登陆注册
14821200000039

第39章

The ranger thought rapidly. This Yaqui would live unless left there to die or be murdered by the Mexicans when they found courage to sneak back to the well. It never occurred to Gale to abandon the poor fellow. That was where his old training, the higher order of human feeling, made impossible the following of any elemental instinct of self-preservation. All the same, Gale knew he multiplied his perils a hundredfold by burdening himself with a crippled Indian.

Swiftly he set to work, and with rifle ever under his hand, and shifting glance spared from his task, he bound up the Yaqui's wounds. At the same time he kept keen watch.

The Indians' burros and the horses of the raiders were all out of sight. Time was too valuable for Gale to use any in what might be a vain search. Therefore, he lifted the Yaqui upon Sol's broad shoulders and climbed into the saddle. At a word Sol dropped his head and started eastward up the trail, walking swiftly, without resentment for his double burden.

Far ahead, between two huge mesas where the trail mounted over a pass, a long line of dust clouds marked the position of the horses that had escaped from the corral. Those that had been stolen would travel straight and true for home, and perhaps would lead the others with them. The raiders were left on the desert without guns or mounts.

Blanco Sol walked or jog-trotted six miles to the hour. At that gait fifty miles would not have wet or turned a hair of his dazzling white coat. Gale, bearing in mind the ever-present possibility of encountering more raiders and of being pursued, saved the strength of the horse. Once out of sight of Papago Well, Gale dismounted and walked beside the horse, steadying with one firm hand the helpless, dangling Yaqui.

The sun cleared the eastern ramparts, and the coolness of morning fled as if before a magic foe. The whole desert changed. The grays wore bright; the mesquites glistened; the cactus took the silver hue of frost, and the rocks gleamed gold and red. Then, as the heat increased, a wind rushed up out of the valley behind Gale, and the hotter the sun blazed down the swifter rushed the wind.

The wonderful transparent haze of distance lost its bluish hue for one with tinge of yellow. Flying sand made the peaks dimly outlined.

Gale kept pace with his horse. He bore the twinge of pain that darted through his injured hip at every stride. His eye roved over the wide, smoky prospect seeking the landmarks he knew.

When the wild and bold spurs of No Name Mountains loomed through a rent in flying clouds of sand he felt nearer home. Another hour brought him abreast of a dark, straight shaft rising clear from a beetling escarpment. This was a monument marking the international boundary line. When he had passed it he had his own country under foot. In the heat of midday he halted in the shade of a rock, and, lifting the Yak down, gave him a drink. Then, after a long, sweeping survey of the surrounding desert, he removed Sold's saddle and let him roll, and took for himself a welcome rest and a bite to eat.

The Yak was tenacious of life. He was still holding his own.

For the first time Gale really looked at the Indian to study him.

He had a large head nobly cast, and a face that resembled a shrunken mask. It seemed chiseled in the dark-red, volcanic lava of his Sooner wilderness. The Indian's eyes were always black and mystic, but this Yak's encompassed all the tragic desolation of the desert. They were fixed on Gale, moved only when he moved.

The Indian was short and broad, and his body showed unusual muscular development, although he seemed greatly emaciated from starvation or illness.

Gale resumed his homeward journey. When he got through the pass he faced a great depression, as rough as if millions of gigantic spikes had been driven by the hammer of Thorn into a seamed and cracked floor. This was Altar Valley. It was a chaos of array's, canyons, rocks, and ridges all mantled with cactus, and at its eastern end it claimed the dry bed of Forlorn River and water when there was any. With a wounded, helpless man across the saddle, this stretch of thorny and contorted desert was practically impassable.

Yet Gale headed into it unflinchingly. He would carry the Yaqui as far as possible, or until death made the burden no longer a duty.

Blanco Sol plodded on over the dragging sand, up and down the steep, loose banks of washes, out on the rocks, and through the rows of white-toothed choyas.

The sun sloped westward, bending fiercer heat in vengeful, parting reluctance. The wind slackened. The dust settled. And the bold, forbidding front of No Name Mountains changed to red and gold.

Gale held grimly by the side of the tireless, implacable horse, holding the Yaqui on the saddle, taking the brunt of the merciless thorns. In the end it became heartrending toil. His heavy chaps dragged him down; but he dared not go on without them, for, thick and stiff as they were, the terrible, steel-bayoneted spikes of the choyas pierced through to sting his legs.

