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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #69671 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/69671)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of Greener than spruce, by Herbert Farris
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: Greener than spruce
-
-Author: Herbert Farris
-
-Release Date: January 7, 2023 [eBook #69671]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Roger Frank and Sue Clark
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GREENER THAN SPRUCE ***
-
-
-
-
-
-GREENER THAN SPRUCE
-
-By Herbert Farris
-
-Author of “Plenty Grub an’ Plenty Gold,” etc.
-
-
-
-
-“Maybe greener men _have_ hit Alasky--but I doubt it!”
-
-The speaker, a rheumy-eyed, old veteran of the trails, spoke thus
-disparagingly of young Harris Benton. The old-timer’s perpetual
-“sun-grin” expanded visibly as he watched Benton’s parka-clad figure
-disappear around a bend in the river trail.
-
-“Wonder how long he’ll last,” the old fellow speculated, turning to
-the group on the river bank. “I’ll bet I’ve showed him a dozen times
-how to tie his snowshoes to his feet, an’ I’ve told him little
-things about pitchin’ his tent and makin’ camp, till I’m black in
-the face. It’ll be three-four weeks yet before mushin’ll be any
-good, but I’ve got a right good notion to load up the old Yukon sled
-an’ take out after that young chechahco.”
-
-“An’ why?”
-
-The old-timer had paused for that query. The question certainly gave
-pith and point to the clever thing on the tip of his tongue. The
-remark would have lost its savor in the telling; the retort,
-however, was pungent.
-
-“An’ why?” he repeated. “I’ll tell you for why. I’ve been snow-blind
-twice, so my eyes ain’t what they used to be. Nowadays, when I ain’t
-wearin’ snow glasses--an’ blast the dang things, I hate ’em!-- I’ve
-got to keep my eyes clamped on the spruce.
-
-“Spruce is dang restful to the eyes. It’s restful because it’s
-green, but to keep on lookin’ at it, a man’s got to twist his head
-from one side the river to the other, an’ there’s times when I think
-I’m li’ble to twist my head plum off--like a screech owl. Now,
-instead of takin’ all that trouble, I _could_ start out an’ foller
-after this young Benton. Instead of lookin’ at the spruce then, I
-could keep my eyes fastened straight ahead on _him_. He’s greener
-than any spruce that ever growed.”
-
-If young Harris Benton could have heard this sarcastic speech, he
-would have been rudely made aware of the withering contempt in which
-he was held by the general run of Alaskans with whom he had come in
-contact. Had he been aware of the feeling which existed, he would
-not have been offended in the least; he would have been amused. He
-was green but, unlike many greenhorns, he realized the fact and was
-anxious to learn. Moreover, he was willing to accept the hard
-knocks--a part of the curriculum of Alaska’s trail school--and come
-up smiling. For Harris Benton, although he was probably the greenest
-chechahco in the North, had not been raised a pet.
-
-At noon, young Benton hauled his sled to the river bank and, with
-considerable difficulty, dropped a dead spruce tree and built a
-small tea fire. After his noon meal he unloaded his Yukon sled,
-inverted it so that the steel-shod runners shone like twin mirrors
-in the rays of the sun; then--and this is almost past believing--he
-proceeded to smear the steel shoes of the sled runners with
-lubricating oil.
-
-The dealer who had sold him the oil--either unscrupulous or a
-practical joker--had seriously informed him that “greased sled
-runners makes mighty easy slippin’ on the trail.” Harris Benton had
-innocently bought five gallons of the lubricant.
-
-Where a musher pulls without dogs, as young Benton was doing, every
-pound of excess weight is an additional check to his progress. And
-besides the five gallons of lubricating oil, Harris Benton was
-hauling other nonessentials. He had more clothing than he really
-needed; about twenty pounds of books and old magazines, and the
-merchant from whom he had bought his outfit had sold him far too
-many cooking utensils. Benton’s entire outfit weighed almost twelve
-hundred pounds, and, since at best he could haul but four hundred
-pounds on his Yukon sled, he was relaying. He would haul from three
-to four hundred pounds as far up the river trail as he could
-possibly travel in a day, cache his load, and return to his camp
-with his empty sled.
-
-Early in the month of May he reached the Kentna country. He had been
-on the trail four months, and he had arrived with pick, pan, and
-shovel, together with ample food to last him through the mining
-season. Also--as every old-timer in the Kentna country will
-testify--he had arrived with the ambition and energy of a half dozen
-men in spite of the grueling work on the trail.
-
-Young Benton spent his first week after arriving at “the cricks” in
-building a cache for his supplies. It was a simple box affair, built
-of logs, supported high in air by four posts. He was busily stowing
-his food and other supplies in the cache, when a voice at his elbow
-brought him about with a start. Looking up from his work, he saw the
-old-timer who had offered him many helpful suggestions back at the
-trading post. The old man was surveying him, his small stock of
-provisions, and his crude cache, with frank curiosity.
-
-“Well, I see you landed here all right,” he remarked by way of
-greeting. “I’m camped just above here on Penny Ante Crick, an’ I
-ain’t got a thing to do till the snow goes off, so I thought I’d
-mush over an’ see how you’re gettin’ along. Staked yourself a claim
-yet?”
-
-Benton admitted that he had not. “I didn’t know it was lawful to
-stake a claim unless you discover gold,” he added.
-
-“Plenty of ’em stakes first an’ find the gold afterward--if there’s
-any to be found.” The old man’s rheumy eyes were mildly
-disapproving. “I wouldn’t worry too much about makin’ my discovery,
-if I was you. Most any gravel you find around here carries _some_
-gold. Trouble is to find it in payin’ quantities. So hurry up an’
-stake yourself a claim or two, before some of these ground hogs
-comes in on the first boat this summer an’ grabs it all. Us
-old-timers takes just what we can work to good advantage, but most
-greenhorns’ll wear out a pair of hobnail shoes just a-racin’ over
-the country stakin’. You’re lucky to be here among the first, so
-hurry up an’ get busy.”
-
-“Thanks for the tip. I’ll----”
-
-“It’s none of my business,” the old-timer suddenly interrupted, “but
-what in thunder have you brought into the country in _that_?”
-
-Benton had placed his five-gallon can of lubricating oil near the
-cache, and it was that which had elicited the question. He was
-somewhat puzzled.
-
-“Why, that’s my oil,” he said. “How do you carry yours?”
-
-The ancient sour dough had all he could do to keep a straight face.
-This green chechahco had actually brought kerosene into this
-wilderness!
-
-“You won’t have no use for a lamp,” he said gently. “All summer you
-can read fine print right in your tent--any hour of the night, too.
-I thought ev’ry-body knowed----”
-
-“I have no lamp,” young Benton interrupted impatiently. “I’m green
-but I’m not quite a fool--I hope. That isn’t oil for a lamp; it’s
-about four gallons of lubricating oil that I had left over from my
-winter’s sledding.”
-
-“I see.” The old man shifted his weight from one moccasined foot to
-the other, swallowing his Adam’s apple twice before he once more
-found his voice. “I understand you but I don’t know what you mean,”
-he said. “How much of this oil did you use an’ how did you use it?”
-
-“Well, I used about a gallon.” Young Benton was looking doubtfully
-at the old man. “I think I see what you’re driving at now. I allowed
-that storekeeper to sell me five gallons when one was all that I
-needed.”
