登陆注册
14729000000015

第15章 THE PIMIENTA PANCAKES(1)

While we were rounding up a bunch of the Triangle-O cattle in the Frio bottoms a projecting branch of a dead mesquite caught my wooden stirrup and gave my ankle a wrench that laid me up in camp for a week.

On the third day of my compulsory idleness I crawled out near the grub wagon, and reclined helpless under the conversational fire of Judson Odom, the camp cook. Jud was a monologist by nature, whom Destiny, with customary blundering, had set in a profession wherein he was bereaved, for the greater portion of his time, of an audience.

Therefore, I was manna in the desert of Jud's obmutescence.

Betimes I was stirred by invalid longings for something to eat that did not come under the caption of "grub." I had visions of the maternal pantry "deep as first love, and wild with all regret," and then I asked:

"Jud, can you make pancakes?"

Jud laid down his six-shooter, with which he was preparing to pound an antelope steak, and stood over me in what I felt to be a menacing attitude. He further endorsed my impression that his pose was resentful by fixing upon me with his light blue eyes a look of cold suspicion.

"Say, you," he said, with candid, though not excessive, choler, "did you mean that straight, or was you trying to throw the gaff into me?

Some of the boys been telling you about me and that pancake racket?""No, Jud," I said, sincerely, "I meant it. It seems to me I'd swap my pony and saddle for a stack of buttered brown pancakes with some first crop, open kettle, New Orleans sweetening. Was there a story about pancakes?"Jud was mollified at once when he saw that I had not been dealing in allusions. He brought some mysterious bags and tin boxes from the grub wagon and set them in the shade of the hackberry where I lay reclined.

I watched him as he began to arrange them leisurely and untie their many strings.

"No, not a story," said Jud, as he worked, "but just the logical disclosures in the case of me and that pink-eyed snoozer from Mired Mule Canada and Miss Willella Learight. I don't mind telling you.

"I was punching then for old Bill Toomey, on the San Miguel. One day Igets all ensnared up in aspirations for to eat some canned grub that hasn't ever mooed or baaed or grunted or been in peck measures. So, Igets on my bronc and pushes the wind for Uncle Emsley Telfair's store at the Pimienta Crossing on the Nueces.

"About three in the afternoon I throwed my bridle rein over a mesquite limb and walked the last twenty yards into Uncle Emsley's store. I got up on the counter and told Uncle Emsley that the signs pointed to the devastation of the fruit crop of the world. In a minute I had a bag of crackers and a long-handled spoon, with an open can each of apricots and pineapples and cherries and greengages beside of me with Uncle Emsley busy chopping away with the hatchet at the yellow clings. I was feeling like Adam before the apple stampede, and was digging my spurs into the side of the counter and working with my twenty-four-inch spoon when I happened to look out of the window into the yard of Uncle Emsley's house, which was next to the store.

"There was a girl standing there--an imported girl with fixings on--philandering with a croquet maul and amusing herself by watching my style of encouraging the fruit canning industry.

"I slid off the counter and delivered up my shovel to Uncle Emsley.

"'That's my niece,' says he; 'Miss Willella Learight, down from Palestine on a visit. Do you want that I should make you acquainted?'

"'The Holy Land,' I says to myself, my thoughts milling some as Itried to run 'em into the corral. 'Why not? There was sure angels in Pales--Why, yes, Uncle Emsley,' I says out loud, 'I'd be awful edified to meet Miss Learight.'

"So Uncle Emsley took me out in the yard and gave us each other's entitlements.

"I never was shy about women. I never could understand why some men who can break a mustang before breakfast and shave in the dark, get all left-handed and full of perspiration and excuses when they see a bold of calico draped around what belongs to it. Inside of eight minutes me and Miss Willella was aggravating the croquet balls around as amiable as second cousins. She gave me a dig about the quantity of canned fruit I had eaten, and I got back at her, flat-footed, about how a certain lady named Eve started the fruit trouble in the first free-grass pasture--'Over in Palestine, wasn't it?' says I, as easy and pat as roping a one-year-old.

"That was how I acquired cordiality for the proximities of Miss Willella Learight; and the disposition grew larger as time passed. She was stopping at Pimienta Crossing for her health, which was very good, and for the climate, which was forty per cent. hotter than Palestine.

I rode over to see her once every week for a while; and then I figured it out that if I doubled the number of trips I would see her twice as often.

"One week I slipped in a third trip; and that's where the pancakes and the pink-eyed snoozer busted into the game.

"That evening, while I set on the counter with a peach and two damsons in my mouth, I asked Uncle Emsley how Miss Willella was.

"'Why,' says Uncle Emsley, 'she's gone riding with Jackson Bird, the sheep man from over at Mired Mule Canada.'

"I swallowed the peach seed and the two damson seeds. I guess somebody held the counter by the bridle while I got off; and then I walked out straight ahead till I butted against the mesquite where my roan was tied.

