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To Win or to Die by George Manville Fenn PDF

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The Project Gutenberg EBook of To Win or to Die, by George Manville Fenn This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org Title: To Win or to Die A Tale of the Klondike Gold Craze Author: George Manville Fenn Illustrator: Paul Hardy Release Date: May 8, 2007 [EBook #21377] Language: English Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TO WIN OR TO DIE *** Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England George Manville Fenn "To Win or to Die" Chapter One. A break-down. “It’s a lie! I don’t and I won’t believe it.” The speaker half whispered that, and then he shouted, “Do you hear?” There was a pause, and then from the face of a huge white snow-cliff there came back the word “hear.” “Well done, echo!” cried the speaker. “Echo,” came back. “Thankye; that’s quite cheering; anything’s better than that horrible silence. W hat do they say? W hen a man gets in the habit of talking to himself it’s a sign that he is going mad? Once more, it’s a lie! A man would go mad in this awful solitude if he didn’t hear some one speaking. Snow, snow, snow, and rock and mountain; and ugh! how cold! Pull up, donkey! jackass! idiot! or you’ll freeze to death.” The speaker was harnessed by a looped rope to a small, well-packed sledge, after the fashion of one who tracks about along the Thames; but how different here! No sunny river, no verdant flowing mead or hanging summer wood, but winter, stern winter in its wildest, and the heavy sledge, in answer to the tugging at the rope, now sticking fast amongst the heaped-up stones frozen together in a mass, now suddenly gliding down sharp slopes and tripping its owner up, so that again and again, during an awful day’s tramp, he had fallen heavily. But only to struggle up, shake the snow from his fur-lined coat, and continue his journey onward towards the golden land where the nuggets lay in wondrous profusion waiting the bold adventurer’s coming—heaped-up, almost fabulous riches that had lain undiscovered since the beginning of the world. He, the toiler, dragging that sledge, in which were carefully packed his gun, ammunition, spare clothes, blankets, stores, and sleeping-bag of fur, had started at daylight that morning from the last outpost of civilisation—a miserable shanty at the top of the tremendous pass he had surmounted with the help of the men who occupied the shanty and called themselves guides; and then, after repacking his sledge and trusting to the landmarks ahead and a pocket compass, he had boldly set off, ready to dare every peril, for he was young, sanguine, well-armed, strong, and nerved by hope and the determination to succeed. It was only a brave struggle over the mountains, and then down into the river valley beyond, to leave the winter behind with its pain and misery, and meet the welcome of the summer sunshine and—the gold. That morning it was winter indeed; but the adventurer’s heart was warm, and the way through the mountains was plain, while the exertion sent the blood tingling through his veins till he glowed as the rugged miles were mastered. Then there was the halt and a seat on the sledge for a hasty meal upon the tough provisions; but how delicious every mouthful was! Then forward again, refreshed for the journey onward, to some snugly sheltered spot where he could camp for the night and sleep in his fur bag, regardless of any number of degrees of frost. But as the afternoon wore on, the sledge seemed to grow more heavy, the way wilder and more stern, and the stoppages frequent. He unpacked and rested and refreshed himself. Then he grew cheery once more. “Lightens the load and me too,” he said with a laugh, as he thrust his head through the loop and tugged at the sledge; but it did not seem lighter. It grew more heavy, and the obstacles were terrible to surmount. But he knew he was in the right track through the pathless waste of heaped-up snow. There was no mistaking that awful gorge, with the rocks piled up like Titanic walls on either side. He knew that he could not go wrong. All he had to do was to persevere, and he plodded on. “Never mind if it’s only yards instead of miles surmounted,” he muttered. “They are so many yards nearer the winning post.” At last, as he fought his way on, with his unwonted exertions beginning to tell mentally and bodily, he broke out talking wildly to fight back the horrible sensation of depression, and was brought to a standstill, the sledge having jammed between two blocks of ice-covered rock; and he stood for some minutes gazing round hopelessly at the fast-dimming scene, which had looked picturesque in the morning, but appeared awful now. “I ought to have had a companion,” he muttered, “if it had only been a dog.” He stood still, staring at the precipices on either side, whose chasms were beginning to look black; then at his jammed-in sledge; and he felt that he must drag it out and go on again, for night was coming on, and he could not camp where he was. Then as he was wearily and slowly stooping down to drag the sledge back, he made a sudden bound as if electrified, tried to run, tripped, and fell heavily. For all at once there was a roar like thunder, a terrible rushing sound, the echoes of the mountains seemed to have been let loose, and his hair began to bristle, while a cold perspiration gathered on his face as he listened to the sounds dying away in rumbling whispers. “Away up to the right,” he said to himself as he gazed in that direction, realising that it was a snow- fall. Thousands of tons had gone down somewhere out of sight; but he was safe, and giving the sledge a jerk, he set it free, guided it over the snow, and prepared for another start. But that avalanche had somewhat unnerved him, for he had been looking out for a place to camp, and it now seemed madness to think of coming to a halt there. “Must find a safer place,” he thought; and now fresh dangers began to suggest themselves. Would there be wolves in these mountains? Certainly there must be bears; and dragging off one of his big fur gloves, he took out