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<h2> WHITE FACED DICK: A STORY OF PINE TREE GULCH </h2>
<p>How Pine Tree Gulch got its name no one knew, for in the early days
every ravine and hillside was thickly covered with pines. It may be that
a tree of exceptional size caught the eye of the first explorer, that
he camped under it, and named the place in its honor; or, maybe, some
fallen giant lay in the bottom and hindered the work of the first
prospectors. At any rate, Pine Tree Gulch it was, and the name was as
good as any other. The pine trees were gone now. Cut up for firing,
or for the erection of huts, or the construction of sluices, but the
hillside was ragged with their stumps.</p>
<p>The principal camp was at the mouth of the Gulch, where the little
stream, which scarce afforded water sufficient for the cradles in the
dry season, but which was a rushing torrent in winter, joined the Yuba.
The best ground was at the junction of the streams, and lay, indeed, in
the Yuba Valley rather than in the Gulch. At first most gold had been
found higher up, but there was here comparatively little depth down to
the bedrock, and as the ground became exhausted the miners moved down
towards the mouth of the Gulch. They were doing well, as a whole, how
well no one knew, for miners are chary of giving information as to what
they are making; still, it was certain they were doing well, for the
bars were doing a roaring trade, and the storekeepers never refused
credit—a proof in itself that the prospects were good.</p>
<p>The flat at the mouth of the Gulch was a busy scene, every foot was good
paying stuff, for in the eddy, where the torrents in winter rushed down
into the Yuba, the gold had settled down and lay thick among the gravel.
But most of the parties were sinking, and it was a long way down to the
bedrock; for the hills on both sides sloped steeply, and the Yuba must
here at one time have rushed through a narrow gorge, until, in some
wild freak, it brought down millions of tons of gravel, and resumed its
course seventy feet above its former level.</p>
<p>A quarter of a mile higher up a ledge of rock ran across the valley, and
over it in the old time the Yuba had poured in a cascade seventy feet
deep into the ravine. But the rock now was level with the gravel, only
showing its jagged points here and there above it. This ledge had been
invaluable to the diggers: without it they could only have sunk their
shafts with the greatest difficulty, for the gravel would have been full
of water, and even with the greatest pains in puddling and timber work
the pumps would scarcely have sufficed to keep it down as it rose in the
bottom of the shafts. But the miners had made common cause together, and
giving each so many ounces of gold or so many days' work had erected a
dam thirty feet high along the ledge of rock, and had cut a channel for
the Yuba along the lower slopes of the valley. Of course, when the rain
set in, as everybody knew, the dam would go, and the river diggings must
be abandoned till the water subsided and a fresh dam was made; but there
were two months before them yet, and everyone hoped to be down to the
bedrock before the water interrupted their work.</p>
<p>The hillside, both in the Yuba Valley and for some distance along Pine
Tree Gulch, was dotted by shanties and tents; the former constructed for
the most part of logs roughly squared, the walls being some three feet
in height, on which the sharp sloping roof was placed, thatched in the
first place with boughs, and made all snug, perhaps, with an old sail
stretched over all. The camp was quiet enough during the day. The few
women were away with their washing at the pools, a quarter of a mile up
the Gulch, and the only persons to be seen about were the men told off
for cooking for their respective parties.</p>
<p>But in the evening the camp was lively. Groups of men in red shirts
and corded trousers tied at the knee, in high boots, sat round blazing
fires, and talked of their prospects or discussed the news of the
luck at other camps. The sound of music came from two or three plank
erections which rose conspicuously above the huts of the diggers, and
were bright externally with the glories of white and colored paints. To
and from these men were always sauntering, and it needed not the clink
of glasses and the sound of music to tell that they were the bars of the
camp.</p>
<p>Here, standing at the counter, or seated at numerous small tables, men
were drinking villainous liquor, smoking and talking, and paying but
scant attention to the strains of the fiddle or the accordion, save
when some well known air was played, when all would join in a boisterous
chorus. Some were always passing in or out of a door which led into a
room behind. Here there was comparative quiet, for men were gambling,
and gambling high.</p>
<p>Going backwards and forwards with liquors into the gambling room of the
Imperial Saloon, which stood just where Pine Tree Gulch opened into Yuba
