Gold Mountain: A Klondike Mystery (25 page)

While the breaking of camp was in process I took the two rocks I’d found in the mountain stream out of my pocket, taking care to keep them concealed from onlookers. It was early evening and the light was good. I balanced them in my hand. They were heavy and dull yellow in colour. I pressed my fingernail into the surface of one. It was very soft, and my nail made a small indentation.

Pure gold.

I put them away, full of thought.

I never saw or heard of Mr. Paul Sheridan again. Perhaps he died of the knife wounds I inflicted; perhaps he hadn’t been able to survive alone even in that lush wilderness. Perhaps it was so wonderful he never wanted to leave.

Perhaps he found Gold Mountain to be as difficult to escape as it was to enter.

Epilogue

Corporal Richard Sterling knocked at the back door of Mrs. Mann’s boarding house at seven o’clock on Monday morning. It had been a week since he’d returned from the pursuit of Paul Sheridan and Fiona MacGillivray, and the rhythm of life in the mud-soaked streets of Dawson City had fallen back into its usual frantic pace.

The previous evening, he’d been called into the office of Inspector Cortlandt Starnes, temporary commander of the NWMP in the Yukon. Sterling had stood at attention while Starnes congratulated him on returning one of Dawson’s most prominent citizens safely to town. And on
not returning
Soapy Smith’s henchman, which was never stated but nevertheless understood.

Starnes then gave Sterling one more order.

Mr. Mann opened the door, pulling his suspenders over his shoulders. “Mrs. MacGillivray asleep,” he said. The door began to shut again.

“I’m not here to see her, but Angus. Is he up?”

“Breakfast,” Mr. Mann said.

The door opened and Sterling was admitted. Mrs. Mann stood at the stove, stirring the porridge pot. The smell of toast and coffee filled the kitchen. Angus sat at the table, caught in the act of spreading orange marmalade on his toast. He broke into a big smile. “Morning, sir.”

“Good morning, Angus, Ma’am. This is Mr. Templeton.” Sterling introduced his companion, a short chubby man with neatly trimmed hair and moustache and intelligent brown eyes. He wore a pair of thick spectacles perched on a beak of a nose that would do a hawk proud. He was well-dressed in high boots with a long wool double-breasted jacket over a clean white shirt and tie. He took off his cap when he entered the house and nodded politely to Mrs. Mann.

“I’d like to take Angus away from his duties at the shop once again,” Sterling said. “I trust this will be the last time.”

Angus jumped to his feet, toast in hand. “Where are we going?”

Templeton laughed. “I see what you mean, Corporal. Eager indeed. Finish your breakfast, son.”

Angus stuffed the food into his mouth. “Finished,” he mumbled.

“Coffee?” Mrs. Mann asked the new arrivals.

“No, thank you, Ma’am. We breakfasted at the Fort.”

Mr. Mann stroked his chin. “If sis is police business then okays.”

Millie was waiting outside, a single canvas pack, lightly filled, slung over her back. Angus added the tin containing his lunch to her load and gave her an affectionate scratch behind the ears. Mr. Templeton carried a bulging pack of his own.

Sterling explained their mission as they walked through the morning streets. “Mr. Templeton’s a surveyor. The creek we followed heading north isn’t on any maps, and the government wants the location marked. We won’t be travelling up it this time, just want to make a note of the exact location. Won’t take us more than a couple of hours to get there and back, and I figured you deserve to be in on the recording of the new river.”

“Can I name it?” Angus said.

Templeton laughed. “Perhaps you can. MacGillivray River is a mouthful though.”

“Angus Creek?”

“Sterling Stream has a nice ring.”

They all laughed. It was a good day for a walk. It was going to be a scorcher of a day, but the trees and the river would keep the temperature down. Sterling was looking forward to a pleasant outing for a change. A chance to get a break from town and spend some time in the wilderness without a care in the world. They followed the same route they had last week, past the city’s outskirts and along the north bank of the Klondike River. Even in the few days since they’d last come this way, the town had grown. Men were hard at work chopping down trees and turning them into building logs. More men, a dark steady river all its own, marched down the other bank, heading south to the gold fields.

