Bob Hampton of Placer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 333 pages of information about Bob Hampton of Placer.

Bob Hampton of Placer eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 333 pages of information about Bob Hampton of Placer.

A small tent, dirty and patched, stood with its back against the slope of earth down which he had plunged.  Its flap flung aside revealed within a pile of disarranged blankets, together with some scattered articles of wearing apparel, while just before the opening, his back pressed against the supporting pole, an inverted pipe between his yellow, irregular teeth, sat a hideous looking man.  He was a withered, dried-up fellow, whose age was not to be guessed, having a skin as yellow as parchment, drawn in tight to the bones like that of a mummy, his eyes deep sunken like wells, and his head totally devoid of hair, although about his lean throat there was a copious fringe of iron-gray beard, untrimmed and scraggy.  Down the entire side of one cheek ran a livid scar, while his nose was turned awry.

He sat staring at the newcomer, unwinking, his facial expression devoid of interest, but his fingers opening and closing in apparent nervousness.  Twice his lips opened, but nothing except a peculiar gurgling sound issued from the throat, and Brant, who by this time had attained his feet and his self-possession, ventured to address him.

“Nice quiet spot for a camp,” he remarked, pleasantly, “but a bad place for a tumble.”

The sunken eyes expressed nothing, but the throat gurgled again painfully, and finally the parted lips dropped a detached word or two.  “Blame—­pretty girl—­that.”

The lieutenant wondered how much of their conversation this old mummy had overheard, but he hesitated to question him.  One inquiry, however, sprang to his surprised lips.  “Do you know her?”

“Damn sight—­better—­than any one around here—­know her—­real name.”

Brant stared incredulously.  “Do you mean to insinuate that that young woman is living in this community under an assumed one?  Why, she is scarcely more than a child!  What do you mean, man?”

The soldier’s hat still rested on the grass where it had fallen, its military insignia hidden.

“I guess—­I know—­what I—­know,” the fellow muttered.  “What ’s—­your—­regiment?”

“Seventh Cavalry.”

The man stiffened up as if an electric shock had swept through his limp frame.  “The hell!—­and—­did—­she—­call you—­Brant?”

The young officer’s face exhibited his disgust.  Beyond doubt that sequestered nook was a favorite lounging spot for the girl, and this disreputable creature had been watching her for some sinister purpose.

“So you have been eavesdropping, have you?” said Brant, gravely.  “And now you want to try a turn at defaming a woman?  Well, you have come to a poor market for the sale of such goods.  I am half inclined to throw you bodily into the creek.  I believe you are nothing but a common liar, but I ’ll give you one chance—­you say you know her real name.  What is it?”

The eyes of the mummy had become spiteful.

“It’s—­none of—­your damn—­business.  I’m—­not under—­your orders.”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Bob Hampton of Placer from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.