登陆注册
20072900000027

第27章 CHAPTER IV(3)

A long hour passed by. The sun had slanted to a point halfway between the zenith and the horizon. Suddenly a thought confronted Ellen Jorth:

"He's not comin'," she whispered. The instant that idea presented itself she felt a blank sense of loss, a vague regret--something that must have been disappointment. Unprepared for this, she was held by surprise for a moment, and then she was stunned. Her spirit, swift and rebellious, had no time to rise in her defense. She was a lonely, guilty, miserable girl, too weak for pride to uphold, too fluctuating to know her real self. She stretched there, burying her face in the pine needles, digging her fingers into them, wanting nothing so much as that they might hide her. The moment was incomprehensible to Ellen, and utterly intolerable. The sharp pine needles, piercing her wrists and cheeks, and her hot heaving breast, seemed to give her exquisite relief.

The shrill snort of a horse sounded near at hand. With a shock Ellen's body stiffened. Then she quivered a little and her feelings underwent swift change. Cautiously and noiselessly she raised herself upon her elbows and peeped through the opening in the brush. She saw a man tying a horse to a bush somewhat back from the Rim. Drawing a rifle from its saddle sheath he threw it in the hollow of his arm and walked to the edge of the precipice. He gazed away across the Basin and appeared lost in contemplation or thought. Then he turned to look back into the forest, as if he expected some one.

Ellen recognized the lithe figure, the dark face so like an Indian's.

It was Isbel. He had come. Somehow his coming seemed wonderful and terrible. Ellen shook as she leaned on her elbows. Jean Isbel, true to his word, in spite of her scorn, had come back to see her. The fact seemed monstrous. He was an enemy of her father. Long had range rumor been bandied from lip to lip--old Gass Isbel had sent for his Indian son to fight the Jorths. Jean Isbel--son of a Texan--unerring shot--peerless tracker--a bad and dangerous man! Then there flashed over Ellen a burning thought--if it were true, if he was an enemy of her father's, if a fight between Jorth and Isbel was inevitable, she ought to kill this Jean Isbel right there in his tracks as he boldly and confidently waited for her. Fool he was to think she would come.

Ellen sank down and dropped her head until the strange tremor of her arms ceased. That dark and grim flash of thought retreated. She had not come to murder a man from ambush, but only to watch him, to try to see what he meant, what he thought, to allay a strange curiosity.

After a while she looked again. Isbel was sitting on an upheaved section of the Rim, in a comfortable position from which he could watch the openings in the forest and gaze as well across the west curve of the Basin to the Mazatzals. He had composed himself to wait.

He was clad in a buckskin suit, rather new, and it certainly showed off to advantage, compared with the ragged and soiled apparel Ellen remembered. He did not look so large. Ellen was used to the long, lean, rangy Arizonians and Texans. This man was built differently.

He had the widest shoulders of any man she had ever seen, and they made him appear rather short. But his lithe, powerful limbs proved he was not short. Whenever he moved the muscles rippled. His hands were clasped round a knee--brown, sinewy hands, very broad, and fitting the thick muscular wrists. His collar was open, and he did not wear a scarf, as did the men Ellen knew. Then her intense curiosity at last brought her steady gaze to Jean Isbel's head and face. He wore a cap, evidently of some thin fur. His hair was straight and short, and in color a dead raven black. His complexion was dark, clear tan, with no trace of red. He did not have the prominent cheek bones nor the high-bridged nose usual with white men who were part Indian. Still he had the Indian look. Ellen caught that in the dark, intent, piercing eyes, in the wide, level, thoughtful brows, in the stern impassiveness of his smooth face. He had a straight, sharp-cut profile.

Ellen whispered to herself: "I saw him right the other day. Only, I'd not admit it. . . . The finest-lookin' man I ever saw in my life is a damned Isbel! Was that what I come out heah for?"

She lowered herself once more and, folding her arms under her breast, she reclined comfortably on them, and searched out a smaller peephole from which she could spy upon Isbel. And as she watched him the new and perplexing side of her mind waxed busier. Why had he come back?

What did he want of her? Acquaintance, friendship, was impossible for them. He had been respectful, deferential toward her, in a way that had strangely pleased, until the surprising moment when he had kissed her. That had only disrupted her rather dreamy pleasure in a situation she had not experienced before. All the men she had met in this wild country were rough and bold; most of them had wanted to marry her, and, failing that, they had persisted in amorous attentions not particularly flattering or honorable. They were a bad lot. And contact with them had dulled some of her sensibilities. But this Jean Isbel had seemed a gentleman. She struggled to be fair, trying to forget her antipathy, as much to understand herself as to give him due credit. True, he had kissed her, crudely and forcibly. But that kiss had not been an insult. Ellen's finer feeling forced her to believe this. She remembered the honest amaze and shame and contrition with which be had faced her, trying awkwardly to explain his bold act.

