“Both of a village and a mining district, from which the village takes its name. Is your brother a miner?”
“Yes, sir.”
“I presume he intended to meet you at the settlement. You will no doubt find him at the tavern; if not, I will tell him of your arrival, for my way leads through the mines.”
“Thank you, sir. My brother’s name is John Borlan.”
“I am somewhat acquainted with him,” said Mr. Ruger, “though in this region of strange names we call him Jack. My name is Thomas Ruger.”
“Tom, in California style?” she asked, with a merry twinkle in her eye.
“Yes, Miss Borlan,” he said, also smiling. “Tom Ruger is well known where Thomas Ruger never was heard of. And now I will bid you good-day, Miss Borlan, for I am in something of a hurry to reach the settlement. If I do not find Jack there, I will go on to the mines and tell him.”
“Ah, Miss, you don’t have such men as Tom Ruger out where you come from,” said the driver, as Tom disappeared up the road. “And them nags of his’n can’t be beat this side of the mountains. He makes a heap o’ money with ’em.”
“What! a horse-jockey?” exclaimed Miss Borlan.
“We don’t call him that, miss. Some says he’s a sportin’ man, which ain’t nothin’ agin him, for the country’s new, ye see. He’s got heaps o’ money anyway, and there ain’t a camp nor a town on the coast that don’t know Tom Ruger. Ah, ye don’t have such men as Tommy. He’d be at home in a palace, now wouldn’t he? And it’s jest the same in a miner’s shanty. Ye don’t have such men as he. If he takes a likin’ to anybody, he sticks to ’em through thick and thin; but if he gits agin ye once, he’s—the—very—deuce. Ah, ye don’t have no such man out where you come from.”