.(车轮的)辐条;轮辐;破坏某人的计划;阻挠某人的行动 v.讲,谈(speak的过去式);说;演说;从某种观点来说 | |
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8 perplexed | |
adj.不知所措的 | |
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9 steadily | |
adv.稳定地;不变地;持续地 | |
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10 willows | |
n.柳树( willow的名词复数 );柳木 | |
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11 sentries | |
哨兵,步兵( sentry的名词复数 ) | |
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12 overhauling | |
n.大修;拆修;卸修;翻修v.彻底检查( overhaul的现在分词 );大修;赶上;超越 | |
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13 ranch | |
n.大牧场,大农场 | |
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14 overhauled | |
v.彻底检查( overhaul的过去式和过去分词 );大修;赶上;超越 | |
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15 standing | |
n.持续,地位;adj.永久的,不动的,直立的,不流动的 | |
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16 depressed | |
adj.沮丧的,抑郁的,不景气的,萧条的 | |
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17 poking | |
n. 刺,戳,袋 vt. 拨开,刺,戳 vi. 戳,刺,捅,搜索,伸出,行动散慢 | |
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18 admiration | |
n.钦佩,赞美,羡慕 | |
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19 stump | |
n.残株,烟蒂,讲演台;v.砍断,蹒跚而走 | |
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20 enquired | |
打听( enquire的过去式和过去分词 ); 询问; 问问题; 查问 | |
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21 hitched | |
(免费)搭乘他人之车( hitch的过去式和过去分词 ); 搭便车; 攀上; 跃上 | |
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22 desecration | |
n. 亵渎神圣, 污辱 | |
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23 mighty | |
adj.强有力的;巨大的 | |
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24 skunk | |
n.臭鼬,黄鼠狼;v.使惨败,使得零分;烂醉如泥 | |
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25 bridle | |
n.笼头,束缚;vt.抑制,约束;动怒 | |
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26 utterly | |
adv.完全地,绝对地 | |
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