The Valley of Silent Men eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 287 pages of information about The Valley of Silent Men.

The Valley of Silent Men eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 287 pages of information about The Valley of Silent Men.

“I shall do my best, sir.”

“Good.  It’s simply the silly whim of a dying man, Mercer.  But I want to be humored in it.  And I’m sensitive—­like yourself.  I don’t want Cardigan to know.  There’s an old Indian named Mooie, who lives in a shack just beyond the sawmill.  Give him ten dollars and tell him there is another ten in it if he sees the business through, and reports properly to you, and keeps his mouth shut afterward.  Here—­the money is under my pillow.”

Kent pulled out a wallet and put fifty dollars in Mercer’s hands.

“Buy cigars with the rest of it, old man.  It’s of no more use to me.  And this little trick you are going to pull off is worth it.  It’s my last fling on earth, you might say.”

“Thank you, sir.  It is very kind of you.”

Mercer belonged to a class of wandering Englishmen typical of the Canadian West, the sort that sometimes made real Canadians wonder why a big and glorious country like their own should cling to the mother country.  Ingratiating and obsequiously polite at all times, he gave one the impression of having had splendid training as a servant, yet had this intimation been made to him, he would have become highly indignant.  Kent had learned their ways pretty well.  He had met them in all sorts of places, for one of their inexplicable characteristics was the recklessness and apparent lack of judgment with which they located themselves.  Mercer, for instance, should have held a petty clerical job of some kind in a city, and here he was acting as nurse in the heart of a wilderness!

After Mercer had gone with the breakfast things and the money, Kent recalled a number of his species.  And he knew that under their veneer of apparent servility was a thing of courage and daring which needed only the right kind of incentive to rouse it.  And when roused, it was peculiarly efficient in a secretive, artful-dodger sort of way.  It would not stand up before a gun.  But it would creep under the mouths of guns on a black night.  And Kent was positive his fifty dollars would bring him results—­if he lived.

Just why he wanted the information he was after, he could not have told himself.  It was a pet aphorism between O’Connor and him that they had often traveled to success on the backs of their hunches.  And his proposition to Mercer was made on the spur of one of those moments when the spirit of a hunch possessed him.  His morning had been one of unexpected excitement, and now he leaned back in an effort to review it and to forget, if he could, the distressing thing that was bound to happen to him within the next few hours.  But he could not get away from the thickening in his chest.  It seemed growing on him.  Now and then he was compelled to make quite an effort to get sufficient air into his lungs.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Valley of Silent Men from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.