The Faith of Men eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 173 pages of information about The Faith of Men.

The Faith of Men eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 173 pages of information about The Faith of Men.
they launched it, Leclere let fly.  He potted one, who went over the side after the manner of Timothy Brown.  The other dropped into the bottom of the canoe, and then canoe and poling boat went down the stream in a drifting battle.  After that they hung up on a split current, and the canoe passed on one side of an island, the poling boat on the other.  That was the last of the canoe, and he came on into Sunrise.  Yes, from the way the Indian in the canoe jumped, he was sure he had potted him.  That was all.  This explanation was not deemed adequate.  They gave him ten hours’ grace while the Lizzie steamed down to investigate.  Ten hours later she came wheezing back to Sunrise.  There had been nothing to investigate.  No evidence had been found to back up his statements.  They told him to make his will, for he possessed a fifty-thousand dollar Sunrise claim, and they were a law-abiding as well as a law-giving breed.

Leclere shrugged his shoulders.  “Bot one t’ing,” he said; “a leetle, w’at you call, favour—­a leetle favour, dat is eet.  I gif my feefty t’ousan’ dollair to de church.  I gif my husky dog, Batard, to de devil.  De leetle favour?  Firs’ you hang heem, an’ den you hang me.  Eet is good, eh?”

Good it was, they agreed, that Hell’s Spawn should break trail for his master across the last divide, and the court was adjourned down to the river bank, where a big spruce tree stood by itself.  Slackwater Charley put a hangman’s knot in the end of a hauling-line, and the noose was slipped over Leclere’s head and pulled tight around his neck.  His hands were tied behind his back, and he was assisted to the top of a cracker box.  Then the running end of the line was passed over an over-hanging branch, drawn taut, and made fast.  To kick the box out from under would leave him dancing on the air.

“Now for the dog,” said Webster Shaw, sometime mining engineer.  “You’ll have to rope him, Slackwater.”

Leclere grinned.  Slackwater took a chew of tobacco, rove a running noose, and proceeded leisurely to coil a few turns in his hand.  He paused once or twice to brush particularly offensive mosquitoes from off his face.  Everybody was brushing mosquitoes, except Leclere, about whose head a small cloud was visible.  Even Batard, lying full-stretched on the ground with his fore paws rubbed the pests away from eyes and mouth.

But while Slackwater waited for Batard to lift his head, a faint call came from the quiet air, and a man was seen waving his arms and running across the flat from Sunrise.  It was the storekeeper.

“C-call ’er off, boys,” he panted, as he came in among them.

“Little Sandy and Bernadotte’s jes’ got in,” he explained with returning breath.  “Landed down below an’ come up by the short cut.  Got the Beaver with ’m.  Picked ’m up in his canoe, stuck in a back channel, with a couple of bullet-holes in ’m.  Other buck was Klok Kutz, the one that knocked spots out of his squaw and dusted.”

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Project Gutenberg
The Faith of Men from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.