and examined his revolver, before replacing it in its leather holster. He glanced, too, at his rifle in its woollen case, bound on the top of the loaded sledge. “Bah! how cowardly one can turn!” he muttered. “Of course, there will be all those troubles to face. I’m fagged—that’s what it is. Now, then, old fellow, gee up! I’ll camp in the first sheltered nook I see; I’m sure to find one soon. Then supper in the warm bag and a good night’s rest. Sleep? I could lie down and sleep here in the snow. Pull up! That’s the way. I wonder how much gold I could drag on a sledge like this?” For quite another hour he toiled on, and perhaps got over a quarter of a mile, always gazing anxiously ahead for a suitable shelter, but looking in vain. Then he utterly broke down, catching his foot against a block which the darkness hid from his fast- dimming eyes; and with a sob of misery as he saved himself from striking his face, at the expense of a heavy wrench to one wrist, he lay perfectly still, feeling a strange drowsy sensation creeping over him. “This will not do,” he cried aloud in alarm, for he knew that giving way to such a feeling in the snow meant resigning himself to death; and he painfully rose to his knees, and then remained, staring wildly before him, wondering whether he was already dreaming. For not far away, flashing and quivering in reflections from the precipice wall on his left, there was a light which kept rising and falling. No dream, but the reflected light of a camp fire. Others, bound upon the same mission as himself, must be close at hand; and staggering now to his feet, he placed his gloved hands to his lips and gave forth a loud echoing “Ahoy!” The next moment his heart beat high with joy, and the horrible perils of frost and darkness in that unsheltered place faded away into nothingness, for his hail was answered from close at hand. “Ahoy! Who is it?” came echoing back. “Help!” shouted the adventurer; and then he sank upon his sledge with heart throbbing and a strange giddiness attacking him. Chapter Two. Fallen among thieves. “Hullo, there!” cried a rough voice. “W hy don’t you come on?” and the next minute a couple of figures seemed to start out of the darkness. “I’m fagged out. Can you lend me a hand?” “Lend you a hand? Yes,” said another voice. “Where’s your mate?” “I’m alone.” “Alone? No pal with you?” “No, and my sledge has stuck fast. Will you help me as far as your fire?” “Got a sled, hev you? All right, mate. Where’s the line? Lay hold, Leggy, while I give it a hyste. That’s your sort. Come on.” It seemed like a dream, and as if all the peril and horror had passed away, as the two men dragged the sledge along and the adventurer staggered on beside them, till they halted in the ruddy light of a great fire, lit at the foot of a stupendous wall of glistening ice-covered rock. The fire of pine-boughs crackled and flashed, and lit up the face of a third man, a big red-bearded fellow, who was kneeling down tending the embers and watching a camp kettle slung from three sticks, the contents of which were beginning to steam. “Here we are, Beardy,” said one of the rescue party. “Comp’ny gent on his travels.” The kneeling man scowled at the speaker, and then put his hand behind him as if from instinct, but dropped it as the other said: “It’s all right, Beardy. Number four’s empty, isn’t it? Because if it aren’t, you’ll have to give up your room.” The big red-bearded man showed some prominent yellow teeth in a grin, nodded, and pushed a blazing brand under the kettle. “Sit down, youngster,” said the first speaker. “Maybe you’ll jyne us at supper?” “I shall be very glad.” “Right you are, and welcome! ’Aven’t brought anything with you, I suppose?” “Yes, I have some cake and bacon.” “Well done, young un. Get it out,” said the red-bearded man, and, recovered somewhat by his warm reception, the young adventurer began to unlash the load upon the sledge, the two men who had come to his aid eagerly joining in, their eyes glistening as they examined the various objects that were set free. “Going yonder after the yaller stuff?” said the owner of the red beard, as they squatted round the fire. “Yes.” “And all alone, too?” The traveller nodded, and held his half-numbed hands in the warm glow, as he furtively glanced round at his companions, whose aspect was by no means reassuring. “Well,” continued the last speaker, “I dunno what Yankee Leggat thinks, and I dunno what Joey Bredge has got to say, but what I says is this. You’re a-going to do what’s about as silly a thing as a young man can do.” “Why?” “W hy?” said the man fiercely; “because you’re going to try and do what no chap can do all alone. You’ve got a good kit and some money, I s’pose; but you don’t think you’re going to get to the gold stuff, do you?” “Of course I do.” The man showed his yellow teeth in an unpleasant grin, and winked at his companions. “And all alone, eh? ’Tain’t to be done, lad. You’ll be stuck up before you yet half-way there by Injuns, or some o’ they Yankee shacks yonder, stripped o’ everything you’ve got, and set adrift, eh, Joey?” The man addressed nodded and grunted. “What should you say he ought to do, Leggy?” “Make his hay while the sun shines,” said the other. “He’s tumbled into a bit o’ luck, and if he knows what he’s about he’ll just stop along with us. We don’t want him, seeing as our party’s made up, but we don’t want to be hard on a lad as is a bit hign’rant o’ what he’s got to go through.” “That’s so,” put in the man addressed as Joey. “You can’t do it, mate. W hy, if it hadn’t been for us you’d ha’ been a hicicle afore morning, if the bears and wolves hadn’t tucked you up warm inside. You’ve got to take a good offer. Now, Beardy, bring out the tins; that soup’s done by this time.” The traveller made no reply, but leaned a little more over the fire, wishing that he had braved the dangers of the bitter frost and snow, and feeling that he had been too ready to break down at the first encounter with trouble. For the more he saw of his new companions the less he, liked them, and he was not long in making up his mind what to do. By this time three big tin cups, which fitted one into the other, had been