“Oh, yes! Yes, of course. What can I do for you, Mr. Manfred?”
What was it about his eyes, the chin, the way—
“You can do quite a lot, Mr. Hesketh, but first you can tell me where Margrita Redaway and Mr. Trevallion are.”
“Oh? They are around some place. I, I am not among their circle of friends, I’m afraid. You will have to ask elsewhere.”
“I am asking you, Mr. Hesketh, and I want an answer. You see, I know all about you, Mr. Hesketh, all.”
Albert Hesketh was icy cold. It could not be. This could not happen. Who was this Manfred?
“That’s very nice. I had no idea I was so interesting, Mr. Manfred, but then it takes very little to interest some people.”
“I’ve been interested for a long time, Mr. Hesketh. For more than fifteen years, Mr. Hesketh.”
With a careful hand, not to spill a drop, Hesketh filled his cup. Then he looked up. “Coffee, sir? If we are to talk we might as well relax.”
“No coffee,” Manfred said.
“Fifteen years? It seems a long time. I don’t seem to recall—”
“You used to talk of loose ends, Mr. Hesketh. You never liked loose ends. Well, I’m one of those loose ends, Mr. Hesketh. I am a loose end that never got tucked in as you like them done. I am one of your mistakes, Mr. Hesketh.”
Hesketh smiled. “Mistakes can always be rectified,” he replied.
“Where are they, Mr. Hesketh?”
“I have no idea.” He folded his newspaper. “I am afraid, sir, we must terminate this conversation. I have other matters to attend to.”
“Of course, Mr. Hesketh. You have to do something about me, do you not? You have to rectify that mistake.”
“I am not amused.” Inwardly he was trembling with anger. Who was this interloper?
“You’re such a little man, Mr. Hesketh. Really, a very petty little man. You have fancied yourself an important mining man, Mr. Hesketh, but you are not. Look around you, Mr. Hesketh. Take a good look because this is as far as you’re going.”
Albert Hesketh stood up. Inside something seemed to burn with a white heat. He fought to retain his coolness. “I am sure, young man,” he said, “you have some sort of delusion. Go take a hot bath and lie down for a few hours. It will pass off.”
Manfred smiled. “I shall find them, Mr. Hesketh. You can bank on it. The rest of the company are out now. We are looking, checking. We will find them.”
Hesketh shrugged. “I hope you do, if it will make you feel better. They have probably eloped, gone off to Genoa or somewhere. Maybe even to Placerville.”
“I think not.” Manfred arose. “Trevallion’s mule is still in the stable. So is Miss Redaway’s horse. We’re going to find them, Mr. Hesketh.”
Hesketh went to the elevator and then to his room. He was trembling with fury tinged with sheer panic.
Who was this man? Why did he look familiar?
Again he consulted his watch…eighteen hours.
How much longer?
He must, somehow, get word to Waggoner. How, without being seen and recognized?
Suddenly, standing by his window, he saw the answer to his problems.
The Ax—the Clean-Cutter!
He was down there on the street now, but could he be reached, and would he act as wished? The Ax had always been the least known, the least understood of them all. Moreover, he traveled alone and had never hung out with any of the old Missouri crowd.
Most of that Missouri crowd had actually been drifters from elsewhere, men who congregated at the points of departure of the wagon trains. The Ax was a different sort from the others, seemingly better educated, always better dressed, and very likely the most dangerous of the lot.
Manfred would know nothing about the Ax, hence would not suspect him.
* * *
—
On a Sunday morning at the bakery, all was quiet. Melissa arose late, attended church, and then returned to the bakery. Only one baker was on the job this morning, a thin, tall man with sandy hair and bushy eyebrows who was a New Hampshire man, who dreamed of making his pile and returning to the coast to spend the rest of his life fishing.