Valley, was a lad, whose appearance had earned for him the name of White
Faced Dick.</p>
<p>White Faced Dick was not one of those who had done well at Pine Tree
Gulch; he had come across the plains with his father, who had died
when halfway over, and Dick had been thrown on the world to shift
for himself. Nature had not intended him for the work, for he was a
delicate, timid lad; what spirits he originally had having been years
before beaten out of him by a brutal father. So far, indeed, Dick was
the better rather than the worse for the event which had left him an
orphan.</p>
<p>They had been traveling with a large party for mutual security against
Indians and Mormons, and so long as the journey lasted Dick had got
on fairly well. He was always ready to do odd jobs, and as the draught
cattle were growing weaker and weaker, and every pound of weight was of
importance, no one grudged him his rations in return for his services;
but when the company began to descend the slopes of the Sierra Nevada
they began to break up, going off by twos and threes to the diggings of
which they heard such glowing accounts. Some, however, kept straight on
to Sacramento, determining there to obtain news as to the doings at all
the different places, and then to choose that which seemed to them to
offer the surest prospects of success.</p>
<p>Dick proceeded with them to the town, and there found himself alone. His
companions were absorbed in the busy rush of population, and each had
so much to provide and arrange for, that none gave a thought to the
solitary boy. However, at that time no one who had a pair of hands,
however feeble, to work need starve in Sacramento, and for some weeks
Dick hung around the town doing odd jobs, and then having saved a few
dollars, determined to try his luck at the diggings, and started on foot
with a shovel on his shoulders and a few days' provisions slung across
it.</p>
<p>Arrived at his destination, the lad soon discovered that gold digging
was hard work for brawny and seasoned men, and after a few feeble
attempts in spots abandoned as worthless he gave up the effort, and
again began to drift; and even in Pine Tree Gulch it was not difficult
to get a living. At first he tried rocking cradles, but the work was
far harder than it appeared. He was standing ankle deep in water from
morning till night, and his cheeks grew paler, and his strength, instead
of increasing, seemed to fade away. Still, there were jobs within his
strength. He could keep a fire alight and watch a cooking pot, he could
carry up buckets of water or wash a flannel shirt, and so he struggled
on, until at last some kind hearted man suggested to him that he should
try to get a place at the new saloon which was about to be opened.</p>
<p>"You are not fit for this work, young 'un, and you ought to be at home
with your mother; if you like I will go up with you this evening to
Jeffries. I knew him down on the flats, and I dare say he will take you
on. I don't say as a saloon is a good place for a boy, still you will
always get your bellyful of victuals and a dry place to sleep in, if
it's only under a table. What do you say?"</p>
<p>Dick thankfully accepted the offer, and on Red George's recommendation
was that evening engaged. His work was not hard now, for till the miners
knocked off there was little doing in the saloon; a few men would come
in for a drink at dinnertime, but it was not until the lamps were lit
that business began in earnest, and then for four or five hours Dick was
busy.</p>
<p>A rougher or healthier lad would not have minded the work, but to Dick
it was torture; every nerve in his body thrilled whenever rough miners
cursed him for not carrying out their orders more quickly, or for
bringing them the wrong liquors, which, as his brain was in a whirl
with the noise, the shouting, and the multiplicity of orders, happened
frequently. He might have fared worse had not Red George always stood
his friend, and Red George was an authority in Pine Tree Gulch—powerful
in frame, reckless in bearing and temper, he had been in a score of
fights and had come off them, if not unscathed, at least victorious. He
was notoriously a lucky digger, but his earnings went as fast as they
were made, and he was always ready to open his belt and give a bountiful
pinch of dust to any mate down on his luck.</p>
<p>One evening Dick was more helpless and confused than usual. The saloon
was full, and he had been shouted at and badgered and cursed until he
scarcely knew what he was doing. High play was going on in the saloon,
and a good many men were clustered round the table, Red George was
having a run of luck, and there was a big pile of gold dust on the table
before him. One of the gamblers who was losing had ordered old rye,
and instead of bringing it to him, Dick brought a tumbler of hot liquor
which someone else had called for. With an oath the man took it up and
threw it in his face.</p>
<p>"You cowardly hound!" Red George exclaimed. "Are you man enough to do
