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Chapter Nineteen

L
ily called herself every kind of fool, for why else would she give him the means to pursue his dream instead of stamping it beneath her boot heel?

August had flown and September brought the first snow flurries. Since she’d handed over her fortune to Jack five weeks ago he had moved to town and now she faced the possibility of running into him on a daily basis. And though she knew she’d earn another bagful in the coming months, it didn’t assuage the hurt. The night that had changed her life had not changed his.

When he’d asked her about New York she had actually thought she meant something more to him. Her own feelings for him had clouded her thinking to the point that she didn’t understand that he meant to set her up in some shoddy room as his mistress.
Had he heard anything she’d said about what she wanted, about how much she loved it here?

Lily burned with shame at not being the kind of woman he could be proud of.

Word was that he’d managed to construct several machines and convinced some of the larger outfits to try them out. That meant Jack would be here through the fall and winter.

Lily knew where that would lead. Her only hope to salvage her dignity was to leave. That meant she needed to make enough gold to carry herself safely away, and to that intention she dedicated herself.

Word from the new arrivals was that the next big strike had been made by three lucky Swedes. Rumor was that gold was washing up on the beaches in Nome and although she didn’t believe such talk, the men who had failed to secure a claim did and they were leaving in droves. Nome was over a thousand miles down the Yukon River. But now that the river flowed, ferries came and went with regularity, carrying goods and passengers, and would do so until the freeze-up, after which only the dogsleds used the river as frozen highway. It was best for her to follow them and quickly, before the need to be with Jack overcame her last shred of dignity.

 

Jack’s business was well under way. By early October he’d built eleven machines and sold four already. They were up and running in the mines and
the initial reports were so favorable he had appointments with three other mine owners.

As part of each agreement, he trained the operators in the use of the engine and taught them precautions so as not to be scalded by the steam. The contract stipulated bracing the ceilings, for he did not want a repeat of his accident. He believed firmly that his own mishap was the reason that it had taken so long to get his operation rolling. Word had spread that his machine caused cave-ins and that was bad for business. But now the results spoke for themselves.

Business was good. It was his personal life that was a tangle. He’d received four more letters from his mother begging him to come home. She was certain they could find a likely match if he were willing to look in circles outside New York.

Jack found himself making opportunities to run into Lily on the street. She always reacted in the same way. Her eyes went wide and then she plastered a false smile upon her face that would have done the women back home proud. She’d ask about his health or the business, but before he could tell her anything she’d excuse herself for some appointment or another.

He was a fool and he knew it. But he didn’t know how to fix it. He hadn’t meant to insult her, had only been trying to find a way for them. But Lily was a proud woman and it pained him that he’d hurt her so deeply.

Jack left town for his appointment craning his neck as he always did for a glimpse of Lily. He did not see her as he headed up the Eldorado to Claim #16, owned and operated by Fred Anderson.

The day was cold and cloudy, the tiny ice crystals stinging his cheek as he reached Anderson’s mine earlier than expected. He found the miners working the end of an overnight shift. The foreman was covered in grime except for a band across his broad forehead where his hat must have been.

“Oh, so you’re the inventor. Nice to meet you. We’re running four times our regular tonnage and now that we’ve got the second steamer up, it’ll go even faster.”

Jack frowned. “What second steamer?”

“The boss bought a boiler from Kentucky Jim and rigged a nozzle—a bigger one—from a fire hose and he ordered another boiler that will arrive before the freeze-up. That’ll give us three.”

Jack felt a prickling unease crawling up his neck like an army of ants.

“You’ve braced the ceiling?”

“Yup. From the nozzle to a good twenty feet back.”

“That’s not enough!”

Next thing he knew he was running with the foreman at his heels. He reached the first group of miners on the steamer he’d constructed, but they couldn’t hear him shouting over the sound of the
nozzle blasting the gravel. The air was so wet it scared Jack to the core. He glanced up and saw only the operator stood under the bracing he had insisted run the length of the mineshafts. Jack turned a lever, releasing the steam. All the men turned toward him.

