登陆注册
20072900000012

第12章 CHAPTER II(3)

Nobody paid the slightest attention. It was the same as if Jean had not spoken. Waiting, half amused, half irritated, Jean shot a rapid glance around the store. The place had felt bare; and Jean, peering back through gloomy space, saw that it did not contain much. Dry goods and sacks littered a long rude counter; long rough shelves divided their length into stacks of canned foods and empty sections; a low shelf back of the counter held a generous burden of cartridge boxes, and next to it stood a rack of rifles. On the counter lay open cases of plug tobacco, the odor of which was second in strength only to that of rum.

Jean's swift-roving eye reverted to the men, three of whom were absorbed in the greasy checkerboard. The fourth man was the one who had spoken and he now deigned to look at Jean. Not much flesh was there stretched over his bony, powerful physiognomy. He stroked a lean chin with a big mobile hand that suggested more of bridle holding than familiarity with a bucksaw and plow handle. It was a lazy hand. The man looked lazy. If he spoke at all it would be with lazy speech. yet Jean had not encountered many men to whom he would have accorded more potency to stir in him the instinct of self-preservation.

"Shore," drawled this gaunt-faced Texan, "old Gass lives aboot a mile down heah. "With slow sweep of the big hand he indicated a general direction to the south; then, appearing to forget his questioner, he turned his attention to the game.

Jean muttered his thanks and, striding out, he mounted again, and drove the pack mule down the road. "Reckon I've ran into the wrong folds to-day," he said. "If I remember dad right he was a man to make an' keep friends. Somehow I'll bet there's goin' to be hell." Beyond the store were some rather pretty and comfortable homes, little ranch houses back in the coves of the hills. The road turned west and Jean saw his first sunset in the Tonto Basin. It was a pageant of purple clouds with silver edges, and background of deep rich gold. Presently Jean met a lad driving a cow. "Hello, Johnny!" he said, genially, and with a double purpose. "My name's Jean Isbel. By Golly! I'm lost in Grass Valley. Will you tell me where my dad lives?"

"Yep. Keep right on, an' y'u cain't miss him," replied the lad, with a bright smile. "He's lookin' fer y'u."

"How do you know, boy?" queried Jean, warmed by that smile.

"Aw, I know. It's all over the valley thet y'u'd ride in ter-day.

Shore I wus the one thet tole yer dad an' he give me a dollar."

"Was he glad to hear it?" asked Jean, with a queer sensation in his throat.

"Wal, he plumb was."

"An' who told you I was goin' to ride in to-day?"

"I heerd it at the store," replied the lad, with an air of confidence.

"Some sheepmen was talkin' to Greaves. He's the storekeeper. I was settin' outside, but I heerd. A Mexican come down off the Rim ter-day an' he fetched the news." Here the lad looked furtively around, then whispered. "An' thet greaser was sent by somebody. I never heerd no more, but them sheepmen looked pretty plumb sour. An' one of them, comin' out, give me a kick, darn him. It shore is the luckedest day fer us cowmen."

"How's that, Johnny?"

"Wal, that's shore a big fight comin' to Grass Valley. My dad says so an' he rides fer yer dad. An' if it comes now y'u'll be heah."

"Ahuh!" laughed Jean. "An' what then, boy?"

The lad turned bright eyes upward. "Aw, now, yu'all cain't come thet on me. Ain't y'u an Injun, Jean Isbel? Ain't y'u a hoss tracker thet rustlers cain't fool? Ain't y'u a plumb dead shot? Ain't y'u wuss'ern a grizzly bear in a rough-an'-tumble? . . . Now ain't y'u, shore?"

Jean bade the flattering lad a rather sober good day and rode on his way. Manifestly a reputation somewhat difficult to live up to had preceded his entry into Grass Valley.

Jean's first sight of his future home thrilled him through. It was a big, low, rambling log structure standing well out from a wooded knoll at the edge of the valley. Corrals and barns and sheds lay off at the back. To the fore stretched broad pastures where numberless cattle and horses grazed. At sunset the scene was one of rich color.

Prosperity and abundance and peace seemed attendant upon that ranch; lusty voices of burros braying and cows bawling seemed welcoming Jean.

A hound bayed. The first cool touch of wind fanned Jean's cheek and brought a fragrance of wood smoke and frying ham.

Horses in the Pasture romped to the fence and whistled at these newcomers. Jean espied a white-faced black horse that gladdened his sight. "Hello, Whiteface! I'll sure straddle you," called Jean.

Then up the gentle slope he saw the tall figure of his father--the same as he had seen him thousands of times, bareheaded, shirt sleeved, striding with long step. Jean waved and called to him.

"Hi, You Prodigal!" came the answer. Yes, the voice of his father--and Jean's boyhood memories flashed. He hurried his horse those last few rods. No--dad was not the same. His hair shone gray.

"Here I am, dad," called Jean, and then he was dismounting. A deep, quiet emotion settled over him, stilling the hurry, the eagerness, the pang in his breast.

"Son, I shore am glad to see you," said his father, and wrung his hand.

"Wal, wal, the size of you! Shore you've grown, any how you favor your mother."

Jean felt in the iron clasp of hand, in the uplifting of the handsome head, in the strong, fine light of piercing eyes that there was no difference in the spirit of his father. But the old smile could not hide lines and shades strange to Jean.

"Dad, I'm as glad as you," replied Jean, heartily. "It seems long we've been parted, now I see you. Are You well, dad, an' all right?"

