Prove It! Prove It!

: The Highgrader

Sam Bleyer, superintendent of the big Verinder mines, had been up to see

his chief at the hotel and was passing the private sitting-room of the

Farquhar party when a voice hailed him. He bowed inclusively to Lady

Farquhar, Miss Seldon, and Miss Dwight.



"You called me?"



"I did. Are you in a very great hurry?" Joyce flashed her most

coquettish smile at him.



"You are
ever to be in a hurry when Miss Seldon wants you, Bleyer,"

announced Verinder, following the superintendent into the room.



Bleyer flushed. He was not "a lady's man," as he would have phrased it,

but there was an arresting loveliness about Joyce that held the eye.



"You hear my orders, Miss Seldon," he said.



"Awfully good of you, Mr. Verinder," Joyce acknowledged with a swift

slant smile toward the mine owner. "Just now I want Mr. Bleyer to be an

information bureau."



"Anything I can do," murmured Bleyer.



He was a thin little man with a face as wrinkled as a contour map of

South America. Thick glasses rested on a Roman nose in front of

nearsighted eyes. Frequently he peered over these in an ineffective

manner that suggested a lost puppy in search of a friend. But in spite

of his appearance Bleyer was a force in Goldbanks. He knew his business

and gave his whole energies to it.



"We're all so interested in Mr. Kilmeny. Tell us all about him,

please."



"That's a rather large order, isn't it?" The wrinkles in his leathery

face broke into a smile. "What in particular do you want to know?"



"Everything. What does he do? How does he live? How long has he been

here?"



"He has been around here about five years. He has a lease in a mine."

There was a flinty dryness in the manner of the superintendent that

neither Joyce nor Moya missed.



"And he makes his living by it?"



Above his spectacles the eyes of Bleyer gleamed resentfully. "You'll

have to ask Mr. Kilmeny how he makes his living. I don't know."



"You're keeping something from us. I believe you do know, Mr. Bleyer."

With a swift turn of her supple body Joyce appealed to Verinder. "Make

him tell us, please."



Moya did not lift the starlike eyes that were so troubled from the face

of Bleyer. She knew the man implied something discreditable to Kilmeny.

The look that had flashed between him and Verinder told her so much. Red

signals of defiance blazed on both cheeks. Whatever it was, she did not

intend to believe him.



Verinder disclosed a proper reluctance. "Bleyer says he doesn't know."



"Oh, he says! I want him to tell what he thinks."



"You won't like it," the mine owner warned.



"I'll be the best judge of that." Joyce swung upon Bleyer. "You hear,

sir. You're to tell me what you mean."



"I don't mean anything." He paused, then looked straight at Joyce with a

visible harshness. "I'll tell you what the common gossip is if you want

to know, Miss Seldon. They say he is a highgrader."



"And what is a highgrader?" demanded Moya.



"A highgrader is one who steals rich ore from the mine where he works,"

answered Verinder smugly.



Moya, eyes hot and shining, flashed her challenge at him. "I don't

believe it--not a word of it, so far as Mr. Kilmeny is concerned."



"Afraid that doesn't change the facts, Miss Dwight. It's a matter of

general knowledge." Beneath Verinder's bland manner there lurked a

substratum of triumph.



"General fiddlesticks! Don't believe it, Joyce," cried Moya stormily.

"He doesn't even work as a miner. He owns his own lease."



"He used to work in the mines, even if he doesn't now. There are

stories----"



"Ridiculous to think it of Mr. Kilmeny," exploded Moya. "We've done

nothing but insult him ever since we've known him. First he was a

highwayman. Now he is a thief. Anything else, Mr. Verinder?"



"Everybody knows it," retorted Verinder sulkily.



"Then prove it. Put him in prison. Aren't there any laws in the state?

If everybody knows it, why isn't he arrested?" the Irish girl flamed.



"Moya," chided Lady Farquhar gently.



Her ward turned upon Lady Jim a flushed face stirred by anger to a vivid

charm. "Can't you see how absurd it is? He owns his own lease. Mr.

Bleyer admits it. Is he robbing himself, then?"



The muscles stood out on the cheeks of the superintendent like cords. He

stuck doggedly to his guns. "I didn't say he stole the ore himself. The

charge is that he buys it from the men who do take it. His lease is an

excuse. Of course he pretends to get the ore there."



"It's the common talk of the camp," snapped Verinder contemptuously.

"The man doesn't even keep it under decent cover."



"Then prove it ... prove it! That ought to be easy--since everybody

knows it." Moya's voice was low, but her scornful passion lashed the

Englishman as with a whip.



"By Jove, that's just what I'm going to do. I'm going to put our friend

behind the bars for a few years," the smug little man cried

triumphantly.



The red spots on Moya's cheeks burned. The flashing eyes of the girl

defied her discarded lover.



"If you can," she amended with quiet anger.



The soft laugh of Joyce saved for the moment the situation. "Dear me,

aren't we getting a little excited? Mr. Bleyer, tell me more. How does

a--a highgrader, didn't you call him?--how does he get a chance to steal

the ore?"



"He picks out the best pieces while he is working--the nuggets that are

going to run a high per cent. of gold--and pockets them. At night he

carries them away."