that to a man?"</p>
<p>"You bet," the gambler, who was a new arrival at Pine Tree Gulch,
replied; and picking up an empty glass, he hurled it at Red George. The
bystanders sprang aside, and in a moment the two men were facing
each other with outstretched pistols. The two reports rung out
simultaneously: Red George sat down unconcernedly with a streak of blood
flowing down his face, where the bullet had cut a furrow in his cheek;
the stranger fell back with a bullet hole in the center of his forehead.</p>
<p>The body was carried outside, and the play continued as if no
interruption had taken place. They were accustomed to such occurrences
in Pine Tree Gulch, and the piece of ground at the top of the hill, that
had been set aside as a burial place, was already dotted thickly with
graves, filled in almost every instance by men who had died, in the
local phraseology, "with their boots on."</p>
<p>Neither then nor afterwards did Red George allude to the subject to
Dick, whose life after this signal instance of his championship was
easier than it had hitherto been, for there were few in Pine Tree Gulch
who cared to excite Red George's anger; and strangers going to the
place were sure to receive a friendly warning that it was best for their
health to keep their tempers over any shortcomings on the part of White
Faced Dick.</p>
<p>Grateful as he was for Red George's interference on his behalf, Dick
felt the circumstance which had ensued more than anyone else in the
camp. With others it was the subject of five minutes' talk, but Dick
could not get out of his head the thought of the dead man's face as he
fell back. He had seen many such frays before, but he was too full of
his own troubles for them to make much impression upon him. But in the
present case he felt as if he himself was responsible for the death of
the gambler; if he had not blundered this would not have happened.</p>
<p>He wondered whether the dead man had a wife and children, and, if so,
were they expecting his return? Would they ever hear where he had died,
and how?</p>
<p>But this feeling, which, tired out as he was when the time came for
closing the bar, often prevented him from sleeping for hours, in no way
lessened his gratitude and devotion towards Red George, and he felt that
he could die willingly if his life would benefit his champion. Sometimes
he thought, too, that his life would not be much to give, for, in spite
of shelter and food, the cough which he had caught while working in the
water still clung to him, and as his employer said to him angrily one
day:</p>
<p>"Your victuals don't do you no good, Dick; you get thinner and thinner,
and folks will think as I starve you. Darned if you aint a disgrace to
the establishment."</p>
<p>The wind was whistling down the gorges, and the clouds hung among the
pine woods which still clothed the upper slopes of the hills, and the
diggers, as they turned out one morning, looked up apprehensively.</p>
<p>"But it could not be," they assured each other. Everyone knew that the
rains were not due for another month yet; it could only be a passing
shower if it rained at all.</p>
<p>But as the morning went on, men came in from camps higher up the river,
and reports were current that it had been raining for the last two days
among the upper hills; while those who took the trouble to walk across
to the new channel could see for themselves at noon that it was filled
very nigh to the brim, the water rushing along with thick and turbid
current. But those who repeated the rumors, or who reported that the
channel was full, were summarily put down. Men would not believe that
such a calamity as a flood and the destruction of all their season's
work could be impending. There had been some showers, no doubt, as there
had often been before, but it was ridiculous to talk of anything like
rain a month before its time. Still, in spite of these assertions, there
was uneasiness at Pine Tree Gulch, and men looked at the driving clouds
above and shook their heads before they went down to the shafts to work
after dinner.</p>
<p>When the last customer had left and the bar was closed, Dick had nothing
to do till evening, and he wandered outside and sat down on a stump, at
first looking at the work going on in the valley, then so absorbed in
his own thoughts that he noticed nothing, not even the driving mist
which presently set in. He was calculating that he had, with his savings
from his wages and what had been given him by the miners, laid by eighty
dollars. When he got another hundred and twenty he would go; he would
make his way down to San Francisco, and then by ship to Panama and up
to New York, and then west again to the village where he was born. There
would be people there who would know him, and who would give him work
for his mother's sake. He did not care what it was; anything would be
better than this. Then his thoughts came back to Pine Tree Gulch, and he
started to his feet. Could he be mistaken? Were his eyes deceiving him?
