Digging for Gold: Adventures in California by R. M. Ballantyne (e reading malayalam books .TXT) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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All eyes were at once turned on Frank, who stepped forward, and saidâ
âI can certainly testify to the fact that this man Bradling did attempt to shoot the man whom you call Dick, but I know nothing about the murder which seems to have been perpetrated here, andââ
âItâs a young feller as was a quiet harmless sort oâ critter,â said one of the bystanders, âwho was found dead under a bush this morning with his skull smashed in; and itâs my opinion, gentlemen, that, since this stranger has sworn to the fact that Bradling tried to murder Dick, he should swing for it.â
âI protest, gentlemen,â said Frank energetically, âthat I did not swear at all! I did not even say that Bradling tried to murder anybody: on the contrary, I think the way in which the man Dick handled his gun at the time when Bradling fired was very suspââ
A shout from the crowd drowned the remainder of this speech.
âString him up without more ado,â cried several voices.
Three men at once seized Bradling, and a rope was quickly flung over the bough of the oak.
âMercy! mercy!â cried the unhappy man, âI swear that I did not murder the man. I have made my pile down at Bigbear Gully, and Iâll give it allâevery centâif you will wait to have the matter examined. Stay,â he added, seeing that they paid no heed to him, âlet me speak one word, before I die, with Mr Allfrey. I want to tell him where my gold lies hid.â
âItâs a dodge,â cried one of the executioners with a sneer, âbut have your say out. Itâs the last youâll have a chance to say here, so look sharp about it.â
Frank went forward to the man, who was trembling, and very pale, and begged those who held him to move off a few paces.
âOh! Mr Allfrey,â said Bradling, âI am innocent of this; I am an escaped convict, it is true, and I did try to kill that man Dick, who has given me provocation enough, God knows, but, as He shall be my judge at last, I swear I did not commit this murder. If you will cut the cords that bind my hands, you will prevent a cold-blooded murder being committed now. You saved my life once before. Oh! save it again.â
The man said all this in a hurried whisper, but there was something so intensely earnest and truthful in his bearing that Frank, under a sudden and irresistible impulse, which he could not afterwards account for, drew his knife and cut the cords that bound him.
Instantly Bradling bounded away like a hunted deer, overturning several men in his flight, and being followed by a perfect storm of bullets from rifles and revolvers, until he had disappeared in the neighbouring wood. Then the miners turned with fury on Frank, but paused abruptly on seeing that he and Joe Graddy stood back to back, with a revolver in each hand.
Of course revolvers and rifles were instantly pointed at them, but fortunately the miners in their exasperation had discharged all their fire-arms at Bradlingânot a piece remained loaded!
Several therefore commenced hurriedly to re-load, but Frank shouted, in a voice that there was no misunderstandingâ
âThe first who attempts to load is a dead man!â
This caused them to hesitate, for in those times men, when desperate, were wont to be more prompt to act than to threaten. Still, there were some present who would have run the risk, and it is certain that our hero and his friend would have then and there terminated their career, had not a backwoods hunter stepped forward and said:
âWell now, ye air makinâ a pretty noise âbout nothinâ! See here, I know that feller Bradling well. He didnât kill the man. It was a Redskin as did it; I came up in time to see him do it, and killed the Redskin afore he could get away. In proof whereof here is his gun, anâ youâll find his carcase under the bank where the murder was committed, if yeâve a mind to look for it. But Bradling is a murderer. I knows him of old, anâ so, although heâs innocent of this partikler murder, I didnât see no occasion to try to prevent him gittinâ his desarts. Itâs another matter, howsâever, when youâre goinâ to scrag the men as let him off. If yeâll take the advice of an old hunter as knows a thing or two, youâll go to work on yer claims slick off, for the rains are cominâ on, and they will pull ye up sharp, I guess. Youâll make hay while the sun shines if youâre wise.â
The opportune interference of this hunter saved Frank and Joe, who, after thanking their deliverer, were not slow to mount their mules and hasten back to Bigbear Gully, resolved more firmly than ever to wind up their affairs, and bid a final adieu to the diggings.
When they arrived at Bigbear Gully they found the condition of the people most deplorable, owing to scarcity of provisions, prevailing sickness, and the total absence of physic or medical attendance. To make matters worse, there were indications that the rainy season was about to set in; an event that would certainly increase the violence of the disease which had already swept away so many of the miners, not a few of whom fell down in the holes where they were digging for gold, and thus, in digging their own graves, ended their golden dreams, with gold-dust for their winding-sheets.
In California there may be said to be only two seasonsâa wet one and a dry. The wet season is from November to March, during which period foggy weather and cold south-west winds prevail. During the remaining months of the year, arid scorching north-east winds blow so frequently and so long that everything green becomes parched and shrivelled up. Of course this state of things is modified in different localities by the proximity or absence of mountains, rivers, and sandy plains, and there are various periods throughout the year during which the climate is delightful; but on the whole it is considered badâespecially during the rains, when water comes down in such continuous deluges that gold-digging and all other work is much interfered withâsometimes stopped altogether. At midday in this season there is frequently July heat, while in the morning and evening there is January cold.