-
-The old-timer lifted his tufted eyebrows. “An’ you got through the
-winter with one gallon,” he said softly, wonderingly.
-
-“Why, I only used it in the morning and again at noon. Just when
-I--but maybe I didn’t use it often enough. Still, the sled came
-along pretty well.”
-
-The old-timer barked apologetically in his mittened hand. At last he
-understood. It had been so many years since he had heard of the old
-joke of greasing sled runners that he had forgotten. But this boy
-was so very much in earnest, it wouldn’t do to hurt his feelings.
-And besides, it might lead to serious trouble. This innocent youth
-had dragged this worthless stuff over the trail--pounds and pounds
-of it. Murder had been committed for less than a joke like that!
-
-“The skinflint sold you too much, all right,” he said, as he reached
-down and thoughtfully “hefted” the can. “But you’ve got it here--I
-reckon you might as well forget it. Anyhow, you won’t have any more
-use for it. You’re all through sleddin’. An’ now I’d better be
-gettin’ along. If you want anything this summer, you’ll find me over
-on Penny Ante Crick. Number Five Above Discovery’s the name of my
-claim.”
-
- * * * * *
-
-Harris Benton was highly elated when he next saw the old-timer. Not
-only had he staked a claim on what he called Benton Gulch but he had
-actually discovered gold and he had found it in paying quantities.
-For a week he had panned the gravel on Benton Gulch, and he was now
-displaying his sample to the old-timer. The old man listened
-attentively to the boy’s story, but did not enthuse over the sample.
-
-“You’ve come clean over here to Penny Ante Crick to show me this,
-an’ I’m right sorry to have to disappoint you.” In spite of the old
-man’s words, young Benton was grinning cheerfully. “It takes a whole
-lot to discourage a young rooster like you,” he resumed, “but I’ll
-soon show you why you’ve got to leave that gulch alone. I don’t
-doubt what you say. You got the gold here to prove it. But how’re
-you goin’ to work the ground? Answer me that.”
-
-Harris Benton still grinned. “I know why you think I can’t work that
-ground,” he said. “It’s what you old-timers call a dry gulch. I know
-there won’t be drinking water there this summer. What you overlooked
-is this. By digging a ditch less than a quarter mile in length I can
-get one of the best sluice heads in this country. Right over that
-shoulder at the head of my gulch is where I----”
-
-“I know where you mean, all right,” interrupted the old-timer. “But
-have you talked with Joe Murtry yet?”
-
-“Haven’t even seen him. But why should I talk to him? What has he to
-do with it?”
-
-“Ev’rything. Joe Murtry owns ev’ry drop of water in Caribou Crick.
-He recorded it last spring a year ago.”
-
-Young Benton was on the point of interrupting, but the old-timer
-silenced him. “Now don’t start to tell me that all you’ve got to do
-is to go over to Caribou Crick an’ get Joe Murtry to give you the
-right to take what water you want, for Joe ain’t that kind. He ain’t
-only the luckiest man in Alasky--he’s the _meanest_. If he’s worth a
-dime, he’s worth a half million right now, but even so, he wouldn’t
-give a man daylight in a dark cellar. You just forget you ever
-staked a claim on that little gulch an’ start out prospectin’ for
-something that’ll do you some good.”
-
-Young Benton thanked the old man for his advice. “But,” he added,
-“I’m not going to start out prospectin’, when I’ve already
-discovered gold--unless I’m forced to do so. I’m going over to see
-Murtry at once.”
-
-“All right; but be ready to run if he comes at you. He’s the meanest
-man in Alasky, bar none. Joe Murtry never done no man a favor, an’
-he never will. Mark what I tell you, son. He’ll chase you off his
-ground just as soon as you show up an’ tell him what you want.
-You’re just wastin’ your time. But, then, that’s the trouble with
-all chechahcos; they won’t listen to an old-timer’s advice.”
-
-Young Benton went at once to Caribou Creek. In spite of what he had
-heard of Joe Murtry, he was not convinced. There was an abundance of
-water in Caribou Creek, and surely no man would be mean enough to
-refuse to allow the use of the surplus. This line of reasoning gave
-him great confidence, but his first glimpse of Murtry caused his
-heart to sink.
-
-Murtry was not tall, but he was as broad as two average-sized men.
-Yet he was not fat. His arms were unusually long, and, due to a
-slight stoop to his powerful shoulders, his huge hands hung slightly
-ahead of his knees. Young Benton looked at him and instantly thought
-of a gorilla. With two others, Murtry was setting up a string of
-sluice boxes.
-
-Benton watched them for a time; twice, without waiting to be asked,
-he gave them a hand. Murtry, who had barely spoken, paused at last
-and sized up his caller. What he saw evidently satisfied him.
-
-“Want a job?” he asked gruffly. “I’m taking one of these men upriver
-tomorrow, an’ if you’re lookin’ for work, you can stay here an’ help
-Sam. Do whatever he tells you.”
-
-Here was a golden opportunity. Surely if he favored Murtry, he might
-expect the big fellow to reciprocate. “I’m not looking for work for
-the season,” he said, “but I’ll be glad to help out for a few
-days--if that will do you any good.”
-
-Murtry grunted. “All I need,” he said. “I’ve got a foreman an’
-fifteen men waitin’ for me upriver. They mush in from the
-coast--their time starts the first of June whether they’re here or
-not. Hunderd an’ fifty miles from here. I’m goin’ up in my boat an’
-bring ’em down. You stay an’ help Sam out till I come back with my
-men, an’ I’ll pay you the goin’ wages--ten bucks an’ grub.”
-
-Sam soon shuffled off to cook the evening meal, and Benton decided
-to say nothing about his sluice head of water until after they had
-eaten. Their pipes going, he thought it time to broach the subject.
-
-“I didn’t tell you that I was a neighbor of yours,” he said by way
-of opening the conversation. “I spent the winter sledding in my
-outfit.”
-
-“That so?” Murtry said with a mild simulation of interest. “Where
-you camped?”
-
-Benton indicated the direction. “Right over there,” he said, “I’ve
-named it Benton Gulch.”
-
-“You ain’t staked that little dry gulch?”
-
-“Why, yes. You see, I believe there’s a little gold there--I don’t
-know how much--I’ve already done quite a bit of panning and I hope
-to----”
-
-“You’re a fool!” Murtry interrupted in a rage. “If you don’t know
-that I own ev’ry drop of water in Caribou Crick, it’s time you was
-learnin’. How do you aim to work that gulch without water?”
-
-“That’s what I came over to see you about,” said Benton. “I heard
-that it was your water and I thought that you would be glad to spare
-me a sluice head.” Benton was speaking calmly, in spite of the
-other’s belligerent attitude. “Of course,” he went on, “if the water
-in Caribou Crick should run low this summer or fall, I’d quit taking
-it out, but----”
-
-“You’d _quit_ takin’ it out!” Murtry cried. “You’re never goin’ to
-_begin_ takin’ it out! If you ever start monkeyin’ with Caribou
-Crick, I’ll drill you so full of holes you’ll look like----”
-
-Murtry’s anger was intensified by his failure to find the word he
-was seeking. “Say,” he cried, “you get clean off this claim! Beat it
-quick, while you’re all together!”
-
-Benton was sitting at the rough table; he rose slowly. “Why
-certainly--if it’s your claim--I’ll leave.” He was speaking
-hesitantly but he was not afraid of the glowering bully who had
-commanded him to leave. He was simply surprised at the man’s
-unreasonable anger. “But even if I have no water, that gulch belongs
-to me, and I mean to hold it.”