No; among the stones and boulders of the old bed of the Yuba there was
the gleam of water, and even as he watched it he could see it widening
out. He started to run down the hill to give the alarm, but before he
was halfway he paused, for there were loud shouts, and a scene of bustle
and confusion instantly arose.</p>
<p>The cradles were deserted, and the men working on the surface loaded
themselves with their tools and made for the high ground, while those at
the windlasses worked their hardest to draw up their comrades below. A
man coming down from above stopped close to Dick, with a low cry, and
stood gazing with a white scared face. Dick had worked with him; he was
one of the company to which Red George belonged.</p>
<p>"What is it, Saunders?"</p>
<p>"My God! they are lost!" the man replied. "I was at the windlass when
they shouted up to me to go up and fetch them a bottle of rum. They had
just struck it rich, and wanted a drink on the strength of it."</p>
<p>Dick understood at once. Red George and his mates were still in the
bottom of the shaft, ignorant of the danger which was threatening them.</p>
<p>"Come on," he cried; "we shall be in time yet," and at the top of his
speed dashed down the hill, followed by Saunders.</p>
<p>"What is it, what is it?" asked parties of men mounting the hill.</p>
<p>"Red George's gang are still below."</p>
<p>Dick's eyes were fixed on the water. There was a broad band now of
yellow with a white edge down the center of the stony flat, and it
was widening with terrible rapidity. It was scarce ten yards from the
windlass at the top of Red George's shaft when Dick, followed closely by
Saunders, reached it.</p>
<p>"Come up, mates; quick, for your lives! The river is rising; you will be
flooded out directly. Everyone else has gone!"</p>
<p>As he spoke he pulled at the rope by which the bucket was hanging, and
the handles of the windlass flew round rapidly as it descended. When it
had run out Dick and he grasped the handles.</p>
<p>"All right below?"</p>
<p>An answering call came up, and the two began their work, throwing their
whole strength into it. Quickly as the windlass revolved it seemed
an endless time to Dick before the bucket came up, and the first man
stepped out. It was not Red George. Dick had hardly expected it would
be. Red George would be sure to see his two mates up before him, and the
man uttered a cry of alarm as he saw the water, now within a few feet of
the mouth of the shaft.</p>
<p>It was a torrent now, for not only was it coming through the dam, but
it was rushing down in cascades from the new channel. Without a word the
miner placed himself facing Dick, and the moment the bucket was again
down, the three grasped the handles. But quickly as they worked, the
edge of the water was within a few inches of the shaft when the next
man reached the surface; but again the bucket descended before the rope
tightened. However, the water had begun to run over the lip—at first,
in a mere trickle, and then, almost instantaneously, in a cascade, which
grew larger and larger.</p>
<p>The bucket was halfway up when a sound like thunder was heard, the
ground seemed to tremble under their feet, and then at the turn of the
valley above, a great wave of yellow water, crested with foam, was seen
tearing along at the speed of a race horse.</p>
<p>"The dam has burst!" Saunders shouted. "Run for your lives, or we are
all lost!"</p>
<p>The three men dropped the handles and ran at full speed towards the
shore, while loud shouts to Dick to follow came from the crowd of men
standing on the slope. But the boy grasped the handles, and with lips
tightly closed, still toiled on. Slowly the bucket ascended, for Red
George was a heavy man; then suddenly the weight slackened, and the
handle went round faster. The shaft was filling, the water had reached
the bucket, and had risen to Red George's neck, so that his weight was
no longer on the rope. So fast did the water pour in, that it was not
half a minute before the bucket reached the surface, and Red George
sprang out. There was but time for one exclamation, and then the great
wave struck them. Red George was whirled like a straw in the current;
but he was a strong swimmer, and at a point where the valley widened
out, half a mile lower, he struggled to shore.</p>
<p>Two days later the news reached Pine Tree Gulch that a boy's body had
been washed ashore twenty miles down, and ten men, headed by Red George,
went and brought it solemnly back to Pine Tree Gulch. There among the
stumps of pine trees a grave was dug, and there, in the presence of the
whole camp, White Faced Dick was laid to rest.</p>
<p>Pine Tree Gulch is a solitude now, the trees are growing again, and
none would dream that it was once a busy scene of industry; but if the
traveler searches among the pine trees he will find a stone with the
words:</p>
<p>"Here lies White Faced Dick, who died to save Red George. 'What can a
man do more than give his life for a friend?'"</p>
<p>The text was the suggestion of an ex-clergyman working as a miner in
Pine Tree Gulch.</p>
<p>Red George worked no more at the diggings, but, after seeing the stone
laid in its place, went east, and with what little money came to him
when the common fund of the company was divided after the flood on the
Yuba, bought a small farm, and settled down there; but to the end of
his life he was never weary of telling those who would listen to it the
story of Pine Tree Gulch.</p>
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