登陆注册
15313800000060

第60章

There were turns-in where a continuance straight ahead would require an airship or a coroner; again turns-out where the direct line would telescope you against the state of California.These we could make out by straining our eyes.The horses plunged and snorted; the buckboard leaped.Fire flashed from the impact of steel against rock, momentarily blinding us to what we should see.Always we descended into the velvet blackness of the abyss, the canon walls rising steadily above us shutting out even the dim illumination of the stars.From time to time our driver, desperately scared, jerked out cheering bits of information.

"My eyes ain't what they was.For the Lord's sake keep a-lookin', boys.""That nigh hoss is deef.There don't seem to be no use saying WHOA to her.""Them brakes don't hold fer sour peanuts.I been figgerin' on tackin' on a new shoe for a week.""I never was over this road but onct, and then Iwas headed th' other way.I was driving of a cor??e."Then, after two hours of it, BING! BANG! SMASH!

our tongue collided with a sheer black wall, no blacker than the atmosphere before it.The trail here took a sharp V turn to the left.We had left the face of the precipice and henceforward would descend the bed of the canon.Fortunately our collision had done damage to nothing but our nerves, so we proceeded to do so.

The walls of the crevice rose thousands of feet above us.They seemed to close together, like the sides of a tent, to leave only a narrow pale lucent strip of sky.The trail was quite invisible, and even the sense of its existence was lost when we traversed groves of trees.One of us had to run ahead of the horses, determining its general direction, locating the sharper turns.The rest depended on the instinct of the horses and pure luck.

It was pleasant in the cool of night thus to run down through the blackness, shouting aloud to guide our followers, swinging to the slope, bathed to the soul in mysteries of which we had no time to take cognizance.

By and by we saw a little spark far ahead of us like a star.The smell of fresh wood smoke and stale damp fire came to our nostrils.We gained the star and found it to be a log smouldering; and up the hill other stars red as blood.So we knew that we had crossed the zone of an almost extinct forest fire, and looked on the scattered camp-fires of an army of destruction.

The moon rose.We knew it by touches of white light on peaks infinitely far above us; not at all by the relieving of the heavy velvet blackness in which we moved.After a time, I, running ahead in my turn, became aware of the deep breathing of animals.

I stopped short and called a warning.Immediately a voice answered me.

"Come on, straight ahead.They're not on the road."When within five feet I made out the huge freight wagons in which were lying the teamsters, and very dimly the big freight mules standing tethered to the wheels.

"It's a dark night, friend, and you're out late.""A dark night," I agreed, and plunged on.Behind me rattled and banged the abused buckboard, snorted the half-wild broncos, groaned the unrepaired brake, softly cursed my companions.

Then at once the abrupt descent ceased.We glided out to the silvered flat, above which sailed the moon.

The hour was seen to be half past one.We had missed our train.Nothing was visible of human habitations.The land was frosted with the moonlight, enchanted by it, etherealized.Behind us, huge and formidable, loomed the black mass of the range we had descended.Before us, thin as smoke in the magic lucence that flooded the world, rose other mountains, very great, lofty as the sky.We could not understand them.The descent we had just accomplished should have landed us on a level plain in which lay our town.But here we found ourselves in a pocket valley entirely surrounded by mountain ranges through which there seemed to be no pass less than five or six thousand feet in height.

We reined in the horses to figure it out.

"I don't see how it can be," said I."We've certainly come far enough.It would take us four hours at the very least to cross that range, even if the railroad should happen to be on the other side of it.""I been through here only once," repeated the driver,--"going the other way.--Then I drew a corpse." He spat, and added as an afterthought, "BEAU-ti-ful Cal-if-or-nia!"We stared at the mountains that hemmed us in.

They rose above us sheer and forbidding.In the bright moonlight plainly were to be descried the brush of the foothills, the timber, the fissures, the canons, the granites, and the everlasting snows.

Almost we thought to make out a thread of a waterfall high up where the clouds would be if the night had not been clear.

"We got off the trail somewhere," hazarded the Tenderfoot.

"Well, we're on a road, anyway," I pointed out.

"It's bound to go somewhere.We might as well give up the railroad and find a place to turn-in.""It can't be far,' encouraged the Tenderfoot;"this valley can't be more than a few miles across.""Gi dap!" remarked the driver.

We moved forward down the white wagon trail approaching the mountains.And then we were witnesses of the most marvelous transformation.For as we neared them, those impregnable mountains, as though panic-stricken by our advance, shrunk back, dissolved, dwindled, went to pieces.Where had towered ten-thousand-foot peaks, perfect in the regular succession from timber to snow, now were little flat hills on which grew tiny bushes of sage.Apassage opened between them.In a hundred yards we had gained the open country, leaving behind us the mighty but unreal necromancies of the moon.

Before us gleamed red and green lights.The mass of houses showed half distinguishable.A feeble glimmer illuminated part of a white sign above the depot.That which remained invisible was evidently the name of the town.That which was revealed was the supplementary information which the Southern Pacific furnishes to its patrons.It read: "Elevation 482 feet." We were definitely out of the mountains.