“We could name the river after my mother,” Angus said. “Fiona River. It was because of her we discovered it.”

Sterling thought the peaceful little creek flowing into the Klondike was nothing at all like the tempestuous Fiona MacGillivray. If a river were to be named after her, it should be a great waterway, pouring into nothing less than the ocean. He didn’t say so.

The question of what to name the new river became a moot point.

They couldn’t find it.

To Templeton’s increasing impatience, they walked up and down the Klondike. It had rained several times over the past week, and all traces of their footsteps, the horse and cart they’d been following, and all the people, donkeys, wagons that trooped after them, were gone. They followed the Klondike River much farther than Angus and Sterling believed they’d been, until eventually they met up with a river that
was
on the government maps. They swore they hadn’t come this far.

They came back, eyes on the ground, checking every step, eventually hearing the sounds of civilization in the west. Sterling took off his hat and scratched at his head.

“If you’re playing some sort of a joke on me, Corporal, I am not amused,” Templeton snapped. He shifted his pack. It contained his surveying equipment, and he was hot and tired and bad-tempered.

“No joke. It’s just not there.”

“The creek might have dried up,” Angus said. “Although that’s not likely with all this rain. But even then the riverbed should be visible. It was about five feet across, right, sir?”

“The banks were a foot high and there was five feet or so of a watercourse. Open water. No trees or bushes.”

They searched for the rest of the day as Templeton got increasingly angry and Sterling increasingly frustrated. Angus had the idea of letting Millie lead the way to possibly retrace their steps. But the dog simply sniffed after rabbits and enjoyed the day’s excursion.

The sun was low in the sky when they got back to town, tired and hungry and perturbed. Templeton stalked off muttering something about wasting government time.

Sterling and Angus watched him go. Stoves and cooking fires glowed on the hills of both sides of the river, and light streamed from steamboats and make-shift rafts being used as houses. Kerosene and oil lamps were lit in the dancehalls up and down Front Street. Music, men’s voices, and women’s laughter poured out of the doors.

They could see Fiona MacGillivray inside the Savoy, drifting across the saloon. She wore a scarlet dress and her thick black hair was piled up under a scrap of a hat more ostrich feather than cloth. She jerked her head toward one of the bartenders, and he hurried to serve a well-dressed man at the end of the bar.

“What do you think happened to it, Corporal Sterling?” Angus asked. “To that creek?”

“I’ve seen waterways dry up if beavers build a dam upriver, or something blocking the way moves, and the water can turn in another direction. But for the creek bed to grow into fully-treed forest in a week?” He shook his head. “I don’t know. Perhaps it’s better we don’t know. I’m going inside to check everyone’s behaving themselves. You better get off home.”

“Night, sir.”

“Good night, Angus.”

Corporal Richard Sterling of the North-West Mounted Police stood on the boardwalk for a moment, watching the tall, lanky boy make his way down the crowded street. When he turned back to the Savoy, Fiona MacGillivray was standing by the window, looking out. She lifted her hand and beckoned him in with a warm smile.

The doors opened and a body flew out, propelled by Joe Hamilton, newly hired bouncer. The man landed face first in Front Street and struggled to his feet with a groan and numerous curses, dripping mud and horse dung.

“Well, if it isn’t Ronald Kirkluce,” Sterling said. “I thought you’d been run out of town long ago. You’d better come with me.”

A Note to the Reader

The astute reader is advised not to attempt to follow the trail of Fiona and Sheridan and parties in search of them. They have, perhaps, stepped off the map into the unknown lands.

Acknowledgements

Sincere thanks to my great critique group: D.J. McIntosh, Jane Burfield, Donna Carrick, Madeleine Harris-Callway, Cheryl Freedman, fabulous writers all. And to Jessica Simon, who provided a ton of useful information about the flora and fauna and scenery of the Yukon. I apologize to Jessica
for all my errors, deliberate and accidental. Thanks also to Jerry Sussenguth, who helped with the German accent.