produced, and filled from the steaming contents of the kettle. “We didn’t expect company,” said the cook, “so two of us’ll have to do with one tin, and have it filled twice. You and me’ll join, Joey, and let squire have my tin.” “No, thank you,” was the reply, made quietly and firmly. “I will not intrude on your good nature farther. I was a bit done up, but the fire has set me right again, and I’m quite ready to take the risks of the journey alone.” “Oh, that’s it, is it?” said the man gruffly. “I’ll get you to let me rest here by the fire for an hour to eat my bit of bread and meat, and then I’ll camp near you and go on again as I came. I shall manage, I daresay.” “Are we going to stand this, mates?” cried the red-bearded man fiercely. “No!” came in answer, as all sprang up as if by a preconcerted signal. “You misunderstand me, gentlemen,” said the adventurer quietly, though his heart beat fast with the knowledge that the suspicions which had haunted him were correct. “I am much obliged for your kindness, and I want to save you trouble, that is all.” “Hear that, lads? We aren’t good enough for the likes of him. All right, then, off he goes.” “Our company aren’t good enough, eh? Then off you goes.” “Very well,” said the young man, rising quickly; “but there is no need for a quarrel. I will go at once, and I thank you for what you have done.” “But we haven’t done yet,” cried the man addressed as Leggy. “Now, boys.” There was a sudden rush, and in an instant the young fellow was seized and thrown upon his face; then, in spite of his desperate struggles, he was turned over, his weapon seized, and everything of value dragged from his pockets. “Quiet!” snarled the leader in the attack, “or I’ll soon quiet you.” “You dogs! You scoundrels! Help! Thieves!” “Louder, my lad, louder. Call police: there’s some over yonder in Canady. Haul off that fur coat, lads. It’ll just fit me, and I’ll have his cap and gloves. That’s right. Now then, my whippersnapper, off you go!” Set free, the young man, in spite of his bubbling rage, felt the madness of further resistance, and the uselessness of wasting breath; so he sprang to his sledge, to begin lashing it fast with the rope. “Hands off there!” roared the chief scoundrel, taking aim at him. “Now then, run for it, and get yourself warm before we begin to shoot.” “I’m going,” panted the victim, “but I must fasten up my traps.” “You ain’t got no traps. They’re ourn,” cried the man. “We give you a chance for your life, so cut at once.” “W hat! Send me away like this?” cried the young man, aghast. “It’s murder! Let me have my blankets, man.” “Run!” shouted the scoundrel, and he shook his pistol. “You coward!” cried the victim. “Run!” was roared again. Feeling that the gang into whose hands he had fallen probably meant to hide their crime by silencing him for ever, the victim turned and ran for his life, and as he ran he felt a sharp pang in the arm. A heavy fall checked the victim’s panic flight, and as he lay panting and wet with the perspiration which had started from every pore, he realised that one of the bullets had taken effect, ploughing his left arm, which throbbed as if being seared with a red-hot iron. But the bodily agony was as nothing to the mental anguish which he suffered. Death was before him if he lay there—death in a painless, insidious form, no doubt; but still, death in all its horror to one so young and strong. He knew that he must rise and keep moving if he wished to prolong his existence, and he rose to his feet, raging now against the cowardly gang, and more against himself. “I was a fool and a coward,” he groaned. “W hy didn’t I fight for my life? Great heaven! W hat shall I do?” He paused for a moment, meaning to turn back and make an attack upon his enemies. But, unarmed as he was, he knew it was madness, and he tramped on through the darkness in the faint hope of finding help, but with his heart sinking as he grasped the fact that fate or the management of the gang had driven him onward farther into the defile, and away from the aid he might have found if he had made his way back to his morning’s starting-place. Fully satisfied that death would be his portion, he struggled on aimlessly till utterly exhausted; and then he paused, breathless, to go over once more the scene by the glowing fire, and ask himself whether he had not been to blame for displaying his distrust after the way in which he had been rescued. But he could only come back to his old way of thinking—that he had fallen among thieves of the worst type, and that he owed his life to the prompt way in which he had escaped. Recovering his breath somewhat, he stood listening as he gazed back through the darkness; but all was still. There were no signs of pursuit, so, taking out his handkerchief, he folded it into a bandage, and with one hand and his teeth contrived to bind and tie it tightly round his wound so as to stop the bleeding, which was beginning to cause a strange sensation of faintness. He had been hot with exertion when he stopped, but now the feeling of exhilaration caused by his escape died out as rapidly as the heat. A deadly chill attacked mind and body, for his position seemed crushing. It was horrible beyond bearing, and for the moment he was ready to throw himself down in his despair. The intense cold would, he knew, soon bring on a sensation of drowsiness, which would result in sleep, and there would be no pain—nothing but rest from which there would be no awakening; and then— Then the coward feeling was driven back in a brave effort—a last struggle for life. The cold was intense, the darkness thicker than ever, for the sides of the ravine had been closing in till only a narrow strip of faintly marked sky was visible, while at every few steps taken slowly the poor fellow stumbled over some inequality and nearly fell. At times he struck himself heavily, but he was beyond feeling pain, and in his desperation these hindrances acted merely as spurs to fresh effort, for he was on the way to safety. At any minute he felt that he might catch sight of another gleam of light, the camp fire of some other adventurer, and he knew that some of those on the way to the