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This cabin was not his, by the way, having been built several
years previously by a couple of miners who had got out a raft of
logs at that point for a grub-stake. They had been most
hospitable lads, and, after they abandoned it, travelers who knew
the route made it an object to arrive there at nightfall. It was
very handy, saving them all the time and toil of pitching camp;
and it was an unwritten rule that the last man left a neat pile of
firewood for the next comer. Rarely a night passed but from half
a dozen to a score of men crowded into its shelter. Jacob Kent
noted these things, exercised squatter sovereignty, and moved in.
Thenceforth, the weary travelers were mulcted a dollar per head
for the privilege of sleeping on the floor, Jacob Kent weighing
the dust and never failing to steal the down-weight. Besides, he
so contrived that his transient guests chopped his wood for him
and carried his water. This was rank piracy, but his victims were
an easy-going breed, and while they detested him, they yet
permitted him to flourish in his sins.
One afternoon in April he sat by his door,--for all the world like
a predatory spider,--marvelling at the heat of the returning sun,
and keeping an eye on the trail for prospective flies. The Yukon
lay at his feet, a sea of ice, disappearing around two great bends
to the north and south, and stretching an honest two miles from
bank to bank. Over its rough breast ran the sled-trail, a slender
sunken line, eighteen inches wide and two thousand miles in
length, with more curses distributed to the linear foot than any
other road in or out of all Christendom.
Jacob Kent was feeling particularly good that afternoon. The
record had been broken the previous night, and he had sold his
hospitality to no less than twenty-eight visitors. True, it had
been quite uncomfortable, and four had snored beneath his bunk all
night; but then it had added appreciable weight to the sack in
which he kept his gold dust. That sack, with its glittering
yellow treasure, was at once the chief delight and the chief bane
of his existence. Heaven and hell lay within its slender mouth.
In the nature of things, there being no privacy to his one-roomed
dwelling, he was tortured by a constant fear of theft. It would
be very easy for these bearded, desperate-looking strangers to
make away with it. Often he dreamed that such was the case, and
awoke in the grip of nightmare. A select number of these robbers
haunted him through his dreams, and he came to know them quite
well, especially the bronzed leader with the gash on his right
cheek. This fellow was the most persistent of the lot, and,
because of him, he had, in his waking moments, constructed several
score of hiding-places in and about the cabin. After a
concealment he would breathe freely again, perhaps for several
nights, only to collar the Man with the Gash in the very act of
unearthing the sack. Then, on awakening in the midst of the usual
struggle, he would at once get up and transfer the bag to a new
and more ingenious crypt. It was not that he was the direct
victim of these phantasms; but he believed in omens and thought-transference,
and he deemed these dream-robbers to be the astral
projection of real personages who happened at those particular
moments, no matter where they were in the flesh, to be harboring
designs, in the spirit, upon his wealth. So he continued to bleed
the unfortunates who crossed his threshold, and at the same time
to add to his trouble with every ounce that went into the sack.
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