-
-“Hold it as long as you want to!” Murtry was shouting after him.
-“Hold it till you get good an’ tired of doing assessment work on it!
-Wait a minute till I tell you something you’d just as well know now
-as later!” Benton paused and Murtry continued. “There ain’t any gold
-in that gulch, but even if there was, _you’d_ never get to work it.
-I’ve got the water an’ I aim to keep it!”
-
-The old-timer was right. He was right about everything! He had said
-that Joe Murtry was the meanest man in Alaska; he had said that no
-matter how much gold the tiny gulch might carry, Murtry would never
-allow it to be worked. Benton considered the various things that the
-old-timer had told him until he reached his camp in Benton Gulch.
-Well, he decided, he would follow the old man’s advice and quit the
-gulch on the following day.
-
-Benton had been prospecting the gulch every day for more than a
-week. Through force of habit he took his pick, shovel and gold pan,
-and went to work in the narrow cut which he had been running into a
-shoulder of the hill near his tent. He was far from an expert with
-the gold pan, but he enjoyed the beginner’s thrill, which always
-came when he “tailed off” the residue in the pan, and saw the streak
-of yellow trickling behind the black sand.
-
-Young Benton extended his cut three feet into the hill. He was
-following along the disintegrated slate bed rock; although he did
-not realize it, the bedrock was totally different. Before it had
-been “slick,” now it was rough and “rotten.”
-
-He filled his pan with gravel and carried it to a hole which he had
-dug in the gulch’s channel. Now the hole was filled with water from
-the melting snows; in a week, perhaps, it would be dry. At least the
-old-timer had said that it would, and Benton was now a firm believer
-in the wisdom of the old man.
-
-It is a maxim with old-timers that “many things are mistaken for
-gold, but gold is never mistaken for anything else.” A greenhorn is
-often fooled, for example, by iron pyrites and “cube” iron, but when
-he discovers gold, the real thing, he knows. So it was with Benton.
-For a week he had been panning “pinhead stuff” that would “rattle in
-the pan.” Now, as he “tailed off” the pan he had taken from the
-disintegrated bed rock, he saw that a half-dozen dull-yellow pieces
-of gold were in the bottom of the pan. Benton’s old-timer would have
-pronounced them slugs.
-
-Benton was excited. He held the slugs in the palm of his hand, while
-he attempted to estimate their value. The smallest of them, he
-decided, was fully twice as large as a five-dollar gold piece; the
-largest was surely worth more than twenty dollars. The six slugs
-would total almost a hundred dollars. Chechahco that he was, Benton
-still knew that he had uncovered bonanza dirt.
-
-Young Benton went again to his cut. This time he worked feverishly
-for two hours. His pay streak was rich, extremely so, but there was
-a heavy overburden to handle. In other words, above the pay he had
-discovered on bed rock, lay ten, twenty, possibly as much as fifty
-feet of muck and gravel. Undoubtedly the ground was rich enough that
-he could take out hundreds of dollars that summer without water, but
-if he could only manage to get that sluicehead from Caribou Creek,
-he could with a pressure hose, run that overburden off like so much
-soup. He _must_ have that water? But how?
-
-At five o’clock next morning young Benton was seated on the stump of
-a spruce where the clear waters of Caribou Creek gushed into the
-brown foam-flecked river. He looked at Murtry’s river boat which was
-beached near by. It rested on two fresh-peeled logs, and Benton saw
-that all preparations had been recently made to launch the vessel.
-At six o’clock, Murtry and one of his men put in an appearance.
-Benton had no time to lose; he spoke to Murtry at once.
-
-“Murtry,” he said, without rising from his stump, “I’ve been
-thinking the matter over and I wonder if you would consider
-_selling_ me a sluice head of water from Caribou Crick. I’ll pay you
-what it is worth.”
-
-Murtry paid him no attention. He and his man put their shoulders at
-the stern of the boat and skidded the vessel into the river. Murtry
-made a line fast to a convenient “dead man,” while his man leaped
-into the stern of the boat and started the engine. No sooner did he
-have the engine purring rhythmically, than he shut it off.
-
-“What’s the matter?” Murtry, who was about to cast off and leap
-aboard, made the line fast again. “Anything wrong with that engine?”
-
-“No, but----” The man was looking at Murtry in wide-eyed alarm. He
-was afraid to tell what was wrong, and yet he dared not remain
-silent. “Mr. Murtry,” he said, speaking swiftly, as if anxious to
-break the news as quickly as possible, “there ain’t a single drop of
-engine oil. I spoke to Sam about it last night after we’d loaded the
-other stuff aboard, an’ he said there was plenty of oil here. But I
-just looked an’ there’s nothin’ but gasoline. There’s more gasoline
-than we need, but there ain’t a drop of----”
-
-“You idiot!” Murtry exclaimed. “Chase right up to camp an’ get some
-out of the cache an’ hurry!”
-
-Murtry’s man leaped ashore, but stood hesitantly, shifting his feet
-as if in a quandary.
-
-“Hurry! I don’t want to wait here all day!”
-
-“I’ll go look again, but I looked last evenin’ an’ there wasn’t any
-there. At least I didn’t see it. That’s why Sam was so sure there
-was plenty on the boat.”
-
-“Of course it’s there. If you don’t find it in the cache, look in
-the tool shed.”
-
-At this the man shuffled off. Young Benton was much pleased at
-Murtry’s unexpected delay, but he was somewhat nettled at the manner
-in which he had been ignored. He decided to try again, and this time
-he would do his utmost to make Murtry answer him.
-
-“I suppose you didn’t hear me a bit ago,” he began, “but----”
-
-“I heard you the first time,” Murtry interrupted with an oath. “Now
-shut your yap an’ get out!”
-
-Benton did not move. Seeing this, Murtry’s great hamlike hands
-twisted about convulsively; his lips drew back against his uneven
-teeth, and with an enraged snarl he quickly rushed at the youth.
-
-“I’ll show you if you move or not!” he shouted. “Once I get a hold
-of you, I’ll----”
-
-Murtry suddenly brought up with a sharp exclamation. Ten feet from
-Benton, he had stopped with an expression of bewilderment on his
-broad face. He was gazing like a man fascinated into the barrel of
-an automatic.
-
-“I came ready for you,” said young Benton coolly. “I’m not on your
-claim, and I don’t see you or anybody else throwing me off of
-government land. And now, you can at least listen to what I have to
-say, even if you don’t care to----”
-
-“I’ll listen, you young pup,” Murtry said, “but there’s a day
-comin’. You’ll wake up some day an’ learn that what I say goes in
-this neck of the woods.”
-
-Murtry advanced a step as he said this. “And you,” said Benton as he
-menaced Murtry with his weapon, “may _never_ wake up, if you come
-another step in this direction. There, that’s better,” he went on as
-Murtry retreated a step. “From what I’ve been told, Murtry, you’re a
-mighty rich man. It won’t bother you in the least to sell--or give
-me, for that matter--some of your water. You’ve got your pile made.
-Now be decent and give me a chance to get out of this country with a
-little money for all the hardship I’ve gone through. Will you listen
-to a sensible proposition?”
-
-“Rave on,” said Murtry sullenly. “You’ve got me dead to rights. Talk
-away if it does you any good, but you’ll get nothin’ out of me.”
