Part 38 (1/2)
Nasmyth laughed. ”Well,” replied he, ”perhaps it's a little curious, considering everything, but I was impatient to get back again. In fact, I feel more at home each time I scramble down from the divide.”
He glanced round through the sliding snow at the dim white range and ranks of towering pines, and, as he did so, the roar of the river and the wail of trees that swayed beneath a fierce wind filled the rock-walled hollow. Then the persistent clink of drills and thud of axes broke out again, while here and there the blurred white figure of a toiling man emerged from the snow. It was a picture that a man unused to the wilderness might have shrunk from, but Gordon understood his comrade. They were engaged in a great struggle, with the powers of savage Nature arrayed against them; but it was with a curious quickening of all the strength that was in them, mental and physical, that they braced themselves for the conflict.
”I have a thing or two to tell you, but we'll get into the shanty and have supper first. The boys are just quitting work,” remarked Gordon.
They clambered down over a practicable trail, though part of it was covered deep with snow, crept in and out among the boulders by the light of a great fire that blazed above the fall, and found Mattawa laying a meal out when they reached the shanty. Neither Nasmyth nor Gordon said anything of consequence until after the meal, and then Nasmyth, who had put on his deer-hide jacket and duck trousers, flung himself down in an empty packing-case that was stuffed with soft spruce twigs, and looked about him with a smile of contentment. A lamp hung above him, and its light gleamed upon axes, drills, iron wedges, and crosscut saws, and made a chequered pattern of brightness and shadow on the rude log walls. A glowing stove diffused a cosy warmth, and the little room was filled with the odours of tobacco and drying boots and clothes.
”I suppose you saw Wisbech?” observed Gordon. ”Miss Waynefleet told one of the boys, who was through at the settlement, that she had a note from him asking if she'd get a letter he or Acton had written into your hands as soon as possible. He seems to be making quite a stay in this country.”
”He has stayed several months longer than he intended,” replied Nasmyth. ”I believe he did it on my account; but he's going on again in a week or two. I saw him at Bonavista. Where's Waynefleet?”
”I guess he's in Victoria.”
”I didn't come across him. What took him there?”
Gordon laughed. ”He said it was business. Wanted to see if we couldn't get our tools and powder cheaper. As a matter of fact, it would be a relief if that could be done. Any way, he has been working quite hard, and has hung on rather longer than I expected. Administration's his strong point. He doesn't like chopping.” Gordon's face grew grave. ”In one way it's rather a pity he's fond of talking. I'm 'most afraid somebody may start him discoursing on what we're doing over a gla.s.s of wine and a cigar. I like a man of that kind where I can put my hand on him. He's one of our weak spots.”
Nasmyth nodded. ”I'm sorry I didn't know he was in the city,” he said.
”How are you getting on?”
”Satisfactorily, so far as the work goes. We have pushed the blasting heading well under the fall, but there's a thing that has been worrying me. I'd gone across the range to see what the boys in the valley had done, when a man came in. It appears he resented our trying to lower the river. Mattawa saw him.”
Mattawa looked up with a grin. ”He said he'd a claim up at the head of the valley, and we had got to quit work right away. If we didn't he'd get the Crown people or the court to stop us. He liked plenty of water round his ranch. Some of the boys got a little riled with him, and they took him up the gully and put him on his horse.”
”I never heard of a claim up yonder,” declared Nasmyth gravely.
”Well,” said Gordon, ”I believe there is one. Somebody recorded it a long while ago, and did nothing on it, but, as it was bought land, his t.i.tle stands. Potter says he understood the man was dead. It may be an attempt to get some money out of us.”
Nasmyth sat thoughtfully silent a moment or two.
”One of the Crown people hinted at something of the kind,” he said.
”Now I scarcely think any of the boys would go back on us by selling out his land?”
”Not one. Any way, I guess they could hardly do it without the consent of the trustees. You and I are not likely to give ours.” He paused for a moment. ”Well,” he added, ”I guess Waynefleet could be depended on.”
Nasmyth said nothing for almost a minute, and both recognized that the silence was significant. Then he rose abruptly.
”In one shape or other the trouble you suggested is one we will have to face,” he commented. ”That's why I'm going to fire a big charge in the blasting heading to-night. You can bring the giant-powder along, Tom.”
Mattawa appeared to be amazed, and Gordon stared at his comrade curiously.
”If you fire that charge now, you'll naturally make an end of the heading, and I understood your notion was to drive right under the fall and blow the whole ledge out at one time,” objected Gordon.
”Guess if you just rip the top of the rock off, as far as we have gone, it will take us quite a while to make another tunnel, and money, as I needn't remind you, is running out.”
”Exactly!” agreed Nasmyth. ”That extra work will have to be faced, but if I can get a big charge in to-night I can cut down the ridge a foot or two. Two feet less water will count for something in the valley, and I'm going to make sure of it. It seems certain that somebody will try to stop us by-and-by.”
Gordon noticed the hard glint in Nasmyth's eyes, and knew that now when he was being pushed back to the wall he meant to fight, and would not shrink from a sacrifice. They had driven that uncompleted heading at a heavy cost, cutting at first an open gallery in the face of the rock, drenched with the spray of the fall. Then they had crawled into the dripping tunnel hewn out by sheer force of muscle, for it was seldom that powder could be used, and they had only a worn-out machine, and had toiled crouching with scarcely room to bring a hammer down on wedge or to hold the drill, while from odd fissures the icy river poured in on them. Now, it seemed, all that severe effort was to be practically thrown away, but he recognized that his comrade was right. It was wiser to make sure of two feet than to wait until somebody set the law in motion and stopped the work.
”Yes,” he a.s.sented simply; ”I guess it has to be done.”
Mattawa entered with the magazine, and Nasmyth laid out several sticks of giant-powder near the stove. There was a certain risk in this, but giant-powder freezes, and when that happens one must thaw it out. It is a singularly erratic compound of nitro-glycerine, which requires to be fired by a powerful detonator, and, if merely ignited, burns harmlessly. One can warm it at a stove, or even flatten it with a hammer, without stirring it to undesired activity--that is, as a rule--but now and then a chance tap with a pick-handle or a little jolt suffices to loose its tremendous potentialities. In such cases the men nearest it are usually not shattered, but dissolved into their component gases.