"Well, there"s a heap of it anyway. It goes ever so far down," said he, thrusting in a stick.
"It"s from ten to twelve feet deep," replied Nate, proud of his knowledge; "and see how long and wide!"
"_I_ don"t see how they ever ground up rocks so fine," said Kyzie.
"Exactly like sand. And it stretches out so far that you"d think "twas a sand beach by the sea,--only there isn"t any sea."
"Well, it"s just as good as a beach anyway," said Nate. "Just as good for picnics and the like of that. When there"s anything going on, they get out the bra.s.s band and have fireworks and bring chairs and benches and sit round here. I tell you it"s great!"
"There are lots of benches here now," remarked Edith. "And what"s that long wooden thing?"
"That"s a staging. That"s where they have the bra.s.s band sit; that"s where they send up the fireworks."
"Oh, I hope they"ll have fireworks while we"re here, and picnics."
"Of course they will. They"re always having "em. And I heard somebody say they"re talking of a barbecue."
Edith clapped her hands. She did not know what a barbecue might be, but it sounded wild and jolly.
"What a long stretch of mud-puddle right here by the tailings," said Kyzie.
Nate laughed. "It _is_ a damp spot, that"s a fact!"
They all wondered what he was laughing at. "I guess there used to be water here once," said Jimmy at a venture. "There"s water here now standing round in spots. And,--why, it"s _fishes_!"
Lucy stooped all of a sudden and picked up a dead fish.
"Ugh! I never caught a fish before!" But next moment she threw it away in disgust.
"How did dead fishes ever get into this mud-puddle?" queried Edith.
"Well, they used to live in it before it dried up," replied Nate. "Fact is, this is a _lake_!"
Everybody exclaimed in surprise; and Kyzie said:--
"It doesn"t seem possible; but then things are so queer up here that you can believe almost anything."
"Really it is a lake. It"s all right in the winter, and swells tremendously then; but this is a dry year, you know, and it"s all dried up." Kyzie forgave the lake for drying up, but pitied the fishes. Edith thought Castle Cliff was "a funny place anyway."
"What little bits of houses! Did they dry up too?"
"Oh, those are just the cabins and bunk-houses that were built for the miners, ever so long ago when the mine was going. Fixed up into cottages now for summer boarders. Do you want to see the mine?"
They went around behind the shaft-house and beyond the old saw-mill.
"O my senses!" cried Edith, "is that the old gold mine, that monstrous great thing? Isn"t it horrid?"
They all agreed that it was "perfectly awful and dreadful," and that it made you shudder to look into it; and that they were glad baby Eddo was safely out of the way. The mine was a deep, irregular chasm, full of dirty water and rocks. It had a hungry, cruel look; you could almost fancy it was waiting in wicked glee to swallow up thoughtless little children.
"It doesn"t seem as if anybody could ever have dug for gold in that horrid ditch," exclaimed Kyzie.
"You"d better believe they did, though," said the young guide. "They used to get it out in nuggets, cart-loads of it."
He was not quite sure of the nuggets, but liked the sound of the word.
"Yes, cart-loads of it. I tell you "twas the richest mine in the whole Cuyamaca Mountains."
"Too bad the gold gave out," said Kyzie, gazing regretfully into the watery depths.
"But it didn"t give out! Why, there"s gold enough left down there to buy up the whole United States! They lost the vein, that"s all"
"The vein? What"s a vein?" asked Edith.
"Well, you see," replied the guide, "gold goes along underground in streaks; they call it veins. The miners had to stop digging here because they lost track of the streak. But they"ll find it again."
"How do _you_ know?" asked Jimmy-boy, who thought Nate was putting on too many airs.
"Because Mr. Templeton said so. They"ve sent for Colonel Somebody from I--forget where. He"s a splendid mining engineer, great for finding lost veins. He"ll be here next week and bring a lot of men."
"Whoop-ee!" cried Jimmy, "he"ll find the vein and things, and we"ll be having gold as plenty as blackberries!"
"Just what I was talking about yesterday when you laughed," broke in Lucy. "I said I"d go down in a bucket; don"t you know I did?"
Edith was gazing spellbound at the yawning chasm.
"Look at those rickety steps! The men will get killed! "Twill all cave in!"
"No danger," said Nate, "there are walls down there, stone walls, papa says, that keep it all safe."
He meant "galleries," but had forgotten the word.
"Well, I don"t care if there are five hundred stone walls, I guess the men could drown all the same!" said Edith. "That water ought to be let out, Nate Pollard! If the colonel is coming next week why don"t they let out the water this very day and give the place a chance to dry off."
She spoke in a tone of the gravest anxiety, as if she understood the matter perfectly, and felt the whole care of the mine. Indeed, the mine had become suddenly very interesting to all the children. It certainly looked like a rough, wild, frightful hole; nothing more than a hole; but if there were gold down there in "nuggets," why, that was quite another matter; it became at once an enchanted hole; it was as delightful as a fairy story.
"I hope it"s true that they"ve sent for that colonel," said Kyzie.
"Of course it"s true," replied Nate, who did not like to have his word doubted.
"I s"pose there are buckets "round here. Oh, aren"t you glad we came to Castle Cliff?" said Lucy, pirouetting around Jimmy.
"Bab will be glad, too," she thought. For Lucy never could look forward to any pleasure without wishing her darling "niece" to share it with her.
"Well, I guess we"ve seen everything there is to see," remarked Nate, who had now told all he knew and was ready to go.
While they still wandered about, talking of "tailings" and "nuggets,"
they were startled by the peal of a bell.
"Twelve o"clock! Two minutes ahead of time though," said Nate, taking from his pocket a handsome gold watch which Jimmy had always admired.