-
-“I’ll give you a third of all the money I take out,” said Benton,
-speaking slowly and distinctly. “If you’ll give me the water to work
-the ground. Is it a go?”
-
-Murtry opened his lips as if he intended to reply; then closed them
-tightly. A minute passed and he seemed to reconsider. “You might as
-well trot along,” he said contemptuously. “Use your brains. Why
-_would_ I take a third? If there’s any money there, I can have it
-all after you starve out; an’ if there ain’t anything there, what’s
-the idee of my takin’ a third!”
-
-Benton said nothing more. Argument seemed such a futile thing, so
-far as Murtry was concerned. Five minutes passed and Murtry’s man
-appeared empty handed. His manner was apologetic.
-
-“It ain’t there,” he said, whining. “An’ there ain’t any on the
-boat. Sam or some of the other boys must’ve used it all up last fall
-before the boat was laid up. I don’t know what to do unless I mush
-up there an’ have the boys come down in a boat or on a raft.”
-
-For almost a minute, Murtry raved like a maniac. “An’ ev’ry day that
-my men stay up there, it’s costin’ me a hunderd an’ sixty-five
-dollars.” He groaned. “Fifteen men at ten a day an’ my foreman at
-fifteen a day. That’s what comes of puttin’ a man like you in charge
-of my boat. Say, how long do you think it’d take you to mush up
-there?”
-
-“A hunderd an’ fifty miles is a good ways--goin’ through the brush
-like I’ll have to do,” the man said. “I’ll do my best though to make
-it in ten days.”
-
-“Sixteen hunderd an’ sixty-five dollars!” Again Murtry groaned. “An’
-maybe a whole lot more--if you _don’t_ make it in ten days. Well,
-what are you standin’ there for? Get a move on!”
-
-“Wait just a minute, Mr. Murtry. I’ve just thought about somethin’
-that may save you a whole lot of money, an’ save me that long trip
-upriver on foot. An old-timer over on Penny Ante Crick has been
-tellin’ all around that this young Benton sledded in nearly five
-gallons of oil last winter. He was laughin’ about him usin’ it to
-grease his sled runners, an’ he’s got upward of four gallons of it
-left. Now, if you could buy it off him----”
-
-“Why, of course,” Murtry interrupted briskly. “I heard about it a
-month ago. Just forgot it.” He turned to Benton. “How much do you
-want for that oil?” he asked in a pleasant voice.
-
-Young Benton was thinking fast. He, too, had forgotten all about the
-oil that he had bought to make slippin’ easy. He had considered the
-stuff worthless, but now----
-
-“I’ll tell you, Mr. Murtry,” he said thoughtfully, “I had a lot of
-work sledding that oil in here last winter. I really hadn’t thought
-about selling it, but since you need it, and I don’t, I’ll let you
-have it.”
-
-“You mean for nothin’?” Murtry asked incredulously.
-
-“Of course not. I mean for a fair price.”
-
-Murtry became suspicious. “What do you call a fair price?” he
-countered. “It’s worth nothin’ whatever to you, an’ I’ll give
-you--let’s see, I’ll give you two dollars a gallon for it an’ allow
-you a dollar a pound for freightin’ it into the country. Fair
-enough, ain’t it?”
-
-Benton grinned. “That’s one way of looking at it,” he said amiably,
-“but I really can’t think of letting it go for what you offer. Two
-dollars a gallon is more than the oil is worth, but--the freighting
-the stuff into this country. Man, that was the hardest work I ever
-did in my life!”
-
-“I get you.” Murtry spoke thickly. “You’ve got me where the wool’s
-short an’ you aim to gouge me. All right--tell you what I’ll
-do--I’ll give you a hundred dollars cash on the nail. How ’bout it?”
-
-“That _would_ be gouging, as you call it.” Benton seemed to be
-considering the matter. “No,” he said at last, “I can’t take that
-much money. Four gallons of oil isn’t worth a hundred dollars.”
-
-“Say, what in thunder are you drivin’ at?” Murtry cried angrily.
-“Are you tryin’ to kid somebody?”
-
-“Not at all. You’ve made your offer, and now I’ll make mine.” Benton
-spoke slowly and distinctly. “As you said a moment ago, that oil is
-really worth nothing at all to me, so I’ll tell you what I’ll do.
-I’ll just give you the oil, provided that you’ll give me something
-that’s worth nothing whatever to you. In case you don’t know, I mean
-a sluice head of water from Caribou Creek. Are you on?”
-
-Murtry was thinking hard. There was not one chance in a thousand of
-this confident youngster finding gold on that little dry gulch.
-There was water to spare, lots of it going to waste, but oil--there
-was only four gallons of lubricating oil in the country! With a
-scowl, Murtry nodded his head in the affirmative.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was a month later before the old-timer visited young Benton on
-his dry gulch. Fully a half dozen men were bustling about on the
-claim. Benton himself was closely watching two men who were holding
-the nozzle of a pressure hose trained against a bank of gravel. The
-old-timer stood aghast until Benton came over to greet him.
-
-“Well, how in the name of Sam Hill,” said the old man, “did you ever
-make a deal with Joe Murtry to get this water!”
-
-For reply Benton fished a bit of paper from his pocket, and passed
-it over. “Read it,” he said with a grin.
-
-The old-timer slowly spelled out the brief document.
-
- In consideration of four gallons of engine oil, I hereby
- agree to sell, assign, and transfer to Harris Benton,
- a full sluice head of water to be taken from the waters
- of Caribou Creek, and I agree to allow him or his agents
- to go on my claim or claims to dig the necessary ditch
- to carry said water.
-
- Joe Murtry.
-
-“You’re the first man that ever got the best of Joe Murtry,” gasped
-the old-timer. “How in thunder did you do it?”
-
-Benton explained.
-
-“And now,” he went on, “I’ve got some good miners working for me,
-but--you’re an old-timer--do they seem to be working the ground all
-right?”
-
-“Listen, son,” said the old-timer solemnly. “You don’t need the
-advice of an old-timer.”
-
-
-[Transcriber’s Note: This story appeared in the June 5, 1926 issue
-of Western Story Magazine.]
-
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Herbert Farris</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: January 7, 2023 [eBook #69671]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Roger Frank and Sue Clark</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GREENER THAN SPRUCE ***</div>
-
-<h1>GREENER THAN SPRUCE</h1>
-<div class='ifpc'>
- <img src='images/illus-fpc.jpg' alt='image' style='width:100%'>
-</div>
-<div style='text-align:center;font-size:1.2em;margin-top:1em;'>Greener than Spruce</div>
-<div style='text-align:center;margin-top:0.5em;'>By Herbert Farris</div>
-<div style='text-align:center;font-size:0.9em;margin-bottom:1em;'>Author of “Plenty Grub an’ Plenty Gold,” etc.</div>
-
-<p>“Maybe greener men <i>have</i> hit Alasky&mdash;but I doubt it!”</p>
-
-<p>The speaker, a rheumy-eyed, old veteran of the trails, spoke
-thus disparagingly of young Harris Benton. The old-timer’s
-perpetual “sun-grin” expanded visibly as he watched Benton’s
-parka-clad figure disappear around a bend in the river
-trail.</p>
-
-<p>“Wonder how long he’ll last,” the old fellow speculated,
-turning to the group on the river bank. “I’ll bet I’ve showed
-him a dozen times how to tie his snowshoes to his feet, an’ I’ve
-told him little things about pitchin’ his tent and makin’ camp,
-till I’m black in the face. It’ll be three-four weeks yet before
-mushin’ll be any good, but I’ve got a right good notion to load
-up the old Yukon sled an’ take out after that young
-chechahco.”</p>
-
-<p>“An’ why?”</p>
-
-<p>The old-timer had paused for that query.