To the last mile Gale held to Blanco Sol's gait and kept ever-watchful gaze ahead on the trail. Then, with the low, flat houses of Forlorn River shining red in the sunset, Gale flagged and rapidly weakened. The Yaqui slipped out of the saddle and dropped limp in the sand. Gale could not mount his horse. He clutched Sol's long tail and twisted his hand in it and staggered on.

Blanco Sol whistled a piercing blast. He scented cool water and sweet alfalfa hay. Twinkling lights ahead meant rest. The melancholy desert twilight rapidly succeeded the sunset. It accentuated the forlorn loneliness of the gray, winding river of sand and its grayer shores. Night shadows trooped down from the black and looming mountains.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 造化鸿蒙

    造化鸿蒙

    传说人死后来到鬼门关,途径黄泉,路的尽头有条河,名曰忘川河,河上有座桥,名曰奈何桥,桥上有个亭子,亭中有位孟婆,他给每个经过的人送上一碗忘川水,忘记一切进入忘川河,忘川河尽头有块石头,名为三生石三生石记载今生来世,千年之后苦心年不灭,为了保护前世今生的爱人,莫离再次踏入鬼门关。
  • 创世龙枪

    创世龙枪

    持龙枪,看六道,踏金龙,游太虚,胜者王,败者寇,洪荒之子,对战邪灵,太虚创世,实力为颠。
  • 镜玉罗丽的护花天使

    镜玉罗丽的护花天使

    一场大雨倾泻而下地淋透了女孩的全身,而在她口口声声带着哭腔喊的“妈妈”却撑着伞,背着一袋钱远走高飞,在这场“离别雨”中消失了身,只留下她那未满三岁的女儿......
  • 袁宝华文集第六卷:文选(1997年1月-2011年5月)

    袁宝华文集第六卷:文选(1997年1月-2011年5月)

    本书为十卷本,汇集了作者在解放初期恢复东北工业,制定和实施“一五”计划,赴苏谈判156项工程,三年“大跃进”大炼钢铁,国民经济调整,建立新中国物资管理体制,“文化大革命”期间国民经济运行,改革开放期间国民经济管理,企业整顿和改革,制定《企业法》,开创职工教育和MBA教育工作,开拓企业思想政治工作,创建民间经济类社团,建设中国企业家队伍,以及担任中国人民大学校长工作中的理论著作和文章。
  • 御妖王

    御妖王

    一个叫钟志天的高中生。看似普普通通。身体内封存着惊人的秘密,直到有一天他的母亲被妖杀害,他才知道自己的身世之秘,于是踏上了一条复仇之路……
  • 天组

    天组

    天组,华夏一个特殊的部队,九个年青人在各种命运的错位下相聚到了一起。服役期只有五年,五年后国家不再承认他们曾经的身份,退役后他们又该何去何从?
  • 异界来的超级护卫

    异界来的超级护卫

    因为能力特殊,他进入了一个特殊团队里,里边有先进的铠甲,世界顶级的杀手,古武的高手,修仙的道士。他一个异界来的晶石元素师,无意中在地球修齐了五中晶石元素,成为真正的元素之神。元素是什么,元素就是一切!!!怎么样才能成为可怕的最强者,那就是去征服,征服!征服!!小李飞刀的速度!仙法般的魔法幻化!媲美九阳神功的爆发力!
  • 女尊:曾有女帝心悦卿

    女尊:曾有女帝心悦卿

    一个是女将军穿成女帝的冷静沉着,一个是宅男穿成美男的荒唐事实。在这场你追我赶的游戏里,究竟良人是相拥入怀牵手到最后还是从此天涯分离两相忘?黎音陵:“跟孤回家。”苏楠竹:“你不是不要我了吗?”怎会,明明就是喜欢极了。
  • 眼中泪我的公主

    眼中泪我的公主

    一定会完本!警告我的读者,在这里开本!每一个男人都有心目当中女神
  • 就想独宠你

    就想独宠你

    她,善良聪慧、可爱动人、孝顺父母。他,有钱的富二代、花花公子、桀骜不训。看似毫不相关的两人,却是彼此的羁绊,经历一场又一场的风雨困难······