Ronicky Doone's Treasure by Max Brand (top fiction books of all time .txt) đ
- Author: Max Brand
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âNow, about a month after this Whitwell disappeared, and they didnât find him for a long time. And he stayed away so long that Moon knew he had quit the band. After a while they pick up his trail and find him not far from Cosslettâs cabin. And there they find him dragging the lake!
âItâs easy to figure what he was doing. He was trying to get his hands on that iron box of old Cosslettâs and he wanted to get it for himself and not have to share up with the band. Moon let him stay on there for a month, hoping that maybe Whitwell would find the box; and then theyâd kill Whitwell and take the box from him. But Whitwell didnât have any luck, it seemed, so finally Moon came to me and gave me the job of killing Whitwell.
âI tried to beg out of it, but there was nothing to do but go and kill or else get killed myself. That was the rule under Jack Moon, and thatâs the rule under him still.
âWhen I reached Cunningham Lake, I found that Whitwell was gone; but I picked up a fresh trail and followed it two days. It brought me up at last to an old deserted camp, and there I nailed Whitwell. There wasnât anything to it. He was sound asleep in a chair. When he woke up, I had my gun shoved under his chin.
âWell, he didnât even so much as blink. He just sat up and grinned at me. First thing he said was: âIâm ready to divvy up, if thatâs what you want. â
â âDivvy up on what?â I asked him.
â âThe box, â says he. âI found it. â
âThat took my breath. Iâd heard so much from Moon, he seemed so sure that that box held the clue to the treasure, that I gaped at Whitwell. He went on to talk smooth and easy. He figured that Iâd come along for him. He admitted that I had him, and that I could blow his head off, but what was the good? I told him, and I told him true, that I couldnât kill him, that the job had been forced on me, and that I hated Moon and the rest of his band. That was music to Whitwell. He told me the whole story right off. Heâd found the box by dragging. But it was heavy; weighed forty pounds, even if it was small. He tried to break it open, but he didnât have a sledge hammer; and while he was trying to smash the lock against a rock he saw somebody coming up the river road. He took his glasses and made out that it was me.
âHe knew, of course, why I was after him. He saddled and jumped onto his horse. But he couldnât take that heavy box with him, so he left it behind at Cosslettâs house and then tore off across the hills. What he intended to do was to shake me off the trail, get some giant powder, return and blow up the box, and then see what was to be seen.
âNow he offered to share everything with me. I thanked him, and we were shaking hands to seal the bargain when a gun was fired through the window, and Whitwell was shot out of his chair.
âOf course Moon had just been trying me out, and when he sent me on the trail he sent a tried man after me to see what I did. He had orders to simply kill me if I tried to dodge the work. And that was what his man tried to do, because the second Whitwell spilled out of his chair, another shot was sent at me and just clipped through my hair. I dropped to the floor beside Whitwell. My ear was close to his lips. I heard him whisper: âUnder the veranda, â and then he was dead.
âIn the meantime, the front door of the cabin opened, and big Si Treat came in. He figured that heâd killed us both with those two shots, from the way weâd both dropped. There was nothing for it but to get him out of the way. I shot for his legs, saw him go down, and then I scrambled through the door and rode like mad for Cunningham Lake.
âBut I never got there. Treat hadnât come alone. Moon and two others were with him, and they rode like devils to cut me off. They did it and turned me into the south mountains. For a month they hunted me, and for a month I managed to keep out of bullet range. By that time I was away south, and I saw that the country was too hot for me. I could never get back to Jerry. Theyâd watch around her and lay for me. There was only one thing left and that was to get as far away as I could, start to work, and support Jerry.
âI couldnât send for her, because the minute she left that devil Moon would trail her to me. I just had to live where I was and work and send her the money to live on. And thatâs what I did. Ten years of it, lad, without ever seeing her face. But I gave her enough for an education. Then when she was independent I made up my mind that Iâd come back and risk the chance to get Cosslettâs gold. I came back then, told Jerry simply that I was in danger from Moon and his band, and started to plan to get to Cunningham Lake and Cosslettâs old shack. But before I got well started, you know what happened. You arrived in time to drag me out to safety. You arrived in time to give me a fighting chance at that money â and give yourself a chance at the same thing!â
âAnd Jerry knows â â
âOnly that weâre trying to get that iron box. She knows the story behind that, and how Moon killed the old man. She knows that I canât call down the law on the head of Moon because there are complications; but just what those complications are, she canât say. Is it all clear to you now, Ronicky, just how we stand?â
âAll clear, I guess,â said Doone. âBut it looks to me as though thereâs a trail of crimson, spilled all around that gold of Cosslettâs. First men were killed so that he could get his hands on it. Then other gents were bumped off because they were his agents. Then Cosslett was killed because he had the gold; and then several other gents were killed because they were trying to find out where Cosslett hid the stuff. Now here we go, you and me, and take your girl with us; and all three of us walk up and rap at the same door. Well, Dawn, it looks like black business to me!â
âYouâre losing heart, Ronicky?â asked the elder man gloomily.
