Part 7 (2/2)
”Ain't thirsty,” replied the ”swagger.”
”Let 'im alone,” said a third. ”Can't you see he's bin working a 'duffer'?”
Benjamin Tresco, standing on the curb of the pavement, watched the advent of the prospector with an altogether remarkable interest, which rose to positive restlessness when he saw the digger pause before the entrance of the Kangaroo Bank.
The ill-clad, dirty stranger pushed through the swinging, gla.s.s door, stood with his hobnailed boots on the tesselated pavement inside the bank, and contemplated the Semitic face of the spruce clerk who, with the glittering gold-scales by his side, stood behind the polished mahogany counter.
But either the place looked too grand and expensive, or else the clerk's appearance offended, but the ”swagger” backed out of the building, and stood once more upon the asphalt, wearing the air of a stray dog with no home or friends.
Tresco crossed the street. With extended hand, portly mien, and benign countenance, he approached the digger, after the manner of a benevolent sidesman in a church.
”Selling gold, mate?” He spoke in his most confidential manner. ”Come this way. _I_ will help you.”
Down the street he took the derelict, like a s.h.i.+p in full sail towing a battered, mastless craft into a haven of safety.
Having brought the ”swagger” to a safe anchorage inside his shop, Tresco shut the door, to the exclusion of all intruders; took his gold-scales from a shelf where they had stood, unused and dusty, for many a month; stepped behind the counter, and said, in his best business manner: ”Now, sir.”
The digger unhitched his swag and dropped it unceremoniously on the floor, stood his long _manuka_ stick against the wall, thrust his hand inside his ”jumper,” looked at the goldsmith's rubicund face, drew out a long canvas bag which was tied at the neck with a leather boot-lace, and said, in a hoa.r.s.e whisper, ”There, mister, that's my pile.”
Tres...o...b..lanced the bag in his hand.
”You've kind o' struck it,” he said, as he looked at the digger with a blandness which could not have been equalled.
The digger may have grinned, or he may have scowled--Tresco could not tell--but, to all intents and purposes, he remained imperturbable, for his wilderness of hair and beard, aided by his hat, covered the landscape of his face.
”Ja-ake!” roared the goldsmith, in his rasping, raucous voice, as though the apprentice were quarter of a mile away. ”Come here, you young limb!”
The shock-headed, rat-faced youth shot like a shrapnel sh.e.l.l from the workshop, and burst upon the astonished digger's gaze.
”Take this bob and a jug,” said the goldsmith, ”and fetch a quart. We'll drink your health,” he added, turning to the man with the gold, ”and a continual run of good luck.”
The digger for the first time found his full voice. It was as though the silent company of the wood-hens in the ”bush” had caused the hinges of his speech to become rusty. His words jerked themselves spasmodically from behind his beard, and his sentences halted, half-finished.
”Yes. That's so. If you ask me. Nice pile? Oh, yes. Good streak o' luck.
Good streak, as you say. Yes. Ha, ha! Ho, ho!” He actually broke into a laugh.
Tresco polished the bra.s.s dish of his scales, which had grown dim and dirty with disuse; then he untied the bag of gold, and poured the rich contents into the dish. The gold lay in a lovely, dull yellow heap.
”Clean, rough gold,” said Tresco, peering closely at the precious mound, and stirring it with his grimy forefinger. ”It'll go 3 15s. You're in luck, mister. You've struck it rich, and”--he a.s.sumed his most benignant expression--”there's plenty more where this came from, eh?”
”You bet,” said the digger. ”Oh, yes, any Gawd's quant.i.ty.” He laughed again. ”You must think me pretty green, mister.” He continued to laugh.
”How much for the lot?”
Tresco spread the gold over the surface of the dish in a layer, and, puffing gently but adroitly, he winnowed it with his nicotine-ladened breath till no particle of sand remained with the gold. Then he put the dish on the scales, and weighed the digger's ”find.”
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