keep going until he found his own untouched river.
It took him nine days and even then what he first found was not what he had been hoping for. The bright line of water that guided him out of the forest was already named and known-the Swallow River. To his disappointment there were men there before him and they were panning rich deposits. But there were not many of them and from talking to them he learned that they were the first to reach so far up the Swallow.
He spent two nights on the periphery of this newborn mining encampment, but the lure of his own personal El Dorado was too strong and on the third morning he repacked his mule and struck off alone upriver.
Though California’s population exploded as a result of the Gold Rush it was by no means entirely unsettled beforehand. Places had been named, some of the land had been mapped. Settlers who had known nothing of gold had hacked homesteads out of the wilds and, here and there, small hamlets had formed.
I turned the pages of the journal that charted Nathaniel’s progress upriver, looking for a place name or the mention of a settlement in the hope that I might be able to pinpoint what part of the Swallow River he had journeyed along.
For several pages there was little, just the outline of four days’ slow travel. Immediately beyond the encampment of miners the riverbed had lost its gold-bearing floor of sand and gravel and its water flowed instead over flat rock and jumbles of boulders, terrain poorly suited for the collection of gold dust. Nathaniel’s entries on these days were weighted with despondency and he began to consider cutting his losses and returning to the encampment. On the fourth day, however, he made this entry:
And the day after that:
This entry finished at the bottom of the last page in the book. I had become caught up in the narrative and I felt a pang of disappointment that the outcome of his quest had not been recorded. I held the book open in my hands for a moment, wondering what had become of the man, and as I did so I noticed jagged lines of paper along the inside of its spine. It looked like three pages had been torn out.
I put the book back on its shelf.
“The last few pages are missing.”
“Are they? I never noticed. But then, as I said, I haven’t looked at it for years.”
“What happened to him?”
She laughed. “What happened to your great-great-grandfather?”
“I don’t even know who he was.”
“Exactly. I know he was supposed to have been reasonably well off. Whether it came from gold or not I couldn’t say.” She looked tiredly about the room. “I know his money didn’t stick around too long, though. Our family’s been in this area since Nathaniel came up that river and I don’t think a single one of us ever was what you would call even comfortable.”
“Have you ever heard of a place called Cooper’s Bend? He mentions it in the journal.”
“Yes, though there aren’t many people still alive who know it by that name.”
“Where is it?”
“Right here. That piece of river at the bottom of your father’s land. That’s what used to be called Cooper’s Bend till folks took to calling it Empty Mile-after all the gold was mined out, I guess.”
I leaned back in my chair and closed my eyes for a moment. I’d come here hoping to find out why my father had bought the land. An old journal would have been an exciting place to discover the secret, but I had read nothing there that might explain the land’s importance to him. The only whiff of meaning came from the mention of gold, but what of that? Any gold there might have been in the Swallow River at Empty Mile, along with all the gold in all the other Californian rivers, was long gone.
Millicent smiled patiently at me. “Does any of that help? A couple of months after his first visit your father came back by himself and asked to read the journal again and then, not long after that, he and his friend showed up to dig some fence post holes.”
“I didn’t see a fence. Where did they dig?”
“Down in the trees at the bottom of the meadow. Made such a racket I went down to have a look. They had this thing like a big corkscrew with a gasoline engine that they held between them. Bored right into the ground. Looked like a crazy place to do it, right in the trees. I don’t know how they thought they were going to string wire through all that brush. But then, your father didn’t look too much like the practical type, and I don’t think they drilled more than a handful of holes anyhow.”
“When was this?”
“Three or four months ago.”
“And you don’t know who this friend was? You didn’t hear a name?”
“No. He was a redhead, the sandy type. Tall, thin.”
I took my cell phone out and brought up the photo Gareth had insisted I take of him. Millicent nodded.
“Yes, that’s him.”
“My father didn’t buy the place until a month ago. Why would he be digging fence holes on land he didn’t own?”
“Perhaps he was getting a jump on things.”
“Who owned the land before?”
“I don’t know.”
“Can you show me where the holes are?”
Millicent went to the front door, pushed open the screen, and pointed to a spot in the trees at the bottom of the meadow.
“Go straight in from there, you should find them.”
I thanked her and walked down across the meadow.
The first hole I found was about twenty yards in from the start of the trees and I’d seen it before. It was the hole my father had stood pondering over the day he brought Stan and me to Empty Mile for the first time. By walking parallel to the meadow from this point I found two others.
Although I’d never put up a fence I guessed the holes were about the right diameter but everything else about them looked wrong. They were too widely spaced, at least twenty-five feet between each, and they seemed overly deep, they went down about four feet. And what was the logic of erecting a fence on uncleared land?
I left the belt of trees and walked back up the slope to take a look at the log cabin. It was reasonably large for