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used to play with you too when he was a boy?" He asked this with what seemed to her tortured soul like silken cruelty. She had no answer, none at least that would avail. Desperately she snatched at a straw. "All this isn't proof. It's mere surmise. Some one's tracks were found by you. How do you know they were father's?" "I've got that cinched too. I took his boots and measured them." "Then where's the gold, if he took it? It must be somewhere. Where is it?" "Now I'm going up to the head of the class, ma'am. The gold--why, that's a dead easy one. _Near as I can make out, I'm sitting on it right now._" She gave a startled little cry that died in her throat. "Yes, it's ce'tainly a valuable wash-stand. Chippendale furniture ain't in it with this kind. I reckon the king of England's is ace high against a straight flush when it bucks up against yours." Melissy threw up her cards. "How did you find out?" she asked hoarsely. The deputy forced her to commit herself more definitely. "Find out what?" "Where I put the box." "I'll go back and answer some of those other questions first. I might as well own up that I knew all the time your father didn't hold up the stage." "You did?" "He's no fool. He wouldn't leave his tracks all over the place where he had just held up a stage. He might jest as well have left a signed note saying he had done it. No, that didn't look like Champ Lee to me. It seemed more likely he'd arrived after the show than before. It wouldn't be like him, either, to go plowing up the side of the ditch, with his partner on the other side, making a trail that a blind man could follow in the night. Soon as I knew Lee and Boone made those tracks, I had it cinched that they were following the lateral to see where the robber was going. They had come to the same conclusion I had, that there wasn't any way of escape _except by that empty lateral_, _assuming it had been empty_. The only point was to find out where the hold-up left the lateral. That's why they rode one on each side of it. They weren't missing any bets, you see." "And that's why they drove the sheep down to water--to hide the wheel-tracks. I couldn't understand that." "I must 'a' been right on their heels, for they were jest getting the trotters out of the corral when I reached the place where your rig left the water. 'Course I fell back into the brush and circled around so as to hit the store in front." "But if dad knew
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