"Not complainin', son. I can ride all day same as ever," he said.

"Come. Never mind your hosses. They'll be looked after.

Come meet the folks. . . . Wal, wal, you got heah at last."

同类推荐
  • 偶会篇

    偶会篇

    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。
  • 道基

    道基

    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。
  • 佛说阿阇世王女阿术达菩萨经

    佛说阿阇世王女阿术达菩萨经

    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。
  • 潭州沩山灵佑禅师语录

    潭州沩山灵佑禅师语录

    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。
  • 佛说未生冤经

    佛说未生冤经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 极品宠物店

    极品宠物店

    禽言兽语,无所不通,真龙仙凰,皆为灵宠!**********大家好,我叫周明,我是一个御兽师,我的梦想是开一家天上地下,独一无二的宠物店!在我的宠物店里,价格公道,品种齐全。无论您是要上古真龙,还是祥瑞麒麟,亦或者是左青龙,又白虎,上朱雀,下玄武,只要您需要,我们就能满足您的各种要求。**********所以,请大家记住我们这家宠物店的名字——《御兽斋》
  • 逆仙

    逆仙

    一颗引魂珠,让林洛融佛道两脉至高心法,洗筋伐髓,成就绝世资质。顶级势力的角逐,布下的逆天棋局,让他在生死中行走,开始了漫漫仙路的追寻,经历诸多恩怨情感的纠缠。林洛是否逆转命运,详情故事,尽在《逆仙》。最古典的仙侠故事,最缱倦的恩怨情仇……
  • 制霸老公,请放手

    制霸老公,请放手

    她为了保住父亲生前的心血,被迫和他分手。从此他们形同陌路却又日日相见。他和别人相亲高调喊话,让众人关注。“相亲就相亲,我不在乎,我不在乎,我不在乎!”她无动于衷。正式订婚时她却意外出现,包中藏刀。“你敢和别人结婚,我就敢死在当场。”“张兮兮,是不是我把手里的股份给你,你就会和我睡。”他邪魅的问道。“你就不能把股份分几次给我,多睡几次!”捂脸~~
  • 至尊神武

    至尊神武

    无边广大的世界,层出不穷的天才,一介少年自微末崛起,踏破天路,败尽群雄!从卑下的矿工,到至高无上的主宰;自朝不保夕,到永恒不灭!这是属于至尊神武的传奇!
  • 逝年记

    逝年记

    那些年很迷幻,饮一杯透红烈酒,看一看夜景繁华,细细回忆开来,影影绰绰却又清清楚楚:初恋的女友傍大款,曾恋的大款是小三。恋我的萝莉是千金,结婚的老婆是女汉。那曾经爱情,都在灯红酒绿间化作云烟。青春易碎,逝年难回。……
  • 秦汉三国皇帝传

    秦汉三国皇帝传

    本书主要撰写了秦朝从秦始皇(公元前247年)嗣秦王位起至三国吴灭亡(公元280年)止,共500多年的历史故事。以单列皇帝(正统)写其全传的形式,全方位介绍了自秦始皇至三国的37位皇帝的生平事迹,采取了相对按时间顺序又进行了分门别类的写法,《秦汉三国皇帝传》涵盖了政治、经济、文化、军事、民情等方面的故事。以正史为依据,既全面具体又通俗易懂,是一本详细叙史的好书。
  • 和一棵树说了一下午话

    和一棵树说了一下午话

    本书精选了作者近年来创作的数十篇优秀散文作品,文思动人,耐人寻味。作者在对自然与人生的思考中,用文字与心灵进行了一场深刻对话:关于生与死,关于起与落,关于贫与富,关于高贵与卑微,关于显赫与平凡,关于快乐与痛苦。没有情绪的浮夸,只有情感的沉淀。这些质朴的语言给予迷茫的心灵一剂良药,于生活的俯仰之间,道出了人生的景致和意义。
  • 安然有你度此生

    安然有你度此生

    文艺版:生命中人来人往,有人能陪你走过一段时间,那必然会有人愿与你携手一生,错过的人教会我们成长,执手之人陪伴我们成长,有些缘分或许早已命中注定,莫慌莫急,静待花开。简单粗暴版:守身多年的某总裁,就这样被深夜酒吧买醉的某女扑到了(表多想,人家很清白)。亲情缺失多年的某总裁,就这样被一碗黑乎乎的素面条圈住了。接着,拉开帷幕……
  • 超时代末日之章

    超时代末日之章

    假如这是一个现实与非现实交织的世界,给你仅仅两年的时间让你拯救全宇宙,你会愿意担负起这个沉重的使命吗?在宇宙面临危难的时候,被上天给予力量与权利的天权将担负救世之任!契约师、斩灵者、猫灵、元素师、念力者、神官、六芒星会……前所未有的神之旅途,曲折离奇的爱情。超霸气的宇宙之战,独坐宇宙之颠,是为爱情,还是孤独?故事发生在一个凉爽星期日的邂逅……
  • 了了一婚

    了了一婚

    秦笙觉得自己活得简直就是一个笑话。还没和魏琰结婚之前,她假装自己不爱他。可结婚之后,她假装自己爱他。直到那一天,他为救白月光亲手推她下涯底,人们都说魏琰薄情,为了情人致使发妻殒命大海,可谁又知道,自她离去,他的世界从此再无一线阳光。秦笙二字,成了他此生唯一的救赎……