"'She's gone riding,' I whisper in my bronc's ear, 'with Birdstone Jack, the hired mule from Sheep Man's Canada. Did you get that, old Leather-and-Gallops?'

"That bronc of mine wept, in his way. He'd been raised a cow pony and he didn't care for snoozers.

"I went back and said to Uncle Emsley: 'Did you say a sheep man?'

"'I said a sheep man,' says Uncle Emsley again. 'You must have heard tell of Jackson Bird. He's got eight sections of grazing and four thousand head of the finest Merinos south of the Arctic Circle.'

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 独孤魔神

    独孤魔神

    独孤飞扬留残影,逍遥天地一书生。魔神问鼎震天啸,飞扬跋扈为谁雄?道魔大战,封尘万年,魔道式微,道分两级,灵台气紫,逆天而存!不求长存天地,只愿逍遥乾坤。天魔圣体动荡大陆,化仙渡劫飞升再战,一路枯骨血洒魔道,古道古魔纷至沓来,战九天,胜仙皇!立九幽,成魔神!魔道无尽不回头,改天换地掌仙神。少年无罪,血泪交迫,舍身入魔只为报活命之恩,无尽魔道一个人的战役、、、
  • 最后一个道门后裔

    最后一个道门后裔

    小小山村,无意中挖出一句鎏金棺材,一个普通的高中生在机缘巧合下,成功遁入道门。鬼神不仅仅是传说,一条经历常人无法想象,不敢想象的恐怖之路!正等着最后一个道门后裔。
  • 张氏可书

    张氏可书

    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。
  • 异界王朝帝国

    异界王朝帝国

    携美异界游,云浩天与爱人双双穿越,在异界一点点建立起属于自己的王朝帝国……
  • 王俊凯爱上百变妻子

    王俊凯爱上百变妻子

    三年前的分手,直到三年后的相遇,成为情侣.....他们之间总是甜甜的,可是有经过人们的挑拨,他们分手,离婚,霸道总裁到处找,找到了她,可她再一次的逃离他的怀抱。她说过,我们之间的感情需要考验,可是经过这次,我发现我们真的情深缘浅,分开吧....王俊凯:我们不分手好吗?
  • 孤灯缘

    孤灯缘

    长歌一曲泪洒西楼,长剑斩破长虹。血染素衣,当年一壶清酒醉落花阴下,走南闯北历沧桑,浪迹天涯,谁来牵挂?流逝青春,长河断桥头,紫清坤元红尘落尽怎来寻?郎君手把利剑舞无影,妾坐帐前轻描眉,为何两情相悦不相守?正邪不双存,离别不言,寒风玉花碎,此去人独悲。世间又多一孤魂。来世若能在会,纵使相见不相识,多少刀光剑影,明争暗斗苦经营,不阻妾与君来会。“世事沧桑,何必?”“吾既已行此路,哪得回首?”“苦海有边,两情相悦得相守,何苦?”“阁下怎知相恋之苦?”“红颜逝,岁月自无情,为何?”“正邪不两立,天地不容,汝又如何逆天?不必劝,吾心已决,难矣。
  • 溯世劫

    溯世劫

    生而为人,好不容易有了爹,还专坑儿子,好不容易张大,最后还要被女人坑,好不容易当上了皇帝,还要被基友坑,基友坐拥三千佳丽,皇帝独守空房。好吧,在这里面,皇帝是配角,基友是主角。芥子往往都是形容小人物,但是小人物也终究是会有称王称雄的那一天。每一个成功的人的背后都会有可歌可泣的历史,每一个伤疤背后都是万千的思绪深藏其中。血与火的考量,生死的别离又会将懵懂的少年带向何种的深渊?若是不厌烦,请听我娓娓道来。
  • 魔兽公子

    魔兽公子

    谁说魔兽无情?且看梅肖,一个由魔兽抚养长大的孤儿如何纵横大陆
  • 凰舞天下:魔帝,你好坏!

    凰舞天下:魔帝,你好坏!

    她,二十一世纪腹黑狂傲的杀手女王,艳倾天下,风华绝代。一朝身亡,重生异世,洗去蒙尘,天才光芒尽显!本是天之骄子,岂容尔等放肆?!说姐是废材?把你的钛合金狗眼给姐睁大!修灵脉,学炼药,收神兽,夺神器……!外加出神入化的医术,活死人,肉白骨!他,紫祭国温润如玉的白衣王爷,亦是神龙见首不见尾的魔帝殿下,腹黑妖孽,邪肆不羁。执掌万千乾坤,一剑风云尽破!当妖孽美男遇上冰山美人,难得棋逢对手,怎能随便放跑呢?“夫人,今晚谁在上?”某男邪笑。【本文男女主身心干净,男强+女强=爽文!】
  • 综漫之幻想意志

    综漫之幻想意志

    千年前的大战,究竟是为了什么。无数神灵的陨落,是谁的祸。虽然不知道为什么,不过故事就是从这开始的。..............或许你能改变这一切吧