“Out!” he cried, grabbing one man after another and shoving them toward the main tunnel.

They stumbled back into the main shaft and stared at him as if he’d lost his mind. But when the crew foreman recognized Jack, he ordered them out and the men scrambled up the shaft toward safety as he reached the operator and sent him up as well.

“How many more?” he called to the fleeing man.

“Nine down below,” he called back, still scrambling toward the surface.

Jack grabbed the lantern and headed down the main shaft. He could hear the other engine farther down. He lifted the lantern and looked at the ceiling, noting that water dripped from the passage. This was bad—really bad.

He reached the men, standing below the braced portion of the tunnel and turned off the steam.

“You’re weakening the ceiling. Out! Everybody out!”

The men did as he ordered, but the tunnel was wide enough for only one at a time. Jack watched the lights retreating with the men as he waited his turn to flee. There was no sound with the first collapse, just a light that was there and then gone. Three
more lights winked out as the men closest to him turned and ran back. He could see the lanterns bobbing before their terrified faces as they ran hunched over. There was a horrible scream cut short as more of the ceiling broke loose.

Only three men made it to the braced location to join him and the operator of the nozzle. Four of the nine now stood with Jack in the shelter of the timbers.

The men dug frantically through the loose gravel. The first man they unearthed was already dead. They dug no farther.

“They’re all gone,” cried one miner.

“Calvin was first. He might have made it out,” said another.

“I saw him fall,” said the last. “He’s dead.”

The first miner began to weep.

“Douse the fire in the boiler,” ordered Jack.

“But it’s light,” argued the second.

“The fire will eat up all our oxygen.”

One of the men snatched up the cask of water. Jack grabbed his arm.

“No. We may need that. Just scatter the coals on the ground.”

They did. The embers glowed an eerie orange. Two lanterns remained. They doused one and turned the wick low on the other.

“They’ll start digging us out as soon as the tunnel is safe,” assured Jack.

But how much of the steam-soaked tunnel had come down? Would help reach them before their air ran out?

 

Lily dressed, stopped at the bank and then headed for the steamer offices. She had finally earned a tidy amount, enough to carry her to Nome and allow her to set up in a new boomtown. The threatening skies gave her the push she needed and by the time she reached the docks it was snowing in earnest. She watched the flakes vanish into the river. Soon it would be ice once more, the steamers would cease and the only way out would be by dog team—and Jack had her dog.

She picked a steamer leaving on Friday. That gave her six days to get her affairs in order and to retrieve Nala. Lily poured gold from her pouch into the scales to the correct measure and bought a one-way ticket to Nome. As soon as she lifted the ticket she felt ill at the thought of leaving Jack.

She headed up Front Street clutching her ticket with grim determination, knowing that Nala was just the excuse she needed to see him. If she thought about the reality of never seeing Jack again she’d lose her nerve. She was just going to get her dog. She put one more foot before the other.

“You’re a fool over that man, Lily, and he’ll be your ruination.”

“Miss Lily?”

Had she spoken aloud? She turned to see Amos Luritz, the tailor, standing before her.

“Good morning,” she said.

“Miss Lily, wait until you hear. Such news, I have. My business is so good, mending and sewing all day that I can’t keep up. I had to hire an assistant!” he said, beaming. “Such a blessing and who would have guessed my fortune is coming from thread instead of gold? And it’s all because of you. You gave me a business here.”

“No, no. It’s because you work hard and you are a very good tailor.”

“Come spring I’ll have enough to buy a ticket down the Yukon on one of these fine ferries. Sure will beat walking all the way from Dyea. And in Seattle, I’ll find a steamer to take me all the way home to New York.” His smile changed into a look of surprise when he noticed that she held a ferry ticket in her hand. “Are you leaving, too, Miss Lily?”

“I might be.” No, she was. Why did she say
might?

“What about your singing? What about your partner, the inventor?”

Was she really ready to sail to a new camp without him?

Lily squeezed the ticket, indecision twisting her insides. She should go, but she longed to stay.