同类推荐
  • 人间词话删稿

    人间词话删稿

    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。
  • 佛说金光王童子经

    佛说金光王童子经

    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。
  • 西方合论

    西方合论

    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。
  • 大宋宣和遗事

    大宋宣和遗事

    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。
  • 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。
热门推荐
  • 网游之终极商人

    网游之终极商人

    只要你能抓住商机,在游戏里经商一样可以白手起家。只要你能琢磨玩家消费心理,同样可以把原本一万游戏币的装备哄抬十万游戏币。不管是现实还是网络并不是说物以稀为贵,囤积居奇才是关键。凤姐只有一个,为什么没有真心着手抢她的男人呢?原因很简单,她达不到固有抢购的价值。让我们跟着杨瓜瓜从一百万游戏币抄手成为百亿大商................
  • 宫如烟

    宫如烟

    『宫如烟』主要写了月琉璃与众不同的人生,中毒,受伤,遭人陷害…之后与有情人成为眷属的故事。本书属本人的处女座,写的不好,还请大家谅解,多提意见!
  • 豪门重生:亿万前夫靠边站

    豪门重生:亿万前夫靠边站

    一场精心策划的阴谋夺取了她的生命,而她全然不知,只念着他的背叛。重生之后的她未曾想过报复,只想要远远地逃离他,却偏偏与她的愿望背道而驰,他提前出现在了她的生命里。相遇,她只当不曾相识,他却步步进逼!
  • 荒雨

    荒雨

    寂寥的夜空,下着雨,雨水顺着铠甲的纹路滚落在冰凉的岩石上。他平静的俯视着这片苍茫的大地,却不知自己到底身在何处。他仰望着天空,赤红的雷电划破了漆黑的夜空,照出了他呆滞的双眼。他期待着走上莫须有的轮回,盼望着在那里能够赎回他犯下的罪孽。他乞求在轮回里遇到错过的亡魂,弥补他心中的悔恨。
  • 紫云修仙传

    紫云修仙传

    山村小子紫云经历兄长与父亲被妖兽杀死,自己被妖蛇吞食,但幸运没有死,然后得到了一位真丹境高人鬼魂的指点,从此进入了修仙者的行列,看他如何在这复杂的修仙世界中经历起起落落,悲欢离合。历经无数生死,感悟修仙之道,最终能否成就长生大道。
  • 许谁一世不飘零

    许谁一世不飘零

    匆匆一遇,谁的一见钟情,蹉跎了谁的年华?子悠:陌上人如玉,公子世无双,说的就是你吧?李冉:我以为我会就如此接受命运,接受这世人对女子残忍的束缚,现在我愿意冲破这束缚,追随你的脚步。李天傲:曾是惊鸿照影来,与我,只要你欢喜,一切都值得。欧阳瑾:最是无情帝王家,在这深宫我看惯了冷漠争斗,谢谢上天把你送到我身边,给了我从未敢奢求的快乐。。。
  • 渔村爱情故事

    渔村爱情故事

    八十年代初。一个发生在山东胶东小渔村的真实爱情故事。王青草爱上了同村青年王冬生,但是他们的爱情却一波三折,离奇曲折。时光如粼粼河水向前流淌到新的世纪,最终,两人之间究竟揭开了怎样的惊天秘密。真爱是永远的主题,驾驭真爱的秘密是什么呢?也许故事会告诉你些许答案。读者中应该不乏胶东半岛海边出生的人,这里的原生态的海边农村风情会让我们想起故乡的美好。如果你不是,这里也能感受到浓浓的胶东风。好了,请随着我的笔触,穿越故事中浓浓的历史迷雾,走进八十年代初胶东小渔村春天里一个普通的雨后清晨……
  • 做人要学曾国藩 做事要学胡雪岩

    做人要学曾国藩 做事要学胡雪岩

    善于识人用人是曾国藩成功的根本要诀。他对于人才非常重视,不论在何时,都注意留心人才。他认为,“为政之要,首务得人”,“得一好人,便为天地消一浩劫”,“多事之秋,得一人则重于山岳,少一人则弱于婴儿”,“除得人之外,无一事可恃”。
  • 名侦探柯南之凉宫版

    名侦探柯南之凉宫版

    伊灵雪,莫名其妙的来到柯南世界,因为一个短信告诉她在那里的身世,同时也告诉她的任务,只是没想到任务竟然是……………在那同时也开启凉宫积雪之路……………
  • 北不见归雁

    北不见归雁

    三年前的一个夜晚,陆蔓拥有的一切都支离破碎,她的姐姐踏上红尘路,而她则从乖乖女变成了叛逆少女。三年后的一次打架事件,让顾笙结识了陆蔓,顾笙倾尽所有只为陆蔓可以展颜一笑。可事事不如人意,三年前的被害少女找上门来,将她推上风口浪尖,彻底将她摧残。一切阴谋的背后一个黑衣人莞尔一笑。“陆蔓,我要让你生不如死。”陆蔓报之以灿烂的微笑。“谁是最后的赢家还说不定。”我是一只来自温暖南方的大雁,前往寒冷的北方寻找你的足迹。