Likewise she recalled the subtle swift change in him at her words, "Oh, I've been kissed before!" She was glad she had said that. Still--was she glad, after all?

She watched him. Every little while he shifted his gaze from the blue gulf beneath him to the forest. When he turned thus the sun shone on his face and she caught the piercing gleam of his dark eyes.

She saw, too, that he was listening. Watching and listening for her!

同类推荐
  • 香岩洗心水禅师语录

    香岩洗心水禅师语录

    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。
  • 佛说义足经

    佛说义足经

    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。
  • 落花

    落花

    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。
  • 还冤记

    还冤记

    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。
  • 律宗问答

    律宗问答

    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
  • The Divine Comedy

    The Divine Comedy

    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。
  • 冷兵器之光历186

    冷兵器之光历186

    人类越来越快速地掌握着这个世界的真理,医疗,生物技术发展至的高度,使生物繁衍后代的职能,对人类来说已经变得无足轻重,模糊了贫富,善恶,美丑的概念后,剩下的只是最清晰的利弊多少之分,和对自身与社会的进化的追求。信仰失去了存在的价值,他们只需要相信属于自己的理性思考后得到的判断。而感性意识,也从理所当然的存在,变为了社会发展的障碍。“判”是一群诞生于冰冷的培养室中的特殊人类,聚集了从全世界提取而来的最完美的基因,从一出生就拥有超越一切常人的优势。他们被单独以最高端完善的方式有针对性地进行社会不同领域的教育。唯独不允许教他们一切可能会导致产生私人感情的东西。他们拥有基本公民自由,最高级社会待遇,但政府对他们依然拥有终生控制权。——光历476年记。
  • 诛天圣主

    诛天圣主

    混沌初开,神魔乱世,一个沉睡万世的神秘少年睁开双眸,于沉睡中苏醒,是诸天的幸运,还是乱世的纷争降临。也许这一切都只是乱世的阴谋又或是一个凄凉的故事......
  • 穿越我的僵尸梦

    穿越我的僵尸梦

    自从看了我和僵尸有个约会后,我的心里一直就有个僵尸梦。本书带你去体会一个僵尸的情感,一个啼笑皆非的僵尸里的至尊,一段迷乱而又艰险的旅途。本书绝对的叫人热血沸腾。
  • 乡村高手在都市

    乡村高手在都市

    乡村小子叶枫,无意间得到一本武林秘籍,从此之后金钟罩铁布衫、无影脚、一阳指……那些只有武侠小说里才有的功夫,他全都会!身怀绝技的他,走出大山,混迹都市!仗着有武功,他是打得了流氓,斗得了恶匪……
  • 天价婚爱,引妻入怀

    天价婚爱,引妻入怀

    人们说,灰姑娘只要找到水晶鞋就能找到属于自己的白马王子,可是为什么她穿着水晶鞋,却等来了一个恶魔。“艾希,你被开除了!”她只是一个拼命想在这灯红酒绿的社会活下去走投无路的少女。可是老天似乎却偏偏很生厌她……杜氏集团的唯一继承人翰少爷,可不是她能招惹的起的人。
  • 醉枕江湖

    醉枕江湖

    遥遥汉阳峰,幽幽康王谷。关中无敌手,身败隐微处。倜傥少侠客,一朝入江湖。玄铁双勾戟,北斗天罡步。廿经虽奇门,怎显方家术?世事若盘棋,黑白胜无数。扬我混元功,教四海臣服。唯恨人远去,青山做独孤!正是:金庸封笔古龙归,此间论武有阿谁?诸君看我谈笑里,江湖枕戟一把醉!
  • 修真二人组

    修真二人组

    一对被抛弃的婴儿,一对帅气的组合,从此修炼至最高境界,笑傲天下。无数的传奇,由他们创造,永生?金钱?妻子?样样具有。
  • 强袭魔女之新纪元

    强袭魔女之新纪元

    乱战一次意外的旅程一支强大的佣兵团到了一个看似相识却又颠覆他们传统观念的世界魔女?异型军?这究竟是什么样的世界?人生的一次新开始一切都重新来过,人生……不管如何,从这里开始摆脱过去,守护而非破坏,重振军人本色,寻回我们昔日的尊严
  • 35岁前要有的66种智慧

    35岁前要有的66种智慧

    本书通过大量贴近生活的事例和精炼的要点,阐述了年青人必须掌握的人生哲理和生存智慧。