-The question certainly gave pith and point to the clever thing
-on the tip of his tongue. The remark would have lost its savor
-in the telling; the retort, however, was pungent.</p>
-
-<p>“An’ why?” he repeated. “I’ll
-tell you for why. I’ve been snow-blind twice, so my eyes ain’t
-what they used to be. Nowadays, when I ain’t wearin’ snow
-glasses&mdash;an’ blast the dang things, I hate ’em!&mdash;&nbsp;I’ve got to
-keep my eyes clamped on the spruce.</p>
-
-<p>“Spruce is dang restful to the eyes.
-It’s restful because it’s green, but to keep on lookin’ at it, a
-man’s got to twist his head from one side the river to the
-other, an’ there’s times when I think I’m li’ble to twist my
-head plum off&mdash;like a screech owl. Now, instead of takin’ all
-that trouble, I <i>could</i>
-start out an’ foller after this young Benton.
-Instead of lookin’ at the spruce then, I could keep my eyes
-fastened straight ahead on <i>him</i>. He’s greener than
-any spruce that ever growed.”</p>
-
-<p>If young Harris Benton could have heard
-this sarcastic speech, he would have been rudely made aware of
-the withering contempt in which he was held by the general run
-of Alaskans with whom he had come in contact. Had he been aware
-of the feeling which existed, he would not have been offended in
-the least; he would have been amused. He was green but, unlike
-many greenhorns, he realized the fact and was anxious to learn.
-Moreover, he was willing to accept the hard knocks&mdash;a part of
-the curriculum of Alaska’s trail school&mdash;and come up smiling.
-For Harris Benton, although he was probably the greenest
-chechahco in the North, had not been raised a pet.</p>
-
-<p>At noon, young Benton hauled his sled to
-the river bank and, with considerable difficulty, dropped a dead
-spruce tree and built a small tea fire. After his noon meal he
-unloaded his Yukon sled, inverted it so that the steel-shod
-runners shone like twin mirrors in the rays of the sun;
-then&mdash;and this is almost past believing&mdash;he proceeded to smear
-the steel shoes of the sled runners with lubricating
-oil.</p>
-
-<p>The dealer who had sold him the
-oil&mdash;either unscrupulous or a practical joker&mdash;had seriously
-informed him that “greased sled runners makes mighty easy
-slippin’ on the trail.” Harris Benton had innocently bought five
-gallons of the lubricant.</p>
-
-<p>Where a musher pulls without dogs, as
-young Benton was doing, every pound of excess weight is an
-additional check to his progress. And besides the five gallons
-of lubricating oil, Harris Benton was hauling other
-nonessentials. He had more clothing than he really needed; about
-twenty pounds of books and old magazines, and the merchant from
-whom he had bought his outfit had sold him far too many cooking
-utensils. Benton’s entire outfit weighed almost twelve hundred
-pounds, and, since at best he could haul but four hundred pounds
-on his Yukon sled, he was relaying. He would haul from three to
-four hundred pounds as far up the river trail as he could
-possibly travel in a day, cache his load, and return to his camp
-with his empty sled.</p>
-
-<p>Early in the month of May he reached the
-Kentna country. He had been on the trail four months, and he had
-arrived with pick, pan, and shovel, together with ample food to
-last him through the mining season. Also&mdash;as every old-timer in
-the Kentna country will testify&mdash;he had arrived with the
-ambition and energy of a half dozen men in spite of the grueling
-work on the trail.</p>
-
-<p>Young Benton spent his first week after
-arriving at “the cricks” in building a cache for his supplies.
-It was a simple box affair, built of logs, supported high in air
-by four posts. He was busily stowing his food and other supplies
-in the cache, when a voice at his elbow brought him about with a
-start. Looking up from his work, he saw the old-timer who had
-offered him many helpful suggestions back at the trading post.
-The old man was surveying him, his small stock of provisions,
-and his crude cache, with frank curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I see you landed here all right,”
-he remarked by way of greeting. “I’m camped just above here on
-Penny Ante Crick, an’ I ain’t got a thing to do till the snow
-goes off, so I thought I’d mush over an’ see how you’re gettin’
-along. Staked yourself a claim yet?”</p>
-
-<p>Benton admitted that he had not. “I
-didn’t know it was lawful to stake a claim unless you discover
-gold,” he added.</p>
-
-<p>“Plenty of ’em stakes first an’ find the
-gold afterward&mdash;if there’s any to be found.” The old man’s
-rheumy eyes were mildly disapproving. “I wouldn’t worry too much
-about makin’ my discovery, if I was you. Most any gravel you
-find around here carries <i>some</i> gold. Trouble is
-to find it in payin’ quantities. So hurry up an’ stake yourself
-a claim or two, before some of these ground hogs comes in on the
-first boat this summer an’ grabs it all. Us old-timers takes
-just what we can work to good advantage, but most greenhorns’ll
-wear out a pair of hobnail shoes just a-racin’ over the country
-stakin’. You’re lucky to be here among the first, so hurry up
-an’ get busy.”</p>
-
-<p>“Thanks for the tip. I’ll&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“It’s none of my business,” the old-timer
-suddenly interrupted, “but what in thunder have you brought into
-the country in <i>that</i>?”</p>
-
-<p>Benton had placed his five-gallon can of
-lubricating oil near the cache, and it was that which had
-elicited the question. He was somewhat puzzled.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, that’s my oil,” he said. “How do
-you carry yours?”</p>
-
-<p>The ancient sour dough had all he could
-do to keep a straight face. This green chechahco had actually
-brought kerosene into this wilderness!</p>
-
-<p>“You won’t have no use for a lamp,” he
-said gently. “All summer you can read fine print right in your
-tent&mdash;any hour of the night, too. I thought ev’ry-body
-knowed&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I have no lamp,” young Benton
-interrupted impatiently. “I’m green but I’m not quite a fool&mdash;I
-hope. That isn’t oil for a lamp; it’s about four gallons of
-lubricating oil that I had left over from my winter’s
-sledding.”</p>
-
-<p>“I see.” The old man shifted his weight
-from one moccasined foot to the other, swallowing his Adam’s
-apple twice before he once more found his voice. “I understand
-you but I don’t know what you mean,” he said. “How much of this
-oil did you use an’ how did you use it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Well, I used about a gallon.” Young
-Benton was looking doubtfully at the old man. “I think I see
-what you’re driving at now. I allowed that storekeeper to sell
-me five gallons when one was all that I needed.”</p>
-
-<p>The old-timer lifted his tufted eyebrows.
-“An’ you got through the winter with one gallon,” he said
-softly, wonderingly.</p>
-
-<p>“Why, I only used it in the morning and
-again at noon. Just when I&mdash;but maybe I didn’t use it often
-enough. Still, the sled came along pretty well.”</p>
-
-<p>The old-timer barked apologetically in
-his mittened hand. At last he understood. It had been so many
-years since he had heard of the old joke of greasing sled
-runners that he had forgotten. But this boy was so very much in
-earnest, it wouldn’t do to hurt his feelings. And besides, it
-might lead to serious trouble. This innocent youth had dragged
-this worthless stuff over the trail&mdash;pounds and pounds of it.
