Stories in Light and Shadow eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 225 pages of information about Stories in Light and Shadow.

Stories in Light and Shadow eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 225 pages of information about Stories in Light and Shadow.
slight reticence and dejection in his manner, which they had at first attributed to remorse and a guilty conscience, now began to tell as absurdly in his favor.  Here was poor Uncle Billy toiling though the ditches, while his selfish partner was lolling in the lap of luxury in San Francisco!  Uncle Billy’s glowing accounts of Uncle Jim’s success only contributed to the sympathy now fully given in his behalf and their execration of the absconding partner.  It was proposed at Biggs’s store that a letter expressing the indignation of the camp over his heartless conduct to his late partner, William Fall, should be forwarded to him.  Condolences were offered to Uncle Billy, and uncouth attempts were made to cheer his loneliness.  A procession of half a dozen men twice a week to his cabin, carrying their own whiskey and winding up with a “stag dance” before the premises, was sufficient to lighten his eclipsed gayety and remind him of a happier past.  “Surprise” working parties visited his claim with spasmodic essays towards helping him, and great good humor and hilarity prevailed.  It was not an unusual thing for an honest miner to arise from an idle gathering in some cabin and excuse himself with the remark that he “reckoned he’d put in an hour’s work in Uncle Billy’s tailings!” And yet, as before, it was very improbable if any of these reckless benefactors really believed in their own earnestness or in the gravity of the situation.  Indeed, a kind of hopeful cynicism ran through their performances.  “Like as not, Uncle Billy is still in ‘cahoots’ [i. e., shares] with his old pard, and is just laughin’ at us as he’s sendin’ him accounts of our tomfoolin’.”

And so the winter passed and the rains, and the days of cloudless skies and chill starlit nights began.  There were still freshets from the snow reservoirs piled high in the Sierran passes, and the Bar was flooded, but that passed too, and only the sunshine remained.  Monotonous as the seasons were, there was a faint movement in the camp with the stirring of the sap in the pines and cedars.  And then, one day, there was a strange excitement on the Bar.  Men were seen running hither and thither, but mainly gathering in a crowd on Uncle Billy’s claim, that still retained the old partners’ names in “The Fall and Foster.”  To add to the excitement, there was the quickly repeated report of a revolver, to all appearance aimlessly exploded in the air by some one on the outskirts of the assemblage.  As the crowd opened, Uncle Billy appeared, pale, hysterical, breathless, and staggering a little under the back-slapping and hand-shaking of the whole camp.  For Uncle Billy had “struck it rich”—­had just discovered a “pocket,” roughly estimated to be worth fifteen thousand dollars!

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Stories in Light and Shadow from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.