great Eldorado must be men who would help and even protect a fellow-creature in his dire state of peril. But he knew that this intense feeling of energy could not last, that he was rapidly growing weaker, and that ere many minutes had elapsed he would once more stumble and fall, and this time the power to rise again would have passed away. Was it too late to return to his enemies and make an appeal for his life? he asked himself at last. They might show him mercy, and life was so sweet. But as these thoughts flickered through his brain in the half delirium fast deadening his power of thinking coherently, he once more saw the scene by the fire, and the faces of the three scoundrels stood out clearly with that relentless look, that cruel bestial glare of the eye, which told him that an appeal would but hasten his end. “Better fall into the hands of God than men like them,” he groaned, and setting his teeth hard he tottered on a few yards farther, with the snow growing less deep, the ground more stony. Then the end came sooner than he expected, for his feet caught against something stretched across his way, and he fell heavily, uttering a cry of horror as he struggled to his knees. For it was no block of stone, no tree-trunk torn from some shelf in the precipice above; he grasped the fact in an instant that he had tripped over a sledge similar to his own, to fall headlong upon the ghastly evidence of what was to be his own fate; for stiff and cold in the shallow snow, his fingers had come upon the body of some unfortunate treasure-seeker, and as, half-wild with horror, he forced himself to search with his hands to discover whether some spark of life might yet be burning, it was to find that whoever it was must have laid calmly down in his exhaustion, clasping his companion to his breast to give and receive the warmth that might save both their lives. Vain effort. The man’s breast was still for ever, and the faithful dog that had nestled closely with his muzzle in his master’s neck was stiff and stark. “God help me!” groaned the adventurer, clasping his hands and letting them fall softly on the dead; “is this the ending of my golden dream?” Chapter Three. In the dark. The horrible chill of impending death, the bright light of reason, and the intense desire to live, roused the half-stunned adventurer to action. Die? Like that? No!—when salvation was offered to him in this way. It was horrible, but it was for life. There, close by him, slightly powdered with snow, was the unfortunate’s sledge, and in an instant he was tearing at the rope which bound its load to the framework. He could hardly believe his good fortune, for as the rope fell from the packages the first thing he set free was a fur-lined coat, possibly one which the dead man was too much exhausted to assume. Suffering keenly from the cold, this was put on at once; and then, continuing the search, it was to find that a rifle was bound along one side, balanced by tools on the other. Then there were blankets and stores similar, as far as he could judge, to those with which his own sledge had been laden. The warmth afforded by the thick garment and the exertion increased the thrill of returning energy. For he was no longer helpless to continue his journey. It could be no act of injustice to the dead to take possession of the means of saving his own life; and now all thought of giving up without making a desperate struggle was completely gone. Soon after a fresh thrill of returning energy swept through him, and, turning quickly back to where the dead were lying, he knelt there, hesitating for a few moments before, with his determination increasing, he softly thrust the dog aside, and felt about the dead man’s waist. He shuddered as his hands came in contact with the icy feeling of cold, but it was for life, and a feeling of joy shot through him, for it was as he had hoped. In a few minutes he had unfastened a buckle, turned the body over slightly, and that which he sought to obtain yielded to the steady pull he gave. He had drawn free the dead man’s belt, bringing with it his revolver in its little holster and the pouchful of cartridges. That seemed to give new life to him as he buckled the belt about his waist. Then, taking out the pistol, he felt it in the dark, to find that it was loaded in every chamber, and that the lock worked easily and well. The pistol replaced in the belt, the young man remained thinking, with all his energy seeming to have returned. W hat was he to do next? There was food of some kind on the sledge, and he must eat. There were blankets, and with them and the sledge for shelter he must rest and sleep. There was the dead man and his faithful dog, but their near presence brought no feeling of horror. He felt that he could kneel down by the poor fellow and offer up a prayer for His mercies, and then lie down to sleep in perfect trust of awakening at daybreak, for he was no longer suffering from exhaustion, and hardly felt the cold. “But not yet—not yet,” he muttered, and a faint sound broke the silence as he stood there, his teeth grinding softly together, while his next words, uttered half aloud, told the direction his thoughts had taken. “The cowardly dogs!” he exclaimed. “Three to one, and him unarmed. But not now—not now.” A brief search brought his hands in contact with a canvas satchel-bag, in which were ship’s biscuits, and one of these he took. It would suffice. Breaking it and beginning to eat, he set off at once on the back track to execute his daring project, one which made him glow to his finger-tips. “Better go on,” he said with a mocking laugh. “Yes, but not yet. They’re cowards—such scoundrels always are—and the darkness will magnify the number of the attack. “Bah! talking to myself again; but I’m not going mad. I can’t go on without letting them taste something of what they have given me.” He tramped on slowly, but the return journey seemed less difficult, and he wondered now that he should feel so fresh and glowing with a spreading warmth. It was as dark as ever, but he had no fear of not finding his way; and sooner than he expected, and just as he was finishing the last scrap of hard biscuit, he