登陆注册
20072900000006

第6章 CHAPTER I(4)

Jean had doffed his sombrero at sight of her and he still held it, rather deferentially, perhaps. It seemed to attract her attention.

"Put on y'ur hat, stranger. . . . Shore I can't recollect when any man bared his haid to me. "She uttered a little laugh in which surprise and frankness mingled with a tint of bitterness.

Jean sat down with his back to a pine, and, laying the sombrero by his side, he looked full at her, conscious of a singular eagerness, as if he wanted to verify by close scrutiny a first hasty impression.

If there had been an instinct in his meeting with Colter, there was more in this. The girl half sat, half leaned against a log, with the shiny little carbine across her knees. She had a level, curious gaze upon him, and Jean had never met one just like it. Her eyes were rather a wide oval in shape, clear and steady, with shadows of thought in their amber-brown depths. They seemed to look through Jean, and his gaze dropped first. Then it was he saw her ragged homespun skirt and a few inches of brown, bare ankles, strong and round, and crude worn-out moccasins that failed to hide the shapeliness, of her feet.

Suddenly she drew back her stockingless ankles and ill-shod little feet.

When Jean lifted his gaze again he found her face half averted and a stain of red in the gold tan of her cheek. That touch of embarrassment somehow removed her from this strong, raw, wild woodland setting. It changed her poise. It detracted from the curious, unabashed, almost bold, look that he had encountered in her eyes.

"Reckon you're from Texas," said Jean, presently.

"Shore am," she drawled. She had a lazy Southern voice, pleasant to hear. "How'd y'u-all guess that?"

"Anybody can tell a Texan. Where I came from there were a good many pioneers an' ranchers from the old Lone Star state. I've worked for several. An', come to think of it, I'd rather hear a Texas girl talk than anybody."

"Did y'u know many Texas girls?" she inquired, turning again to face him.

"Reckon I did--quite a good many."

"Did y'u go with them?"

"Go with them? Reckon you mean keep company. Why, yes, I guess I did--a little," laughed Jean. "Sometimes on a Sunday or a dance once in a blue moon, an' occasionally a ride. "

"Shore that accounts," said the girl, wistfully.

"For what? " asked Jean.

"Y'ur bein' a gentleman," she replied, with force. Oh, I've not forgotten. I had friends when we lived in Texas. . . . Three years ago. Shore it seems longer. Three miserable years in this damned country!"

Then she bit her lip, evidently to keep back further unwitting utterance to a total stranger. And it was that biting of her lip that drew Jean's attention to her mouth. It held beauty of curve and fullness and color that could not hide a certain sadness and bitterness. Then the whole flashing brown face changed for Jean.

He saw that it was young, full of passion and restraint, possessing a power which grew on him. This, with her shame and pathos and the fact that she craved respect, gave a leap to Jean's interest.

"Well, I reckon you flatter me," he said, hoping to put her at her ease again. "I'm only a rough hunter an' fisherman-woodchopper an' horse tracker. Never had all the school I needed--nor near enough company of nice girls like you."

"Am I nice?" she asked, quickly.

"You sure are," he replied, smiling.

"In these rags," she demanded, with a sudden flash of passion that thrilled him. "Look at the holes." She showed rips and worn-out places in the sleeves of her buckskin blouse, through which gleamed a round, brown arm. "I sew when I have anythin' to sew with. . . .

Look at my skirt--a dirty rag. An' I have only one other to my name.

. . . Look!" Again a color tinged her cheeks, most becoming, and giving the lie to her action. But shame could not check her violence now. A dammed-up resentment seemed to have broken out in flood. She lifted the ragged skirt almost to her knees. "No stockings! No Shoes!

. . . How can a girl be nice when she has no clean, decent woman's clothes to wear?"

"How--how can a girl. . ." began Jean. "See here, miss, I'm beggin' your pardon for--sort of stirrin' you to forget yourself a little.

Reckon I understand. You don't meet many strangers an' I sort of hit you wrong--makin' you feel too much--an' talk too much. Who an' what you are is none of my business. But we met. . . . An' I reckon somethin' has happened--perhaps more to me than to you. . . . Now let me put you straight about clothes an' women. Reckon I know most women love nice things to wear an' think because clothes make them look pretty that they're nicer or better. But they're wrong. You're wrong. Maybe it 'd be too much for a girl like you to be happy without clothes. But you can be--you axe just as nice, an'--an' fine--an', for all you know, a good deal more appealin' to some men."

"Stranger, y'u shore must excuse my temper an' the show I made of myself," replied the girl, with composure. "That, to say the least, was not nice. An' I don't want anyone thinkin' better of me than I deserve. My mother died in Texas, an' I've lived out heah in this wild country--a girl alone among rough men. Meetin' y'u to-day makes me see what a hard lot they are--an' what it's done to me."

Jean smothered his curiosity and tried to put out of his mind a growing sense that he pitied her, liked her.

"Are you a sheep herder?" he asked.

" Shore I am now an' then. My father lives back heah in a canyon.

He's a sheepman. Lately there's been herders shot at. Just now we're short an' I have to fill in. But I like shepherdin' an' I love the woods, and the Rim Rock an' all the Tonto. If they were all, I'd shore be happy."

"Herders shot at!" exclaimed Jean, thoughtfully. "By whom?

An' what for?"

"Trouble brewin' between the cattlemen down in the Basin an' the sheepmen up on the Rim. Dad says there'll shore be hell to pay.

I tell him I hope the cattlemen chase him back to Texas."

"Then-- Are you on the ranchers' side? " queried Jean, trying to pretend casual interest.

"No. I'll always be on my father's side," she replied, with spirit.