“Harry? When you get the bread in the oven come back and sit down.” Melissa sipped her coffee and glanced out the door. Across the street a blond man in a black broadcloth suit was tying his horse to the hitching-rail. As was often the case in the west, she noticed the horse first and the man after. It was a splendid animal, far better than the average drifter might have. It was the sort of horse only a wealthy man or an outlaw would be apt to have. Outlaws needed horses that could run fast and far.
The man looked up and down the street, then started across to the bakery.
“Harry? We’ve a customer. Draw him a cup of coffee and after he’s gone, tell me what you think of him.”
The door opened and the stranger stepped in, removing his hat as he did so. He was a handsome, blond man with a wedge-shaped face. She had recognized him the moment he turned to face the bakery as the man who had waved to them on that long-ago day.
“Oh? I am sorry, ma’am, but you are open for business?”
“We are. Come and sit down. Harry? The coffee if you please.”
He seated himself at a nearby table, glancing around. “Warm,” he said, “and pleasant. I don’t know when I’ve seen a pleasanter place.” He looked at her. “Or a prettier woman.”
“Drink your coffee,” she said.
He flashed a quick smile. “I will.” He waved a hand. “Quiet today?”
“It’s not noon yet. Most of the noisy ones are still sleeping off last night.”
“Was that when the shooting was?”
“Shooting? Oh, that one! No, it was earlier. Broad daylight.”
Harry walked over, stirring sugar into his coffee. He spun a chair around and sat down astraddle of it, putting the coffee on the table before him. “Figured they had him boxed. Come in on him from both sides, an’ him expecting nothing.”
“They got him?”
“Nope. They surely didn’t! That ol’ Jacob Teale’s a foxy one! They come in at him and went for their iron, and he nailed both of them. They got lead into him, and he may die, but he settled their hash. Done it quick an’ smooth.”
“What was it about?”
Harry shrugged. “Who knows? They were newcomers. Nobody knowed about them but their first names, Les an’ Rig.”
The stranger sipped his coffee. “Must’ve been a reason. Teale work for somebody?”
“Yep. Bodyguard. He was bodyguard for that actress. Redaway, her name is.”
“Redaway? Well, what d’you know! I’ve heard of her. I know that name. Young, is she?”
“Twenty, twenty-one, along in there. And beautiful. Best-lookin’ woman you ever did see.”
Melissa was not talking, she was watching the stranger. He was not just making talk. He was looking for information.
At that moment the door opened and Jim Ledbetter came in. He took a sharp look around, noticing the stranger, who looked up, smiling. “How do you do, sir?”
He emptied his cup and got to his feet. “Well, I must be off. Enjoyed the coffee.” He placed a coin on the table and took up his hat. He shot a quick, sharp glance at Ledbetter who had stopped just inside the door.
“Lookin’ for somebody?” Ledbetter spoke around the cigar tucked in the corner of his mouth.
“Well, now. I might be. I just might be! Ledbetter, isn’t it? The man who operates the mule trains?”
“Among other things,” Jim said dryly.
“You tell Trevallion that the Ax is lookin’ for him. A.X. Elder’s the name.”
Ledbetter rolled the cigar to the other side of his mouth. “He knows your name. He read it off a gun you dropped when runnin’ away.”
Elder’s smi
le vanished. “I won’t be running when I see him again,” he said.
“Then you ain’t as smart as you used to be,” Ledbetter said.
“Maybe you’d like some?” Elder suggested.
Ledbetter held out his right hand toward the counter where Harry stood. “Hand it to me, Harry.”
Harry handed him a shotgun with two barrels.
“All right, Mr. Elder. Any time you’re ready.”
CHAPTER 56
Trevallion felt a hand on his shoulder. “Val? Val, are you all right?”
He sat up quickly. “Sorry. I fell asleep. I was dead for it.”
“I can imagine.” As he stood up their eyes met. “Val, tell me. I’m a big girl now. Is this all of it? Are we not going to get out?”
“Not that way.” He nodded his head to indicate where he had been working. “I broke through last night. There’s just a small gap and another pile of rock. If we get through that, there will be another.”
