ON THE WAY TO THE BLACK HILLS
Just before Luke started for the Black
Hills, he received the following letter from his faithful
friend Linton. It was sent to New York to the
care of Mr. Reed, and forwarded, it not being considered
prudent to have it known at Groveton where he was.
“Dear Luke,” the letter
commenced, “it seems a long time since I have
seen you, and I can truly say that I miss you more
than I would any other boy in Groveton. I wonder
where you are—your mother does not seem
to know. She only knows you are traveling for
Mr. Reed.
“There is not much news.
Groveton, you know, is a quiet place. I see Randolph
every day. He seems very curious to know where
you are. I think he is disturbed because you
have found employment elsewhere. He professes
to think that you are selling newspapers in New York,
or tending a peanut stand, adding kindly that it is
all you are fit for. I have heard a rumor that
he was often to be seen playing billiards at Tony
Denton’s, but I don’t know whether it is
true. I sometimes think it would do him good
to become a poor boy and have to work for a living.
“We are going to Orchard Beach
next summer, as usual, and in the fall mamma may take
me to Europe to stay a year to learn the French language.
Won’t that be fine? I wish you could go
with me, but I am afraid you can’t sell papers
or peanuts enough—which is it?—to
pay expenses. How long are you going to be away?
I shall be glad to see you back, and so will Florence
Grant, and all your other friends, of whom you have
many in Groveton. Write soon to your affectionate
friend,
“Linton.”
This letter quite cheered up Luke,
who, in his first absence from home, naturally felt
a little lonely at times.
“Linny is a true friend,”
he said. “He is just as well off as Randolph,
but never puts on airs. He is as popular as Randolph
is unpopular. I wish I could go to Europe with
him.”
Upon the earlier portions of Luke’s
journey to the Black Hills we need not dwell.
The last hundred or hundred and fifty miles had to
be traversed in a stage, and this form of traveling
Luke found wearisome, yet not without interest.
There was a spice of danger, too, which added excitement,
if not pleasure, to the trip. The Black Hills
stage had on more than one occasion been stopped by
highwaymen and the passengers robbed.
The thought that this might happen
proved a source of nervous alarm to some, of excitement
to others.
Luke’s fellow passengers included
a large, portly man, a merchant from some Western
city; a clergyman with a white necktie, who was sent
out by some missionary society to start a church at
the Black Hills; two or three laboring men, of farmerlike
appearance, who were probably intending to work in
the mines; one or two others, who could not be classified,
and a genuine dude, as far as appearance went, a slender-waisted,
soft-voiced young man, dressed in the latest style,
who spoke with a slight lisp. He hailed from the
city of New York, and called himself Mortimer Plantagenet
Sprague. As next to himself, Luke was the youngest
passenger aboard the stage, and sat beside him, the
two became quite intimate. In spite of his affected
manners and somewhat feminine deportment, Luke got
the idea that Mr. Sprague was not wholly destitute
of manly traits, if occasion should call for their
display.
One day, as they were making three
miles an hour over a poor road, the conversation fell
upon stage robbers.
“What would you do, Colonel
Braddon,” one passenger asked of the Western
merchant, “if the stage were stopped by a gang
of ruffians?”
“Shoot ’em down like dogs,
sir,” was the prompt reply. “If passengers
were not so cowardly, stages would seldom be robbed.”
All the passengers regarded the valiant
colonel with admiring respect, and congratulated themselves
that they had with them so doughty a champion in case
of need.
“For my part,” said the
missionary, “I am a man of peace, and I must
perforce submit to these men of violence, if they took
from me the modest allowance furnished by the society
for traveling expenses.”
“No doubt, sir,” said
Colonel Braddon. “You are a minister, and
men of your profession are not expected to fight.
As for my friend Mr. Sprague,” and he directed
the attention of the company derisively to the New
York dude, “he would, no doubt, engage the robbers
single-handed.”
“I don’t know,”
drawled Mortimer Sprague. “I am afraid I
couldn’t tackle more than two, don’t you
know.”
There was a roar of laughter, which
did not seem to disturb Mr. Sprague. He did not
seem to be at all aware that his companions were laughing
at him.
“Perhaps, with the help of my
friend, Mr. Larkin,” he added, “I might
be a match for three.”
There was another burst of laughter,
in which Luke could not help joining.
“I am afraid I could not help
you much, Mr. Sprague,” he said.
“I think, Mr. Sprague,”
said Colonel Braddon, “that you and I will have
to do the fighting if any attack is made. If our
friend the minister had one of his sermons with him,
perhaps that would scare away the highwaymen.”
“It would not be the first time
they have had an effect on godless men,” answered
the missionary, mildly, and there was another laugh,
this time at the colonel’s expense.
“What takes you to the Black
Hills, my young friend?” asked Colonel Braddon,
addressing Luke.
Other passengers awaited Luke’s
reply with interest. It was unusual to find a
boy of sixteen traveling alone in that region.
“I hope to make some money,”
answered Luke, smiling. “I suppose that
is what we are all after.”
He didn’t think it wise to explain his errand
fully.
“Are you going to dig for gold,
Mr. Larkin?” asked Mortimer Sprague. “It’s
awfully dirty, don’t you know, and must be dreadfully
hard on the back.”
“Probably I am more used to
hard work than you, Mr. Sprague,” answered Luke.
“I never worked in my life,”
admitted the dude. “I really don’t
know a shovel from a hoe.”
“Then, if I may be permitted
to ask,” said Colonel Braddon, “what leads
you to the Black Hills, Mr. Sprague?”
“I thought I’d better
see something of the country, you know. Besides,
I had a bet with another feller about whether the hills
were weally black, or not. I bet him a dozen bottles
of champagne that they were not black, after all.”
This statement was received with a
round of laughter, which seemed to surprise Mr. Sprague,
who gazed with mild wonder at his companions, saying:
“Weally, I can’t see what you fellers are
laughing at. I thought I’d better come myself,
because the other feller might be color-blind, don’t
you know.”
Here Mr. Sprague rubbed his hands
and looked about him to see if his joke was appreciated.
“It seems to me that the expense
of your journey will foot up considerably more than
a dozen bottles of champagne,” said one of the
passengers.
“Weally, I didn’t think
of that. You’ve got a great head, old fellow.
After all, a feller’s got to be somewhere, and,
by Jove!— What’s that?”
This ejaculation was produced by the
sudden sinking of the two left wheels in the mire
in such a manner that the ponderous Colonel Braddon
was thrown into Mr. Sprague’s lap.
“You see, I had to go somewhere,”
said Braddon, humorously.
“Weally, I hope we sha’n’t
get mixed,” gasped Sprague. “If it’s
all the same to you, I’d rather sit in your lap.”
“Just a little incident of travel,
my dear sir,” said Braddon, laughing, as he
resumed his proper seat.
“I should call it rather a large
incident,” said Mr. Sprague, recovering his
breath.
“I suppose,” said Braddon,
who seemed rather disposed to chaff his slender traveling
companion, “if you like the Black Hills; you
may buy one of them.”
“I may,” answered Mr.
Sprague, letting his glance rest calmly on his big
companion. “Suppose we buy one together.”
Colonel Braddon laughed, but felt
that his joke had not been successful.
The conversation languished after
awhile. It was such hard work riding in a lumbering
coach, over the most detestable roads, that the passengers
found it hard to be sociable. But a surprise was
in store. The coach made a sudden stop. Two
horsemen appeared at the window, and a stern voice
said: “We’ll trouble you to get out,
gentlemen. We’ll take charge of what money
and valuables you have about you.”