登陆注册
4708200000089

第89章

We'd be stronger for havin' more'n our faith in him. He's silent Indian, but make him tell."

Mercedes called to Yaqui. At her bidding there was always a suggestion of hurry, which otherwise was never manifest in his actions. She put a hand on his bared muscular arm and began to speak in Spanish.

Her voice was low, swift, full of deep emotion, sweet as the sound of a bell. It thrilled Gale, though he understood scarcely a word she said. He did not need translation to know that here spoke the longing of a woman for life, love, home, the heritage of a woman's heart.

Gale doubted his own divining impression. It was that the Yaqui understood this woman's longing. In Gale's sight the Indian's stoicism, his inscrutability, the lavalike hardness of his face, although they did not change, seemed to give forth light, gentleness, loyalty. For an instant Gale seemed to have a vision; but it did not last, and he failed to hold some beautiful illusive thing.

"Si!" rolled out the Indian's reply, full of power and depth.

Mercedes drew a long breath, and her hand sought Thorne's.

"He says yes," she whispered. "He answers he'll save us; he'll take us all back--he knows!"

The Indian turned away to his tasks, and the silence that held the little group was finally broken by Ladd.

"Shore I said so. Now all we've got to do is use sense. Friends, I'm the commissary department of this outfit, an' what I say goes.

You all won't eat except when I tell you. Mebbe it'll not be so hard to keep our health. Starved beggars don't get sick. But there's the heat comin', an' we can all go loco, you know. To pass the time! Lord, that's our problem. Now if you all only had a hankerin' for checkers. Shore I'll make a board an' make you play. Thorne, you're the luckiest. You've got your girl, an' this can be a honeymoon. Now with a few tools an' little material see what a grand house you can build for your wife. Dick, you're lucky,too. You like to hunt, an' up there you'll find the finest bighorn huntin' in the West. Take Yaqui and the .405. We need the meat, but while you're gettin' it have your sport. The same chance will never come again. I wish we all was able to go. But crippled men can't climb the lava. Shore you'll see some country from the peaks. There's no wilder place on earth, except the poles.

An' when you're older, you an' Nell, with a couple of fine boys, think what it'll be to tell them about bein' lost in the lava, an' huntin' sheep with a Yaqui. Shore I've hit it. You can take yours out in huntin' an' thinkin'. Now if I had a girl like Nell I'd never go crazy. That's your game, Dick. Hunt, an' think of Nell, an' how you'll tell those fine boys about it all, an' about the old cowman you knowed, Laddy, who'll by then be long past the divide. Rustle now, son. Get some enthusiasm. For shore you'll need it for yourself an' us.

Gale climbed the lava slope, away round to the right of the arroyo, along an old trail that Yaqui said the Papagos had made before his own people had hunted there. Part way it led through spiked, crested, upheaved lava that would have been almost impassable even without its silver coating of choya cactus. There were benches and ledges and ridges bare and glistening in the sun. From the crests of these Yaqui's searching falcon gaze roved near and far for signs of sheep, and Gale used his glass on the reaches of lava that slanted steeply upward to the corrugated peaks, and down over endless heave and roll and red-waved slopes. The heat smoked up from the lava, and this, with the red color and the shiny choyas, gave the impression of a world of smoldering fire.

Farther along the slope Yaqui halted and crawled behind projections to a point commanding a view over an extraordinary section of country. The peaks were off to the left. In the foreground were gullies, ridges, and canyons, arroyos, all glistening with choyas and some other and more numerous white bushes, and here and there towered a green cactus. This region was only a splintered and more devastated part of the volcanic slope, but it was miles in extent.

Yaqui peeped over the top of a blunt block of lava and searched the sharp-billowed wilderness. Suddenly he grasped Gale and pointed across a deep wide gully.

With the aid of his glass Gale saw five sheep. They were much larger than he had expected, dull brown in color, and two of them were rams with great curved horns. They were looking in his direction. Remembering what he had heard about the wonderful eyesight of these mountain animals, Gale could only conclude that they had seen the hunters.

Then Yaqui's movements attracted and interested him. The Indian had brought with him a red scarf and a mesquite branch. He tied the scarf to the stick, and propped this up in a crack of the lava.

The scarf waved in the wind. That done, the Indian bade Gale watch.

Once again he leveled the glass at the sheep. All five were motionless, standing like statues, heads pointed across the gully.

They were more than a mile distant. When Gale looked without his glass they merged into the roughness of the lava. He was intensely interested. Did the sheep see the red scarf? It seemed incredible, but nothing else could account for that statuesque alertness. The sheep held this rigid position for perhaps fifteen minutes. Then the leading ram started to approach. The others followed. He took a few steps, then halted. Always he held his head up, nose pointed.

"By George, they're coming!" exclaimed Gale. "They see that flag.

They're hunting us. They're curious. If this doesn't beat me!"

Evidently the Indian understood, for he grunted.

Gale found difficulty in curbing his impatience. The approach of the sheep was slow. The advances of the leader and the intervals of watching had a singular regularity. He worked like a machine.