I have attempted wherever possible to keep the historical details of the Klondike Gold Rush, and the town of Dawson, Yukon Territory, accurate. Occasionally, however, it is necessary to stretch the truth in the interests of a good story. A few historical personages make cameos in the book: Jefferson Randolph (Soapy) Smith, Big Alex McDonald, Belinda Mulrooney, Inspector Cortlandt Starnes, but all dramatic characters and incidents are the product of my imagination.

The reader who is interested in learning more about the Klondike Gold Rush is advised to begin with the definitive book on the subject,
Klondike: The Last Great Gold Rush 1896–1899
, by Pierre Berton. Also by Berton,
The Klondike Quest: A Photographic Essay 1897–1899
.

OTHER READING:

Gamblers and Dreamers: Women, Men and Community in the Klondike
. Charlene Porsild.

Gold Diggers: Striking It Rich in the Klondike
. Charlotte Gray.

Good Time Girls of the Alaska-Yukon Gold Rush
. Lael Morgan.

The Klondike Gold Rush: Photographs from 1896–1899
. Graham Wilson.

The Last Great Gold Rush: A Klondike Reader
. Edited by Graham Wilson.

The Real Klondike Kate
. T. Ann Brennan.

Women of the Klondike
. Francis Blackhouse.

The Klondike Stampede
. Tappan Adney.

FOR INFORMATION ABOUT THE NWMP:

The NWMP and Law Enforcement 1873–1905
. R.C. Macleod.

Sam Steele: Lion of the Frontier
. R. Stewart.

Showing the Flag: The Mounted Police and Canadian Sovereignty in the North, 1894–1925
. W.R. Morrison.

They Got Their Man: On Patrol with the North-West Mounted
. P.H. Godsell.

SOAPY SMITH AND SKAGWAY:

King Con: The Story of Soapy Smith
. Jane G. Haigh.

The Streets Were Paved with Gold: A Pictorial History of the Klondike Gold Rush, 1896–1899
. Stan Cohen.

THE LIFE OF SCOTTISH TRAVELLERS:

Exploits and Anecdotes of the Scottish Gypsies
. William Chambers.

Pilgrims of the Mist: The Stories of Scotland’s Travelling People
. Sheila Stewart.

www.time-travellers.org.uk.

LIVING IN THE YUKON WILDERNESS:

This Was the North
. Anton Money with Ben East.

About the Author

Author photo courtesy of Alex Delany

Vicki Delany is one of Canada’s most prolific and varied crime writers. She writes everything from standalone novels of gothic suspense to the Constable Molly Smith books, a traditional village/police procedural series set in the British Columbia Interior, to the light-hearted Klondike Mystery series, the first two of which are
Gold Digger
and
Gold Fever
. Vicki lives in Prince Edward County, Ontario. Visit
www.vickidelany.com
.

Copyright

Copyright © Vicki Delany, 2012

All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise (except for brief passages for purposes of review) without the prior permission of Dundurn Press. Permission to photocopy should be requested from Access Copyright.

Editor: Matt Baker

Design: Jesse Hooper

Epub Design: Carmen Giraudy

Library and Archives Canada Cataloguing in Publication

Delany, Vicki, 1951-

Gold mountain [electronic resource] : a Klondike mystery / Vicki Delany.

Electronic monograph.
Issued also in print format.

ISBN 978-1-4597-0190-8

1. Klondike River Valley (Yukon)--Gold discoveries--Fiction. I. Title.

PS8557.E4239G65 2012 C813’.6 C2011-906001-9

We acknowledge the support of the
Canada Council for the Arts
and the
Ontario Arts Council
for our publishing program. We also acknowledge the financial support of the
Government of Canada
through the
Canada Book Fund
and
Livres Canada Books
, and the
Government of Ontario
through the
Ontario Book Publishing Tax Credit
and the
Ontario Media Development Corporation
.

Care has been taken to trace the ownership of copyright material used in this book. The author and the publisher welcome any information enabling them to rectify any references or credits in subsequent editions.

J. Kirk Howard, President

www.dundurn.com

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