<h2>CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
<h3>THE GUARDIAN OF THE SILVER LODE.</h3>
<p>As has been mentioned before, Thad had a plan
in view when he left the camp in company with
Aleck, somewhere about midnight. Though for
certain reasons which he considered good, he had
not seen fit to take a single one of his comrades into
his confidence, the scoutmaster believed that the
only way for Aleck to win his own game was to find
the long-lost mine, and take possession of the same
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Page 198]</SPAN></span>
in the name of his father, who had been the original
discoverer of the lode.</p>
<p>Scores of hungry prospectors, besides Kracker,
had done everything in their power to locate the
mine; though none had descended to his last unworthy
methods of trying to torture Jerry Rawson's
son, in the hope of profiting thereby. As the claim
of the original discoverer rested only on a scant
foundation, of course the man lucky enough to find
the silver lode again would have a right to hold
possession, in the eye of the law. He might choose
to pay the widow something, but even that was a
matter resting solely upon his conscience.</p>
<p>Thad had a reason for carrying the only lantern
belonging to the scouts; and he hoped that if they
were so lucky as to find that Aleck's rude little chart
told the truth, they might utilize that means of
illumination when entering the mine.</p>
<p>Of course both of them carried their guns, for
there was no telling when they could return to
camp. An arrangement had been with Allan, so
that day and night there would be a sign shown,
calculated to tell the absent ones whether the coast
were clear, or the lawyer and sheriff still hovered
near by, waiting to entrap the Rawson boy, should
he show up.</p>
<p>They had moved along for some time, when Aleck
broke the silence by saying, with considerable feeling
in his voice:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Page 199]</SPAN></span>
"It makes me glad to know you believed what I
told you, Thad, about that business of my uncle. If
you could only meet up with him once, I'm sure
you'd know the tricky kind of man he is, just from
his looks, and the smooth way he talks. But no
matter what they all do and say, I'm just bound to
carry my plans out. My mother approves of what
I am doing; and she is thinking of me, and praying
all the time I'm up here, trying to take dad's place."</p>
<p>"Don't mention it," said Thad, quickly. "Of
course we all believe every word you told us, no
matter whether we've met this rascally uncle of
yours or not. Our chum Step Hen did, and I
reckon he wasn't much impressed with him, from
the way he talked. And as you belong to the
scouts, our first duty is to stand by you through
thick and thin."</p>
<p>"Only as long as you believe in my word, Thad,"
added the other.</p>
<p>"That's true," returned the other, quickly; "even
a scout has no business sticking up for a comrade
when he knows the other is in the wrong; but we
believe in you, Aleck. And if only you could find
that mine, I feel sure all of this funny business
would stop. Once you had put in a claim, with the
proper witnesses, and hurried to file it before the
court, nobody could steal it away. And that's
going to be just where the Boy Scouts can help
you."</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Page 200]</SPAN></span>
"Well, we'll know more than we do now, before
a great many hours," asserted the miner's son;
"unless this little map is all wrong, and poor dad
only believed he had found a rich lode. But remember,
he brought home specimens that were
nearly pure silver; and every one who saw them
said they beat the world for richness. I can remember
my dad saying that there were tons and
tons without end of that same sort, in <i>his</i> mine.
And then he was suddenly taken down sick, and died
with the secret untold. All these long years, when
we've been poor and wanting many things, there
that secret lay in my hand, oh! hundreds of times,
and I never dreamed of it still accident showed
me the paper, back of the glass in the little pocket
mirror that dad had carried with him a long time."</p>
<p>They relapsed into silence again for a long time,
each busy with his thoughts. Aleck knew what
few simple directions his rude chart carried; he had
gazed at it so many times that it was photographed
on his mind, and there had been no need for him
to rip the seam of his coat, and take the slip of
faded paper out. Kracker had not dreamed how
near the coveted clue had been to his hands, at the
time he actually held the boy, and closely examined
all his pockets.</p>
<p>"It's lucky," remarked Thad, after fully an hour
more had passed, with both boys pushing forward
steadily all the time, over rugged ways that severely
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Page 201]</SPAN></span>
tried their abilities—"it's lucky, I say, that we are
heading exactly away from the direction where that
Sheriff, and your uncle, must be coming from."</p>
<p>"Yes, but I knew we'd do that before we ever
started out," replied Aleck.</p>
<p>"You've been sizing up the region all day in
camp, and laying your plans, if the chance ever
came to try them out; isn't that so, Aleck?"</p>
<p>"You never said truer words in your life, Thad,"
answered the other. "I found a pretty high rock
on which I could perch; and that gave me a chance
to look over in this region with those fine glasses
of yours. And I tell you now, it gave me a great
thrill when I recognized something dad had marked
on that little chart. It seemed just as if I could
hear his voice calling me from the grave, and telling
me I was doing the right thing—to go ahead,
no matter who tried to stop me."</p>
<p>"What sort of a land-mark was it you saw?"
asked the other scout.</p>
<p>"Why, you see, he made a rough sketch of a rock
that looks a whole lot like a human head," Aleck
went on to say, earnestly.</p>
<p>"Why, hello! I remember noticing that very
same rock, the time I went up to take a look, and
see if I could get a glimpse of our hunter squad.
