登陆注册
20052500000066

第66章 CHAPTER IX(2)

But it was just this support that Steptoe strangely clung to in his designs for the future, and a wild idea seized him. The surveyor was really the only disinterested witness between the two parties.

If Steptoe could confuse his mind before the actual fighting--from which he would, of course, escape as a non-combatant--it would go far afterwards to rehabilitate Steptoe's party. "Very well, then," he said to Marshall, "I shall call this gentleman to witness that we have been attacked here in peaceable possession of our part of the claim by these armed strangers, and whether they are acting on your order or not, their blood will be on your head."

"Then I reckon," said the surveyor, as he tore away his beard, wig, spectacles, and mustache, and revealed the figure of Jack Hamlin, "that I'm about the last witness that Mr. Steptoe-Horncastle ought to call, and about the last witness that he ever WILL call!"

But he had not calculated upon the desperation of Steptoe over the failure of this last hope. For there sprang up in the outlaw's brain the same hideous idea that he voiced to his companions at the Divide. With a hoarse cry to his followers, he crashed his pickaxe into the brain of Marshall, who stood near him, and sprang forward.

Three or four shots were exchanged. Two of his men fell, a bullet from Stacy's rifle pierced Steptoe's leg, and he dropped forward on one knee. He heard the steps of his reinforcements with their weapons coming close behind him, and rolled aside on the sloping ledge to let them pass. But he rolled too far. He felt himself slipping down the mountain-side in the slimy shoot of the tunnel.

He made a desperate attempt to recover himself, but the treacherous drift of the loose debris rolled with him, as if he were part of its refuse, and, carrying him down, left him unconscious, but otherwise uninjured, in the bushes of the second ledge five hundred feet below.

When he recovered his senses the shouts and outcries above him had ceased. He knew he was safe. The ledge could only be reached by a circuitous route three miles away. He knew, too, that if he could only reach a point of outcrop a hundred yards away he could easily descend to the stage road, down the gentle slope of the mountain hidden in a growth of hazel-brush. He bound up his wounded leg, and dragged himself on his hands and knees laboriously to the outcrop. He did not look up; since his pick had crashed into Marshall's brain he had but one blind thought before him--to escape at once! That his revenge and compensation would come later he never doubted. He limped and crept, rolled and fell, from bush to bush through the sloping thickets, until he saw the red road a few feet below him.

If he only had a horse he could put miles between him and any present pursuit! Why should he not have one? The road was frequented by solitary horsemen--miners and Mexicans. He had his revolver with him; what mattered the life of another man if he escaped from the consequences of the one he had just taken? He heard the clatter of hoofs; two priests on mules rode slowly by; he ground his teeth with disappointment. But they had scarcely passed before another and more rapid clatter came from their rear. It was a lad on horseback. He started. It was his own son!

He remembered in a flash how the boy had said he was coming to meet the padre at the station on that day. His first impulse was to hide himself, his wound, and his defeat from the lad, but the blind idea of escape was still paramount. He leaned over the bank and called to him. The astonished lad cantered eagerly to his side.

"Give me your horse, Eddy," said the father; "I'm in bad luck, and must get."

The boy glanced at his father's face, at his tattered garments and bandaged leg, and read the whole story. It was a familiar page to him. He paled first and then flushed, and then, with an odd glitter in his eyes, said, "Take me with you, father. Do! You always did before. I'll bring you luck."

同类推荐
  • 春秋配

    春秋配

    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。
  • 论语点睛补注

    论语点睛补注

    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。
  • 佛说慧印三昧经

    佛说慧印三昧经

    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。
  • 入楞伽心玄义

    入楞伽心玄义

    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。
  • 梼杌闲评

    梼杌闲评

    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
  • 奇武非凡

    奇武非凡

    这里强者尊,弱者卑!没有天赋异人,只有埋头苦练。吴名能否报仇?绝世奇功又能否练成?携兄弟斗三帝虐五皇,走上武界巅峰,一路的辛酸苦辣又以因何而看破情义,一柄银枪划破苍穹,一指吴名笑傲天下。
  • 素染倾城

