A startling revelation.
A stout, black-bearded man stood in
front of the hotel to welcome the stage passengers.
He took a clay pipe from his lips and nodded a welcome.
“Glad to see you, strangers,”
he said. “Here, Peter, you black rascal,
help the gentlemen with their baggage.”
The door was thrown open, and the
party filed into a comfortless looking apartment,
at one end of which was a rude bar.
One of the passengers, at least, seemed
to know the landlord, for Col. Warner advanced
to greet him, his face beaming with cordiality.
“How are you, John?” he
said. “How does the world use you?”
The landlord growled something inaudible.
“Have a drink, colonel?” was the first
audible remark.
“Don’t care if I do.
It’s confounded dry traveling over these mountain
roads. Walk up, gentlemen. Col. Warner
doesn’t drink alone.”
With the exception of Herbert and
George Melville, the passengers seemed inclined to
accept the offer.
“Come along, Melville,”
said the colonel; “you and your friend must
join us.”
“Please excuse me, colonel,”
answered Melville. “I would prefer not
to drink.”
“Oh, nonsense! To oblige me, now.”
“Thank you; but I am traveling
for my health, and it would not be prudent.”
“Just as you say, Melville;
but a little whisky would warm you up and do you good,
in my opinion.”
“Thank you all the same, colonel;
but I think you must count me out.”
The colonel shrugged his shoulders
and beckoned Herbert.
“You can come, anyway; your health won’t
prevent.”
Melville did not interfere, for he
knew it would give offense, but he hoped his young
clerk would refuse.
“Thank you,” said Herbert;
’I won’t object to a glass of sarsaparilla.”
“Sarsaparilla!” repeated
the colonel, in amazement. “What’s
that?”
“We don’t keep no medicine,” growled
the landlord.
“Have you root-beer?” asked Herbert.
“What do you take me for?”
said the landlord, contemptuously. “I haven’t
got no root-beer. Whisky’s good enough for
any man.”
“I hope you’ll excuse
me, then,” said Herbert. “I am not
used to any strong drinks.”
“How old are you?” asked
the colonel, rather contemptuously.
“Sixteen.”
“Sixteen years old and don’t
drink whisky! My young friend, your education
has been sadly neglected.”
“I dare say it has,” answered Herbert,
good-naturedly.
“Gentlemen,” said Col.
Warner, apologetically, “the boy is a stranger,
and isn’t used to our free Western ways.
He’s got the makings of a man in him, and it
won’t be long before he’ll get over his
squeamishness, and walk up to the bar as quick as any
one of us.”
Herbert and Melville stood apart,
while the rest of the company emptied their glasses,
apparently at a gulp. It was clear that their
refusal had caused them to be regarded with dislike
and suspicion.
The accommodations of the Echo Gulch
Hotel were far from luxurious. The chambers were
scarcely larger than a small closet, clap-boarded
but not plastered, and merely contained a bedstead.
Washing accommodations were provided downstairs.
Herbert and George Melville were assigned
to a single room, to which they would not have objected
had the room been larger. It was of no use to
indulge in open complaints, however, since others had
to fare in the same way.
“This isn’t luxury, Herbert,” said
Melville.
“No,” answered the boy; “but I don’t
mind it if you don’t.”
“I am afraid I may keep you awake by my coughing,
Herbert.”
“Not if I once get to sleep. I sleep as
sound as a top.”
“I wish I did; but I am one
of the wakeful kind. Being an invalid, I am more
easily annoyed by small inconveniences. You, with
your sturdy health, are more easily suited.”
“Mr. Melville, I had just as
lief sleep downstairs in a chair, and give you the
whole of the bed.”
“Not on my account, Herbert.
I congratulate myself on having you for a roommate.
If I had been traveling alone I might have been packed
away with the colonel, who, by this time, would be
even less desirable as a bedfellow than usual.”
The worthy colonel had not been content
with a single glass of whisky, but had followed it
up several times, till his utterance had become thick,
and his face glowed with a dull, brick-dust color.
Col. Warner had been assigned
to the adjoining chamber, or closet, whichever it
may be called. He did not retire early, however,
while Herbert and George Melville did.
Strangely enough, Herbert, who was
usually so good a sleeper, after a short nap woke
up. He turned to look at his companion, for it
was a moonlight night, and saw that he was sleeping
quietly.
“I wonder what’s got into
me?” he thought; “I thought I should sleep
till morning.”
He tried to compose himself to sleep,
but the more effort he made the broader awake he became.
Sometimes it seems as if such unaccountable deviations
from our ordinary habits were Heaven-sent. As
Herbert lay awake he suddenly became aware of a conversation
which was being carried on, in low tones, in the next
room. The first voice he heard, he recognized
as that of the colonel.
“Yes,” he said, “some
of the passengers have got money. There’s
that Stiefel probably carries a big sum in gold and
notes. When I was speaking of the chance of the
stage being robbed, he was uncommon nervous.”
“Who’s Stiefel?”
was growled in another voice, which Herbert had no
difficulty in recognizing as the landlord’s.
“Oh, he’s the fat, red-faced
German. From his talk, I reckon he’s come
out to buy mines somewhere in Colorado.”
“We’ll save him the trouble.”
“So we will—good
joke, John. Oh, about this Stiefel, he carries
his money in a belt round his waist. I infer
that it is gold.”
“Good! What about the others?”
“There’s a tall, thin
man—his name is Parker,” proceeded
the colonel; “he’s smart, or thinks he
is; you’ll have to pull his stockings off to
get his money. Ha, ha!”
“How did you find out, colonel?”
asked the landlord, in admiration.
“Drew it out of him, sir.
He didn’t know who he was confiding in.
He’ll wonder how the deuce his hiding place was
suspected.”
Other passengers were referred to
who have not been mentioned, and in each case the
colonel was able to tell precisely where their money
was kept.
“How about that milksop that
wouldn’t drink with us?” inquired the
landlord, after a while.
“Melville? I couldn’t
find out where he keeps his cash. Probably he
keeps it in his pocket. He doesn’t look
like a cautious man.”
“Who’s the boy?”
“Only a clerk or secretary of
Melville’s. He hasn’t any money, and
isn’t worth attention.”
“Very glad to hear it,”
thought Herbert. “I don’t care to
receive any attention from such gentry. But who
would have thought the colonel was in league with
stage robbers? I thought him a gentleman.”
Herbert began to understand why it
was that Col. Warner, if that was his real name,
had drawn the conversation to stage robbers, and artfully
managed to discover where each of the passengers kept
his supply of money. It was clear that he was
in league with the landlord of the Echo Gulch Hotel,
who, it was altogether probable, intended to waylay
the stage the next day.
This was a serious condition of affairs.
The time had been when, in reading stories of adventure,
Herbert had wished that he, too, might have some experience
of the kind. Now that the opportunity had come,
our hero was disposed to regard the matter with different
eyes.
“What can be done,” he
asked himself, anxiously, “to escape the danger
which threatens us to-morrow?”