登陆注册
20072900000046

第46章 CHAPTER VI(7)

Jorth strode to Ellen, and, whirling her around with a strong hand, he held her facing him.

"Did y'u see Isbel?"

"Yes," replied Ellen, just as sharply as her father had asked.

"Did y'u talk to him?"

"Yes."

"What did he want up heah?"

"I told y'u. He was tracking the black horse y'u stole."

Jorth's hand and arm dropped limply. His sallow face turned a livid hue.

Amaze merged into discomfiture and that gave place to rage. He raised a hand as if to strike Ellen. And suddenly Daggs's long arm shot out to clutch Jorth's wrist. Wrestling to free himself, Jorth cursed under his breath. "Let go, Daggs," he shouted, stridently. "Am I drunk that you grab me? "

"Wal, y'u ain't drunk, I reckon," replied the rustler, with sarcasm.

"But y'u're shore some things I'll reserve for your private ear."

Jorth gained a semblance of composure. But it was evident that he labored under a shock.

"Ellen, did Jean Isbel see this black horse?"

"Yes. He asked me how I got Spades an' I told him."

"Did he say Spades belonged to him?"

"Shore I reckon he, proved it. Y'u can always tell a horse that loves its master."

"Did y'u offer to give Spades back?"

"Yes. But Isbel wouldn't take him."

"Hah! . . . An' why not?"

"He said he'd rather I kept him. He was about to engage in a dirty, blood-spilling deal, an' he reckoned he'd not be able to care for a fine horse. . . . I didn't want Spades. I tried to make Isbel take him.

But he rode off. . . . And that's all there is to that."

"Maybe it's not," replied Jorth, chewing his mustache and eying Ellen with dark, intent gaze. "Y'u've met this Isbel twice."

"It wasn't any fault of mine," retorted Ellen.

"I heah he's sweet on y'u. How aboot that?"

Ellen smarted under the blaze of blood that swept to neck and cheek and temple. But it was only memory which fired this shame. What her father and his crowd might think were matters of supreme indifference.

Yet she met his suspicious gaze with truthful blazing eyes.

"I heah talk from Bruce an' Lorenzo," went on her father. "An' Daggs heah--"

"Daggs nothin'!" interrupted that worthy. "Don't fetch me in. I said nothin' an' I think nothin'."

"Yes, Jean Isbel was sweet on me, dad . . . but he will never be again," returned Ellen, in low tones. With that she pulled her saddle off Spades and, throwing it over her shoulder, she walked off to her cabin.

Hardly had she gotten indoors when her father entered.

"Ellen, I didn't know that horse belonged to Isbel," he began, in the swift, hoarse, persuasive voice so familiar to Ellen. "I swear I didn't.

I bought him--traded with Slater for him. . . . Honest to God, I never had any idea he was stolen! . . . Why, when y'u said 'that horse y'u stole,' I felt as if y'u'd knifed me. . . ."

Ellen sat at the table and listened while her father paced to and fro and, by his restless action and passionate speech, worked himself into a frenzy. He talked incessantly, as if her silence was condemnatory and as if eloquence alone could convince her of his honesty. It seemed that Ellen saw and heard with keener faculties than ever before.

He had a terrible thirst for her respect. Not so much for her love, she divined, but that she would not see how he had fallen!

She pitied him with all her heart. She was all he had, as he was all the world to her. And so, as she gave ear to his long, illogical rigmarole of argument and defense, she slowly found that her pity and her love were making vital decisions for her. As of old, in poignant moments, her father lapsed at last into a denunciation of the Isbels and what they had brought him to. His sufferings were real, at least, in Ellen's presence. She was the only link that bound him to long-past happier times. She was her mother over again--the woman who had betrayed another man for him and gone with him to her ruin and death.

"Dad, don't go on so," said Ellen, breaking in upon her father's rant.