Anxious to escape before the weather became worse, Frank went at once to Jeffsonâs store to obtain supplies, settle up accounts, and inquire for his friend Meyer. He found Jeffson looking very illâhe having recently had a severe attack of the prevailing complaint, but âCompanyâ had recovered completely, and was very busy with the duties of his store, which (âCompanyâ being a warm-hearted man) included gratuitous attendance on, and sympathy with, the sick.
âItâll ruin us intirely,â he was wont to say, âfor we canât stand by and see them die oâ sickness anâ intarvation mixed, anâ the poor critters has nothinâ wotever to pay. Howsâever, vartue is its own reward, anâ we makes the tough miners pay handsome for their supplies, which makes up for the sick wans, anâ kapes us goinâ on hearty enough.â
âAnd what of Meyer?â asked Frank, somewhat anxiously.
Instead of answering, Jeffson put on his hat, and bidding him follow, went out of the store. He led him and Joe towards a large pine-tree, at the root of which there was a low mound, carefully covered with green turf. Pointing to it, the Yankee store-keeper said with some emotionâ
âThere he lies, poor fellow; and a better, more kind-hearted, or honester man, never drove pick and shovel into the airth.â
In compliance with the request of Frank, who was deeply moved, Jeffson told how that, after the departure of his friends, the poor Germanâs spirits sank; and while he was in this state, he was prevented from rallying by a severe attack of dysentery which ended in his death.
âI trust that he was not pressed by poverty at the last,â said Frank.
âHe would have been,â replied the Yankee, âif he had been allowed to have âis own way; for, being unable to work, of course he ran out oâ gold-dust, and nothing would persuade him to touch the nugget you left in my charge. I hit upon a plan, however, which answered very well. I supplied him all through his illness with everything that he required to make him as comfortable as could be, poor fellow, tellinâ him it was paid for in full by a friend of his, whose name I couldnât and wouldnât mention. âJeffson,â says he, startinâ up like a livinâ skeleton, and lookinâ at me so serious with his hollow eyes; âJeffson, if it bees you dat give me de tings, I vill not have dem. I vill die first. You is poor, anâ ve cannot expect you keep all de dyinâ miners vor noting.â
ââWell,â says I, âI wonât go for to say Iâm over rich, for times air raither hard just now; but it ainât me as is the friend. I assure you Iâm paid for it in full, so you make your mind easy.â
âWith that he lay down anâ gave a long sigh. He was exhausted, and seemed to have dismissed the subject from his mind, for he never spoke of it again.â
âI rather suspect,â said Frank, âthat you did not tell him the exact truth.â
âI guess I did,â replied the Yankee.
âWho, then, was the friend?â
âYourself,â said Jeffson, with a peculiar smile. âI intend to keep payment of it all off your nugget, for you see it is a fact that we ainât in very flourishing circumstances at present; and I knew you would thank me for not deserting your friend in his distress.â
âYou did quite right,â said Frank earnestly; âand I thank you with all my heart for your kindness to poor Meyer, as well as your correct estimate of me.â
Frank did not forget that his own resources were at a low ebb just then, and that he had been counting on the nugget for the payment of his expenses to the coast, and his passage to England, but he made no mention of the fact. His comrade, Joe Graddy, however, could not so easily swallow his disappointment in silence.
âWell,â said he, turning his quid from one cheek to the otherâfor Joe was guilty of the bad habit of chewing tobacco,ââwell, itâs not for the likes oâ me to put my opinion contrairy to yourn, anâ in coorse itâs all very right that our poor messmate should have been looked arter, an Iâm very glad he wos. Notwithstandinâ, Iâm bound for to say it is raither okard as it stands, for weâre pretty nigh cleaned out, anâ have got to make for the coast in the rainy season, wâich, it appears to me, is very like settinâ sail in a heavy gale without ballast.â
âCome, Joe,â interposed Frank, âweâre not quite so hard up as that comes to. There is a little ballast left,âsufficient, if we only turn to, and wash out a little more gold, to take us home.â
âSorry to hear youâre in such a fix,â said Jeffson, still regarding his friends with a peculiar smile on his cadaverous countenance; âbut I think I can get ye out of it. See here,â he added, leading them to another grave not far distant from that of Meyer; âcan you guess who lies under the sod there? He was a friend of yours; though perhaps you would scarcely have acknowledged him had he been alive. You remember Bradlingââ
âWhat! our old travelling companion!â exclaimed Frank.
âThe same.â
âWhy, I saved his life only a few days ago.â
âI know it,â said Jeffson, âHe came here late one night, all covered with blood; and, flinging himself down on a bench in my store, said that he was done for. And so he was,
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