"But--haven't you any policemen here? Why don't you stop them and search

them?"



"The miners' union is too strong. There would be a strike if we tried

it. But it has got to come to that soon. The companies will have to join

hands for a finish fight. They can't have men hoisted up from their work

with a hundred dollars' worth of ore stowed away on them."



"Is it as bad as that, Mr. Bleyer?" asked Lady Farquhar in surprise.



"Sometimes they take two or three hundred dollars' worth at once."



"They don't all steal, do they?" demanded Moya with an edge of sarcasm

in her clear voice.



Bleyer laughed grimly. "I'd like to know the names of even a few that

don't. I haven't been introduced to them."



"One hundred per cent. dishonest," murmured Moya without conviction.



"I don't guarantee the figures, Miss Dwight." The superintendent added

grudgingly: "They don't look at it that way. Bits of high-grade ore are

their perquisite, they pretend to think."



Verinder broke in. "They say your friend Kilmeny took ore to the value

of two thousand dollars from the Never Quit on one occasion. It ran to

that amount by actual smelter test, the story goes. I've always rather

doubted it."



"Why--since he is so dishonest?" Moya flung at him.



"Don't think a man could carry away so much at one time. What d'ye

think, Bleyer?"



"Depends on how high-grade ore the mine carries. At Cripple Creek we

found nearly four thousand on a man once. He was loaded down like a

freight car--looked like the fat boy in 'Pickwick Papers.'"



"Should think he'd bulge out with angles where the rock projected," Lady

Farquhar suggested.



"The men have it down to a system there. We used to search them as they

left work. They carry the ore in all sorts of unexpected places, such as

the shoulder padding of their coats, their mouths, their ears, and in

slings scattered over the body. The ore is pounded so that it does not

bulge."



"Perhaps I'm doing Mr. Kilmeny an injustice, then. Very likely he did

get away with two thousand at one time," Verinder jeered with an

unpleasant laugh.



"Yes, let's think the worst of everybody that we can, Mr. Verinder,"

came Moya's quick scornful retort.



The Croesus of Goldbanks stood warming himself with his back to the

grate, as smug and dapper a little man as could be found within a day's

journey.



"Very good, Miss Dwight. Have it your own way. I'm not a bally prophet,

you know, but I'll go this far. Your little tin hero is riding for a

fall. It's all very well for him to do the romantic and that sort of

piffle, by Jove, but when you scrape the paint off he's just a receiver

of stolen property and a common agitator. Don't take my word for it. Ask

Bleyer." Without looking at him he gave a little jerk of the head toward

his superintendent. "Who is the most undesirable citizen here, Bleyer?

Who makes all the trouble for the companies?"



Bleyer shook his head. "I can't back my opinion with proof."



"You know what people say. Whom do the men rely on to back them whenever

they have trouble with us? Out with it."



"Kilmeny is their king pin--the most influential man in camp."



"Of course he is. Anybody could tell to look at him that he is a leader.

Does it follow he must be a criminal?" Moya demanded abruptly.



The superintendent smiled. He understood what was behind that

irritation. "You're a good friend, Miss Dwight."



"It's absurd that I am. He did nothing for Joyce and me--except fight

for us and see that we were sheltered and fed and brought home safely.

Why shouldn't we sit still and let his reputation be torn to tatters?"



Bluecher bore down upon the field of Waterloo. "Of course we're 'for' Mr.

Kilmeny, as you Yankees say. I don't care whether he is a highgrader or

not. He's a gentleman--and very interesting." Joyce nodded decisively,

tilting a saucy chin toward Verinder. "We're for him, aren't we,

Moya?"



Lady Farquhar smiled and let her embroidery drop to the table as she

rose. "I like him myself. There's something about him that's very

attractive. I do hope you are wrong, Mr. Bleyer. He does not look like

an anarchist and a thief."



"That is not the way he would define himself. In this community

highgrading isn't looked on as theft. Last year our sheriff was

suspected of buying ore from miners and shipping it to the smelters.

Public opinion does not greatly condemn the practice." Bleyer, bowing as

he spoke, excused himself and withdrew.



Verinder appealed to Lady Farquhar. The indignation of the newly rich

sat heavily upon him. With all his little soul he disliked Jack Kilmeny.

Since the man had done so signal a service for Joyce, jealousy gnawed at

his heart.



"Of course we've got to be decent to the man, I suppose. He had a big

slice of luck in getting the chance to help Miss Seldon and Miss Dwight.

And I don't forget that he is a cousin to our friends. If it wasn't for

that I'd say to mail him a check and wipe the slate clean. But of

course----"



"You'd never dare," breathed Moya tensely. "I won't have him insulted."



"Of course not, under the circumstances. No need to get volcanic, Miss

Dwight. I merely suggested what I'd like to do. Now the burden is off my

shoulders. I have given you the facts."



"You've given us only suspicions, Mr. Verinder. I don't think it would

be fair to assume them correct," the chaperone answered.



But Moya knew that Verinder had dropped his seed in fruitful soil. Lady

Farquhar would not forget. Jack Kilmeny's welcome would be something

less than cordial henceforth.



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