同类推荐
  • HECUBA

    HECUBA

    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。
  • LITTLE DORRIT

    LITTLE DORRIT

    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。
  • 太上玄灵北斗本命延生真经注

    太上玄灵北斗本命延生真经注

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Tea-table Talk

    Tea-table Talk

    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。
  • THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES

    THE HOUND OF THE BASKERVILLES

    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
  • 花样偶像

    花样偶像

    三个偶像团体,两组情侣,到底哪个才是你的菜。萌系少年萌化你,霸道总裁爱上你,柔系暖男治愈你,冷酷冰山冰封你,妖孽帅哥缠住你。他们不仅仅是偶像也是一个个频繁的人,也渴望爱情。
  • 重生之校霸十八岁

    重生之校霸十八岁

    三十一岁的待产妇女发现老公出轨,不当包子,暴打渣夫,手撕小三,却因为难产死在手术台上。再醒来,竟然成为十八岁的高中太妹?重来一次,只想做个温婉的白莲花美少女。然而校园里的男碧池和女碧池们接踵而来。小弟:大姐,揍人去!周婧:每天都被约架真的好累,喂,那个风云学霸,有没有兴趣和我组个cp?
  • 露天电影

    露天电影

    秦山原多年前偶然和一个村妇上过床,却不知人家还一直沉迷在这个梦中,结果给他日后惹下了大麻烦……
  • 鬼医嫡女:腹黑世子无良妻

    鬼医嫡女:腹黑世子无良妻

    她是医学界的风云人物,却穿越成了一个要什么没什么的废柴花痴小姐,这也就算了还被人无缘无故的给骂了一顿了!说她不知羞耻,被休了还来四王府。姐不说话真当姐是hellokitty啊!任你虐的?既然你敢做就要承担的起做了这件事情的后果!被休就被休,姐还怕你不成!像你这种丢到大街上连狗都要瞎眼睛的人,就算你求我我也不稀罕!大仲马!她狡猾,她无良,她会算计,从来不让自己吃亏,可是为什么偏偏每一次遇见那个要命的人之后,自己就很背啊!
  • 七之魂隐

    七之魂隐

    一个拥有特殊能力的中国女孩,一个对爱情执着坚定的日本男孩。他们的爱情何去何从?一个个事件的背后,每个灵魂都向你诉说着它们的故事。异国,同性,身残,牢狱,外表,时间,金钱地位,什么才是真正的爱情?这是一个关系着灵魂的问题,他,她,它,请你和我一起见证他们的故事。
  • 神谕全面唤起

    神谕全面唤起

    这是——无论什么样的绝望都不能掩饰住的希望之光,这光温暖世界、拯救世人,却唯独无法救赎自身。闪耀的记忆随风而去,看不到前路只有岁月如梭。积累的时光化作食粮,在彷徨、在寻求。有你相伴,内心像被填满一般。就算要迎来世界的终结。回到那幸福的日子,这是我们无法回避的命运。被爱着、感不到痛楚。不会害怕,哪怕只有一瞬能够回到从前。你不会独自一人逝去,即使有此为证。直到必须接受命运的那一刻,生命之火似幻湮灭,宣告梦的终结。闪耀的光芒在黑暗中消失,折断羽翼预示着终结。若是这样,便唤我之名。我的名字是——
  • 钢琴恋曲:樱花萌芽成爱

    钢琴恋曲:樱花萌芽成爱

    搞什么?好歹她也是一代众人膜拜女神,剽悍女汉子!怎么能被蓝俊熙这个恶魔王子给打倒呢?校园决战,校园王子vs钢琴公主,谁胜谁负?在两人战斗的过程中,感情悄悄升温,爱情种子在悄悄萌芽但却在战斗的过程中,她的心越来越偏向那个讨厌的家伙……当爱情开始,面对霸气十足帅气王子的追求,钢琴公主会不会同意?樱花树下熟悉的钢琴恋曲,唤起了谁的恋情?指间的旋律,醉心的乐曲,谁……敲醒了她的音符?谁……奏响了她的心之门?倾dream樱花,浪漫幻想成曲,这一季,如雪一般的樱花恋情,是否会在花期中结束?当爱情种子懵懂悄悄发芽,才知道他们的爱情,苦涩于咖啡……
  • 明灭晨星

    明灭晨星

    曾经的星际争霸职业选手徐明在一次打比赛的过程中穿越到星际争霸年间。好吧,既然穿过来,不做点什么简直对不起自己。枪兵坦克,维京雷神全都玩的转。不要问我怎么知道维京战机克黄金舰队的,哥就是知道。当然了,穿过来还附送一个妹妹,那真是再好不过的事情了。。。什么?刚开始不给兵?特么就老子加上老子一个妹妹单挑那么多小狗?想知道哥哥我两个枪兵咋挑狗狗群的吗?。。。那就点进来吧。。。哈哈哈。。。
  • 天意眷顾,我们终有一天会各得其所

    天意眷顾,我们终有一天会各得其所

    22个爱情故事,22种跌宕人生。他们一个个都爱得小心而慌张,一路情事,既有身体的坚守,也有内心的一片狼藉。原来,一次恋爱,一个手势,一句诺言,都是他们爱之人生的一种隐喻,不在此时,也在彼地,皆成未了之愿未尽之缘。他们,将拧巴、卑微、纠结和悲凉,一一呈现,又将你温暖打动。不为争执。不为解释。只求默默还原和追溯。
  • 迎接我的那一抹黯淡彩虹

    迎接我的那一抹黯淡彩虹

    彩虹其实离你并不远,它只不过是在等待着雨天。可若没有迎接它的另一道彩虹,它只能悄无声息的离开,因为它知道,不会有另一道彩虹的出现了。。