登陆注册
15464200000019

第19章 CHAPTER V(4)

"Bo, thank Heaven I brought you with me!" exclaimed Helen, fervently. "I'll eat if it chokes me."Whereupon she found herself actually hungry, and while she ate she glanced out of the stage, first from one side and then from the other. These windows had no glass and they let the cool night air blow in. The sun had long since sunk. Out to the west, where a bold, black horizon-line swept away endlessly, the sky was clear gold, shading to yellow and blue above. Stars were out, pale and wan, but growing brighter. The earth appeared bare and heaving, like a calm sea. The wind bore a fragrance new to Helen, acridly sweet and clean, and it was so cold it made her fingers numb.

"I heard some animal yelp," said Bo, suddenly, and she listened with head poised.

But Helen heard nothing save the steady clip-clop of hoofs, the clink of chains, the creak and rattle of the old stage, and occasionally the low voices of the men above.

When the girls had satisfied hunger and thirst, night had settled down black. They pulled the cloaks up over them, and close together leaned back in a corner of the seat and talked in whispers. Helen did not have much to say, but Bo was talkative.

"This beats me!" she said once, after an interval. "Where are we, Nell? Those men up there are Mormons. Maybe they are abducting us!""Mr. Dale isn't a Mormon," replied Helen.

"How do you know?"

"I could tell by the way he spoke of his friends.""Well, I wish it wasn't so dark. I'm not afraid of men in daylight. . . . Nell, did you ever see such a wonderful looking fellow? What'd they call him? Milt -- Milt Dale. He said he lived in the woods. If I hadn't fallen in love with that cowboy who called me -- well, I'd be a goner now."After an interval of silence Bo whispered, startlingly, "Wonder if Harve Riggs is following us now?""Of course he is," replied Helen, hopelessly.

"He'd better look out. Why, Nell, he never saw -- he never -- what did Uncle Al used to call it? -- sav -- savvied --that's it. Riggs never savvied that hunter. But I did, you bet.""Savvied! What do you mean, Bo?"

"I mean that long-haired galoot never saw his real danger.

But I felt it. Something went light inside me. Dale never took him seriously at all.""Riggs will turn up at Uncle Al's, sure as I'm born," said Helen.

"Let him turn," replied Bo, contemptuously. "Nell, don't you ever bother your head again about him. I'll bet they're all men out here. And I wouldn't be in Harve Riggs's boots for a lot."After that Bo talked of her uncle and his fatal illness, and from that she drifted back to the loved ones at home, now seemingly at the other side of the world, and then she broke down and cried, after which she fell asleep on Helen's shoulder.

But Helen could not have fallen asleep if she had wanted to.

She had always, since she could remember, longed for a moving, active life; and 'or want of a better idea she had chosen to dream of gipsies. And now it struck her grimly that, if these first few hours of her advent in the West were forecasts of the future, she was destined to have her longings more than fulfilled.

Presently the stage rolled slower and slower, until it came to a halt. Then the horses heaved, the harnesses clinked, the men whispered. Otherwise there was an intense quiet. She looked out, expecting to find it pitch-dark. It was black, yet a transparent blackness. To her surprise she could see a long way. A shooting-star electrified her. The men were listening. She listened, too, but beyond the slight sounds about the stage she heard nothing. Presently the driver clucked to his horses, and travel was resumed.

For a while the stage rolled on rapidly, evidently downhill, swaying from side to side, and rattling as if about to fall to pieces. Then it slowed on a level, and again it halted for a few moments, and once more in motion it began a laborsome climb. Helen imagined miles had been covered. The desert appeared to heave into billows, growing rougher, and dark, round bushes dimly stood out. The road grew uneven and rocky, and when the stage began another descent its violent rocking jolted Bo out of her sleep and in fact almost out of Helen's arms.

"Where am I?" asked Bo, dazedly.

"Bo, you're having your heart's desire, but I can't tell you where you are," replied Helen.

Bo awakened thoroughly, which fact was now no wonder, considering the jostling of the old stage.

"Hold on to me, Nell! . . . Is it a runaway?""We've come about a thousand miles like this, I think,"replied Helen. "I've not a whole bone in my body."Bo peered out of the window.

"Oh, how dark and lonesome! But it'd be nice if it wasn't so cold. I'm freezing.""I thought you loved cold air," taunted Helen.

"Say, Nell, you begin to talk like yourself," responded Bo.

It was difficult to hold on to the stage and each other and the cloak all at once, but they succeeded, except in the roughest places, when from time to time they were bounced around. Bo sustained a sharp rap on the head.

"Oooooo!" she moaned. "Nell Rayner, I'll never forgive you for fetching me on this awful trip.""Just think of your handsome Las Vegas cowboy," replied Helen.

Either this remark subdued Bo or the suggestion sufficed to reconcile her to the hardships of the ride.

Meanwhile, as they talked and maintained silence and tried to sleep, the driver of the stage kept at his task after the manner of Western men who knew how to get the best out of horses and bad roads and distance.

By and by the stage halted again and remained at a standstill for so long, with the men whispering on top, that Helen and Bo were roused to apprehension.

