登陆注册
5590000000066

第66章 JEAN BELIEVES THAT SHE TAKES MATTERS INTO HER OWN

When the shadows of the giant cactus stretched mutilated hands across the desert sand,and she believed that Nogales was near,Jean carried her suit-case to the cramped dressing-room and took out her six-shooter and buckled it around her.Then she pulled her coat down over it with a good deal of twisting and turning before the dirty mirror to see that it looked all right,and not in the least as though a perfect lady was packing a gun.

She went back and dipped fastidious fingers into the box of chocolates,and settled herself to nibble candy and wait for what might come.She felt very calm and self-possessed and sure of herself.Her only fear was that Art Osgood might have been killed,and his lips closed for all time.So they rattled away through the barrenness and drew near to Nogales.

Casa del Sonora,whither she went,was an old,two-story structure of the truly Spanish type,and it was kept by a huge,blubbery creature with piggish eyes and a bloated,purple countenance and the palsy.As much of him as appeared to be human appeared to be Irish;and Jean,after the first qualm of repulsion,when she faced him over the hotel register,detected a certain kindly solicitude in his manner,and was reassured.

So far,everything had run smoothly,like a well-staged play.Absurdly simple,utterly devoid of any element of danger,any vexatious obstacle to the immediate achievement of her purpose!But Jean was not thrown off her guard because of the smoothness of the trail.

The trip from Tucson had been terribly tiresome;she was weary in every fibre,it seemed to her.But for all that she intended,sometime that evening,to meet Art Osgood if he were in town.She intended to take him with her on the train that left the next morning.She thought it would be a good idea to rest now,and to proceed deliberately,lest she frustrate all her plans by over-eagerness.

Perhaps she slept a little while she lay upon the bed and schooled herself to calmness.A band,somewhere,playing a pulsing Spanish air,brought her to her feet.

She went to the window and looked out,and saw that the street lay cool and sunless with the coming of dusk.

From the American customhouse just on the opposite corner came Lite Avery,stalking leisurely along in his high-heeled riding-boots.Jean drew back with a little flutter of the pulse and watched him,wondering how he came to be in Nogales.She had last seen him boarding a car that would take him out to the Great Western Studio;and now,here he was,sauntering across the street as if he lived here.It was like finding his bed up in the loft and knowing all at once that he had been keeping watch all the while,thinking of her welfare and never giving her the least hint of it.That at least was understandable.But to her there was something uncanny about his being here in Nogales.When he was gone,she stepped out through the open window to the veranda that ran the whole length of the hotel,and looked across the street into Mexico.

She was,she decided critically,about fifteen feet from the boundary line.Just across the street fluttered the Mexican flag from the Mexican customhouse.AMexican guard lounged against the wall,his swarthy face mask-like in its calm.While she leaned over the railing and stared curiously at that part of the street which was another country,from the hills away to the west,where were camped soldiers,--the American soldiers,--who prevented the war from slopping over the line now and then into Arizona,came the clear notes of a bugle held close-pressed against the lips of a United States soldier in snug-fitting khaki.The boom of the sundown salute followed immediately after.In the street below her,Mexicans and Americans mingled amiably and sauntered here and there,killing time during that bored interval between eating and the evening's amusement.

Just beyond the Mexican boundary,the door of a long,adobe cantina was flung open,and a group of men came out and paused as if they were wondering what they should do next,and where they should go.Jean looked them over curiously.Mexicans they were not,though they had some of the dress which belonged on that side of the boundary.

Americans they were;one knew by the set of their shoulders,by the little traits of race which have nothing to do with complexion or speech.

Jean caught her breath and leaned forward.There was Art Osgood,standing with his back toward her and with one palm spread upon his hip in the attitude she knew so well.If only he would turn!Should she run down the stairs and go over there and march him across the line at the muzzle of her revolver?The idea repelled her,now that she had actually come to the point of action.

Jean,now that the crisis had arrived,used her woman's wile,rather than the harsher but perhaps less effective weapons of a man.

"Oh,Art!"she called,just exactly as she would have called to him on the range,in Montana "Hello,Art!"Art Osgood wheeled and sent a startled,seeking glance up at the veranda;saw her and knew who it was that had called him,and lifted his hat in the gesture that she knew so well.Jean's fingers were close to her gun,though she was not conscious of it,or of the strained,tense muscles that waited the next move.

Art,contrary to her expectations,did the most natural thing in the world.He grinned and came hurrying toward her with the long,eager steps of one who goes to greet a friend after an absence that makes of that meeting an event.Jean watched him cross the street.She waited,dazed by the instant success of her ruse,while he disappeared under the veranda.She heard his feet upon the stairs.She heard him come striding down the hall to the glass-paneled door.She saw him coming toward her,still grinning in his joy at the meeting.

"Jean Douglas!By all that's lucky!"he was exclaiming."Where in the world did you light down from?"He came to a stop directly in front of her,and held out his hand in unsuspecting friendship.