"I will be true to y'u--as my mother was. . . . I am a Jorth. Your place is my place--your fight is my fight. . . . Never speak of the past to me again. If God spares us through this feud we will go away and begin all over again, far off where no one ever heard of a Jorth.

. . . If we're not spared we'll at least have had our whack at these damned Isbels."

同类推荐
  • 归田稿

    归田稿

    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。
  • 唐铙歌鼓吹曲十二篇

    唐铙歌鼓吹曲十二篇

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 道德真经注

    道德真经注

    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。
  • 百丈清规证义记

    百丈清规证义记

    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。
  • 中州人物考

    中州人物考

    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
  • TFboys之相爱相杀

    TFboys之相爱相杀

    原本一个美好的家庭在一夜之间,就只剩下两个小女孩.姐姐依露儿,妹妹依小小为了报仇.............在故事里又会和三只擦出怎样的火花?
  • 邪王独尊

    邪王独尊

    一代邪王,三世轮回。废柴逆袭,万世独尊!
  • 极品修真神医

    极品修真神医

    极品修真神医,修真少年,轻松治病,治病同时还能提高真气。“我的朋友,我的兄弟,我的伙伴,我的爱人,都由我来守护!我是要成为医神的男人。”这是一本让人轻松的文,轻松的同时有愉快的感觉……PS1:新书期间各种求PS2:更新时间:早8点到9点半一更,晚八点到九点半一更,不定期爆发。
  • 倾世幻情

    倾世幻情

    她是一府之主的掌上千金,他只是被收养的一名遗孤,数年前他扬言定要娶她,她没有回他,但是一直放在心里,数年之后,他已长大成人,知道当初的诺言有多重,有多么难如登天,位高权重的皇子公侯,肃壁边戎的掌军大帅,她该如何抉择……
  • 季羡林美文60篇

    季羡林美文60篇

    《季羡林美文60篇》是专为广大喜爱季老散文的读者们编选的选本。季老的散文具有鲜明的学者散文特质,兼具学者特有的理性思考和对当下现实问题的观照与反思,同时又不乏散文的灵动与语言文字的优美。与以往季老的散文选本有所不同,《季羡林美文60篇》根据季老散文题材的特点,对不同题材进行分类,以便读者朋友们更好地鉴赏与学习。
  • 鬼王传之昼行百鬼

    鬼王传之昼行百鬼

    小时候的我们都听长辈们讲过妖魔鬼怪的故事,长大后却不再相信,生活在我们周围的妖魔鬼怪最喜欢看到这种情形,这样会让他们生活的更加自由自在。然而老鬼王离奇失踪,阴界十八间渐渐变得不安了起来,这股不安的异动蔓延人间,年轻的新鬼王临危上位,英雄辈出的年代里,谁主沉浮。
  • 学渣称霸

    学渣称霸

    哈哈跟着一屌丝学生称霸全世界,闯仙侠,灭诸神这都不是事
  • 又见花开之十字路口的爱情

    又见花开之十字路口的爱情

    季婷是M文化公司股东兼金牌编剧,国外隐居5年后回国的她究竟为那般?看着试镜新人张钰的她为什么觉得心悸又心痛?当张钰走进她原本平静的生活,遭受过重创的她却选择了逃避,谁知道就在她以为自己远离一切的时候……
  • 神启

    神启

    一个混迹市井的少年,在人神共愤的乱世中邂逅了一段段浪漫的艳遇,从此改变了人生际遇。面对宿命的恩仇,时空的轮回,他扭转乾坤,君临天下,坐拥三宫六院。他以凡人之体,成为世人景仰的圣神,领悟神界天机,参透寰宇奥秘……
  • 玄衣风飞

    玄衣风飞

    只要你对武侠感兴趣,不是仙侠!不是修真!不是国术!不是浪子异侠!他只是玄衣风飞,一本也许不会让你失望的全新武侠!起点也有纯武侠!即便是带点玄幻的武侠,也绝不是如今的网络武侠!我是羽令是。