Dawn was just thinning the curtain of darkness when Nolan woke Casey with a shake of the shoulder.
"I think we'd better be moving from here before the world's astir. You can back on down this draw, Ryan, and strike an old trail that cuts over the ridge and up the next gulch to an old, deserted mine where I've made headquarters.-It isn't far, and we can have breakfast at my camp."
Casey swallowed his astonishment, and for once in his life he did as he was told without argument.
Mack Nolan's camp was fairly accessible by roundabout trail with a few tire tracks to point the way for Casey.-Straight across the ridges, it would not have been more than two miles to Juniper Wells. Nevertheless not one man in a year would be tempted to come this way, unless it were definitely known that some one lived here.
As the camp of a man who was prospecting for pastime rather than for a grubstake, the place was perfect.-Mack Nolan had taken possession of a cabin dug into the hill at the head of a long draw. A brush-covered shed of makeshift construction sheltered a car of the ubiquitous Ford make.-Fifty yards away and in full sight of the cabin, the mouth of a tunnel yawned blackly under a rhyolite ledge.
Casey swept the camp with an observant glance and nodded approval as and stopped before the cabin.
"As a prospector, Mr. Nolan, I'll say 'tis a fine layout you got here. An' tain't the first time an honest-lookin' mine has been made to cover things far off from minin'.-Like the Black Butte bunch, f'r instance. But if any one was to ride up on yuh unexpected here, I'll say yuh could meet 'em with a grin an' feel easy about your secrets."
"That's praise indeed, coming from an old hand like you," Nolan declared.-"Now I'll tell you something else.-With Casey Ryan in the camp the whole thing's twice as convincing.-Come in.-I want to show you what I call an artistic interior."
Grinning, Casey followed him inside and exclaimed profanely in admiration of Mack Nolan's genius.-The cabin showed every mark of the owner's interest in the geologic formation of that immediate district.
On the floor along the wall lay specimens of mineralized rock, a couple of prospector's picks, a single-jack and a set of drills; a sample sack, grimed and with a hole in the corner mended by the simple process of gathering the cloth together around it and tying it tightly with a string, hung from a nail above the tools.
On the window sill were specimens of ore; two or three of the pieces showed a richness that lighted Casey's eyes with the enthusiasm of an old prospector.-Mining journals and a prospector's manual lay upon a box table at the foot of the bunk.
For the rest, the cabin looked exactly what it was--the orderly home of a man quite accustomed to primitive living far off from his fellows.
They had a very satisfactory breakfast cooked by Mack Nolan from his own supplies and eaten in a leisurely manner while Nolan talked of primary formations and secondary, and of mineral intrusions and breaks.-Casey listened and learned a few things he had not known, for all his years of prospecting.-Mack Nolan, he decided, could pass anywhere as a mining expert.
"And now, said Nolan briskly, when he had hung up the dishpan and draped the dishcloth over it to dry, "I'll show you the bottling works. We'll have to do the work by lantern-light.-There's not one chance in fifty that any one would show up here--but you never can tell. We could get the stuff out of sight easily enough while the car was coming up the gulch.-But the smell is a different matter. We'll take no chances."
At the head of the bunk, a curtained space beneath a high shelf very obviously did duty as a wardrobe.-A leather motor coat hung there, one sleeve protruding beyond the curtain of flowered calico. Other garments bulged the cloth here and there.-Nolan, smiling over his shoulder at Casey, nodded and pushed the clothing aside.-A door behind opened inward, admitting the two into a small recess from which another door opened into a cellar dug deep into the hill.