Twice Bought by R. M. Ballantyne (fun books to read for adults .txt) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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âMay I speak with the prisoner for a few minutes?â said Fred Westly to Gashford, as they plodded through the woods. âHe has been my comrade for several years, and I promised his poor mother never to forsake him. May I, Gashford?â
âNo,â was the sharp reply, and then, as if relenting, âWell, yes, you may; but be brief, and no underhand dealing, mind, for if you attempt to help him you shall be a dead man the next moment, as sure as Iâm a living one. Anâ you neednât be too soft, Westly,â he added, with a cynical smile. âYour chum hasâ Well, itâs no business oâ mine. You can go to him.â
Poor Tom Brixton started as his old friend went up to him, and then hung his head.
âDear Tom,â said Fred, in a low voice, âdonât give way to despair. With God all things are possible, and even if your life is to be forfeited, it is not too late to save the soul, for Jesus is able and willing to save to the uttermost. But I want to comfort you with the assurance that I will spare no effort to save you. Many of the diggers are not very anxious that you should bear the extreme punishment of the law, and I think Gashford may be bought over. If so, I need not tell you that my little private store hidden away under the pine-treeââ
âThere is no such store, Fred,â interrupted Tom, with a haggard look of shame.
âWhat do you mean, Tom?â
âI mean that I gambled it all away unknown to you. Oh! Fred, you do notâyou cannot know what a fearful temptation gambling is when given way to, especially when backed by drink. No, itâs of no use your trying to comfort me. I do believe, now, that I deserve to die.â
âWhatever you deserve, Tom, it is my business to save you, if I canâboth body and soul; and what you now tell me does not alter my intentions or my hopes. By the way, does Gashford know about this?â
âYes, he knows that I have taken your money.â
âAnd thatâs the reason,â said Gashford himself, coming up at the moment, âthat I advised you not to be too soft on your chum, for heâs a bad lot altogether.â
âIs the man who knows of a crime, and connives at it, and does not reveal it, a much better âlotâ?â demanded Fred, with some indignation.
âPerhaps not,â replied Gashford, with a short laugh; âbut as I never set up for a good lot, you see, thereâs no need to discuss the subject. Now, fall to the rear, my young blade. Remember that Iâm in command of this party, and you know, or ought to know, that I suffer no insolence in those under me.â
Poor Fred fell back at once, bitterly regretting that he had spoken out, and thus injured to some extent his influence with the only man who had the power to aid his condemned friend.
It was near sunset when they reached Pine Tree Diggings. Tom Brixton was thrust into a strong blockhouse, used chiefly as a powder magazine, but sometimes as a prison, the key of which was kept on that occasion in Gashfordâs pocket, while a trusty sentinel paced before the door.
That night Fred Westly sat in his tent, the personification of despair. True, he had not failed all along to lay his friendâs case before God, and, up to this point, strong hope had sustained him; but now, the only means by which he had trusted to accomplish his end were gone. The hidden hoard, on which he had counted too much, had been taken and lost by the very man he wished to save, and the weakness of his own faith was revealed by the disappearance of the goldâfor he had almost forgotten that the Almighty can provide means at any time and in all circumstances.
Fred would not allow himself for a moment to think that Tom had stolen his gold. He only took it for a time, with the full intention of refunding it when better times should come. On this point Fredâs style of reasoning was in exact accord with that of his unhappy friend. Tom never for a moment regarded the misappropriation of the gold as a theft. Oh no! it was merely an appropriated loanâa temporary accommodation. It would be interesting, perhaps appalling, to know how many thousands of criminal careers have been begun in this way!
âNow, Mister Westly,â said Flinders, entering the tent in haste, âwhatâs to be done? Itâs quite clear that Mister Tomâs not to be hanged, for thereâs two or three of usâll commit murder before that happens; but Iâve bin soundinâ the boys, anâ Iâm afeared thereâs a lot oâ the worst wans thatâll be glad to see him scragged, anâ thereâs a lot as wonât risk their own necks to save him, anâ what betune the wan anâ the other, them thatâll fight for him are a small minorityâso, again I say, whatâs to be done?â
Patrick Flindersâs usually jovial face had by that time become almost as long and lugubrious as that of Westly.
âI donât know,â returned Fred, shaking his head.
âMy one plan, on which I had been founding much hope, is upset. Listen. It was this. I have been saving a good deal of my gold for a long time past and hiding it away secretly, so as to have something to fall back upon when poor Tom had gambled away all his means. This hoard of mine amounted, I should think, to something like five hundred pounds. I meant to have offered it to Gashford for the key of the prison, and for his silence, while we enabled Tom once more to escape. But this money has, without my knowledge, been taken away andââ
âStolen, you mean!â exclaimed Flinders, in surprise.
âNo, not stolenâtaken! I canât explain just now. Itâs enough to know that it is gone, and that my plan is thus overturned.â
âDâee think Gashford would let him out for that?â asked the Irishman, anxiously.