He stooped and took a pick from the floor. “I found this, though. Some miner had left it standing at the wall, God bless him.”
She stared at him, not comprehending.
“Grita, do you remember that cross-section of the cross-cut we looked at up in the office? Did you really look at it?”
“I think so.”
“Look,” he said, “this cross-cut is like a bar across the top of a Y, or almost the top. How wide was the top of the Y, do you remember?”
“I don’t know. I just glanced at it. I think—maybe it was fifty feet. In fact, I am sure it was.”
She turned away, then grabbed his arm. “Oh! Val! Look!”
From under the planks that sheathed the walls on the right, clay was oozing, a long roll of it like the body of a snake that thickened and visibly grew as they watched.
“Aye,” it was an expression his father used, “given time it will fill the place where we stand. It seems to come from nowhere, but it’s in many of the mines on the Comstock. It’s been lying there thousands, maybe millions of years, imprisoned between layers of rock, then somebody opens a space and it finds some place to go. Maybe it’s been building behind the planks, or maybe that last explosion gave it just the start it needed. There are mines where men are assigned to doing nothing else but cutting that stuff away with their shovels and mucking it into cars to be hauled out.”
He took up the pick. In the low blue light of the candle, her eyes were dark hollows in the pallor of her face.
“You believe that chart we looked at showed this cross-cut was to be fifty feet when finished. Well, I stepped it off, and I’ve sized it up a good many times since we’ve been in here. It’s forty feet or more from the other end of the cross-cut to the face, here. I think it is more than forty feet. That means the other tunnel may be no more than seven to ten feet from the face.”
“But it’s rock, Val! It’s solid rock!”
“There’s many kinds of rock. This is like most of the Comstock, it’s decomposed feldspar and clay. Sometimes whole sections of the roof will fall in. It’s pretty flaky stuff.
“Sit back a ways, and pray. Some boys in one of the other mines near here drilled into a boiling hot spring and shot boiling water and steam for thirty feet. Believe me, they got out in a hurry.”
“There are hot springs here?”
“Uh-huh. There’s places where the rocks are so hot you can’t touch them. Several miners have already died from the heat.”
He chose his spot and took a tentative swing at the wall. Just an opening, just a hole of some kind, to let the air in. Trevallion did not know if Grita realized what that blue flame meant. The candle was burning lower, the flame bluer, which meant the air was worsening.
He swunk the pick, tearing loose a chunk of rock. With a double-jack it was about fifty blows to the minute. He wouldn’t do that well with a pick, in this air.
He worked steadily, not thinking. The dim light shone on the wall, picking up stars from bits of mica. When he stopped working there was dead silence except for their breathing. No sound could reach this place, and no air. If anybody realized they were missing, they could not know, and in this mine might be the last place they would think to look.
He struck the pick into the rock and pulled away a good-sized slab. “I’ve got to be careful,” he spoke half aloud and to himself, “or I’ll break this pick-handle.”
His body dripped with sweat, water he could ill afford to lose. With a cold, desperate fury, he attacked the rock wall. Pieces broke off and fell at his feet, some of them gleaming with silver. His body shone with sweat, his pants were dark with it. The heavy thuds of the pick and the gasps of his breathing were loud in the small space.
For an hour or more he worked without a letup. Then suddenly he backed off and sat down, his breath coming in great, wrenching gasps.
“Val?” Her voice was a whisper. “Are you all right?”
“All right,” he did not look around at her, “had to rest.”
He tried not to look at the face. He had made some progress, but pitifully little. The trouble was he had to open a fair-sized hole to allow use of the pick.
Grita got up. “Let me try.”
He shook his head in protest, but yielded the pick. She swung it awkwardly, then began to get the way of it. Yet after a few minutes she backed up and sat down. “Give me a minute. I’ll have to rest.”
He took up the pick.