-Murder had been committed for less than a joke like
-that!</p>
-
-<p>“The skinflint sold you too much, all
-right,” he said, as he reached down and thoughtfully “hefted”
-the can. “But you’ve got it here&mdash;I reckon you might as well
-forget it. Anyhow, you won’t have any more use for it. You’re
-all through sleddin’. An’ now I’d better be gettin’ along. If
-you want anything this summer, you’ll find me over on Penny Ante
-Crick. Number Five Above Discovery’s the name of my
-claim.”</p>
-
-
-<p class='sb'>Harris Benton was highly elated when he
-next saw the old-timer. Not only had he staked a claim on what
-he called Benton Gulch but he had actually discovered gold and
-he had found it in paying quantities. For a week he had panned
-the gravel on Benton Gulch, and he was now displaying his sample
-to the old-timer. The old man listened attentively to the boy’s
-story, but did not enthuse over the sample.</p>
-
-<p>“You’ve come clean over here to Penny
-Ante Crick to show me this, an’ I’m right sorry to have to
-disappoint you.” In spite of the old man’s words, young Benton
-was grinning cheerfully. “It takes a whole lot to discourage a
-young rooster like you,” he resumed, “but I’ll soon show you why
-you’ve got to leave that gulch alone. I don’t doubt what you
-say. You got the gold here to prove it. But how’re you goin’ to
-work the ground? Answer me that.”</p>
-
-<p>Harris Benton still grinned. “I know why
-you think I can’t work that ground,” he said. “It’s what you
-old-timers call a dry gulch. I know there won’t be drinking
-water there this summer. What you overlooked is this. By digging
-a ditch less than a quarter mile in length I can get one of the
-best sluice heads in this country. Right over that shoulder at
-the head of my gulch is where I&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I know where you mean, all right,”
-interrupted the old-timer. “But have you talked with Joe Murtry
-yet?”</p>
-
-<p>“Haven’t even seen him. But why should I
-talk to him? What has he to do with it?”</p>
-
-<p>“Ev’rything. Joe Murtry owns ev’ry drop
-of water in Caribou Crick. He recorded it last spring a year
-ago.”</p>
-
-<p>Young Benton was on the point of
-interrupting, but the old-timer silenced him. “Now don’t start
-to tell me that all you’ve got to do is to go over to Caribou
-Crick an’ get Joe Murtry to give you the right to take what
-water you want, for Joe ain’t that kind. He ain’t only the
-luckiest man in Alasky&mdash;he’s the <i>meanest</i>. If he’s worth
-a dime, he’s worth a half million right now, but even so, he
-wouldn’t give a man daylight in a dark cellar. You just forget
-you ever staked a claim on that little gulch an’ start out
-prospectin’ for something that’ll do you some good.”</p>
-
-<p>Young Benton thanked the old man for his
-advice. “But,” he added, “I’m not going to start out
-prospectin’, when I’ve already discovered gold&mdash;unless I’m
-forced to do so. I’m going over to see Murtry at
-once.”</p>
-
-<p>“All right; but be ready to run if he
-comes at you. He’s the meanest man in Alasky, bar none. Joe
-Murtry never done no man a favor, an’ he never will. Mark what I
-tell you, son. He’ll chase you off his ground just as soon as
-you show up an’ tell him what you want. You’re just wastin’ your
-time. But, then, that’s the trouble with all chechahcos; they
-won’t listen to an old-timer’s advice.”</p>
-
-<p>Young Benton went at once to Caribou
-Creek. In spite of what he had heard of Joe Murtry, he was not
-convinced. There was an abundance of water in Caribou Creek, and
-surely no man would be mean enough to refuse to allow the use of
-the surplus. This line of reasoning gave him great confidence,
-but his first glimpse of Murtry caused his heart to
-sink.</p>
-
-<p>Murtry was not tall, but he was as broad
-as two average-sized men. Yet he was not fat. His arms were
-unusually long, and, due to a slight stoop to his powerful
-shoulders, his huge hands hung slightly ahead of his knees.
-Young Benton looked at him and instantly thought of a gorilla.
-With two others, Murtry was setting up a string of sluice
-boxes.</p>
-
-<p>Benton watched them for a time; twice,
-without waiting to be asked, he gave them a hand. Murtry, who
-had barely spoken, paused at last and sized up his caller. What
-he saw evidently satisfied him.</p>
-
-<p>“Want a job?” he asked gruffly. “I’m
-taking one of these men upriver tomorrow, an’ if you’re lookin’
-for work, you can stay here an’ help Sam. Do whatever he tells
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>Here was a golden opportunity. Surely if
-he favored Murtry, he might expect the big fellow to
-reciprocate. “I’m not looking for work for the season,” he said,
-“but I’ll be glad to help out for a few days&mdash;if that will do
-you any good.”</p>
-
-<p>Murtry grunted. “All I need,” he said.
-“I’ve got a foreman an’ fifteen men waitin’ for me upriver. They
-mush in from the coast&mdash;their time starts the first of June
-whether they’re here or not. Hunderd an’ fifty miles from here.
-I’m goin’ up in my boat an’ bring ’em down. You stay an’ help
-Sam out till I come back with my men, an’ I’ll pay you the goin’
-wages&mdash;ten bucks an’ grub.”</p>
-
-<p>Sam soon shuffled off to cook the evening
-meal, and Benton decided to say nothing about his sluice head of
-water until after they had eaten. Their pipes going, he thought
-it time to broach the subject.</p>
-
-<p>“I didn’t tell you that I was a neighbor
-of yours,” he said by way of opening the conversation. “I spent
-the winter sledding in my outfit.”</p>
-
-<p>“That so?” Murtry said with a mild
-simulation of interest. “Where you camped?”</p>
-
-<p>Benton indicated the direction. “Right
-over there,” he said, “I’ve named it Benton Gulch.”</p>
-
-<p>“You ain’t staked that little dry gulch?”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, yes. You see, I believe there’s a
-little gold there&mdash;I don’t know how much&mdash;I’ve already done
-quite a bit of panning and I hope to&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You’re a fool!” Murtry interrupted in a
-rage. “If you don’t know that I own ev’ry drop of water in
-Caribou Crick, it’s time you was learnin’. How do you aim to
-work that gulch without water?”</p>
-
-<p>“That’s what I came over to see you
-about,” said Benton. “I heard that it was your water and I
-thought that you would be glad to spare me a sluice head.”
-Benton was speaking calmly, in spite of the other’s belligerent
-attitude. “Of course,” he went on, “if the water in Caribou
-Crick should run low this summer or fall, I’d quit taking it
-out, but&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You’d <i>quit</i> takin’ it out!”