caught sight of the faint light of the fire from which he had been driven. The sight of it sent fresh vigour through his limbs, and his plan was soon made. He would keep on till there was the risk of being heard, and then creep closer till well within shot, and his sleeping enemies thrown up by the fire, which they had evidently made up well before settling themselves down for the night. He felt sure that at the first report they would spring up and run for their lives, and he meant to fire at each if he had time, and scare them, for he felt disposed to show as much mercy as he would to a pack of savage wolves. But matters were not to fall out exactly as he had calculated. He tramped steadily on, with the fire growing brighter, and at last he took out the revolver to examine it by touch once more, as he walked on more swiftly now, meaning to go forward a hundred yards or so and then proceed more cautiously, so as to make sure the enemy was asleep. All at once he stopped short, startled. The enemy was not asleep, for he saw a dark shadow pass before the glowing light. The adventurer stopped short for a few moments, but not in hesitation. It was merely to alter his plan of attack; but the next minute all planning was cast to the winds, for there rang out on the night air a wild cry for help—such an appeal as he had himself uttered so short a time before. The cry was repeated, sending a thrill of excitement through the listener, and telling its own tale. To the hearer it was as plain as if he had been told that the gang of ruffians had waylaid another unfortunate, who was about to share his own fate. He rushed forward at once, and as he ran and stumbled he could see that a desperate struggle was going on, figures in fierce contention passing in front of and once trampling through the fire, whose embers were kicked and scattered in all directions. Suddenly two figures stepped aside into the full light, leaving two others wrestling together; and this was the opportunity needed. Their first victim could see plainly that the former were enemies, and stopping short when about twenty yards away, he fired. Both turned to gaze in the direction from which the flash and report had come. They were in time to see another flash. Another report raised the echoes, and they turned and fled. Then the struggle ceased, and the adventurer saw another figure disappearing into the darkness after his two companions. As he dashed off the young fellow rushed up in time to seize the victim, who staggered helplessly, trampling among the burning embers, among which he would have fallen but for the willing hands which dragged him aside, and lowered him down, before their owner began to kick about and scatter the fire, which hissed and smoked and steamed, as snow was heaped over, and raised a veil to hide the pair from their enemies while the bright light was dying out. The next act was to find out whether the enemy were yet in the vicinity. The adventurer advanced for some distance into the darkness, but all was still. Satisfied that he could not be seen, the young man went on for some little distance; but it was evident that the sudden attack had done its work, and the party had fled for their lives. “The question is, will they recover themselves and come back?” he muttered. “Well, we must be on our guard. Two in the right against three in the wrong. Those are fair odds. Two in the right! Suppose it is only one.” He hurried back towards the scene of the encounter, guided by the faintly glowing embers lying here and there, and the dark, blinding wood-smoke which was borne towards him by the light icy wind which came down the defile. “Suppose they have killed him!” “W ho are you? But whoever you are,” came in a hoarse whisper, “if it hadn’t been for you those ruffians would have settled me.” “Thank heaven, then, I was in time. Can you help me trample out the rest or this fire?” “Hadn’t we better escape? You might help me drag my sled into a place of safety.” “There is no place of safety near,” was the reply; “and it’s cold enough to freeze us to death. We had better stay here.” “But we dare not light a fire; they would see us, and come and pick us off.” “I don’t think the cowardly hounds will dare to come back.” “But they might, and I dare not risk it.” “Are you hurt?” “Not seriously, but wrenched and strained in the struggle. Can you understand what I say? I don’t know my own voice.” “Yes, I can hear you. What is it—a cold?” “No; I was right enough an hour ago. That red-bearded dog caught me by the throat. He was trying to strangle me. I fired at random, and then my senses were going, but I heard your shots. He has quite taken away my voice. Where is your hand, sir?” “Here: what do you want?” “Just to make mine speak to it in a friendly grip. God bless you, sir! you’ve saved my life. I can’t say more now.” “Don’t. There: we have no light to betray us now.” Chapter Four. Nature’s mistake. “But hadn’t we better go on?” “No: warmth is everything here. The ground is hot where the fire was, and we’ll camp there till morning. I saw you had a sledge. We’ll drag that to one side for shelter.” “And there is theirs, too,” was said huskily. “Mine!” was the reply. “The scoundrels inveigled me into staying with them, and I had a narrow escape.” “Hah! Just as they served me. I saw their light and came up, and they professed to be friends. I didn’t like the look of them, but one can’t pick one’s company out here, and a good fire was very tempting.” “Hist!” The warning was followed by the clicking of pistol locks, after which the pair listened patiently for some minutes. “Nothing. Here, let’s get the two sledges one on either side of the hot ground. One will be a shelter, the other a breastwork to fire over if the scoundrels come back. Besides, the breastwork will keep in the heat. We are bound to protect ourselves.” “All right,” was the reply, in an answering whisper, and the pair dragged the two sledges into position, and then, allowing for the dank odour of the quenched wood, found that they had provided themselves with a snugly warm shelter, adding to their comfort by means of blankets and a waterproof sheet, which they spread