Treasure Mountain by Louis L’Amour

and I had just killed me an elk, when this dog showed up.

“He stretched out with his head on his paws, like, and I figured him for a bear,

so I slung him a chunk of meat. After that he sort of stayed with me.”

“In Shalako, too? Why, he’d stampede every horse in the valley!”

“He don’t stampede Jacob. Jacob an’ him, they get along.”

Jacob, I took it, was the mule.

“Well,” I got up. “Those boys yonder will think I went to get a drink and the

hogs et me. I’d better start back, but you come down and see us. We’ll be around

for a day or two … and you keep an eye open for those men I spoke of. They

ain’t pleasant folks. Nobody you’d invite to a quiltin’ or a box social, like.”

By the time I got back to the fire everybody was settin’ about. They’d eaten and

we’re drinking coffee and listening for trouble. I made no effort to be quiet,

and, when I was within distance, I hailed the fire, as a gentleman should. The

ungentlemanly often ended up with a bellyful of buckshot.

A man who shoots when you don’t call out doesn’t have too many friends, but his

enemies are surely all dead.

“What took you so long?” Orrin asked

The Tinker was looking at me kind of wise and so was Judas Priest.

“I was keepin’ comp’ny,” I said. “I was settin out with a gal.”

“Up here?” Orrin scoffed.

“I think he’s telling the truth,” the Tinker said “He doesn’t act like he’d been

out among the bears.”

So I explained to them about Nell Trelawney and about old Jack Ben Trelawney

down at Shalako waiting for his daughter to pan out enough gold to get them out

of hock.

Orrin shook his head. “That’s hard work for a man,” he grumbled, “and no woman

should be doing it.”

“Jack Ben’s all crippled up,” I said. “What would you have her do? Set still

while they starve?”

“All the Treawney girls could cook,” he suggested “and the food isn’t all that

good in these mining towns.”

“That needs cash money to lay out for flour and the like. You got to have a

place.”

“I agree with Mr. Orrin,” Judas said positively. “It is no task for a woman.”

We had our own problems, and that night I got out the daybook again I gave it to

Orrin to read to us.

I have been writing in secret, but it is far from easy. I think Pettigrew

suspects what I am doing, but he is a secretive man and merely smiles that sly

smile and says nothing.

Somebody has found gold! This morning Pierre found a small hole, dug near a tree

and hastily filled in. The marks near the tree were of Pettigrew’s boots.

Later, alone with Pierre, I told him the tracks were faked to implicate

Pettigrew. He scoffed at me and didn’t believe it. I told him they wanted to

eliminate anyone who might be on his side and they would probably try to raise

suspicion about me next, and if that didn’t work, there would be another Indian

attack. He was angry and demanded to know what I meant by that. I told him there

had been no Indians, I had found no tracks. Had there been Indians, they would

have returned to destroy us.

He was listening by then, and he asked who would fake such an attack and why. I

told him I thought it was Andre and Swan. He was annoyed because I accused his

brother-in-law. I said it seemed clear that Andre didn’t mind killing and

neither did he seem to mind Swan’s brutality to Angus.

Pierre did not like it, but he listened. “You think gold has been found and held

out?” he said. I told him that was exactly what I believed.

I took to sleeping away from the others, on a pretense of watching for Indians,

and I made my bed among leaves and branches that could not be walked over

without noise.

Moreover I watched my back.

We read on Pa had apparently been doing some scouting around and he had come up

with a camp location—two locations, in fact. He argued with Pierre Bontemps that

there had been friction within the detachment. The story was that the Utes had

attacked them, killed many, and that some had died of starvation later. Only a

few men were supposed to have escaped. For several reasons, the story did not

make a lot of sense, for this hadn’t been a patrol, but a large body of

men—perhaps as many as three hundred. Pa believed there were less.

He figured there had been difficulties in the camp and they had separated. Under

such primitive conditions animosities could develop, and something had obviously

happened there. Pa found two camps, both with stone walls roughly put together,

and he found pestholes—the posts were rotted away but the holes could be cleaned

out. Rough shelters—he found a button or two, and a broken knife.

Pa was shot at twice in the woods, but merely commented it must be Indians.

Meanwhile he stopped telling anyone his conclusions. From bones he dug up and

other signs, he decided one camp was doing a lot better than the other. The men

in that part of the French military detachment were eating better, living better

… must be an Indian or a mountain man in that outfit.

May 24: On the run. Wounded. We found the gold, or some of it. Andre and Swan

acted at once. Luckily I’d spread my bed as usual, then being uneasy I moved

back into the aspen. Had a devil of a time finding a place to stretch out, so

close they were. Suddenly I awakened and heard movement, then a roar of rifles.

They’d slipped up and shot into my bedding. Unable to get close, they stood back

and fired. They must have poured a dozen rounds into the place where my bedding

was.

I heard Andre say, “Now for Pettigrew. Move quickly, man. Tell him it’s Indians

and when you get close …” Swan asked him what to do about Pierre, and Baston

said, “Leave ‘im to me.”

I couldn’t get to both of them in time, but I ran toward Pierre, moving silently

as could be.

We didn’t need no pictures to tell us what was happening there atop the

mountain. Baston and Swan had turned to murder as soon as night came, wanting

the gold for themselves. They’d tried to kill pa first, and they believed the

job was done. Only it didn’t work out the way they planned. When Swan got to

Nativity Pettigrew’s bed, the man was gone. It wasn’t until later that they

discovered a horse was also gone.

Getting out of the aspen was a job, and pa had to find his way back to the camp

in the darkness, expecting a shot any minute, having only a single-shot rifle

and a pistol.

He was coming up on them when he heard Baston.

“… no use reaching for that gun. I took the powder from it last evening,

Pierre. Sackett is dead, and soon you will be.” There was a shot, then Baston

laughed, a mean laugh it was, too. “That was one leg, Pierre.” Another shot.

“The other leg. I never liked you, you know. I knew someday I’d do this, planned

it, thought about it. I just wish I could stay and watch you die.”

Swan ran up, and there was talk. I guess they’d found Pettigrew was gone. I

heard swearing, and I moved in for a shot.

Eager to get a shot, and unable to see in the dark I lifted my rifle, stepped

forward for a better shot, and stepped into an unexpected hole. My body crashed

into a bush. My rifle went off, and bullets cut leaves near my head. Another

shot was fired, and I felt the shock of a bullet. I went down, falling on my

pistol. If I moved they’d hear me. I drew my knife and waited.

They did not find me, and neither was of a mind to come hunting me in the dark.

I heard Baston talking to Pierre, saying, “You’re dead. I will leave you here to

die. You’ve lost blood, both knees are broken, and you’ll never be found. We

didn’t find as much gold as I’d hoped, but we can always come back. We’ll be the

only ones who know where it is now.”

“Pettigrew got away. He’ll tell them,” Pierre said.

And Andre answered, “Him? We’ll catch him before he gets off the mountain. And

when we do, we’ll kill him.”

CHAPTER XVI

When Orrin put down the daybook, too sleepy to read further, I was of no mind to

take it up. Mayhap I was fearful of what I’d find, or just too tired, but the

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