The heavy boom of a dynamite blast rolled across the fiat to the hills
that flung it back in a tardy echo like a spent ball of sound. A blob of
blue smoke curled out of a hole the size of a hogshead in a steep bank
overhung with alders. Outside, the wind caught the smoke and carried
streamers of it away to play with. A startled bluejay, on a limb high up
on the bank, lifted his slaty crest and teetered forward, clinging with
his toe nails to the branch while he scolded down at the men who had
scared him so. A rattle of clods and small rocks fell from their high
flight into the sweet air of a mountain sunset.
"Good execution, that was," Cash remarked, craning his neck toward the
hole. "If you're a mind to go on ahead and cook supper, I'll stay and
see if we opened up anything. Or you can stay, just as you please."
Dynamite smoke invariably made Bud's head ache splittingly. Cash was not
so susceptible. Bud chose the cooking, and went away down the flat, the
bluejay screaming insults after him. He was frying bacon when Cash came
in, a hatful of broken rock riding in the hollow of his arm.
"Got something pretty good here, Bud--if she don't turn out like that
dang Burro Lode ledge. Look here. Best looking quartz we've struck yet.
What do you think of it?"
He dumped the rock out on the oilcloth behind the sugar can and directly
under the little square window through which the sun was pouring a
lavish yellow flood of light before it dropped behind the peak. Bud set
the bacon back where it would not burn, and bent over the table to look.
"Gee, but it's heavy!" he cried, picking up a fragment the size of
an egg, and balancing it in his hands. "I don't know a lot about
gold-bearing quartz, but she looks good to me, all right."
"Yeah. It is good, unless I'm badly mistaken. I'll test some after
supper. Old Nelson couldn't have used powder at all, or he'd have
uncovered enough of this, I should think, to show the rest what he had.
Or maybe he died just when he had started that hole. Seems queer he
never struck pay dirt in this flat. Well, let's eat if it's ready, Bud.
Then we'll see."
"Seems kinda queer, don't it, Cash, that nobody stepped in and filed on
any claims here?" Bud dumped half a kettle of boiled beans into a basin
and set it on the table. "Want any prunes to-night, Cash?"
Cash did not want prunes, which was just as well, seeing there were none
cooked. He sat down and ate, with his mind and his eyes clinging to the
grayish, veined fragments of rock lying on the table beside his plate.