beneath them. This took time, for every now and then they paused to listen or make a reconnaissance in search of danger; but at last all was done, and the question was who should keep the first watch. “I’ll do that,” said the last comer. “I couldn’t lie down to sleep if I tried; my throat gives me so much pain. It feels swollen right up. I’ll take the first watch—listen, one ought to say. W hy, I can’t even see my hand.” “It is terribly dark here in this gulch,” was the whispered reply. “The mountains run up perpendicularly on either side. But I couldn’t sleep after all I’ve gone through to-night. My nerves are all on the jar. I’ll watch with you.” “Listen.” “Well, listen, then. Watch with our ears. Can you hear me when I whisper?” “Oh, yes.” “But they will not come back, I’m sure.” “So much the better for them; but I hope that the miserable, treacherous hounds will meet their reward. So they attacked you just in the same way?” “Not till I told them I would not stay; and I was sorry afterwards, feeling that perhaps I had insulted them by my suspicions. Of course, I did not know their character then.” “No. Well, we know it now. It is a specimen, I suppose, of the scum we shall find yonder.” “I am afraid so.” “You are going after gold, of course?” “Who would be here if he were not?” “Exactly. I hope the game is going to be worth the candle. Suppose we two stick together. You won’t try to choke me the first time you see me nodding off to sleep for the sake of my sledge and stores?” “Oh, I’ll promise you that.” “It was a startler. I was dog tired.” “Eh?” “I was dog tired, and dropping off in the warmth of the fire into a golden dream of being where the nuggets were piled up all around me; and I was just going to pick up one, when a great snake darted at me and coiled itself round my throat. Then I was awake, to find it was a real devil snake in the shape of that red-bearded ruffian.” “That was the one the others called Beardy. But don’t you talk so much: your voice is growing worse.” “Can’t help it, old fellow. I must talk. I’m so excited. Feel the cold?” “Oh, no. I’m quite warm with the glow which comes up through the sheet. A good idea, that was, of bringing it on your sledge.” “Yes, but it’s heavy. I say, though, what an experience this is, here in the pitchy darkness. Ah! Look out!” The pistols clicked again, for from somewhere close at hand there was a faint rustling sound, followed by a heavy thud, as if some one had stumbled and fallen in the snow. The pair listened breathlessly in the black darkness, straining their eyes in the direction from whence the sound had come; but all was perfectly still. They listened again minute after minute, and there was a dull throbbing sound which vibrated through them; but it was only the heavy beating of their own hearts. Then they both started violently, for there was another dull heavy thud, and some one hissed as if drawing in his breath to suppress the strong desire to utter a cry of pain. It was horrible in that intense blackness to crouch there with pistols held ready directed towards the spot where whoever it was had fallen, for there could be no doubt whatever. There had been the fall, not many yards from where they knelt, and they listened vainly for the rustling that must accompany the attempt to get up again. At last the faint rustling came, and the temptation to fire was almost too strong to be resisted. But they mastered it, and waited, both determined and strung up with the desire to mete out punishment to the cowardly miscreants who sought for their own gain to destroy their fellow-creatures. “Don’t fire till you are sure it is they,” each of the two young men thought. “It is impossible to take aim in this darkness.” And they waited till the rustling ended in a sort of whisper. Once more all was silent, and the suspense grew maddening, as they waited minutes which seemed like hours. But the enemy was evidently astir, for there was another whisper, and another—strange warning secretive whispers—and a sigh as of one in pain. At this one of the listeners thrust out a hand, and the other joined in an earnest grip, which told of mutual trust and determination to stand by each other to the death, making them feel that the terrible emergency had made them, not acquaintances of an hour’s length, but staunch friends, both strong and tried. Then they loosened the warm, manly grip, and were ready for the worst. For there was no longer any doubt: the enemy was close at hand, waiting the moment for the deadly rush. The only question was whether they should fire at once—not with the thought of hitting, but to teach the scoundrels how thoroughly they were on the alert, and in the hope of driving them into taking to flight once more. But they doubted. A few shots had done this once, but now that the miscreants had had time to recover from their panic, would it answer again? Thud! thud! in front, and then a far heavier one behind them. They could not hold out much longer. The enemy was creeping towards them. At this moment there was a tremendous crack, a hissing roar, and a terrific concussion, the defenders of the tiny fort being struck down behind their little breastwork. But this onslaught was not from the enemy they awaited. The ever-gathering snow from far above, loosened by the hot current of air ascending from the fire, had come down in one awful charge, and the marauders’ camp was buried in an instant beneath thousands of tons of snow. Chapter Five. Hand in hand. There was the sense of a terrible weight pressing the sufferers down, with their chests against the soft load bound upon the sledge in front; and utterly stunned, they lay for a time motionless, and almost breathless. Then one began to struggle violently, striving to draw himself back, and after a tremendous effort succeeding, to find that beneath him the snow was loose, there being a narrow space along by the side of the sledge, and that though his breath came short he could still breathe. He had hardly grasped this fact when the movement on his right told of a similar action going on, and he began to help his companion in misfortune, who directly after crouched down beside him, panting