Twice Bought by R. M. Ballantyne (fun books to read for adults .txt) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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âDid he tell you who stole his gold?â
âNo, sor, he didnâtâhe said that some feller had took itâon loan, like, though I calls it stalinââbut he didnât say who.â
âAnd have you had no tussle with your conscience, Flinders, about this business?â
The Irishmanâs face wrinkled up into an expression of intense amusement at this question.
âItâs jokinâ ye are, Muster Gashford. Sure, now, me conscienceâif Iâve got wanâdoesnât bother me oftin; anâ if it did, on this occasion, Iâd send it to the right-about double quick, for itâs not offerinâ ye five hundred pound I am to stop the coorse oâ justice, but to save ye from committinâ murther! Give Muster Brixton what punishment the coort likesâfor stailinââonly donât hang him. Thatâs all we ask.â
âYouâll have to pay more for it then,â returned the bully. âThatâs not enough.â
âSure we havenât got a rap more to kape our pots bilinâ, sor,â returned Flinders, in a tone of despair. âLastewise I can spake for myself; for Iâm claned outâall but.â
âRow much does the âall butâ represent?â
âWell, sor, to tell you the raal truth, itâs about tchwo hundred pound, more or less, and I brought it wid me, for fear you might want it, anâ I havenât got a nugget more if it was to save me own life. Itâs the truth Iâm tellinâ ye, sor.â
There was a tone and look of such intense sincerity about the poor fellow, as he slowly drew a second bag of gold from his pocket and placed it beside the first, that Gashford could not help being convinced.
âTwo hundred and five hundred,â he said, meditatively.
âThat makes siven hundred, sor,â said Flinders, suggestively.
The bully did not reply for a few seconds. Then, taking up the bags of gold, he threw them into a corner. Thereafter he drew a large key from his pocket and handed it to the Irishman, who grasped it eagerly.
âGo to the prison,â said Gashford, âtell the sentry youâve come to relieve him, and send him to me. Mind, now, the rest of this business must be managed entirely by yourself, and see to it that the camp knows nothing about our little commercial transaction, for, if it does, your own days will be numbered.â
With vows of eternal secrecy, and invoking blessings of an elaborate nature on Gashfordâs head, the Irishman hastened away, and went straight to the prison, which stood considerably apart from the huts and tents of the miners.
âWho goes there?â challenged the sentry as he approached, for the night was very dark.
âMesilf, av coorse.â
âAnâ who may that be, for yer not the only Patlander in camp, moreâs the pity!â
âItâs Flinders I am. Sure any man wid half an ear might know that. Iâve come to relave ye.â
âBut youâve got no rifle,â returned the man, with some hesitation.
âArenât revolvers as good as rifles, ay, anâ better at close quarters? Shut up your tatie-trap, now, anâ be off to Muster Gashfordâs hut for he towld me to sind you there widout delay.â
This seemed to satisfy the man, who at once went away, leaving Flinders on guard.
Without a momentâs loss of time Paddy made use of the key and entered the prison.
âIs it there ye are, avic?â he said, in a hoarse whisper, as he advanced with caution and outstretched hands to prevent coming against obstructions.
âYes; who are you?â replied Tom Brixton, in a stern voice.
âWhist, now, or yeâll git me into throuble. Sure, Iâm yer sintry, no less, anâ yer chum Pat Flinders.â
âIndeed, Paddy! Iâm surprised that they should select you to be my jailer.â
âHumph! well, they didnât let me have the place for nothingâoch! musha!â
The last exclamations were caused by the poor man tumbling over a chair and hitting his head on a table.
âNot hurt, I hope,â said Brixton, his spirit somewhat softened by the incident.
âNot muchâonly a new bumpâbut itâs wan among many, so it donât matter. Now, listen. Time is precious. Iâve come for to set you freeânot exactly at this momint, howiver, for the boys oâ the camp havenât all gone to bed yet; but whin theyâre quiet, Iâll come again anâ help you to escape. Iâve only come now to let you know.â
The Irishman then proceeded to give Tom Brixton a minute account of all that had been done in his behalf. He could not see how the news affected him, the prison being as dark as Erebus, but great was his surprise and consternation when the condemned man said, in a calm but firm voice, âThank you, Flinders, for your kind intentions, but I donât mean to make a second attempt to escape.â
âYe donât intind to escape!â exclaimed his friend, with a look of blank amazement at the spot where the voice of the other came from.
âNo; I donât deserve to live, Paddy, so I shall remain and be hanged.â
âIâll be hanged if ye do,â said Paddy, with much decision. âCome, now, donât be talkinâ nonsense. Itâs jokinâ ye are, av coorse.â
âIâm very far from joking, my friend,â returned Tom, in a tone of deep despondency, âas you shall find when daylight returns. I am guiltyâmore guilty than you fancyâso I shall plead guilty, whether tried or not, and take the consequences. Besides, life is not worth having. Iâm tired of it!â
âOch! but weâve bought you, anâ paid for you, anâ youâve no manner oâ right to do what ye like wiâ yourself,â returned his exasperated chum. âBut itâs of no use talkinâ to ye. Thereâs somethinâ wrong wiâ your inside, no doubt. When I come back for ye at the right time youâll have thought better of it. Come, now, give us your hand.â
âI wish I could, Flinders, but the rascal that tied me has drawn the cord so tight that I feel as if I had no hands at all.â
âIâll soon putt that right. Where are ye? Ah, thatâs it, now, kape stidy.â
Flinders severed the cord with his bowie knife, unwound it, and set his friend free.
