Deadwood Dick, The Prince of the Road 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Deadwood Dick, The Prince of the Road 
by Edward L. Wheeler This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with 
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Title: Deadwood Dick, The Prince of the Road or, The Black Rider of the Black Hills 
Author: Edward L. Wheeler 
Release Date: February 4, 2005 [EBook #14902] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
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Produced by David Starner, Jeannie Howse and the Online Distributed Proofreading 
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[Illustration] 
BEADLE'S HALF DIME LIBRARY 
1877, BEADLE AND ADAMS. 
Vol. I. Single BEADLE AND ADAMS, PUBLISHERS, Price, No. 1 Number. No. 98 
WILLIAM STREET, NEW YORK. 5 cents 
 
=Deadwood Dick,= THE PRINCE OF THE ROAD; OR, THE BLACK RIDER of the 
BLACK HILLS. 
BY EDWARD L. WHEELER.
CHAPTER I. 
FEARLESS FRANK TO THE RESCUE. 
On the plains, midway between Cheyenne and the Black Hills, a train had halted for a 
noonday feed. Not a railway train, mind you, but a line of those white-covered vehicles 
drawn by strong-limbed mules, which are most properly styled "prairie schooners." 
There were four wagons of this type, and they had been drawn in a circle about a 
camp-fire, over which was roasting a savory haunch of venison. Around the camp-fire 
were grouped half a score of men, all rough, bearded, and grizzled, with one exception. 
This being a youth whose age one could have safely put at twenty, so perfectly developed 
of physique and intelligent of facial appearance was he. There was something about him 
that was not handsome, and yet you would have been puzzled to tell what it was, for his 
countenance was strikingly handsome, and surely no form in the crowd was more 
noticeable for its grace, symmetry, and proportionate development. It would have taken a 
scholar to have studied out the secret. 
He was of about medium stature, and as straight and square-shouldered as an athlete. His 
complexion was nut-brown, from long exposure to the sun; hair of hue of the raven's 
wing, and hanging in long, straight strands adown his back; eyes black and piercing as an 
eagle's; features well molded, with a firm, resolute mouth and prominent chin. He was an 
interesting specimen of young, healthy manhood, and, even though a youth in years, was 
one that could command respect, if not admiration, wheresoever he might choose to go. 
One remarkable item about his personal appearance, apt to strike the beholder as being 
exceedingly strange and eccentric, was his costume--buck-skin throughout, and that dyed 
to the brightest scarlet hue. 
On being asked the cause of his odd freak of dress, when he had joined the train a few 
miles out from Cheyenne, the youth had laughingly replied: 
"Why, you see, it is to attract bufflers, if we should meet any, out on the plains 'twixt this 
and the Hills." 
He gave his name as Fearless Frank, and said he was aiming for the Hills; that if the party 
in question would furnish him a place among them, he would extend to them his 
assistance as a hunter, guide, or whatever, until the destination was reached. 
Seeing that he was well armed, and judging from external appearances that he would 
prove a valuable accessory, the miners were nothing loth in accepting his services. 
Of the others grouped about the camp-fire only one is specially noticeable, for, as Mark 
Twain remarks, "the average of gold-diggers look alike." This person was a little, 
deformed old man; hump-backed, bow-legged, and white-haired, with cross eyes, a large 
mouth, a big head, set upon a slim, crane-like neck; blue eyes, and an immense brown
beard, that flowed downward half-way to the belt about his waist, which contained a 
small arsenal of knives and revolvers. He hobbled about with a heavy crutch constantly 
under his left arm, and was certainly a pitiable sight to behold. 
He too had joined the caravan after it had quitted Cheyenne, his advent taking place about 
an hour subsequent to that of Fearless Frank. His name he asserted was Nix--Geoffrey 
Walsingham Nix--and where he came from, and what he sought in the Black Hills, was 
simply a matter of conjecture among the miners, as he refused to talk on the subject of his 
past, present or future. 
The train was under the command of an irascible old plainsman who had served out his 
apprenticeship in the Kansas border war, and whose name was Charity Joe, which, 
considering his avaricious disposition, was the wrong handle on the wrong man. Charity 
was the least of all old    
    
		
	
	
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