Search      Hot    Newest Novel
HOME > Classical Novels > Gold Seekers of '49 > XV THE SIGHTS OF SAN FRANCISCO
Font Size:【Large】【Middle】【Small】 Add Bookmark  
XV THE SIGHTS OF SAN FRANCISCO
 Charley took one end of the trunk, his father the other, and piloted by the hotel man, with Mr. Grigsby, the hand baggage, in their wake, they climbed two flimsy flights of stairs to the third floor! The hotel man led the way down a narrow hall of rough boards, and flung open a door.  
"Here's your room," he announced, shortly. "Don't ask for what you don't see. We haven't got it. You're lucky, gentlemen, not to be obliged to sleep in a tent—and San Francisco nights are cold. Five dollars each, please."
 
"Certainly," said Mr. Adams; and he and Mr. Grigsby settled for the party.
 
"Well," remarked Mr. Grigsby, when the hotel man alertly left, "I've been in worse quarters."
 
"Don't bump your head," warned Mr. Adams.
 
It was a dormer room. The ceiling, of bare rafters, sloped sharply. The walls also were bare, made of unsurfaced boards, and cracked. There were two "beds": one a low , home-made and solid but not pretty, the other a wobbly canvas cot. Each had a pair of gray blankets as bedclothes. There were a couple of rickety chairs, a home-made table bearing a wash and a tin basin, with a towel hanging from a nail over it, beside a cracked looking-glass, and in the end of the room a small window dulled by dust. Charley tried to look out through the window, but could dimly see only the tops of the roofs, across. From below, and from the city around, floated in through the thin floors and walls a of voices and .
 
"Guess we'd better some of our stuff, and sort what washing we want done," quoth his father, cheerily. "When we take it out we can look about and get what other supplies we need; eh, Grigsby? What are your plans?"
 
"Same as yours, if you say so," answered the Frémonter.
 
"You mean to say you'll go along with Charley and me?"
 
"Why, yes. This town's too crowded for me, already. Doesn't strike me as a very healthy place to loaf in. Money, money; that's all I've heard. So I'm off for the diggin's, like the rest."
 
"Good. Shake," approved Mr. Adams, and Charley felt delighted. The Frémonter was such a fine man; a loyal friend in need. "We'll stick together as long as you can stand our company."
 
"Agreed," quoth Mr. Grigsby, shaking. "There'll be room enough in the hills for us to spread out, if we want to."
 
They their baggage and wrapped their wash in some old newspapers that had been stuffed into the trunk. Then they sallied .
 
"Pshaw! There's no lock on the door," exclaimed Charley's father. "I hate to leave all our stuff around, in that fashion."
 
"It'll be all right, I reckon," said Mr. Grigsby. "Ask the clerk about it."
 
"The door to our room has no lock," Mr. Adams, to the hotel man, when they had tramped below. "We've got quite a bunch of goods lying open."
 
"That's all right, sir," answered the clerk. "They'll not be touched. Not a door in this hotel has a lock. Thieves are given short shift in San Francisco, and they know it. You can leave a bucket of gold out in the street and it'll all be there when you want it again."
 
"Beg your pardon, gentlemen," spoke a voice near at hand, "but I see you're carrying a newspaper or two. Would you sell them?"
 
He was a brusque, bearded man, in miner costume, but he spoke like a person of education.
 
"I'll give you a dollar apiece," cried another man, hurrying forward; and almost immediately the three in the Adams party were surrounded by a crowd.
 
"Wait a minute," bade the first man. "I was here first. I'll give you a dollar apiece."
 
Charley . Were they crazy?
 
"But, gentlemen, these are only some old papers we happened to have as fillers," protested Mr. Adams, as much astonished as Charley.
 
"How many have you got?" demanded the second speaker.
 
"Probably a dozen."
 
"Where from?"
 
"St. Louis; two or three from New York, maybe."
 
"I'll give you eight dollars for the lot."
 
"Give you nine," bid somebody else.
 
"But they're six weeks old, gentlemen," informed Mr. Adams.
 
"Only six weeks old?" the first man. "I'll give you ten dollars for a dozen! And here's your money." He held out a ten-dollar gold piece.
 
"Go up and get the other papers, Charley," directed Mr. Adams. "If these men are crazy it isn't our fault. When you see the papers, if you don't want them you needn't take them, sir," he said to the man.
 