-Murtry cried. “You’re never goin’ to
-<i>begin</i> takin’ it out! If
-you ever start monkeyin’ with Caribou Crick, I’ll drill you so
-full of holes you’ll look like&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Murtry’s anger was intensified by his
-failure to find the word he was seeking. “Say,” he cried, “you
-get clean off this claim! Beat it quick, while you’re all
-together!”</p>
-
-<p>Benton was sitting at the rough table; he
-rose slowly. “Why certainly&mdash;if it’s your claim&mdash;I’ll leave.” He
-was speaking hesitantly but he was not afraid of the glowering
-bully who had commanded him to leave. He was simply surprised at
-the man’s unreasonable anger. “But even if I have no water, that
-gulch belongs to me, and I mean to hold it.”</p>
-
-<p>“Hold it as long as you want to!” Murtry
-was shouting after him. “Hold it till you get good an’ tired of
-doing assessment work on it! Wait a minute till I tell you
-something you’d just as well know now as later!” Benton paused
-and Murtry continued. “There ain’t any gold in that gulch, but
-even if there was, <i>you’d</i> never get to work it. I’ve got the water an’ I
-aim to keep it!”</p>
-
-<p>The old-timer was right. He was right
-about everything! He had said that Joe Murtry was the meanest
-man in Alaska; he had said that no matter how much gold the tiny
-gulch might carry, Murtry would never allow it to be worked.
-Benton considered the various things that the old-timer had told
-him until he reached his camp in Benton Gulch. Well, he decided,
-he would follow the old man’s advice and quit the gulch on the
-following day.</p>
-
-<p>Benton had been prospecting the gulch
-every day for more than a week. Through force of habit he took
-his pick, shovel and gold pan, and went to work in the narrow
-cut which he had been running into a shoulder of the hill near
-his tent. He was far from an expert with the gold pan, but he
-enjoyed the beginner’s thrill, which always came when he “tailed
-off” the residue in the pan, and saw the streak of yellow
-trickling behind the black sand.</p>
-
-<p>Young Benton extended his cut three feet
-into the hill. He was following along the disintegrated slate
-bed rock; although he did not realize it, the bedrock was
-totally different. Before it had been “slick,” now it was rough
-and “rotten.”</p>
-
-<p>He filled his pan with gravel and carried
-it to a hole which he had dug in the gulch’s channel. Now the
-hole was filled with water from the melting snows; in a week,
-perhaps, it would be dry. At least the old-timer had said that
-it would, and Benton was now a firm believer in the wisdom of
-the old man.</p>
-
-<p>It is a maxim with old-timers that “many
-things are mistaken for gold, but gold is never mistaken for
-anything else.” A greenhorn is often fooled, for example, by
-iron pyrites and “cube” iron, but when he discovers gold, the
-real thing, he knows. So it was with Benton. For a week he had
-been panning “pinhead stuff” that would “rattle in the pan.”
-Now, as he “tailed off” the pan he had taken from the
-disintegrated bed rock, he saw that a half-dozen dull-yellow
-pieces of gold were in the bottom of the pan. Benton’s old-timer
-would have pronounced them slugs.</p>
-
-<p>Benton was excited. He held the slugs in
-the palm of his hand, while he attempted to estimate their
-value. The smallest of them, he decided, was fully twice as
-large as a five-dollar gold piece; the largest was surely worth
-more than twenty dollars. The six slugs would total almost a
-hundred dollars. Chechahco that he was, Benton still knew that
-he had uncovered bonanza dirt.</p>
-
-<p>Young Benton went again to his cut. This
-time he worked feverishly for two hours. His pay streak was
-rich, extremely so, but there was a heavy overburden to handle.
-In other words, above the pay he had discovered on bed rock, lay
-ten, twenty, possibly as much as fifty feet of muck and gravel.
-Undoubtedly the ground was rich enough that he could take out
-hundreds of dollars that summer without water, but if he could
-only manage to get that sluicehead from Caribou Creek, he could
-with a pressure hose, run that overburden off like so much soup.
-He <i>must</i> have that water? But how?</p>
-
-<p>At five o’clock next morning young Benton
-was seated on the stump of a spruce where the clear waters of
-Caribou Creek gushed into the brown foam-flecked river. He
-looked at Murtry’s river boat which was beached near by. It
-rested on two fresh-peeled logs, and Benton saw that all
-preparations had been recently made to launch the vessel. At six
-o’clock, Murtry and one of his men put in an appearance. Benton
-had no time to lose; he spoke to Murtry at once.</p>
-
-<p>“Murtry,” he said, without rising from
-his stump, “I’ve been thinking the matter over and I wonder if
-you would consider <i>selling</i> me a sluice
-head of water from Caribou Crick. I’ll pay you what it is
-worth.”</p>
-
-<p>Murtry paid him no attention. He and his
-man put their shoulders at the stern of the boat and skidded the
-vessel into the river. Murtry made a line fast to a convenient
-“dead man,” while his man leaped into the stern of the boat and
-started the engine. No sooner did he have the engine purring
-rhythmically, than he shut it off.</p>
-
-<p>“What’s the matter?” Murtry, who was
-about to cast off and leap aboard, made the line fast again.
-“Anything wrong with that engine?”</p>
-
-<p>“No, but&mdash;&mdash;” The man was looking
-at Murtry in wide-eyed alarm. He was
-afraid to tell what was wrong, and yet he dared not remain
-silent. “Mr. Murtry,” he said, speaking swiftly, as if anxious
-to break the news as quickly as possible, “there ain’t a single
-drop of engine oil. I spoke to Sam about it last night after
-we’d loaded the other stuff aboard, an’ he said there was plenty
-of oil here. But I just looked an’ there’s nothin’ but gasoline.
-There’s more gasoline than we need, but there
-ain’t a drop of&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“You idiot!” Murtry exclaimed. “Chase
-right up to camp an’ get some out of the cache an’
-hurry!”</p>
-
-<p>Murtry’s man leaped ashore, but stood
-hesitantly, shifting his feet as if in a quandary.</p>
-
-<p>“Hurry! I don’t want to wait here all
-day!”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll go look again, but I looked last
-evenin’ an’ there wasn’t any there. At least I didn’t see it.
-That’s why Sam was so sure there was plenty on the
-boat.”</p>
-
-<p>“Of course it’s there. If you don’t find
-it in the cache, look in the tool shed.”</p>
-
-<p>At this the
-man shuffled off. Young Benton was much pleased at Murtry’s
-unexpected delay, but he was somewhat nettled at the manner in
-which he had been ignored. He decided to try again, and this
-time he would do his utmost to make Murtry answer
-him.</p>
-
-<p>“I suppose you didn’t hear me a bit ago,”
-he began, “but&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I heard you the first time,” Murtry
-interrupted with an oath. “Now shut your yap an’ get
-out!”</p>
-
-<p>Benton did not move. Seeing this,
-Murtry’s great hamlike hands twisted about convulsively; his
-lips drew back against his uneven teeth, and with an enraged
-snarl he quickly rushed at the youth.</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll show you if you move or not!” he
-shouted. “Once I get a hold of you, I’ll&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>Murtry suddenly brought up with a sharp
-exclamation. Ten feet from Benton, he had stopped with an
-expression of bewilderment on his broad face. He was gazing like
-a man fascinated into the barrel of an automatic.</p>
-
-<p>“I came ready for you,” said young Benton
-coolly. “I’m not on your claim, and I don’t see you or
-anybody else throwing me off of government land. And now,
-you can at least listen to what I have to say, even if you don’t
-care to&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll listen, you young pup,” Murtry
-said, “but there’s a day comin’. You’ll wake up some day an’
-learn that what I say goes in this neck of the
-woods.”</p>
-
-<p>Murtry advanced a step as he said this.