heavily, in the narrow space, which their efforts had, however, made wider. “Horrible!” panted the second at last. “An avalanche. Surely this does not mean death.” There was no reply, and in the awful darkness a hand was stretched out and an arm grasped. “Why don’t you say something?” whispered the speaker hoarsely. “What can I say, man? God only knows.” “But it is only snow. We must burrow our way out. Wait a moment. This way is towards the open valley.” “No, no; this. Beyond you is the wall of rock. Let me try.” For the next ten minutes there was the sound of one struggling to get through the snow, and then it ended with the hoarse panting of a man lying exhausted with his efforts. “Let me come and try now,” came in smothered accents. “It is of no use. The snow was loose at first, but farther on it is pressed together hard like ice. Try your way.” The scuffling and tearing commenced now to the right. “Yes; it’s quite loose now, and falls down. Ah! no good; here is the solid rock running up as far as I can reach.” “I can hardly breathe. It is growing hotter every moment.” “No; it is cooler here. I can reach right up and stand against the rock.” The speaker’s companion in the terrible peril crept over the snow to his side and rose to his feet, to find the air purer; and, like a drowning man who had raised his head for the moment above water, he drank in deep draughts of the cold, sweet air. “Hah!” he gasped at last hoarsely, after reaching up as high as he could, “the rock has saved us for the moment. The snow slopes away from it like the roof of a shed.” “Yes; if we had been a few feet farther from it we should have been crushed to death. Let’s try and tear a way along by the foot of the rock.” They tried hard in turn till they were utterly exhausted and lay panting; but the only result was that the loose snow beneath them became trampled down. No, not the only result; they increased the space within what was fast becoming a snow cavern, one of whose walls was the solid rocky side of the ravine. “Are we to die like this?” “Is this to be the end of all our golden hopes? Oh, heaven help us! W hat shall we do? The air is growing hotter; we have nearly exhausted it all, and suffocation is coming on fast. I can’t, I won’t die yet. Help! help! help!” Those three last words came in a hoarse faint wail that sounded smothered and strange. “Hush!” cried the other; “be a man. You are killing yourself. The air is not worse. I can breathe freely still.” There was a horrible pause, and then, in pitiful tones: “I am fighting down this fearful feeling of cowardice, but it is so hard—so hard to die so soon. Not twenty yet, and the bright world and all its hopeful promise before one. How can you keep like that? Are you not afraid to die?” “Yes,” came in a low, sad whisper; “but we must not die like this. Tell me you can breathe yet?” “Yes,” came in the husky, grating tones; “better and better now I am still.” “Then there is hope. We are on the track; others will come after a time, and we may be dug out.” “Hah! I dare not think it. I say.” “Yes?” “Do you think those wretches have been caught by the fall as well?” “If they were near they must have been.” “Yes, and we heard them.” “No, no,” sighed the other; “those were patches of snow falling that we heard.” There was silence then, save that twice over a soft whisper was heard, and then a low, deep sigh. “I say.” “Yes?” “I feel sure that air must come to us. I can breathe quite easily still.” “Yes.” “Then we must try and bear it for a time. I’m going to believe that we may be dug out. Shall we try to sleep, and forget our horrible position?” “Impossible, my lad. For me, that is. You try.” “No; you are right. I couldn’t sleep. But, yes, I can breathe better still. There must be air coming in from up above. Well, why don’t you speak? Say something, man.” “I cannot talk.” “You must—you shall, so as to keep from thinking of our being—oh, help! help! help!” “Man, man! don’t cry out in that horrible way;” and one shook the other fiercely, till he sobbed out, “Yes; go on. I am a coward; but the thought came upon me, and seemed to crush me.” “What thought? That we must die?” “No, no,” groaned the other in his husky voice; “that we are buried alive.” Once more there was silence, during which the elder and firmer grasped the hand of his brother in adversity. “Yes, yes,” he whispered, “it is horrible to think of; but for our manhood’s sake keep up, lad. We are not children, to be frightened of being in the dark.” “No; you are right.” “Here, help me sweep away the snow from under us. No, no. Here is the waterproof sheet. We can drag it out—yes, I can feel the sledges. Let’s drag out those blankets.” “No, no, don’t stir; you may bring down the snow roof upon our heads. I mean, yes. I’ll try and help you.” They worked busily for a few minutes, and then knelt together upon what felt like a soft couch. “There’s food, and the snow for water; it would be long before we should starve. W hy are you so silent now? Come, we must rest, and then try to cut our way out when the daylight comes.” “The daylight!” said the other, with a mocking laugh. “Yes; we may see a dim dawn to show us which way to tunnel.” “Ah, of course!” “Could you sleep now?” “No, no; we must talk, or I shall go off my head. That brute hurt me so, it has made me rather strange. Yes, I must talk. I say: God bless you, old fellow! You saved my life from those wretches, and now you’re keeping me from going mad. I say! The air is all right.” “Yes; I can breathe freely, and I am not cold.” “I am hot. I say, let’s talk. Tell me how you came to be here.” “Afterwards; the words would not come now. You tell me how you came.” “Yes; it will keep off the horrors; it’s like a romance, and now it does not seem to be true. And yet it is, and it happened just as if it were only yesterday. I never thought of coming out here. I was going to be a soldier.” He spoke in a hurried, excited way, and the listener heard him draw his breath sharply through his teeth from time to time, as if he shivered from nervous dread. “I was not fit for a soldier. Fate knows best. See what a coward I am.” “I thought you brave.” “What!” “For the