    素染倾城

    数月,她没有等来那人,却被皇帝看上。大婚当日,千军万马闯进皇宫,一片狼藉,命悬一线。她一袭红衣惊艳了他,他仍无言转身,她乞求他带她离开。他果断拒绝,却在她摔倒之后改变主意,将她带在身旁,甚至,强行娶她。而她心系他人,该何去何从?他从来只爱她,不管等多久,都会等着她。若她爱着他人,那他即使不择手段,也不会放手。她只属于他……
  • 兽妃:狂傲第一夫人

    兽妃:狂傲第一夫人

    穿成丞相府痴傻疯癫的大小姐风落霜?带着聘礼去求亲,却一命呜呼?哼,重生后的她,还有那么容易被欺负吗!御赐皇商又如何,拜堂当天,她留下一块板砖外加一纸休书,跑到江湖逍遥快活行医救人!那个男人找到他,大吼道:“女人,你再敢逃跑!我就跟你同归于尽!”
  • 锦织

    锦织

    梁婉清自穿越那日起,就注定再无安生的日子。身边的丫环要害她,继母排挤她,庶姐庶妹们欲除之而后快。更有上一辈的前仇旧恨......梁婉清一叉腰,那就让暴风雨来得更猛烈一些吧!
  • 游戏同步世界

    游戏同步世界

    一个不知道从哪个角落旮旯里冒出来的神创造了一个游戏世界,还把现实世界的命运绑定在了游戏上。从此,进入游戏的人不得不为了世界的命运而奋斗。白锋:叫我当救世主?拜托,我玩游戏纯粹是为了娱乐,就算我脑子里有整个游戏的攻略那又怎样,我只是想探探险,享受爆装备时的快感而已。
  • 僵尸王重现

    僵尸王重现

    这个文章写的是。月痕碰见僵尸王后卿和僵尸王将臣激斗时。两滴僵尸王的精血。滴进了月痕的嘴里。导致月痕变异。成为拥有双异能的一个僵尸。他也爱上了一个女驱魔人,琦静。妈的敢动我的女人,你在作死吗
  • 我入魔以后

    我入魔以后

    江雨寒,第一废物,懦弱到极限,突然一天离别16年的妈妈带着妹妹归来,好像一切都光明了,可这样的光明没有多久。天空烂了一个洞,异变刚好发生在江雨寒的身上,当天空恢复平静,他却变成了一个只能食人血生存的怪物。
  • 孤岛学园

    孤岛学园

    某一天,燕南翼带着自己的妹妹来到了这孤岛之上。只想风平浪静做个普通人生活下去的他,却因为一条关于自己父母的线索而再次拿起被他遗忘多时的刀。十年前收到的生日礼物,凭空出现的灵族少女。这一切的一切都让他不能继续悠闲下去,唯有战斗下去才能找到答案。
  • 重生之巫毒神话

    重生之巫毒神话

    跳跃在亡灵上的舞蹈。行走于黑暗之中的巫师。刘潇面对背叛,爱情,绝望的时候选择了死亡。但是天不亡他,老天给了他重生的机会。刘潇带着前世亡灵巫王的记忆回到了12年前神话刚刚开始的时候,他运筹帷幄,善用人才。在这个神话世界中,刘潇怎么才可以立于不败之地。现实的仇恨,虚拟的成就,刘潇如何处理。最后巫皇的传说,会不会是刘潇的传说呢?
  • 便秘简便自疗

    便秘简便自疗

    本书以问答形式简要介绍了便秘的基本知识、类型、临床症状、辅助检查方法、诊断和鉴别诊断、中西医治疗及预防等知识,重点介绍适合读者自我调养和自我治疗便秘的简便方法,并对便秘防治中的一些误区提出了作者的观点。本书是一部全面反映便秘自我治疗和调养新成果的科普读物,内容融汇中西而详尽,文字简洁而明了。具有科学性、实用性和可读性强的特点。不仅适合便秘患者的自我医疗,也可作为基层医护人员的参考读物。