âNow thin, remain where ye are till I come for ye; anâ if any wan should rap at the door anâ ax whereâs the sintinel anâ the kay, just tell him ye donât know, an donât care; or, if ye prefer it, tell him to go anâ ax his grandmother.â
With this parting piece of advice Flinders left the prisoner, locked the door, put the key in his pocket, and went straight to Fred Westly, whom he found seated beside the fire with his face buried in his hands.
âIf Tom told you he wouldnât attempt to escape,â said Westly, on hearing the details of all that his eccentric friend had done, âyou may be sure that heâll stick to it.â
âDâye raaly think so, Muster Fred?â said his companion in deep anxiety.
âI do. I know Tom Brixton well, and when he is in this mood nothing will move him. But, come, I must go to the prison and talk with him.â
Fredâs talk, however, was not more effective than that of his friend had been.
âWell, Tom,â he said, as he and Flinders were about to quit the block-house, âwe will return at the hour when the camp seems fairly settled to sleep, probably about midnight, and I hope you will then be ready to fly. Remember what Flinders says is so far trueâyour life has been bought and the price paid, whether you accept or refuse it. Think seriously of that before it be too late.â
Again the prison door closed, and Tom Brixton was left, with this thought turning constantly and persistently in his brain:
âBought and the price paid!â he repeated to himself; for the fiftieth time that night, as he sat in his dark prison. ââTis a strange way to put it to a fellow, but that does not alter the circumstances. No, I wonât be moved by mere sentiment. Iâll try the Turkâs plan, and submit to fate. I fancy this is something of the state of mind that men get into when they commit suicide. And yet I donât feel as if I would kill myself if I were free. Bah! whatâs the use of speculating about it? Anyhow my doom is fixed, and poor Flinders with his friends will lose their money. My only regret is that that unmitigated villain Gashford will get it. It would not be a bad thing, now that my hands are free, to run a-muck amongst âem. I feel strength enough in me to rid the camp of a lot of devils before I should be killed! But, after all, what good would that do me when I couldnât know itâcouldnât know it! Perhaps I could know it! No, no! Better to die quietly, without the stain of human blood on my soulâif I have a soul. Escape! Easy enough, maybe, to escape from Pine Tree Diggings; but how escape from conscience? how escape from facts?âthe girl I love holding me in contempt! my old friend and chum regarding me with pity! character gone! a life of crime before me! and death, by rope, or bullet or knife, sooner or later! Better far to die now and have it over at once; prevent a deal of sin, too, as well as misery. âBought, and the price paid!â âTis a strange way to put it and there is something like logic in the argument of Paddy, that Iâve got no right to do what I like with myself! Perhaps a casuist would say it is my duty to escape. Perhaps it is!â
Now, while Tom Brixton was revolving this knotty question in his mind, and Bully Gashford was revolving questions quite as knotty, and much more complex, and Fred Westly was discussing with Flinders the best plan to be pursued in the event of Tom refusing to fly, there was a party of men assembled under the trees in a mountain gorge, not far distant, who were discussing a plan of operations which, when carried out, bade fair to sweep away, arrest, and overturn other knotty questions and deep-laid plans altogether.
It was the band of marauders who had made the abortive attack on Bevanâs fortress.
When the attack was made, one of the redskins who guided the miners chanced to hear the war-whoop of a personal friend in the ranks of the attacking party. Being troubled with no sense of honour worth mentioning, this faithless guide deserted at once to the enemy, and not only explained all he knew about the thief that he had been tracking, but gave, in addition, such information about the weak points of Pine Tree Diggings, that the leader of the band resolved to turn aside for a little from his immediate purposes, and make a little hay while the sun shone in that direction.
The band was a large oneâa few on horseback, many on foot; some being Indians and half-castes, others disappointed miners and desperadoes. A fierce villain among the latter was the leader of the band, which was held together merely by unity of purpose and interest in regard to robbery, and similarity of condition in regard to crime.
âNow, lads,â said the leader, who was a tall, lanky, huge-boned, cadaverous fellow with a heavy chin and hawk-nose, named Stalker, âIâll tell âe what it is. Seems to me that the diggers at Pine Tree Camp are a set of out-anâ-out blackguardsâlike most diggersâexcept this poor thief of a fellow Brixton, so I vote for attackinâ the camp, carryinâ off all the gold we can lay hands on in the hurry-skurry, anâ set this gentlemanâthis thief Brixtonâfree. Heâs a bold chap, Iâm told by the redskin, anâ will no doubt be glad to jine us. Anâ we want a few bold men.â
The reckless robber-chief looked round with a mingled expression of humour and contempt, as
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