tomorrow, and the next day we'd 'a'—say, what you stopping for?' he added, interrupting himself. 'What's up?'
The dentist had paused abruptly on the crest of a caсуn. Cribbens, looking back, saw him standing motionless in his tracks.
'What's up?' asked Cribbens a second time.
McTeague slowly turned his head and looked over one shoulder, then over the other. Suddenly he wheeled sharply about, cocking the Winchester and tossing it to his shoulder. Cribbens ran back to his side, whipping out his revolver.
'What is it?' he cried. 'See anybody?' He peered on ahead through the gathering twilight.
'No, no.'
'Hear anything?'
'No, didn't hear anything.'
'What is it then? What's up?'
'I don' know, I don' know,' muttered the dentist, lowering the rifle. 'There was something.'
'What?'
'Something — didn't you notice?'
'Notice what?'
'I don' know. Something — something or other.'
'Who? What? Notice what? What did you see?'
The dentist let down the hammer of the rifle.
'I guess it wasn't anything,' he said rather foolishly.
'What d'you think you saw — anybody on the claim?'
'I didn't see anything. I didn't hear anything either. I had an idea, that's all; came all of a sudden, like that. Something, I don' know what.'
'I guess you just imagined something. There ain't anybody within twenty miles of us, I guess.'
'Yes, I guess so, just imagined it, that's the word.'
Half an hour later they had the fire going. McTeague was frying strips of bacon over the coals, and Cribbens was still chattering and exclaiming over their great strike. All at once McTeague put down the frying-pan.
'What's that?' he growled.
'Hey? What's what?' exclaimed Cribbens, getting up.
'Didn't you notice something?'
'Where?'
'Off there.' The dentist made a vague gesture toward the eastern horizon. 'Didn't you hear something — I mean see something — I mean—'
'What's the matter with you, pardner?'
'Nothing. I guess I just imagined it.'
But it was not imagination. Until midnight the partners lay broad awake, rolled in their blankets under the open sky, talking and discussing and making plans. At last Cribbens rolled over on his side and slept. The dentist could not sleep.
What! It was warning him again, that strange sixth sense, that obscure brute instinct. It was aroused again and clamoring to be obeyed. Here, in these desolate barren hills, twenty miles from the nearest human being, it stirred and woke and rowelled him to be moving on. It had goaded him to flight from the Big Dipper mine, and he had obeyed. But now it was different; now he had suddenly become rich; he had lighted on a treasure — a treasure far more valuable than the Big Dipper mine itself. How was he to leave that? He could not move on now. He turned about in his blankets. No, he would not move on. Perhaps it was his fancy, after all. He saw nothing, heard nothing. The emptiness of primeval desolation stretched from him leagues and leagues upon either hand. The gigantic silence of the night lay close over everything, like a muffling Titanic palm. Of what was he suspicious? In that treeless waste an object could be seen at half a day's journey distant. In that vast silence the click of a pebble was as audible as a pistol-shot. And yet there was nothing, nothing.
The dentist settled himself in his blankets and tried to sleep. In five minutes he was sitting up, staring into the blue-gray shimmer of the moonlight, straining his ears, watching and listening intently. Nothing was in sight. The browned and broken flanks of the Panamint hills lay quiet and familiar under the moon. The burro moved its head with a clinking of its bell; and McTeagues mule, dozing on three legs, changed its weight to another foot, with a long breath. Everything fell silent again.
'What is it?' muttered the dentist. 'If I could only see something, hear something.'
He threw off the blankets, and, rising, climbed to the summit of the nearest hill and looked back in the direction in which he and Cribbens had travelled a fortnight before. For half an hour he waited, watching and listening in vain. But as he returned to camp, and prepared to roll his blankets about him, the strange impulse rose in him again abruptly, never so strong, never so insistent. It seemed as though he were bitted and ridden; as if some unseen hand were turning him toward the east; some unseen heel spurring him to precipitate and instant flight.
Flight from what? 'No,' he muttered under his breath. 'Go now and leave the claim, and leave a fortune! What a fool I'd be, when I can't see anything or hear anything. To leave a fortune! No, I won't. No, by God!' He drew Cribbens's Winchester toward him and slipped a cartridge into the magazine.
'No,' he growled. 'Whatever happens, I'm going to stay. If anybody comes—' He depressed the lever of the rifle, and sent the cartridge clashing into the breech.
'I ain't going to sleep,' he muttered under his mustache. 'I can't sleep; I'll watch.' He rose a second time, clambered to the nearest hilltop and sat down, drawing the blanket around him, and laying the Winchester across his knees. The hours passed. The dentist sat on the hilltop a motionless, crouching figure, inky black against the pale blur of the sky. By and by the edge of the eastern horizon began to grow blacker and more distinct in out-line. The dawn was coming. Once more McTeague felt the mysterious intuition of approaching danger; an unseen hand seemed reining his head eastward; a spur was in his flanks that seemed to urge him to hurry, hurry, hurry. The influence grew stronger with every moment. The dentist set his great jaws together and held his ground.
'No,' he growled between his set teeth. 'No, I'll stay.' He made a long circuit around the camp, even going as far as the first stake of the new claim, his Winchester cocked, his ears pricked, his eyes alert. There was nothing; yet as plainly as though it were shouted at the very nape of his neck he felt an enemy. It was not fear. McTeague was not afraid.
'If I could only SEE something — somebody,' he muttered, as he held the cocked rifle ready, 'I–I'd show him.'
He returned to camp. Cribbens was snoring. The burro had come down to the stream for its morning drink. The mule was awake and browsing. McTeague stood irresolutely by the cold ashes of the camp-fire, looking from side to side with all the suspicion and wariness of a tracked stag. Stronger and stronger grew the strange impulse. It seemed to him that on the next instant he MUST perforce wheel sharply eastward and rush away headlong in a clumsy, lumbering gallop. He fought against it with all the ferocious obstinacy of his simple brute nature.
'Go, and leave the mine? Go and leave a million dollars? No, NO, I won't go. No, I'll stay. Ah,' he exclaimed, under his breath, with a shake of his huge head, like an exasperated and harassed brute, 'ah, show yourself, will you?' He brought the rifle to his shoulder and covered point after point along the range of hills to the west. 'Come on, show yourself. Come on a little, all of you. I ain't afraid of you; but don't skulk this way. You ain't going to drive me away from my mine. I'm going to stay.'
An hour passed. Then two. The stars winked out, and the dawn whitened. The air became warmer. The whole east, clean of clouds, flamed opalescent from horizon to zenith, crimson at the base, where the earth blackened against it; at the top fading from pink to pale yellow, to green, to light blue, to the turquoise iridescence of the desert sky. The long, thin shadows of the early hours drew backward like receding serpents, then suddenly the sun looked over the shoulder of the world, and it was day.
At that moment McTeague was already eight miles away from the camp, going steadily eastward. He was descending the lowest spurs of the Panamint hills, following an old and faint cattle trail. Before him he drove his mule, laden with blankets, provisions for six days, Cribben's rifle, and a canteen full of water. Securely bound to the pommel of the saddle was the canvas sack with its precious five thousand dollars, all in twenty-dollar gold pieces. But strange enough in that horrid waste of sand and sage was the object that McTeague himself persistently carried — the canary in its cage, about which he had carefully wrapped a couple of old flour-bags.