-“And you,” said Benton as he menaced Murtry with his weapon,
-“may <i>never</i> wake up, if you come another step in this direction. There,
-that’s better,” he went on as Murtry retreated a step. “From
-what I’ve been told, Murtry, you’re a mighty rich man. It won’t
-bother you in the least to sell&mdash;or give me, for
-that matter&mdash;some of your water. You’ve got your pile made. Now
-be decent and give me a chance to get out of this country with a
-little money for all the hardship I’ve gone through. Will you
-listen to a sensible proposition?”</p>
-
-<p>“Rave on,” said Murtry sullenly.
-“You’ve got me dead to rights. Talk away if it does you any
-good, but you’ll get nothin’ out of me.”</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll give you a third of all the
-money I take out,” said Benton, speaking slowly and distinctly.
-“If you’ll give me the water to work the ground. Is it a
-go?”</p>
-
-<p>Murtry opened his lips as if he intended
-to reply; then closed them tightly. A minute passed and he
-seemed to reconsider. “You might as well trot along,” he said
-contemptuously. “Use your brains. Why <i>would</i> I take a third?
-If there’s any money there, I can have it all after you starve
-out; an’ if there ain’t anything there, what’s the idee of my
-takin’ a third!”</p>
-
-<p>Benton said nothing more. Argument seemed
-such a futile thing, so far as Murtry was concerned. Five
-minutes passed and Murtry’s man appeared empty handed. His
-manner was apologetic.</p>
-
-<p>“It ain’t there,” he said, whining. “An’
-there ain’t any on the boat. Sam or some of the other boys
-must’ve used it all up last fall before the boat was laid up. I
-don’t know what to do unless I mush up there an’ have the boys
-come down in a boat or on a raft.”</p>
-
-<p>For almost a minute, Murtry raved like a
-maniac. “An’ ev’ry day that my men stay up there, it’s costin’
-me a hunderd an’ sixty-five dollars.” He groaned. “Fifteen men
-at ten a day an’ my foreman at fifteen a day. That’s what comes
-of puttin’ a man like you in charge of my boat. Say, how long do
-you think it’d take you to mush up there?”</p>
-
-<p>“A hunderd an’ fifty miles is a good
-ways&mdash;goin’ through the brush like I’ll have to do,” the man
-said. “I’ll do my best though to make it in ten
-days.”</p>
-
-<p>“Sixteen hunderd an’ sixty-five
-dollars!” Again Murtry groaned. “An’ maybe a whole lot more&mdash;if
-you <i>don’t</i> make it in ten days. Well, what are you standin’
-there for? Get a move on!”</p>
-
-<p>“Wait just a minute, Mr. Murtry. I’ve
-just thought about somethin’ that may save you a whole lot of
-money, an’ save me that long trip upriver on foot. An old-timer
-over on Penny Ante Crick has been tellin’ all around that this
-young Benton sledded in nearly five gallons of oil last winter.
-He was laughin’ about him usin’ it to grease his sled runners,
-an’ he’s got upward of four gallons of it left. Now, if you
-could buy it off him&mdash;&mdash;”</p>
-
-<p>“Why, of course,” Murtry interrupted
-briskly. “I heard about it a month ago. Just forgot it.” He
-turned to Benton. “How much do you want for that oil?” he asked
-in a pleasant voice.</p>
-
-<p>Young Benton was thinking fast. He, too,
-had forgotten all about the oil that he had bought to make
-slippin’ easy. He had considered the stuff worthless, but
-now&mdash;&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I’ll tell you, Mr. Murtry,” he said
-thoughtfully, “I had a lot of work sledding that oil in here
-last winter. I really hadn’t thought about selling it, but since
-you need it, and I don’t, I’ll let you have it.”</p>
-
-<p>“You mean for nothin’?” Murtry asked incredulously.</p>
-
-<p>“Of course not. I mean for a fair price.”</p>
-
-<p>Murtry became suspicious. “What do you
-call a fair price?” he countered. “It’s worth nothin’ whatever
-to you, an’ I’ll give you&mdash;let’s see, I’ll give you two dollars
-a gallon for it an’ allow you a dollar a pound for freightin’
-it into the country. Fair enough, ain’t it?”</p>
-
-<p>Benton grinned. “That’s one way of
-looking at it,” he said amiably, “but I really can’t think of
-letting it go for what you offer. Two dollars a gallon is more
-than the oil is worth, but&mdash;the freighting the stuff into this
-country. Man, that was the hardest work I ever did in my
-life!”</p>
-
-<p>“I get you.” Murtry spoke thickly.
-“You’ve got me where the wool’s short an’ you aim to gouge
-me. All right&mdash;tell you what I’ll do&mdash;I’ll give you a hundred
-dollars cash on the nail. How ’bout it?”</p>
-
-<p>“That <i>would</i> be gouging, as
-you call it.” Benton seemed to be considering the matter. “No,”
-he said at last, “I can’t take that much money. Four
-gallons of oil isn’t worth a hundred dollars.”</p>
-
-<p>“Say, what in thunder are you drivin’
-at?” Murtry cried angrily. “Are you tryin’ to kid
-somebody?”</p>
-
-<p>“Not at all. You’ve made your offer,
-and now I’ll make mine.” Benton spoke slowly and distinctly. “As
-you said a moment ago, that oil is really worth nothing at all
-to me, so I’ll tell you what I’ll do. I’ll just give you the
-oil, provided that you’ll give me something that’s worth nothing
-whatever to you. In case you don’t know, I mean a sluice head of
-water from Caribou Creek. Are you on?”</p>
-
-<p>Murtry was thinking hard. There was not
-one chance in a thousand of this confident youngster finding
-gold on that little dry gulch. There was water to spare, lots of
-it going to waste, but oil&mdash;there was only four gallons of
-lubricating oil in the country! With a scowl, Murtry nodded his
-head in the affirmative.</p>
-
-
-<p class='sb'>It was a month later before the old-timer
-visited young Benton on his dry gulch. Fully a half dozen men
-were bustling about on the claim. Benton himself was closely
-watching two men who were holding the nozzle of a pressure hose
-trained against a bank of gravel. The old-timer stood aghast
-until Benton came over to greet him.</p>
-
-<p>“Well, how in the name of Sam Hill,”
-said the old man, “did you ever make a deal with Joe Murtry
-to get this water!”</p>
-
-<p>For reply Benton fished a bit of paper
-from his pocket, and passed it over. “Read it,” he said with a
-grin.</p>
-
-<p>The old-timer slowly spelled out the
-brief document.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>In consideration of four gallons of
-engine oil, I hereby agree to sell, assign, and transfer to
-Harris Benton, a full sluice head of water to be taken from the
-waters of Caribou Creek, and I agree to allow him or his agents
-to go on my claim or claims to dig the necessary ditch to carry
-said water.</p>
-<p style="font-variant:small-caps; text-align:right;">Joe Murtry.</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>“You’re the first man that ever got the
-best of Joe Murtry,” gasped the old-timer. “How in thunder did
-you do it?”</p>
-
-<p>Benton explained.</p>
-
-<p>“And now,” he went on, “I’ve got
-some good miners working for me, but&mdash;you’re an old-timer&mdash;do
-they seem to be working the ground all right?”</p>
-
-<p>“Listen, son,” said the old-timer solemnly. “You don’t need
-the advice of an old-timer.”</p>
-
-<div class="tn">
- <p>Transcriber’s Note: This story appeared in
- the June 5, 1926 issue of <i>Western Story</i> magazine.</p>
-</div>
-
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