Suddenly a sharp whistle came from the darkness ahead.

"Thet's Roy," said Joe Beeman, in a low voice.

"I reckon. An' meetin' us so quick looks bad," replied Dale.

"Drive on, Bill."

"Mebbe it seems quick to you," muttered the driver, but if we hain't come thirty mile, an' if thet ridge thar hain't your turnin'-off place, why, I don't know nothin'."The stage rolled on a little farther, while Helen and Bo sat clasping each other tight, wondering with bated breath what was to be the next thing to happen.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 世界通史(第三卷)

    世界通史(第三卷)

    《世界通史》分古代史、中世纪史、近代史、现代史、当代史,所述历史始于原始社会,止于21世纪初。本书全景式再现世纪历史,兼收并蓄国内外史学研究新成果,将世界文明悠久历史沉淀下来的丰富的图文资料,按历史编年的形式进行编排,直观介绍世界历史发展进程,全书以2000多幅珍贵图片,配以百万字的文字叙述,全方位介绍世界历史的基础知识,内容涵盖政治、军事、经济、文化、外交、科技、法律、宗教、艺术、民俗等领域。
  • 卖棺材的小女孩

    卖棺材的小女孩

    我是一个半吊子的神棍,靠着忽悠人的本事糊口,在一次机缘巧合的捉鬼事件中,我遇到了胖子,从那以后,我认识的人越来越多,或是江湖上大名鼎鼎的人物,或是一些名声不显的大神。不知不觉,我陷入了这个世上最大的深渊。这里有人,有鬼,有人不人,鬼不鬼的东西,所有的一切形成了这个寻常人永远看不见摸不着的江湖。我探过墓,斗过鬼,也与江湖上的同行殊死决斗,我甚至忘了我是谁。但是,我知道,这个世上最危险的不是鬼,而是人心。这就是江湖,神奇的江湖,足以改变任何人的江湖。
  • 网游之路德大陆

    网游之路德大陆

    还在砍怪累计经验?还在无视火球?还是古代场景?那你就out了。路德大陆给你展现一个全新的网游。
  • 重生之逆转少女

    重生之逆转少女

    重生之前,她天真单纯,很容易相信任何人。可就是这样,她被自认为最亲的人害死。重生之后,她不相信任何人。反而总是认为他总站在她的身边,帮她,和自己作对,所以一次又一次和他吵架。直至最后,她才明白,一切都是她误会了,其实他一直都在她身边帮她……以下是里面的一些小内容:“晨,不要走好不好?”他停下脚步,转过身望着我,她是在叫我不要走吗?“我不想一个人。”我说这句话的时候眼睛还是闭着的,可是却流了眼泪,从眼角一直流到脸部,滴在枕头上。他走向我,坐到我身边,用手轻轻擦拭着我的眼泪。“你怎么了?”我本能地拉着他的衣角,说:“不要走,陪我好不好?”“好,我不走,哪也不去。”
  • 无夏成顾

    无夏成顾

    武侠网游《乱世浮生oline》桃夭服的综合排行榜上,除去遥不可及时常活跃的NO.1大神莫我成顾,还有一个一直灰着头像的第二名,无夏。她曾是桃夭服服战的主指挥,手握神器,众人膜拜,却因识人不清不慎卷入一个三俗的小三门事件,最后名声狼藉,默默离去。某日登小号上线取东西,却无缘无故被大神捡回家。“大神,你怎么会瞧得上愚蠢无能,身残智艰,一无是处.......还这么小白的我?”“直觉。”“大神难道你也有我们女人的第六感?”“嗯。”所以她到底要不要狐假虎威带着大神去收拾那群欺负她的兔崽子呢?
  • 九龙噬天

    九龙噬天

    江晓痴因太过玩劣,被师傅惩罚,使其轮回以煅其骨。一切都靠吞噬才能提升的世界!
  • 登天神起

    登天神起

    天王大陆,传奇诞生之地!当神器满天飞,丹药成堆的时候。得到杀阵大天王传承的他,能否成为新的天王!远古人族禁地又有何种秘密?大陆之外又有何处?杀阵能否以一敌万,极限又是什么?
  • 万劫复

    万劫复

    意外身死,转世成魔,渡劫渡万劫,上天镇压,入地不可,天不容我,看我逆天破苍穹。
  • 不一样的烂赌生涯

    不一样的烂赌生涯

    感恩是一个人与生俱来的本性,是一个人不可磨灭的良知,很多人在成长的过程中,因种种的负面原因,精神世界的理念发生了变质,失去了最初的底色。但也许灵魂深处,感恩依然存在!可对于一个身负巨债赌债、不能称之为人的人,他游离于人性良知与毁灭堕落的边缘,感恩将何去何从?也许,在本书的主人公龙任的身上,你能找到答案!
  • 迷失的狐狸

    迷失的狐狸

    来自狐仙界的死宅狐狸,寻找玉符回家的故事,在寻找玉符的过程却开启了一段神奇的旅途。“喂,这位少年你看到我的玉符了吗?”