The Seventh Man
A man under thirty needs neighbors and to stop up the current of his life with a long silence is like obstructing a river—eventually the water either sweeps away the dam or rises over it, and the stronger the dam the more destructive is that final rush to freedom. Vic Gregg was on the danger side of thirty and he lived alone in the mountains all that winter. He wanted to marry Betty Neal, but marriage means money, therefore Vic contracted fifteen hundred dollars' worth of mining for the Duncans, and instead of taking a partner he went after that stake single handed. He is a very rare man who can turn out that amount of labor in a single season, but Gregg furnished that exception which establishes the rule: he did the assessment work on fourteen claims and almost finished the fifteenth, yet he paid the price. Week after week his set of drills was wife and child to him, and for conversation he had only the clangor of the four-pound single-jack on the drill heads, with the crashing of the “shots” now and then as periods to the chatter of iron on iron. He kept at it, and in the end he almost finished the allotted work, but for all of it he paid in full.
The acid loneliness ate into him. To be sure, from boyhood he knew the mountain quiet, the still heights and the solemn echoes, but towards the close of the long isolation the end of each day found him oppressed by a weightier sense of burden; in a few days he would begin to talk to himself.
From the first the evening pause after supper hurt him most, for a man needs a talk as well as tobacco, and after a time he dreaded these evenings so bitterly that he purposely spent himself every day, so as to pass from supper into sleep at a stride. It needed a long day to burn out his strength thoroughly, so he set his rusted alarm-clock, and before dawn it brought him groaning out of the blankets to cook a hasty breakfast and go slowly up to the tunnel. In short, he wedded himself to his work; he stepped into a routine which took the place of thought, and the change in him was so gradual that he did not see the danger.
Max Brand
THE SEVENTH MAN
Contents
Chapter I. Spring
Chapter II. Grey Molly
Chapter III. Battle
Chapter IV. King Hol
Chapter V. The Fight
Chapter VI. The Rifle
Chapter VII. Joan Disobeys
Chapter VIII. Discipline
Chapter IX. The Long Arm Of The Law
Chapter X. One Trail Ends
Chapter XI. A New Trail Begins
Chapter XII. The Crisis
Chapter XIII. Equal Payment
Chapter XIV. Suspense
Chapter XV. Seven For One
Chapter XVI. Man-Hunting
Chapter XVII. The Second Man
Chapter XVIII. Concerning The Strength Of Women
Chapter XIX. The Venture
Chapter XX. Discipline
Chapter XXI. The Acid Test
Chapter XXII. The Fifth Man
Chapter XXIII. Bad News
Chapter XXIV. The Music
Chapter XXV. The Battle
“It's Dan,” whispered Kate. “He's come.”
Chapter XXVI. The Test
Chapter XXVII. The Sixth Man
It caused a quick turning of heads.
Chapter XXVIII. The Blood Of The Father
Chapter XXIX. Billy The Clerk
Chapter XXX. The Morgan Hills
Chapter XXXI. The Trap
Chapter XXXII. Relays
Chapter XXXIII. The Jump
Chapter XXXIV. The Warning
Chapter XXXV. The Asper
Chapter XXXVI. The Empty Cave
Chapter XXXVII. Ben Swann
Chapter XXXVIII. The New Alliance
Chapter XXXIX. Victory
Chapter XL. The Failure
Chapter XLI. The Wild Geese