“Did he?”
“Yes, and he doesn’t speak well of him.”
“What does he say about him?”
“I don’t like to tell you, Luke, for I believe he is a protégé of yours.”
“Don’t mind that. If there is anything to be said unfavorable of Ernest I ought to know it.”
“He says the boy robbed a store in which he was employed, and then pretended it was entered by thieves. It was on that account, he says, that the boy was compelled to leave the town where he lived and come to California.”
“Really, that is very interesting. To my own personal knowledge the boy was never before employed in a store, and he came out to California with me.”
“Then what could the man mean?”
“I can’t say. I can only tell you that he is a professional thief.”
“Look quick, Luke, and see if my gold watch is hanging on a nail near the cupboard.”
“No, it is not there.”
“Then the rascal must have stolen it. I gave him a Mexican dollar to buy some eggs at the store.”
“I don’t think you will ever see it again, unless I catch the thief, as I may to-night.”
CHAPTER XXX
A BURGLAR’S FAILURE
If Tom Burns had been more prudent, he would have made good his escape with the money and gold watch he had already secured. But he was too greedy for gain.
He pictured to himself the store with its goodly stock of money taken in during the day, and he felt an irresistible craving for it. There might be one or two hundred dollars, and no one in charge but a boy whom he could easily overpower.
Apart from the pecuniary gain he felt that he should enjoy getting the best of Ernest, who had already foiled him at Oak Forks.
“This time he will come out second best,” chuckled Burns to himself.
Then he laughed when he remembered how his appearance had puzzled Ernest.
“It was a good idea growin’ a beard,” he said to himself. “Seems to have disguised me pretty well. The boy thought he had seen me before, but he couldn’t make out where. The next time he’ll know me, I reckon.
“I must keep out of the way till night,” he said to himself. “It won’t do for me to be seen prowlin’ round the settlement.”
He retired a mile or two among the hills, and waited impatiently for night to come.
“It is lucky that the old man gave me a meal,” he reflected, “otherwise I should be about starved. I wonder if that watch is worth much.”
He examined the watch, and decided that its value was probably not far from a hundred dollars. In fact, the old man had bought it in St. Louis, and had selected a high-priced article.
It did occur to Burns that perhaps he had better remain satisfied with what he had got, for the watch would probably bring him fifty dollars at a sacrifice sale; but the temptation to stay was too strong.
“It would be a sin to give up such a fine chance,” he reflected. “There’s next to no risk, and I may get two hundred dollars.”
Then he began to consider what he would do in that case. He decided that he would go to San Francisco, and see what pickings he could find there.
He had already found out that mining men and others in the far West were more careless about their money than those in the East, probably because money came easier.
“I did well when I came out here,” he said to himself in a tone of congratulation. “I’ll make hay while the sun shines.”
Meanwhile, though he did not know it, his visit was expected, and preparations were being made to receive him.
After supper Luke Robbins came to the store and held a conference with Ernest.
“I am going to pass the night with you, lad,” he said.
“I wish you would, Luke.”
“I want to help you do the honors to my old friend Burns.”
“Perhaps he won’t call.”
“If he knows what’s best for him he won’t, but he will be like the foolish moth, and won’t be contented till he has singed his wings. I will look about me and see where to bestow myself for the night.”
Ernest occupied a bed in the rear of the store, just behind one of the counters. It was near a window in the rear of the building.
“I’ll take that bed, Ernest, and you can find another place.”
“Shall I fasten the window?”
“No. I am going to make it easy for my friend, Burns, to get in. Whether he will find it as easy to get out will be another matter.”
Nothing was said to the miners about the presence of a thief in the settlement. At that time there was no toleration for thieves. The punishment visited upon them was short, sharp and decisive. The judge most in favor was Judge Lynch, and woe be to the offender who ventured to interfere with the rights of property.
Had Luke breathed a word about Burns, half a dozen miners would have volunteered to stand guard, and would thus have interfered with Tom Burns’s visit.
“I want to keep all the fun to myself, Ernest,” said Luke. “We’ll give him a lesson he won’t soon forget. If I told the boys they’d hang him up in short order. I don’t want to take the fellow’s life, but I’ll give him a first-class scare.”
It was about ten minutes of twelve when Tom Burns, leaving his place of concealment, walked with eager steps toward the mining settlement. The one street was not illuminated, for Oreville had not got along as far as that. The moon gave an indistinct light, relieving the night of a part of its gloom.
Burns looked from one cabin to another with a wistful glance.
“I suppose some of these miners have got a lot of gold-dust hidden away in their shanties,” he said to himself. “I wish I knew where I could light on some of their treasure.”
But then it occurred to him that every miner was probably armed, and would make it dangerous to any intruder.
So Tom Burns kept on his way. He was troubled by no conscientious scruples. He had got beyond that long ago. Sometimes it did occur to him to wonder how it would seem to settle down as a man of respectability and influence, taking a prominent part in the affairs of town and church.
“It might have been,” he muttered. “My father was a man of that sort. Why not I? If I hadn’t gone wrong in my early days, if I had not been tempted by the devil to rob the storekeeper for whom I worked, and so made myself an outcast and a pariah, who knows but I might have been at this moment Thomas Burns, Esq., of some municipality, instead of Tom Burns, the tramp? However, it is foolish to speculate about this. I am what I am, and there is little chance of my being anything else.”