FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   332   333   334   335   336   337   338   339   340   341   342   343   344   345   346   347   348   349   350   351   352   353   354   355   356  
357   358   359   >>  
two or three days?" "You? Crippled! Look here--" The Colonel flushed suddenly. "Austin been sayin' anything?" "Oh, I was just thinkin' about the sun." "Well, when I want to go in out of the sun, I'll say so." And, walking more quickly than he had done for long, he left his companion, marched down to the creek, and took his place near the puddling-box. By the time the Boy got to the little patch of shade, offered by the staging, Austin had turned his back on the gang, and was going to speak to the gateman at the locks. He had evidently left the Colonel very much enraged at some curt comment. "He meant it for us all," the Dublin gentleman was saying soothingly. By-and-by, as they worked undisturbed, serenity returned. Oh, the Colonel was all right--even more chipper than usual. What a good-looking fella he was, with that clear skin and splendid colour! A couple of hours later the Colonel set his long shovel against the nearest of the poles steadying the sluice, and went over to the staging for a drink. He lifted the can of weak tea to his lips and took a long draught, handed the can back to the Boy, and leant against the staging. They talked a minute or two in undertones. A curt voice behind said: "Looks like you've got a deal to attend to to-day, beside your work." They looked round, and there was Austin. As the Colonel saw who it was had spoken, the clear colour in the tan deepened; he threw back his shoulders, hesitated, and then, without a word, went and took up his shovel. Austin walked on. The Boy kept looking at his friend. What was the matter with the Colonel? It was not only that his eyes were queer--most of the men complained of their eyes, unless they slept in cabins. But whether through sun-blindness or shaken by anger, the Colonel was handling his shovel uncertainly, fumbling at the gravel, content with half a shovelful, and sometimes gauging the distance to the box so badly that some of the pay fell down again in the creek. As Austin came back on the other side of the line, he stopped opposite to where the Colonel worked, and suddenly called: "Seymour!" Like so many on Bonanza, the Superintendent could not always sleep when the time came. He was walking about "showing things" to a stranger, "a newspaper woman," it was whispered--at all events, a lady who, armed with letters from the highest British officials, had come to "write up the Klondyke." Seymour had left her at his employer
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   332   333   334   335   336   337   338   339   340   341   342   343   344   345   346   347   348   349   350   351   352   353   354   355   356  
357   358   359   >>  



Top keywords:

Colonel

 

Austin

 

staging

 
shovel
 
Seymour
 

suddenly

 
worked
 

colour

 

walking

 

complained


cabins
 

looked

 

blindness

 

friend

 

matter

 
walked
 

hesitated

 

shoulders

 

spoken

 
deepened

newspaper

 
stranger
 

whispered

 

events

 

things

 

showing

 

Superintendent

 
Klondyke
 

employer

 

officials


letters

 

highest

 

British

 

Bonanza

 

shovelful

 

gauging

 

distance

 

content

 

gravel

 

handling


uncertainly

 

fumbling

 

opposite

 

called

 

stopped

 

shaken

 
handed
 

Crippled

 

evidently

 

gateman