The La Chance Mine Mystery
Copyright, 1920 , By Little, Brown, and Company. All rights reserved Published March, 1920
I STOOD UP AND DROVE FOR ALL I WAS WORTH, AND THE GIRL BESIDE ME SHOT,—AND HIT! Frontispiece. See page 76 .
CHAPTER PAGE
I am sick of the bitter wood-smoke, And sick of the wind and rain: I will leave the bush behind me, And look for my love again.
Little as I guessed it, this story really began at Skunk's Misery. But Skunk's Misery was the last thing in my head, though I had just come from the place.
Hungry, dog-tired, cross with the crossness of a man in authority whose orders have been forgotten or disregarded, I drove Billy Jones's old canoe across Lac Tremblant on my way home to Dudley Wilbraham's gold mine at La Chance, after an absence of months. It was halfway to dark, and the bitter November wind blew dead in my teeth. Slaps of spray from flying wave-crests blinded me with gouts of lake water, that was oddly warm till the cutting wind froze it to a coating of solid ice on my bare hands and stinging face, that I had to keep dabbing on my paddling shoulder to get my eyes clear in order that I might stare in front of my leaky, borrowed canoe.
To a stranger there might have seemed to be nothing particular to stare at, out on a lake where the world was all wind and lumpy seas and growing November twilight; but any one who had lived at La Chance knew better. By the map Lac Tremblant should have been our nearest gold route to civilization, but it was a lake that was no lake, as far as transport was concerned, and we never used it. The five-mile crossing I was making was just a fair sample of the forty miles of length Lac Tremblant stretched mockingly past the La Chance mine toward the main road from Caraquet—our nearest settlement—to railhead: and that was forty miles of queer water, sown with rocks that were sometimes visible as tombstones in a cemetery and sometimes hidden like rattlesnakes in a blanket. For the depth of Lac Tremblant, or its fairway, were two things no man might ever count on. It would fall in a night to shallows a child could wade through, among bristling needles of rocks no one had ever guessed at; and rise in a morning to the tops of the spruce scrub on its banks,—a sweet spread of water with not a rock to be seen. What hidden spring fed it was a mystery. But in the bitterest winter it was never cold enough to freeze, further than to form surging masses of frazil ice that would neither let a canoe push through them, nor yet support the weight of a man. Winter or summer, it was no thoroughfare—and neither was the ungodly jumble of swamp and mountains that stopped me from tapping the lower end of it—or I should not have spent the last three months in making fifty miles of road through untrodden bush to Caraquet, over which to transport the La Chance gold to a post-road and a railway: and it was no chosen return route of mine to La Chance now, either.
Susan Morrow Jones
THE LA CHANCE MINE MYSTERY
S. CARLETON
WITH FRONTISPIECE BY
GEORGE W. GAGE
THE LA CHANCE MINE MYSTERY
CONTENTS
THE LA CHANCE MINE MYSTERY
CHAPTER I
I COME HOME: AND THE WOLVES HOWL
CHAPTER II
MY DREAM: AND DUDLEY'S GIRL
CHAPTER III
DUDLEY'S MINE: AND DUDLEY'S GOLD
CHAPTER IV
THE MAN IN THE DARK
CHAPTER V
THE CARAQUET ROAD: AND THE WOLVES HOWL ONCE MORE
CHAPTER VI
MOSTLY WOLVES: AND A GIRL
CHAPTER VII
I FIND LITTLE ENOUGH ON THE CORDUROY ROAD, AND LESS AT SKUNK'S MISERY
CHAPTER VIII
THOMPSON!
CHAPTER IX
TATIANA PAULINA VALENKA!
CHAPTER X
I INTERFERE FOR THE LAST TIME
CHAPTER XI
MACARTNEY HEARS A NOISE: AND I FIND FOUR DEAD MEN
CHAPTER XII
THOMPSON'S CARDS: AND SKUNK'S MISERY
CHAPTER XIII
A DEAD MAN'S MESSENGER
CHAPTER XIV
WOLVES—AND DUDLEY
CHAPTER XV
THE PLACE OF DEPARTED SPIRITS
CHAPTER XVI
IN COLLINS'S CARE
CHAPTER XVII
HIGH EXPLOSIVE
CHAPTER XVIII
LAC TREMBLANT
CHAPTER XIX
SKUNK'S MISERY
CHAPTER XX
THE END
THE END