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The Ranch at the Wolverine

Chapter 8 HELP FOR THE COW BUSINESS

Word Count: 2498    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

the sand into it. Then, squatting on his boot-heels at the edge of the stream, he filled the basin with water and rocked it gently with a rotary motion that proved him no novice at

ent that clung to the bottom of the basin and moved sluggishly around and around. He picked out the tiny pebbles one by one and threw them in the cree

nk with his feet far apart and his shoulders bent, whil

ess." He sat there a long time, thinking and planning and holding himself sternly to cold reality, rejecting every possibility that had the slightest symptom of being an air-castle. He did no

rous fuel. She would begin dreaming and building castles and prospecting for herself, very likely; and that trail led oftenest to black disappointment. If he made good, he would tell her-when he told her something else. And if the whole thing were just a fluke, a stray deposi

reticence in his nature had been strengthened by the vicissitudes of the life he had lived. While Billy Louise had found the sole weak point

nd spoil life for the weak ones who took to chasing the will-o'-the-wisp of sudden wealth. Tramps of the pick-and-pan brigade-they should not come swarming into these hills on any wild-goose chase, if he could help it. And he could and should. This was not, properly speakin

so altruistically. His tho

untry just on the chance of finding another pocket like this one. I'm in the cattle business myself. If I find any gold, it'll go into ca

what I've gone up against. Maybe old Dame Fortune's just played another joke on me-played me for a fool a

prospector had camped while he braved the barrenness of the bills and streams hereabout. Ward had dismounted and glanced into the cavelike hut. Now, after he had eaten a few mouthfuls of dinner,

or while there did not seem to be the makings of a millionaire in that gravel bank, he judged roughly that he could make a plumber's wages if he worked hard enough-and that looked pretty good to a fellow who had worked all his life for fort

rom the mountains. Then some freshet had worn over the edge of the break in the rock until the ledge and its deposit was left high and dry on the side of the gulch, while the creek flowed throug

he admonished himself, "or I'll go plumb loco and imagine I'm a millionaire. I'll pan what I can get at and let it go at that. And I've got to count what gold shows up in the

provements and watching over his cattle. There was fence to build and some hay to cut; and he would like to build another room on to the cabin. Ward had certain fastidious instincts, and he rebelled inwardly at eating, sleeping,

al tiny nuggets jumping up the yield now and then, he could go ahead and do the things he wanted to do. And

the end, where it was not hidden and cluttered with the cherry-trees and service berries below, and when it stopped rolling, he carried it the rest of the way. Then he panned it in the little creek, watching like a ha

lm, and he was well satisfied with the result. It was not a fortune, nor was he likely to find one in the hills. But he bought a team, wagon, and harness with the money, and he had enough left over for a tw

l use of a log-chain for a rough lock, he managed to land the whole outfit in the little flat b

gulch. The world moved on, and he neither knew nor cared how it moved; for the time being his world had narrowed amazingly. If Billy Louise had not been down there in that other world, he would scarcely have given it a thought, so absorbed was he in the de

waiting for their invasions, with the echoes ready to fling back his exultant voice when he called to her or sang for her or laughed at her; ready to imitate enviously her voice when she laughed back at him. He wanted that day to come

e pounding in his temples; sometimes it was so poor that he was disgusted to the point of abandoning the work. But every day he worked, it

y is spent-and he drove that man as relentlessly as he drove himself. Together they accomplished much, while the goldpan lay hidden under a buck brush and Ward's waking moments were filled with an uneasy sense of wasted time. Still, it was for the good of his ranch and his cattle and his air-castle that he toiled in the gulch, and it was necessary that he should put up what hay he

s larger than he had expected. A few days had remained of the month, and Ward had used them to extend his fence so as to give more pasturage to his calves in mild weather. After that he paid the man, d

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