âIâll stay with it as long as the next man,â declared Ronicky. âOne thing Iâd like to know. Wonât Moon suspect that weâre heading for Cosslettâs old shack? Wonât he be apt to drive straight for that place and wait for us there?â
âItâs a chance,â said Hugh Dawn, âbut thatâs a chance we got to take. Moon donât know Whitwellâs secret. Iâm the only one that knows it except you and Jerry.â
âBut if he strikes around blind for the trail and doesnât find it,â said Ronicky, âhe might start straight for Cosslettâs, and then weâd simply be running into the trap. Besides, maybe he guesses that you know something.â
âHe guesses that Whitwell knew something, and that Whitwell told me. What it is, he canât guess. But if heâs at Cosslettâs â then thatâs fate. And if fateâs aginâ us, well be beat any way we look at it. But we wonât be beat, son. I feel lucky! We can get to Cosslettâs inside of two hours of hard riding. And Moon ainât apt to get there as quick as that. Then a look under the veranda â â
âBut what if somebody else has looked there in the last ten years?â
âNot a chance. That veranda was built close to the ground. If Whitwell put it there, he must have put it there because he knew nobodyâd look there.â
âThen, Hugh, well start.â
âYes. Jerry has rested enough by this time!â
It seemed to Ronicky that there was more than an ordinary admixture of superstition in the nature of Hugh Dawn. If fate aided him, he would get Cosslettâs gold. If fate were against him, he would get death instead. So he went ahead blindly trusting in luck. He had made only one sensible provision to meet danger, and that was enlisting the aid of another man, Ronicky himself. The more Ronicky thought of the affair, the more of a wild-goose chase it seemed to him.
Yet he knew that it was madness to attempt to dissuade Hugh Dawn, and he dared not let the big fellow go on with his daughter to face Moon. And face the outlaw chief he knew they would, before the adventure was finished.
Returning to the cabin, they found Geraldine Dawn already up, and they found, moreover, that she had reached the conclusion to which they had already come. She dared not go back and live alone in the big house of her father; a thousand times she would rather continue the trip and face whatever lay before them, than make the return.
Only one thing upset her â what would the people of Trainor say when she did not appear to teach the school? But there was, in the village, a girl who had substituted for her once before during an illness. Therefore the classes would be taken care of. With that scruple cared for â how slight a thing it seemed to Ronicky Doone! â she was ready to face the adventure.
They started on within a few minutes, swerving now to the left and striking through rougher mountain trails. Hugh Dawn had correctly estimated the distance. In the early evening they came upon Cosslettâs cabin.
It stood in an imposing place on the cliff above Cunningham Lake. On all sides the ground sloped back. There were no trees near, though in all other directions the forest stepped down from the mountaintops to the very edge of the lake.
âYou see?â exclaimed Hugh Dawn. âThe old boy picked a place where he could look on all sides of him. He wouldnât trust a forest where gents could sneak up on him.â
Ronicky smiled to himself. Such reasoning simply proved that Dawn had already convinced himself, and was willing to pick up minute circumstances and weave them into the train of proof.
They climbed the slope and found that ten years had dealt hard with the little house. The roof was smashed in. The sides caved out, as though the pressure of time were overcoming them. But the first place to which they ran, the veranda, showed no opening beneath its floor and the ground.
Hugh Dawn looked at it in despair. The ground, indeed, was flush with the top of the flooring.
âI must of remembered wrong,â he muttered, âbut it seems to me that in the old days they used to be a space between the floor and the hill. I dunno how this come!â
Ronicky had been surveying the site carefully.
âMaybe the house had settled,â he suggested. âWeâll tear up the boards and see.â
It was easily done. The rotted wood gave readily around the nail-heads, and in a minute or two every board had been torn up.
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