“Mr. Luritz, I won this at cards and the company won’t exchange it for cash. It’s only to Nome and it leaves on Friday. Would you like it?”

She held out the ticket.

“No, no, Miss Lily, you’ve given me too much already.”

She smiled. “But what about your beautiful daughters? Are you really going to spend another winter without them?”

He hesitated, eyeing the ticket. “I can’t take it.”

“You’ll be home by Christmas.”

He accepted the gift.

“Chanukah,” he corrected. “Would you like to see their pictures now?”

Lily nodded. “Yes, I would.”

He took a creased studio portrait from his pocket and extended it. Lily looked at the bright-eyed daughters surrounding a smiling woman and knew that she wanted to be as happy as this tailor’s wife. She wanted it with Jack.

“You need to get home to them,” she whispered, her throat now constricted.

He nodded, taking the picture and looking down, brushing a finger over his wife’s face. “I do.” When he looked up his eyes were swimming in tears. “How can I thank you?”

“By getting back to your children, of course.”

The shouting in the street brought both Lily and the tailor about.

A red-faced man with a sunken stomach and a full mustache shouted again.

“Cave-in!”

Lily’s heart stopped. Where was Jack? Her knees went to water and the tailor caught her before she hit the boardwalk. Terrible possibilities arrested her, making it hard to breathe.

“Miss Lily?”

“Where?” she whispered.

“Anderson’s claim,” shouted the stampeder. “All men to the site for digging.”

She found she could breathe again, until she remembered that Anderson was using Jack’s invention.

She headed out with the others.

She was nearly to the claim when Nala greeted her. Jack was here.

Lily sank to her knees, hugged her dog and prayed.

“Please, heavenly Father, let him be aboveground.”

But he wasn’t. The information was confusing and she had to speak to many men to learn that fifteen had been down in the mine on two steam engines. Jack had cleared six from the first machine and was heading to the next when the shaft gave way.

Lily found one of the survivors, a pale Welshman named Bobby Durham. A dirty, lopsided black hat sat low over his eyes that darted about in a frantic sort of way. He was smeared with mud and still shaking.

“Where’s Jack Snow?” she asked.

“Dunno.”

“You were with the second crew?”

He nodded, wiping the sweat from his face and smearing the mud onto his cheek. “I’d be dead if not for him. Brian was right behind me. Then the others.”

“Where’s Brian, then?” she asked.

He put his head in his hands and wept.

Lily clasped his shoulder.

Durham began a steady rocking to accompany his sobs.

“The others?” she demanded.

His voice was muffled by his hands pressed over his mouth, but she made it out.

“Behind me when the ceiling fell.” He looked at her, his eyes crazed with grief. “The whole thing slipped loose and fell.”

“Wasn’t the tunnel braced?”

“Over the engine.”

Lily’s stomach churned as she realized what might have happened. She swept the area for Anderson. She found him, ordering men about.

“Mr. Anderson.”

He turned to her, his face registering surprise at finding her here. “Miss Lily!”

“Was the tunnel braced?”

“I got no time for this now.”

“Jack told me that the entire tunnel had to be braced so the steam wouldn’t weaken the earth.”

Anderson looked around at the men who had gone still and silent.

“He never said so.”

Now she understood. Wood was expensive and Anderson had not done as he was told. Jack had come to check on operations, found the oversight and ordered the miners out. Her eyes narrowed on him, but she reined in her fury. This was not the time.

“How many men are trapped in there?”

Anderson cleared his throat. “Nine unaccounted for.”

“And Jack?”

Anderson motioned with his head. “Among them.”

Durham was on his feet now and facing Anderson. “He came to warn us. Told us to get out. Saved my life.” Durham stepped up to Anderson. “You knew?”

Obviously, the miner had figured out who was responsible, and much as Lily would have liked to let Durham strike Anderson, she needed information.

“Was any of it braced?”

Anderson nodded. “Yes, over the engines, where the ceiling is wettest. I never knew that this could happen. I swear to God.”

BOOK: Jenna Kernan
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