登陆注册
20012000000023

第23章

The day following the great stagecoach robbery found the patient proprietor of Collinson's Mill calm and untroubled in his usual seclusion.The news that had thrilled the length and breadth of Galloper's Ridge had not touched the leafy banks of the dried-up river;the hue and cry had followed the stage-road,and no courier had deemed it worth his while to diverge as far as the rocky ridge which formed the only pathway to the mill.That day Collinson's solitude had been unbroken even by the haggard emigrant from the valley,with his old monotonous story of hardship and privation.

The birds had flown nearer to the old mill,as if emboldened by the unwonted quiet.That morning there had been the half human imprint of a bear's foot in the ooze beside the mill-wheel;and coming home with his scant stock from the woodland pasture,he had found a golden squirrel--a beautiful,airy embodiment of the brown woods itself--calmly seated on his bar-counter,with a biscuit between its baby hands.He was full of his characteristic reveries and abstractions that afternoon;falling into them even at his wood-pile,leaning on his axe--so still that an emerald-throated lizard,who had slid upon the log,went to sleep under the forgotten stroke.

But at nightfall the wind arose,--at first as a distant murmur along the hillside,that died away before it reached the rocky ledge;then it rocked the tops of the tall redwoods behind the mill,but left the mill and the dried leaves that lay in the river-bed undisturbed.Then the murmur was prolonged,until it became the continuous trouble of some far-off sea,and at last the wind possessed the ledge itself;driving the smoke down the stumpy chimney of the mill,rattling the sun-warped shingles on the roof,stirring the inside rafters with cool breaths,and singing over the rough projections of the outside eaves.At nine o'clock he rolled himself up in his blankets before the fire,as was his wont,and fell asleep.

It was past midnight when he was awakened by the familiar clatter of boulders down the grade,the usual simulation of a wild rush from without that encompassed the whole mill,even to that heavy impact against the door,which he had heard once before.In this he recognized merely the ordinary phenomena of his experience,and only turned over to sleep again.But this time the door rudely fell in upon him,and a figure strode over his prostrate body,with a gun leveled at his head.

He sprang sideways for his own weapon,which stood by the hearth.

In another second that action would have been his last,and the solitude of Seth Collinson might have remained henceforward unbroken by any mortal.But the gun of the first figure was knocked sharply upward by a second man,and the one and only shot fired that night sped harmlessly to the roof.With the report he felt his arms gripped tightly behind him;through the smoke he saw dimly that the room was filled with masked and armed men,and in another moment he was pinioned and thrust into his empty armchair.

At a signal three of the men left the room,and he could hear them exploring the other rooms and outhouses.Then the two men who had been standing beside him fell back with a certain disciplined precision,as a smooth-chinned man advanced from the open door.

Going to the bar,he poured out a glass of whiskey,tossed it off deliberately,and,standing in front of Collinson,with his shoulder against the chimney and his hand resting lightly on his hip,cleared his throat.Had Collinson been an observant man,he would have noticed that the two men dropped their eyes and moved their feet with a half impatient,perfunctory air of waiting.Had he witnessed the stage-robbery,he would have recognized in the smooth-faced man the presence of "the orator."But he only gazed at him with his dull,imperturbable patience.

"We regret exceedingly to have to use force to a gentleman in his own house,"began the orator blandly;"but we feel it our duty to prevent a repetition of the unhappy incident which occurred as we entered.We desire that you should answer a few questions,and are deeply grateful that you are still able to do so,--which seemed extremely improbable a moment or two ago."He paused,coughed,and leaned back against the chimney."How many men have you here besides yourself?""Nary one,"said Collinson.

The interrogator glanced at the other men,who had reentered.They nodded significantly.

"Good!"he resumed."You have told the truth--an excellent habit,and one that expedites business.Now,is there a room in this house with a door that locks?Your front door DOESN'T.""No."

"No cellar nor outhouse?"

"No."

"We regret that;for it will compel us,much against our wishes,to keep you bound as you are for the present.The matter is simply this:circumstances of a very pressing nature oblige us to occupy this house for a few days,--possibly for an indefinite period.We respect the sacred rites of hospitality too much to turn you out of it;indeed,nothing could be more distasteful to our feelings than to have you,in your own person,spread such a disgraceful report through the chivalrous Sierras.We must therefore keep you a close prisoner,--open,however,to an offer.It is this:we propose to give you five hundred dollars for this property as it stands,provided that you leave it,and accompany a pack-train which will start to-morrow morning for the lower valley as far as Thompson's Pass,binding yourself to quit the State for three months and keep this matter a secret.Three of these gentlemen will go with you.

