"Well," shouted Arch angrily again, "this ain't yo' land an' I've got a option on it an' hit's my business to go up here, an' I'm goin'!"
As he pushed ahead of the geologist the boy flashed his old rifle to his shoulder.
"I'll let ye come just two steps more," he said quietly, and old Jason
Hawn began to grin and stepped aside as though to get out of range.
"Hol' on thar, Arch," he said; "he'll shoot, shore!" And Arch held on, bursting with rage and glaring up at the boy.
"I've a notion to git me a switch an' whoop the life out o' you." The boy laughed derisively.
"My whoopin' days air over." The amazed and amused geologist put his hand on Arch's shoulder.
"Never mind," he said, and with a significant wink he pulled a barometer out of his pocket and carefully noted the altitude.
"We'll manage it later."
The party turned, old Jason still smiling grimly, the colonel chuckling, the geologist busy with speculation, and Arch sore and angry, but wondering what on earth it was that the boy had found up that ravine. Presently with the geologist he dropped behind the other two and the latter's frowning brow cleared into a smile at his lips. He stopped, looking still at the black lump and weighing it once more in his hand.
"I think I know this coal," he said in a low voice, "and if I'm right you've got the best and thickest vein of coking coal in these mountains. It's the Culloden seam. Nobody ever has found it on this side of the mountain, and it is supposed to have petered out on the way through. That boy has found the Culloden seam. The altitude is right, the coal looks and weighs like it, and we can find it somewhere else under that bench along the mountain. So you better let the boy alone."