JACK LONDON: All 22 Novels in One Illustrated Edition. Джек Лондон

JACK LONDON: All 22 Novels in One Illustrated Edition - Джек Лондон


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eyes, laughing at me through its mouth? I say, do you think I could delight in your delights? No, no; love cannot shackle itself with white friendships."

      She put her hand on his arm.

      "Do you think I am wrong?" he asked, bewildered by the strange look in her face.

      She was sobbing quietly.

      "You are tired and overwrought. So there, good-night. You must get to bed."

      "No, don't go, not yet." And she arrested him. "No, no; I am foolish. As you say, I am tired. But listen, Vance. There is much to be done. We must plan to-morrow's work. Come inside. Father and Baron Courbertin are together, and if the worst comes, we four must do big things."

      "Spectacular," Jacob Welse commented, when Frona had briefly outlined the course of action and assigned them their parts. "But its very unexpectedness ought to carry it through."

      "A coup d'etat!" was the Baron's verdict. "Magnificent! Ah! I feel warm all over at the thought. 'Hands up!' I cry, thus, and very fierce.

      "And if they do not hold up their hands?" he appealed to Jacob Welse.

      "Then shoot. Never bluff when you're behind a gun, Courbertin. It's held by good authorities to be unhealthy."

      "And you are to take charge of La Bijou, Vance," Frona said. "Father thinks there will be little ice to-morrow if it doesn't jam to-night. All you've to do is to have the canoe by the bank just before the door. Of course, you won't know what is happening until St. Vincent comes running. Then in with him, and away you go--Dawson! So I'll say good-night and good-by now, for I may not have the opportunity in the morning."

      "And keep the left-hand channel till you're past the bend," Jacob Welse counselled him; "then take the cut-offs to the right and follow the swiftest water. Now off with you and into your blankets. It's seventy miles to Dawson, and you'll have to make it at one clip."

      Chapter XXVIII

       Table of Contents

      Jacob Welse was given due respect when he arose at the convening of the miners' meeting and denounced the proceedings. While such meetings had performed a legitimate function in the past, he contended, when there was no law in the land, that time was now beyond recall; for law was now established, and it was just law. The Queen's government had shown itself fit to cope with the situation, and for them to usurp its powers was to step backward into the night out of which they had come. Further, no lighter word than "criminal" could characterize such conduct. And yet further, he promised them, in set, sober terms, if anything serious were the outcome, to take an active part in the prosecution of every one of them. At the conclusion of his speech he made a motion to hold the prisoner for the territorial court and to adjourn, but was voted down without discussion.

      "Don't you see," St. Vincent said to Frona, "there is no hope?"

      "But there is. Listen!" And she swiftly outlined the plot of the night before.

      He followed her in a half-hearted way, too crushed to partake of her enthusiasm. "It's madness to attempt it," he objected, when she had done.

      "And it looks very much like hanging not to attempt it," she answered a little spiritedly. "Surely you will make a fight?"

      "Surely," he replied, hollowly.

      The first witnesses were two Swedes, who told of the wash-tub incident, when Borg had given way to one of his fits of anger. Trivial as the incident was, in the light of subsequent events it at once became serious. It opened the way for the imagination into a vast familiar field. It was not so much what was said as what was left unsaid. Men born of women, the rudest of them, knew life well enough to be aware of its significance,--a vulgar common happening, capable of but one interpretation. Heads were wagged knowingly in the course of the testimony, and whispered comments went the rounds.

      Half a dozen witnesses followed in rapid succession, all of whom had closely examined the scene of the crime and gone over the island carefully, and all of whom were agreed that there was not the slightest trace to be found of the two men mentioned by the prisoner in his preliminary statement.

      To Frona's surprise, Del Bishop went upon the stand. She knew he disliked St. Vincent, but could not imagine any evidence he could possess which would bear upon the case.

      Being sworn, and age and nationality ascertained, Bill Brown asked him his business.

      "Pocket-miner," he challenged back, sweeping the assemblage with an aggressive glance.

      Now, it happens that a very small class of men follow pocketing, and that a very large class of men, miners, too, disbelieve utterly in any such method or obtaining gold.

      "Pocket-miner!" sneered a red-shirted, patriarchal-looking man, a man who had washed his first pan in the Californian diggings in the early fifties.

      "Yep," Del affirmed.

      "Now, look here, young feller," his interlocutor continued, "d'ye mean to tell me you ever struck it in such-fangled way?"

      "Yep."

      "Don't believe it," with a contemptuous shrug.

      Del swallowed fast and raised his head with a jerk. "Mr. Chairman, I rise to make a statement. I won't interfere with the dignity of the court, but I just wish to simply and distinctly state that after the meeting's over I'm going to punch the head of every man that gets gay. Understand?"

      "You're out of order," the chairman replied, rapping the table with the caulking-mallet.

      "And your head, too," Del cried, turning upon him. "Damn poor order you preserve. Pocketing's got nothing to do with this here trial, and why don't you shut such fool questions out? I'll take care of you afterwards, you potwolloper!"

      "You will, will you?" The chairman grew red in the face, dropped the mallet, and sprang to his feet.

      Del stepped forward to meet him, but Bill Brown sprang in between and held them apart.

      "Order, gentlemen, order," he begged. "This is no time for unseemly exhibitions. And remember there are ladies present."

      The two men grunted and subsided, and Bill Brown asked, "Mr. Bishop, we understand that you are well acquainted with the prisoner. Will you please tell the court what you know of his general character?"

      Del broadened into a smile. "Well, in the first place, he's an extremely quarrelsome disposition--"

      "Hold! I won't have it!" The prisoner was on his feet, trembling with anger. "You shall not swear my life away in such fashion! To bring a madman, whom I have only met once in my life, to testify as to my character!"

      The pocket-miner turned to him. "So you don't know me, eh, Gregory St. Vincent?"

      "No," St. Vincent replied, coldly, "I do not know you, my man."

      "Don't you man me!" Del shouted, hotly.

      But St. Vincent ignored him, turning to the crowd.

      "I never saw the fellow but once before, and then for a few brief moments in Dawson."

      "You'll remember before I'm done," Del sneered; "so hold your hush and let me say my little say. I come into the country with him way back in '84."

      St. Vincent regarded him with sudden interest.

      "Yep, Mr. Gregory St. Vincent. I see you begin to recollect. I sported whiskers and my name was Brown, Joe Brown, in them days."

      He grinned vindictively, and the correspondent seemed to lose all interest.

      "Is it true, Gregory?" Frona whispered.

      "I begin to recognize," he muttered, slowly. "I don't know . . . no, folly! The man must have died."

      "You say in '84, Mr. Bishop?" Bill Brown prompted.

      "Yep, in '84. He was a newspaper-man, bound round the world by way of Alaska


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