"I'll take them," laughed the man, grimly. "Papers only six weeks old? Why, stranger, that's fresh news out here. You can sell a thousand at a dollar apiece."
 
"Wish I had them, then," remarked Mr. Adams. And Charley away. He brought back all the papers that he could find. They sold every one—the first lot at ten dollars for a dozen, and the three more, in which the washing was wrapped, at dollar apiece on delivery later!
 
"This will pay for our washing, at least," commented Mr. Adams. "Is there a laundry near here?" he asked, of the clerk.
 
"Right around the corner."
 
"Thank you."
 
They went out—Charley sighing as he thought of the big stack of old newspapers, back home. Why, they might have brought out a hundred more! What a queer town this was, where people would pay a dollar apiece for old papers! He resolved to write to his mother the first thing, and tell her when she came out to bring every old paper she could find.
 
The air was much than when they had arrived. A strong, wind was blowing, carrying clouds of dust, and because of this, and a raw fog, the sunshine had from gold to gray. Nevertheless, something in the atmosphere made them all step out briskly.
 
Around the corner of the a torn canvas sign before a tent-house said: "Washing Done." And in through the open door they filed. A short, Frenchman, , stood behind the board counter, and bowed at their approach. He wore a little black or goatee, and his face fairly shone above a collarless shirt. From a room behind sounded vigorous scrubbing and .
 
"You do washing?" demanded Mr. Adams.
 
"Oui, m'sieur."
 
"Here's some. When can we get it?"
 
"To-morrow morning, at the ten o'clock. And does m'sieur wish ze repassage—what you call ir-ron?"
 
"What's the charge?" asked Mr. Grigsby.
 
"Seex dollair the dozen, m'sieur, for ze wash; the same for ze ir-ron."
 
"There goes your newspaper money, Adams," laughed the Frémonter. "I think I'll do my own washing, after this."
 
"We have to live, my wife and I, messieurs," explained the Frenchman, spreading his hands. "In France we live on ze very little. In New York we have one très bon café, and we charge ze very little. But out here——" and he his shoulders. "We wash, and for zis meesairable caban—what you call it? hut—we pay ze price of 500 dollair ze month."
 
"Wash what we've brought, but don't you dare to iron them; eh, Grigsby?" said Mr. Adams.
 
"Ze rough wash it shall be, messieurs," bowed the stout Frenchman.
 
"On the trap trail we washed twice a year—spring and fall," commented Mr. Grigsby, as they out. "That's plenty often enough here, too, the way prices run."
 
"Look at the crowd!" exclaimed Mr. Adams, as they emerged at the corner; for part way up a hilly street a great had gathered in front of a low building, and a constant stream of other people were hastening that way. "What's the matter up there?" he inquired, of a .
 
The man scarcely paused. He only turned his head, to drawl:
 
"Post-office, mister, and the mail's come in."
 
"That must be the mail we brought," cried Charley.
 
"If you came on the California, you brought it, sonny," informed another stranger.
 
"When's the office open, sir?" inquired Mr. Adams.
 
"Whenever the mail's distributed, of course," replied the man. "I hear the California fetched about 25,000 pieces, in all languages from American to Chinese. The postmaster and two assistants have been working all night and they'll probably work all day and another night."
 
"Well, we don't expect anything this time; do you, Grigsby?"
 
The Frémonter shook his head.
 
"Nor do I," volunteered the strange man. "But I've a partner up there who's been expecting a letter for six months. See those lines of hopefuls? By noon they'll be extended two blocks. The first in line must have got there as soon as the ship was sighted, last evening. I've known men to wait in line for a week, and have their meals brought to them. And then as like as not they didn't get their letter."
 
"I was thinking that we'd get what few supplies we need," said Mr. Adams, as they resumed their way, "and start out for the diggin's in the morning. There'll be some way of getting up there, I suppose."
 
"Yes, by boat, horse or foot," answered the Frémonter. "I don't reckon we want to buy any horses, and it's a long trail afoot. I'll see about a boat if you'll lay in what supplies you think we'll need."
 
"All right. Sugar, salt, flour, bacon and potatoes will be en............
Join or Log In! You need to log in to continue reading
   
 

Login into Your Account

Email: 
Password: 
  Remember me on this computer.

All The Data From The Network AND User Upload, If Infringement, Please Contact Us To Delete! Contact Us
About Us | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Tag List | Recent Search  
©2010-2018 wenovel.com, All Rights Reserved