“I wouldn’t like to say for certain,” said the man when he was interrogated. “I only tell you what they told me. As I was passing along somebody said as Ferdy Lefroy had been taken dead out of the cars on to the platform. Now you know as much about it as I do.”
He was thus assured that at any rate the journey to San Francisco had not been altogether a fiction. The man had gone “West,” as had been said, and nothing more would be known of him at St. Louis. He must still go on upon his journey and make such inquiry as might be possible at the Ogden Junction.
On the day but one following they started again, taking their tickets as far as Leavenworth. They were told by the officials that they would find a train at Leavenworth waiting to take them on across country into the regular San Francisco line. But, as is not unusual with railway officials in that part of the world, they were deceived. At Leavenworth they were forced to remain for four-and-twenty hours, and there they put themselves up at a miserable hotel in which they were obliged to occupy the same room. It was a rough, uncouth place, in which, as it seemed to Mr. Peacocke, the men were more uncourteous to him, and the things around more unlike to what he had met elsewhere, than in any other town of the Union. Robert Lefroy, since the first night at St. Louis, had become sullen rather than disobedient. He had not refused to go on when the moment came for starting, but had left it in doubt till the last moment whether he did or did not intend to prosecute his journey. When the ticket was taken for him he pretended to be altogether indifferent about it, and would himself give no help whatever in any of the usual troubles of travelling. But as far as this little town of Leavenworth he had been carried, and Peacocke now began to think it probable that he might succeed in taking him to San Francisco.
On that night he endeavoured to induce him to go first to bed, but in this he failed. Lefroy insisted on remaining down at the bar, where he had ordered for himself some liquor for which Mr. Peacocke, in spite of all his efforts to the contrary, would have to pay. If the man would get drunk and lie there, he could not help himself. On this he was determined, that whether with or without the man, he would go on by the first train;—and so he took himself to his bed.
He had been there perhaps half-an-hour when his companion came into the room—certainly not drunk. He seated himself on his bed, and then, pulling to him a large travelling-bag which he used, he unpacked it altogether, laying all the things which it contained out upon the bed. “What are you doing that for?” said Mr. Peacocke; “we have to start from here tomorrow morning at five.”
“I’m not going to start tomorrow at five, nor yet tomorrow at all, nor yet next day.”
“You are not?”
“Not if I know it. I have had enough of this game. I am not going further West for anyone. Hand out the money. You have been told everything about my brother, true and honest, as far as I know it. Hand out the money.”
“Not a dollar,” said Peacocke. “All that I have heard as yet will be of no service to me. As far as I can see, you will earn it; but you will have to come on a little further yet.”
“Not a foot; I ain’t agoing out of this room tomorrow.”
“Then I must go without you;—that’s all.”
“You may go and be ⸻. But you’ll have to shell out the money first, old fellow.”
“Not a dollar.”
“You won’t?”
“Certainly I will not. How often have I told you so.”
“Then I shall take it.”
“That you will find very difficult. In the first place, if you were to cut my throat—”
“Which is just what I intend to do.”
“If you were to cut my throat—which in itself will be difficult—you would only find the trifle of gold which I have got for our journey as far as ’Frisco. That won’t do you much good. The rest is in circular notes, which to you would be of no service whatever.”
“My God,” said the man suddenly, “I am not going to be done in this way.” And with that he drew out a bowie-knife which he had concealed among the things which he had extracted from the bag. “You don’t know the sort of country you’re in now. They don’t think much here of the life of such a skunk as you. If you mean to live till tomorrow morning you must come to terms.”
The room was a narrow chamber in which two beds ran along the wall, each with its foot to the other, having a narrow space between them and the other wall. Peacocke occupied the one nearest to the door. Lefroy now got up from the bed in the further corner, and with the bowie-knife in his hand rushed against the door as though to prevent his companion’s escape. Peacocke, who was in bed undressed, sat up at once; but as he did so he brought a revolver out from under his pillow. “So you have been and armed yourself, have you?” said Robert Lefroy.
“Yes,” said Peacocke;—“if you come nearer me with that knife I shall shoot you. Put it down.”
“Likely I shall put it down at your bidding.”
With the pistol still held at the other man’s head, Peacocke slowly extracted himself from his bed. “Now,” said he, “if you don’t come away from the door I shall fire one barrel just to let them know in the house what