同类推荐
  • 牡丹二首

    牡丹二首

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 日知录之馀

    日知录之馀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 诸教决定名义论

    诸教决定名义论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 瑞州洞山良价禅师语录

    瑞州洞山良价禅师语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • The Vicar of Wakefield

    The Vicar of Wakefield

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 北伐战争

    北伐战争

    国民革命军北伐,是由中国国民党领导下的国民政府以国民革命军为主力于1926年至1927年间发动的统一战争。因其战争过程由南向北进行,故又常简称为“北伐”,或称“北伐战争”。
  • 风水100问(人生运势500问)

    风水100问(人生运势500问)

    对于“风水”这个词,想必大家都不陌生,对于中国人来说,好的居住环境是一个家庭能够长久兴旺的根本基础。从上古时期的原始人选择山顶石穴为宅,到后来通过罗盘定位寻找最吉利的房屋坐向,风水学从单纯的地理环境选择发展成为一门结合天文地理知识和民族文化传统的学科,其内涵和意义都极为复杂多变。风水,顾名思义就是“风”和“水”,这两种大自然中最常见的事物带动着万物的生长,风好水好的地方都是生机勃勃的景象,而一些隐晦荒凉的地方就少有人迹。
  • 一切从秦时明月开始崛起

    一切从秦时明月开始崛起

    以秦时明月为起始,在青铜古门的帮助下,在各个世界成长,达到永恒。PS;会写国漫有秦时明月、纳米核心、斗罗、斗破、狐妖小红娘、星辰变、超兽武装、星游记、超神学院等等.....。书有群;646675996,新书;诸天之开局圣人盗,欢迎阅读
  • 马斯洛的人本哲学

    马斯洛的人本哲学

    本书以全新的视角,介绍了马斯洛的理论精华,书中解答了我们关于人生的一系列问题:什么是人生的意义?人性的本质为何?我们怎样才能获得幸福和安宁?我们怎样才能健全自我的人格?我们怎样才能挖掘自我的潜能?我们怎样才能实现自我的价值?我们如何才能达到力所能及的目标?我们如何才能成为优秀的人?本书引导我们了解马斯洛,了解自己的人生,帮助我们调动自身一切积极的因素以实现最完美的自我,创造最美好的人生境界。
  • 别让拖延害了你

    别让拖延害了你

    本书详解拖延症基本类型和表现症状,在揭开拖延症真相面纱的同时,帮你揪出让人变成“拖拉斯基”的真凶。结合我们身边的生活案例和心理学研究成果,对困扰你的拖延症问题进行一次科学、全面的趣味剖析等内容。
  • 痞少追爱:预定小小妻

    痞少追爱:预定小小妻

    据说阮氏的大少爷有了一个未婚妻,对于这段灰姑娘与王子的“爱情”,很多人都是抱着看戏的态度,这不,刚订婚不久,一个自称阮少高中同学的女人就跑到公司公然勾引他。我去……阮家那本《阮王氏打击小三大全》她是白读的吗?与小三斗争,绝不手下留情,为了自己的幸福着想,该出手时就出手,一场好戏开始了……
  • 嫡女谋:傲世皇子妃

    嫡女谋:傲世皇子妃

    三个月的地牢折磨,她从嫡姐口中得知真相,原来,五年来的出生入死,助他登上大位,她只是一颗棋子,为他人作嫁衣裳,温柔大方的嫡姐?善良知体的继母?乖巧讨喜的庶弟庶妹?全都是假的,原来,只有她一个笨蛋。可怜之人必有可恨之处,但是,她不甘心,不甘心..........一朝重生,一改往日懦弱性格,既然善始不得善终,那她能夺便夺,夺不了的,毁了又何妨?可事实的真相,究竟如何?
  • 方向对了,就不怕路远

    方向对了,就不怕路远

    方向正确,努力才会有价值。不要忙着出发,先找到值得你奋斗的理由。这是一本为年轻人量身打造的职业规划定位课,作者结合自身多年的职场经验和成功人士的奋斗经历,精心归纳总结出成功人士在工作、生活、理财等方面的独到见解,并以生动的案例进行了阐释,相信你能够受益匪浅。
  • 女主想从良

    女主想从良

    穿越到自己吐槽的文里,成为自己唾弃的女主,顾晓白觉得压力山大。为了在这个世界洁身自好,顾晓白努力让自己低调低调再低调,可是这双咸猪手是谁的,你再伸、再伸、再伸,我就把你剁掉……
  • 太子爷深宠:霸道太子妃

    太子爷深宠:霸道太子妃

    第一次见穆辰景这个男人,他浑身是血倒在自己的面前;第二次见他,居然就是在大婚之日。莫名其妙穿越到这个时代,莫名其妙的救了那么一个冷酷的男人,最后又莫名其妙的嫁给了他,言娉娉不得不感叹这个世界缘分的奇妙……“从现在开始,你是本宫的人,不准想着逃跑,不准想着其他的男人,不准丢了本宫的面子,不准……”“……”言娉娉翻了个白眼,“不准这个不准那个,那我还能干些什么?”“你可以想着本宫、念着本宫、盼着本宫。”