Twice Bought | Page 4

Robert Michael Ballantyne
creeping stealthily towards
his enemy's tent, an act which would probably have aroused the
suspicion of a light sleeper, he walked boldly up, entered it, raised
Gashford's unconscious head with one hand, pulled out the bag of gold
with the other, put it on his shoulder, and coolly marched out of the
camp. The audacity of the deed contributed largely to its success.
Great was the rage and consternation of Gashford when he awoke the
following morning and found that his treasure had disappeared.
Jumping at once to the conclusion that it had been stolen by Brixton, he
ran to that youth's tent and demanded to know where the thief had gone

to.
"What do you mean by the thief?" asked Fred Westly, with misgiving
at his heart.
"I mean your chum, Tom Brixton," shouted the enraged miner.
"How do you know he's a thief?" asked Westly.
"I didn't come here to be asked questions by you," said Gashford.
"Where has he gone to, I say?"
"I don't know."
"That's a lie!" roared the miner, clenching his fist in a threatening
manner.
"Poor Tom! I wish I did know where you have gone!" said Fred,
shaking his head sadly as he gazed on the floor, and taking no notice
whatever of the threatening action of his visitor.
"Look here now, Westly," said Gashford, in a low suppressed voice,
shutting the curtain of the tent and drawing a revolver from his pocket,
"you know something about this matter, and you know me. If you don't
tell me all you know and where your chum has bolted to, I'll blow your
brains out as sure as there's a God in heaven."
"I thought," said Westly, quietly, and without the slightest symptom of
alarm, "you held the opinion that there is no God and no heaven."
"Come, young fellow, none o' your religious chaff, but answer my
question."
"Nothing is farther from my thoughts than chaffing you," returned
Westly, gently, "and if the mere mention of God's name is religion,
then you may claim to be one of the most religious men at the diggings,
for you are constantly praying Him to curse people. I have already
answered your question, and can only repeat that I don't know where
my friend Brixton has gone to. But let me ask, in turn, what has

happened to you?"
There was no resisting the earnest sincerity of Fred's look and tone, to
say nothing of his cool courage. Gashford felt somewhat abashed in
spite of himself.
"What has happened to me?" he repeated, bitterly. "The worst that
could happen has happened. My gold has been stolen, and your chum is
the man who has cribbed it. I know that as well as if I had seen him do
it. But I'll hunt him down and have it out of him with interest; with
interest, mark you--if I should have to go to the ends o' the 'arth to find
him."
Without another word Gashford thrust the revolver into his pocket,
flung aside the tent curtain, and strode away.
Meanwhile Tom Brixton, with the gold in a game-bag slung across his
shoulder, was speeding down the valley, or mountain gorge, at the head
of which the Pine Tree Diggings lay, with all the vigour and activity of
youthful strength, but with none of the exultation that might be
supposed to characterise a successful thief. On the contrary, a weight
like lead seemed to lie on his heart, and the faces of his mother and his
friend, Fred Westly, seemed to flit before him continually, gazing at
him with sorrowful expression. As the fumes of the liquor which he
had drunk began to dissipate, the shame and depression of spirit
increased, and his strength, great though it was, began to give way.
By that time, however, he had placed many a mile between him and the
camp where he had committed the robbery. The valley opened into a
wide, almost boundless stretch of comparatively level land, covered
here and there with forests so dense, that, once concealed in their
recesses, it would be exceedingly difficult if not impossible, for white
men to trace him, especially men who were so little acquainted with
woodcraft as the diggers. Besides this, the region was undulating in
form, here and there, so that from the tops of many of the eminences,
he could see over the whole land, and observe the approach of enemies
without being himself seen.

Feeling, therefore, comparatively safe, he paused in his mad flight, and
went down on hands and knees to take a long drink at a bubbling spring.
Rising, refreshed, with a deep sigh, he slowly mounted to the top of a
knoll which was bathed at the time in the first beams of the rising sun.
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