They will point out to you your duty;their shotguns will apprise you of any dereliction from it.What do you say?""Who yer talking to?"said Collinson in a dull voice.

"You remind us,"said the orator suavely,"that we have not yet the pleasure of knowing.""My name's Seth Collinson."

There was a dead silence in the room,and every eye was fixed upon the two men.The orator's smile slightly stiffened.

"Where from?"he continued blandly.

"Mizzouri."

同类推荐
  • 天老神光经

    天老神光经

    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。
  • 大唐旭日

    大唐旭日

    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。
  • 悬解录

    悬解录

    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。
  • 大唐青龙寺三朝供奉大德行状

    大唐青龙寺三朝供奉大德行状

    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。
  • 周慎斋遗书

    周慎斋遗书

    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
  • 人生自是有情痴:那些时光深处的情种

    人生自是有情痴:那些时光深处的情种

    《人生自是有情痴:那些时光深处的情种》讲述历史上帝王与才子中著名的情种的爱情故事,作者在确凿史实的基础上,用动人的笔法演绎那些时光中不曾褪色的爱情悲歌。
  • 邪王娇妻来袭

    邪王娇妻来袭

    她,现代排名第一的杀手,因一次任务的失败,导致她在现代死亡穿越到了古代;他,梧桐国的王爷,腹黑难以对付;当腹黑遇到腹黑就变得更腹黑,一场你追我赶的游戏现在开始…………
  • 六道共主

    六道共主

    轮回盘碎裂,六道失衡,为弥补过错,他踏上了灵魂自赎的征程。历尽千辛万苦,九死一生,随着散落到各处的轮回盘碎片陆续被寻回,一个惊天阴谋也随之浮出了水面,露出了冰山一角……
  • 神灵白夜行

    神灵白夜行

    苏阳是一个来自普通家庭的男孩,机缘巧合之下成为一名神明大人,苏阳内心世界中充满美好幻想,渴望悠哉安静的生活,喜欢与妖怪做朋友,悠然生活中偶尔也有一点小漩涡。——这是一个你眼外的神秘世界。
  • 杨度与梁启超

    杨度与梁启超

    杨度是中国近代史上一个极富争议性的人物,才华卓越,抱负不凡。国学名师王阁运授予帝王之学,又东渡日本研究君主立宪政体,立志在清末民初的政治舞台上大显身手。《杨度与梁启超》把杨度作为引线,串起袁世凯,袁克定,曹锟,汪精卫,梁士诒,孙中山,黄兴,蔡锷等诸多人物,展现出整个波澜起伏的二十世纪初中国人救国之路,引人深思,大开眼界。
  • 泉州府志选录

    泉州府志选录

    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。
  • 现代酒店礼仪即用即查

    现代酒店礼仪即用即查

    本书着重介绍了酒店各部门的服务礼仪,融知识性与操作性于一体,对酒店员工的仪表、称呼、介绍、接待等服务礼仪进行了详细的阐述。
  • 田园香榭

    田园香榭

    溪蓉原本只是赴她恩师之约,谁料醒来竟穿越到了古代。她心心念念想着回去,却一再被牵绊,更是遇到了命中注定之人。凭着自己的制香技艺,一步步走近了真相,却被卷入了宫廷权谋之中,最终她的选择到底将是如何...?
  • 少年无欢

    少年无欢

    据传,真武大帝成仙之时,为后人留下一部旷世天书,名曰《九天玄鉴》,其中记载了真武大帝一生所修炼的武功绝学和成仙悟道之法。这书虽然留存于世,可惜后世再没出过像真武大帝那样的奇才,即使有人有幸得到,穷尽其一生才智能悟到十中之一者已属罕见。更何况百年来江湖纷争不断,一部奇书经过数次盗掠毁损早已七零八落,而其中所记载的绝学竟渐渐失传了。
  • 灵脉:奥灵大陆

    灵脉:奥灵大陆

    奥灵大陆,位于世界中心,无垠的土地上繁衍出无数生灵,万族林立。在这里没有魔法没有斗气,有的只是人体中的一条灵脉。就因为一条灵脉,大能者搬山移岳,通天撼地,无所不能!