The Border Legion eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 377 pages of information about The Border Legion.

The Border Legion eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 377 pages of information about The Border Legion.

Most of the evenings he remained in his cabin, which after dark became a place of mysterious and stealthy action.  The members of his Legion visited him, sometimes alone, never more than two together.  Joan could hear them slipping in at the hidden aperture in the back of the cabin; she could hear the low voices, but seldom what was said; she could hear these night prowlers as they departed.  Afterward Kells would have the lights lit, and then Joan could see into the cabin.  Was that dark, haggard man Kells?  She saw him take little buckskin sacks full of gold-dust and hide them under the floor.  Then he would pace the room in his old familiar manner, like a caged tiger.  Later his mood usually changed with the advent of Wood and Pearce and Smith and Cleve, who took turns at guard and going down into camp.  Then Kells would join them in a friendly game for small stakes.  Gambler though he was, he refused to allow any game there that might lead to heavy wagering.  From the talk sometimes Joan learned that he played for exceedingly large stakes with gamblers and prosperous miners, usually with the same result—­a loss.  Sometimes he won, however, and then he would crow over Pearce and Smith, and delight in telling them how cunningly he had played.

Jim Cleve had his bed up under the bulge of bluff, in a sheltered nook.  Kells had appeared to like this idea, for some reason relative to his scout system, which he did not explain.  And Cleve was happy about it because this arrangement left him absolutely free to have his nightly rendezvous with Joan at her window, sometime between dark and midnight.  Her bed was right under the window:  if awake she could rest on her knees and look out; and if she was asleep he could thrust a slender stick between the boards to awaken her.  But the fact was that Joan lived for these stolen meetings, and unless he could not come until very late she waited wide-eyed and listening for him.  Then, besides, as long as Kells was stirring in the cabin she spent her time spying upon him.

Jim Cleve had gone to an unfrequented part of the gulch, for no particular reason, and here he had located his claim.  The very first day he struck gold.  And Kells, more for advertisement than for any other motive, had his men stake out a number of claims near Cleve’s, and bought them.  Then they had a little field of their own.  All found the rich pay-dirt, but it was Cleve to whom the goddess of fortune turned her bright face.  As he had been lucky at cards, so he was lucky at digging.  His claim paid big returns.  Kells spread the news, and that part of the gulch saw a rush of miners.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Border Legion from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.