When the news of the discovery of gold in Mulrady shaft was finally made public,it created an excitement hitherto unknown in the history of the country.Half of Red Dog and all Rough-and-Ready were emptied upon the yellow hills surrounding Mulrady's,until their circling camp fires looked like a besieging army that had invested his peaceful pastoral home,preparatory to carrying it by assault.Unfortunately for them,they found the various points of vantage already garrisoned with notices of "preemption"for mining purposes in the name of the various members of the Alvarado family.
This stroke of business was due to Mrs.Mulrady,as a means of mollifying the conscientious scruples of her husband and of placating the Alvarados,in view of some remote contingency.It is but fair to say that this degradation of his father's Castilian principles was opposed by Don Caesar."You needn't work them yourself,but sell out to them that will;it's the only way to keep the prospectors from taking it without paying for it at all,"argued Mrs.Mulrady.Don Caesar finally assented;perhaps less to the business arguments of Mulrady's wife than to the simple suggestion of Mamie's mother.Enough that he realized a sum in money for a few acres that exceeded the last ten years'income of Don Ramon's seven leagues.
Equally unprecedented and extravagant was the realization of the discovery in Mulrady's shaft.It was alleged that a company,hastily formed in Sacramento,paid him a million of dollars down,leaving him still a controlling two-thirds interest in the mine.
With an obstinacy,however,that amounted almost to a moral conviction,he refused to include the house and potato-patch in the property.When the company had yielded the point,he declined,with equal tenacity,to part with it to outside speculators on even the most extravagant offers.In vain Mrs.Mulrady protested;in vain she pointed out to him that the retention of the evidence of his former humble occupation was a green blot upon their social escutcheon.