While about it, I turned the glasses around, to see
if there were any sheep on the sides of the mountains
to the south. And it was right then I saw
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Page 202]</SPAN></span>
that outline of a face, cut in the rock, just like somebody
had used a giant chisel and made it—nose,
mouth, chin, forehead, all complete. It startled me
a little at first, Aleck."</p>
<p>"I should guess it would, Thad; but think what
it meant to <i>me</i>, when I had seen it on dad's little
chart; and knew that the entrance to his hidden
mine lay almost in the shadow of that face! I
think he looked on it as the rock guardian to his
silver lode."</p>
<p>"Is that a fact?" ejaculated Thad, partaking
in a measure of the excitement that shook the frame
of his companion; "Well, that's more than you've
seen fit to tell me before, Aleck; and it's some
interesting, I own up."</p>
<p>"I meant to tell you everything, Thad, believe
me," declared the other, quickly, and with some
emotion. "After the fine way you and your chums
rescued me from that shelf up on the face of the
cliff, and said you'd stand by me, no matter what
happened, why, I made up my mind that I would
keep nothing back from you. By to-morrow I expected
to take the map out from the lining of my
coat, where it was sewed in by my mother's own
dear hands, so that nobody would ever think things
had been disturbed at all. And now, I'm surely
hoping that we'll both set eyes on dad's mine before
another dawn breaks."</p>
<p>"For your sake, Aleck, I hope that will come
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Page 203]</SPAN></span>
true. You deserve all the luck in the world, and
that's what every one of our fellows say. But
only for this moonlight I'm afraid we'd have had
a hard job of it, coming all this distance; because
the way is mighty rough, and both of us have
stumbled lots of times as it is. We might have
used the lantern, of course, but that would have put
it out of business later, when we wanted it bad;
and besides, it's flickering might have told our
enemies where we were."</p>
<p>Aleck felt a thrill of pleasure at the way the
other used that word "our;" why, it was just as
though the Silver Fox Patrol had adopted him into
the troop; and meant to make his cause their own.
For a boy who had seldom had a friend to give
him even words of encouragement, this was a
glorious happening indeed. He felt that it had been
the luckiest hour of his whole life when, in the
midst of his bitter dejection, left alone on that high
and isolated rocky ledge, he had discovered the
strange movements of that fiery pencil, that seemed
to be making all sorts of extravagant figures and
circles in the air, which he knew stood for the
means of communication between scouts.</p>
<p>"Let us work our way around this spur," he
said, a while later, after they had continued to
advance further into the depths of the mountains.</p>
<p>"I can guess what you are thinking," Thad went
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Page 204]</SPAN></span>
on to remark; "you believe that we must even now
be in the neighborhood of that rock face."</p>
<p>"Well, I've tried to judge the distance, and how
we got along; and it seems to me we ought to be
nearly there. What do you think, Thad?" asked
the other; and from his manner it was evident that
he laid considerable importance on the opinion of
his companion.</p>
<p>"Just what you do, which is, that we must be
getting close to where we saw that great head outlined
just as if some scupltor had chiseled it from
the solid rock. But even if we fail to find it, Aleck,
that may be because of the formation of the mountain.
Besides, this moonlight is awfully deceptive,
you know."</p>
<p>"Wait, and we'll soon learn," was the confident
answer. "I sat there, and looked for nearly an
hour. I guess I got every rock fixed on my mind."</p>
<p>"Well, I've had a few of the same impressed on
my knees and shins," chuckled the scoutmaster,
drily. "But we've no need to complain, because,
considering all the things we've had to fight against,
I reckon we've escaped pretty slick. See anything
yet, Aleck?"</p>
<p>"No, I own that I don't; but then, that may
come from lots of causes," the other boy replied,
trying not to let his disappointment show in his
manner or speech; for he knew that Thad did not
believe in a display of weakness in scouts. "Perhaps,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Page 205]</SPAN></span>
when we've pushed on a little further, we
may be able to glimpse the face again."</p>
<p>"Wait right here," said Thad, suddenly.</p>
<p>"Oh! did you hear anything? Wouldn't it be
too unbearably hard if we learned that some one,
perhaps that cruel prospector, Colonel Kracker, had
been ahead of us, and located the hidden mine? He
could hurry to enter his claim, and my poor mother
would not stand a ghost of a show. Was it a voice
you heard, Thad?"</p>
<p>"I didn't hear anything to bother me," came the
reply, accompanied with a low chuckle. "I was
only thinking how often we strain ourselves to see
something away off, when all we have to do is to
turn our eyes up and look."</p>
<p>Aleck instantly "caught on" to what his companion
meant. He bent his head back, and gave
utterance to a low cry of satisfaction.</p>
<p>"Well, if that doesn't beat anything?" he
ejaculated, apparently highly pleased; "it's the head,
as sure as I live, and towering right above us, almost.
No wonder I couldn't see it, looking away
off, and thinking it lay further on. We've found
the land-mark dad set down in his little map, Thad.
And now to discover the crack in the wall, hidden
by the hanging vines, where he followed a fox in,
just out of curiosity, and discovered the richest
silver lode he ever knew about. Oh! I'm just shaking
all over with excitement. And I sure hope my
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Page 206]</SPAN></span>
mother's thinking about me right now, thinking,
and praying for me to succeed!"</p>
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