way in which you have fought and mastered the natural dread; but go on.” “Oh, no; it seems nonsense to talk about my troubles at a time like this.” “It is not. Go on, if you can without hurting yourself more.” “I’ll go on because it will hurt me more. It will give me something else to think of. Can you understand my croaking whisper?” “Oh, yes.” “An uncle of mine brought me up after father and mother died.” “Indeed?” “Dear old fellow! He and aunt quite took my old people’s place; and their boy, my cousin, always seemed like my brother.” The listener made a quick movement. “What is it? Hear anything?” “No; go on.” “They were such happy times. I never knew what trouble was, till one day poor uncle was brought home on a gate. His horse had thrown him.” There was a pause, and then the speaker continued in an almost inaudible whisper: “He was dead.” The listener uttered a strange ejaculation. “Yes, it was horrible, wasn’t it? And there was worse to come. It nearly killed poor dear old aunt, and when she recovered a bit it was to hear the news from the lawyers. I don’t quite understand how it was even now—something about a great commercial smash—but all uncle’s money was gone, and aunt was left penniless.” “Great heavens!” came in a strange whisper. “You may well say that. Bless her! She had been accustomed to every luxury, and we boys had had everything we wished. My word! it was a knockdown for poor old Dal.” “Who was poor old Dal?” said the listener, almost inaudibly. “Cousin Dallas—Dallas Adams. I thought the poor chap would have gone mad. He was just getting ready for Cambridge. But after a bit he pulled himself together, and ‘Never mind, Bel,’ he said—I’m Bel, you know; Abel Wray—‘Never mind,’ he said, ‘now’s the time for a couple of strong fellows like we are to show that we’ve got some stuff in us. Bel,’ he said, ‘the dear old mother must never know what it is to want.’” It was the other’s turn to draw in his breath with a low hissing sound, and the narrator’s voice sounded still more husky and strange, as if he were touched by the sympathy of his companion, as he went on: “I said nothing to Dal, but I thought a deal about how easy it was to talk, but how hard for fellows like us to get suitable and paying work. But if I said nothing, I lay awake at nights trying to hit on some plan, till the idea came—ah! is that the snow coming down?” “No, no! It was only I who moved.” “But what—what are you doing? Why, you’ve turned over on your face.” “Yes, yes; to rest a bit.” “I’m trying you with all this rigmarole about a poor, unfortunate beggar.” “No, no!” cried the other fiercely. “Go on—go on.” The narrator paused for a few moments. “Thank you, old fellow,” he whispered softly, and he felt for and grasped the listener’s hand, to press it hard. “I misjudged you. It’s pleasant to find a bit of sympathy like this. I’ve often read how fellows in shipwrecks, and wounded men after battles, are drawn together and get to be like brothers, and it makes one feel how much good there is in the world, after all. I expect you and I will manage to keep alive for a few days, old chap, and then we shall have to make up our minds to die—like men. I won’t be so cowardly any more. I feel stronger, and till we do go to sleep once and for all we’ll make the best of it, like men.” “Yes, yes, yes! Go on—go on!” Chapter Six. A strange madness. It was some time, though, before the narrative was continued, and then it was with this preface. “Don’t laugh at me, old chap. The shock of all this has made me as weak and hysterical as a girl. I say, I’m jolly glad it’s so dark.” “Laugh at you!” “I say, if you speak in that way I shall break down altogether. That fellow choked a lot of the man out of me, and then the excitement, and on the top of it this horrible burying alive—it has all been too much for me.” “Go on—go on.” “Yes, yes, I will. I told you the idea came, but I didn’t say a word to my cousin for fear he should think it mad; and as to hinting at such a thing to the dear old aunt, I felt that it would half kill her. I made up my mind that she should not know till I was gone. “Well, I went straight to the ‘Hard Nut’—that’s Uncle Morgan. We always called him the nut that couldn’t be cracked—the roughest, gruffest old fellow that ever breathed, and he looked so hard and sour at me that I wished I hadn’t gone, and was silent. ‘Well,’ he said, ‘I suppose you two boys mean to think about something besides cricket and football now. You’ve got to work, sir, work!’” “Hah!” sighed the listener. “‘Yes, uncle,’ I said, ‘and I want to begin at once.’ “‘Humph!’ he said. ‘Well, that’s right. But what do you want with me?’ “‘I want you to write me a cheque for a hundred pounds.’ “‘Oh,’ he said, in the harsh, sneering way in which he always spoke to us boys; for he didn’t approve of us being educated so long. He began work early, and made quite a fortune. ‘Oh,’ he said, ‘do you? Hadn’t I better make it five?’ “‘No,’ I said. ‘I’ve thought it all out. One hundred will do exactly.’ “‘What for?’ he said with a snap. “‘I’m off to Klondike.’ “‘Off to Jericho!’ he snarled. “‘No, to Klondike, to make a fortune for the poor old aunt.’ “‘Humph!’ he grunted, ‘and is Dallas going with you to make the second fool in the pair?’ “‘No, uncle,’ I said; ‘one fool’s enough for that job. Dal will stop with his mother, I suppose, and try to keep her. I’m nobody, and I’ll take all risks and go.’ “‘Yes, one fool’s enough, sir,’ he said, ‘for a job like that. But I don’t believe there is any gold there.’ “‘Oh, yes, there is, sir,’ I said. “‘What does Dallas say?’ “‘Nothing. He doesn’t know, and he will not know till aunt gets my letter, and she tells him.’ “‘As if the poor old woman hadn’t enough to suffer without you going off, sir,’ he said. “‘But I can’t stop and live upon her now, uncle.’ “‘Of course you can’t, sir. But what about the soldiering, and the scarlet and gold lace?’ “‘Good-bye to it all, sir,’ I said with a gulp, for it was an awful knockdown to a coxcomb of a chap like I was, who had reckoned on the fine feathers and spurs and the rest of it. “‘Humph!’ he grunted, ‘and you thi...

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