同类推荐
  • The Prime Minister

    The Prime Minister

    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。
  • 善慧大士语录

    善慧大士语录

    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。
  • 明世宗宝训

    明世宗宝训

    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。
  • 增订医方歌诀

    增订医方歌诀

    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。
  • 笠阁批评旧戏目

    笠阁批评旧戏目

    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
  • 传奇女玩家

    传奇女玩家

    新书《大漠红云:绝世女刀客》已发布,欢迎入坑。网游修仙哪家强?勇闯传说远名扬!《传说》,一款可以睡眠游戏的全息网游,一经推出便风靡全球。游戏女大神于小凡意外身亡附体重生于龙凤胎哥哥身上,凭借一副神奇眼镜将虚拟和现实完美对接,带领一群女玩家造就了一段不灭网游修仙传说,也彻底揭开了游戏背后的秘密,原来这一切竟是……
  • 许你余生入骨情深

    许你余生入骨情深

    他是权势遮天,杀伐绝断,矜贵淡漠的帝国商业霸主却唯独对她温柔似水,宠她如命。她是商场上从容不迫,冷静自持的女强人,却为独面对他时,总是不知所措……直到后来,她问:“傅先生为什么喜欢我啊!”他说:“可能是因为眼里和心里都只有傅太太吧!”【男女角双洁,1V1】前方高甜正在上线·^_^
  • 信心就是力量

    信心就是力量

    温暖千万人的成功智慧书!打造“中国信心”的人生励志装备书! 无论寒冬暖春,信心都是力量之源。有信心的人。可以化渺小为伟大,化平庸为神奇。信心是廉价的,谁都可以有;信心也是无价的,只有你的信心才能解救困境中的自己!
  • 医武传奇

    医武传奇

    身穿隋末唐初,见证江湖的侠骨情肠、立身处世。
  • 腹黑老公迷糊妻

    腹黑老公迷糊妻

    人前,他凭借自己的毅力和能力稳坐第一把手。人后,他是跨国集团隐藏幕后的操作人,翻手为云覆手为雨。可是,遇见了那个无良女,他是束手无策在无策。—————佟卓谦,你还要不要脸,亏你还取了一个这么斯文的名字。——————一朝意外,两家逼婚,三言两语,岂是四五六句说的清?总而言之,言而总之,这是一个英俊霸气毒蛇闷骚腹黑男人和一个看不清,说不清,拎不清女人的故事。.简介无能,请看文文。
  • 亲子共读经典智慧故事全集

    亲子共读经典智慧故事全集

    《亲子共读经典智慧故事全集》收集了培养创新思维能力的趣味故事、培养逻辑思维能力的断案推理故事、培养洞察能力和反应能力的斗智斗谋故事、培养解决问题能力的趣味思考故事、提升国学修养的中华成语故事、提升语言文字基础的中华谜语故事等。 本书是该系列之一的《亲子共读经典智慧故事全集》分册,书中内容精选了世界上最经典的智慧故事。
  • 好妈妈总有好方法

    好妈妈总有好方法

    “本应是孩子听你的话,为什么你却被孩子‘控制’了?本应越努力越轻松,为什么你却越努力越受累?……”针对当今父母在教育孩子中遇到的各种揪心问题,作者明确提出“妈妈有爱还不够,妈妈更要有方法”,并通过对众多鲜活案例分析,从3大方面,总结出100多种不费劲就能教出优秀孩子的管用绝招,如“让孩子守规矩:笑的嘴唇,铁的牙齿”“有效批评的四先四再原则”“少一点指责,多一点指导”“负面沟通步步雷区,正面沟通处处阳光”等,不仅让孩子更好成长,也更能改善家长、老师与孩子的关系,具有很强的针对性与技巧性。
  • 婚久言爱

    婚久言爱

    本以为只是一场被逼无奈,各取所需的交易,却不想竟渐渐搭进去一颗真心,输得一塌糊涂。浮华散尽,一切已不是最初的模样。经年回首,才发觉赢的人竟是她。冷妍心:“我本以为此生再不会有爱,却不料爱惨了你。”凌郢宸:“都说最先爱上的人,总会是输得最惨的那一个。虽败,我甘之如饴。”恩怨情仇,家族纷争,在我爱上你的那一刻,早已灰飞烟灭……
  • 神巫丑妃:冷王霸宠九王妃

    神巫丑妃:冷王霸宠九王妃

    谁说的穿越能享福!被称作丑女还不够,还做了狂妄王爷的婢女。讨厌我叫我“丑女人”,还亲我抱我摸我,看我怎么偷那狂妄混蛋的心!情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 不见鱼书至

    不见鱼书至

    上元佳节,新王准许新入宫的宫女们回家团聚。除了偶尔几队巡逻的士兵经过,整个王宫,幽静的可怕。苑秋嬷嬷站在谴思宫的高处,看着这没有一点儿人气儿的宫殿,即使修缮的和从前一样,也终归不是从前的谴思宫了。因为最重要的人不见了,那位曾经能够给整个王宫带来欢乐的鱼书公主。