The sullen hours retreated behind them, the opening seemed pitifully small. Slowly, heavily, he swung the pick. His lungs sucked at the air. He could swing but once or twice, then he would have to rest. Again and again Grita tried. Her hands became blistered, the blisters broke, blood stained the pick handle. He did not remark upon it, and she scarcely noticed the hurt.
The candle flame was bluer now, and smaller. He swung the pick and pulled off a good-sized slab. Once he would have been excited by it, only hours ago. Now he scarcely noticed.
They no longer talked, they no longer wished for freedom from the darkness, they scarcely even thought of air, they just were.
He swung the pick because he knew no other way. All his life there had been a battle, and all his life he had worked. He would go down working, go down fighting, go out trying as he had always done. Had he known how, he would have quit, but life had taught him everything but that. Savagely yet sullenly, like a dumb brute, he attacked the mountain. Bits of it splattered into his face, and sometimes it was wet.
The muscles, into which the swinging of double- and single-jacks had built power, ached desperately now. His hands were like claws, shaped only for the handle of the pick. Sometimes after a blow he fell against the wall and rested there a moment, feeling the hard face of his enemy.
* * *
—
Manfred pushed through the door, bumping the man who stood with his back to it. Not until he was in the room did he see the shotgun in Ledbetter’s hand.
“Another time, Mr. Ledbetter,” Elder said, and went out the door behind Manfred.
“Thank God,” Melissa gasped. “You stopped a shooting,” she said to Manfred.
“Maybe,” Ledbetter said. “I don’t think he would buck a shotgun.” Then he saw the expression on Manfred’s face. “What’s the matter?”
“They’re gone,” he said. “Grita and Trevallion are gone, and I think Hesketh knows where they are.”
“You mean they’re dead?” Melissa demanded.
“I don’t know, but I know him. I know that cat-that-swallowed-the-canary expression on his face. If they are not dead they are in extreme danger.”
Melissa sat down slowly. “Jim? Where could they be?”
“How long since anybody saw them?” Manfred asked.
“It’s been hours.”
“What about Tapley? Has anybody seen Tap?”
“I’m here.” He cam
e into the doorway. “I was looking for Trevallion.”
“So are we all.”
“He was goin’ to the ho-tel. He was meetin’ that actress-woman, Miss Redaway.”
“They might have gone up to the Solomon,” Jim suggested.
“No reason for her to go up there,” Tapley said. “What’s a woman goin’ to do at a mine?”
“She might be curious,” Melissa said, “after all, she owns a good piece of it.”
“Even so,” Tapley argued, “why would they stay? There’s nothing up there to keep them. Santley ain’t there. I seen him down to the store and he was headed for his place down in the valley.”
“Teale would know. He was at the hotel with them,” Melissa said. “He always knew where she was.”
“But Teale got himself shot,” Tapley said. “How would he know?”
“He mightn’t have been shot until after,” Ledbetter said. “Maybe that was the idea. With him dead nobody would know.”
“It’s the mine,” Melissa said. “It’s got to be the mine. You boys better go have a look before it gets dark.”
Manfred turned. “Dane Clyde is supposed to meet me here. Ask him to wait, will you? We won’t be long.”
“Be careful,” Melissa warned.
Ledbetter started to put the shotgun back on the counter. Harry shook his head. “You keep it. You need it more than we do.”
They started up the street together. Farmer Peel stepped out of a gambling hall and shaded his eyes after them.
“Cash me in,” he said over his shoulder, “I’ve business to attend to.”
He turned back to the street. “Jim!” he called. “What’s the trouble?”
“Trevallion’s missing. So’s Margrita Redaway. We think they’re trapped in the Solomon!”
“Hold on! I’m coming!”
Two miners, carrying lunch-buckets and still dripping from the heat of the mine, turned and followed. Along the street word passed from man to man, place to place.
Two more broke off from a crowd and followed, then another one, then three, one of them a gambler in his shirtsleeves.
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