âI think so; but, after all, Iâm almost glad that the moneyâs gone, for I canât help feeling that this way of enticing Gashford to do a thing, as it were slily, is underhand. It is a kind of bribery.â
âFaix, then, itâs not câruption anyhow, for the baste is as cârupt as he can be already. Anâ, sure, wouldnât it just be bribinâ a blackguard not to commit murther?â
âI donât know, Pat. It is a horrible position to be placed in. Poor, poor Tom!â
âHave ye had supper?â asked Flinders, quickly.
âNoâI cannot eat.â
âCook it then, anâ donât be selfish. Other people can ait, though ye canât. Itâll kape yer mind employedâan Iâll want somethinâ to cheer me up whin I come back.â
Pat Flinders left the tent abruptly, and poor Fred went about the preparation of supper in a half mechanical way, wondering what his comrade meant by his strange conduct.
Patâs meaning was soon made plain, that night, to a dozen or so of his friends, whom he visited personally and induced to accompany him to a sequestered dell in an out-of-the-way thicket where the moonbeams struggled through the branches and drew a lovely pale-blue pattern on the green-sward.
âMy frinds,â he said, in a low, mysterious voice, âI know that ivery motherâs son of ye is ready to fight for poor Tom Brixton to-morrow, if the wust comes to the wust. Now, it has occurred to my chum Westly anâ me, that it would be better, safer, and surer to buy him up, than to fight for him, anâ as I know some oâ you fellers has dug up more goold than you knows well what to do wid, anâ youâve all got liberal heartsâlastewise ye should have, if ye havenâtâI propose, anâ second the resolootion, that we make up some five hundred pounds betune us, anâ presint it to Bully Gashford as a mark of our estaimâif heâll onây give us up the kay oâ the prison, put Patrick Flinders, Esquire, sintry over it, anâ then go to slape till breakfast-time tomorry morninâ.â
This plan was at once agreed to, for five hundred pounds was not a large sum to be made up by men whoâsome of them at leastâhad nearly made âtheir pileââby which they meant their fortune, while the liberality of heart with which they had been credited was not wanting. Having settled a few details, this singular meeting broke up, and Patrick Flindersâacting as the secretary, treasurer, and executive committeeâwent off, with a bag of golden nuggets and unbounded self-confidence, to transact the business.
Gashford was not quite so ready to accept Flindersâs offer as that enthusiast had expected. The bully seemed to be in a strangely unusual mood, tooâa mood which at first the Irishman thought favourable to his cause.
âSit down,â said Gashford, with less gruffness than usual, when his visitor entered his hut. âWhat dâye want wiâ me?â
Flinders addressed himself at once to the subject of his mission, and became quite eloquent as he touched on the grandeur of the sum offered, the liberality of the offerers, and the ease with which the whole thing might be accomplished. A very faint smile rested on Gashfordâs face as he proceeded, but by no other sign did he betray his thoughts until his petitioner had concluded.
âSo you want to buy him off?â said Gashford, the smile expanding to a broad grin.
âIf yer honour had bin born a judge anâ sot on the bench since iver ye was a small spalpeen, ye couldnât have hit it off more nately. Thatâs just what we wantâto buy him off. Itâs a purty little commercial transactionâa manâs life for five hundred pound; anâ, sure itâs a good price to give too, consitherinâ how poor we all are, an what a dale oâ sweatinâ work weâve got to do to git the goold.â
âBut suppose I wonât sell,â said Gashford, âwhat then?â
âFair, then, Iâll blow your brains outâ thought the Irishman, his fingers tingling with a desire to grasp the loaded revolver that lay in his pocket, but he had the wisdom to restrain himself and to say, âOch! sor, sure yeâll niver refuse such a natâral request. Anâ we donât ask ye to help us. Only to hand me the kay oâ the prison, remove the sintry, anâ then go quietly to yer bed wid five hundred pound in goold benathe yar hid to drame on.â
To add weight to his proposal he drew forth the bag of nuggets from one of his capacious coat pockets and held it up to view.
âItâs not enough,â said Gashford, with a stern gruffness of tone and look which sank the petitionerâs hopes below zero.
âAh! then, Muster Gashford,â said Flinders, with the deepest pathos, âitâs yer own mother would plade wid ye for the poor boyâs life, av she was hereâthink oâ that. Sure heâs young and inexparienced, anâ itâs the first offince heâs iver committedââ
âNo, not the firstâ interrupted Gashford.
âThe first that I knows on,â returned Flinders.
âTell meâdoes Westly know of this proposal of yours?â
âNo sor, he doesnât.â
âAh, I thought not. With his religious notions, it would be difficult for him to join in an attempt to bribe me to stop the course of justice.â
âWell, sor, youâre not far wrong, for Muster Westly had bin havinâ a sort oâ tussle wid his conscience on that very pint.
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