登陆注册
15488800000040

第40章 CHAPTER VI(1)

>From this hour Ellen Jorth bent all of her lately awakened intelligence and will to the only end that seemed to hold possible salvation for her.

In the crisis sure to come she did not want to be blind or weak.

Dreaming and indolence, habits born in her which were often a comfort to one as lonely as she, would ill fit her for the hard test she divined and dreaded. In the matter of her father's fight she must stand by him whatever the issue or the outcome; in what pertained to her own principles, her womanhood, and her soul she stood absolutely alone.

Therefore, Ellen put dreams aside, and indolence of mind and body behind her. Many tasks she found, and when these were done for a day she kept active in other ways, thus earning the poise and peace of labor.

Jorth rode off every day, sometimes with one or two of the men, often with a larger number. If he spoke of such trips to Ellen it was to give an impression of visiting the ranches of his neighbors or the various sheep camps. Often he did not return the day he left. When he did get back he smelled of rum and appeared heavy from need of sleep.

His horses were always dust and sweat covered. During his absences Ellen fell victim to anxious dread until he returned. Daily he grew darker and more haggard of face, more obsessed by some impending fate.

Often he stayed up late, haranguing with the men in the dim-lit cabin, where they drank and smoked, but seldom gambled any more. When the men did not gamble something immediate and perturbing was on their minds.

Ellen had not yet lowered herself to the deceit and suspicion of eavesdropping, but she realized that there was a climax approaching in which she would deliberately do so.

In those closing May days Ellen learned the significance of many things that previously she had taken as a matter of course. Her father did not run a ranch. There was absolutely no ranching done, and little work.

Often Ellen had to chop wood herself. Jorth did not possess a plow.

Ellen was bound to confess that the evidence of this lack dumfounded her.

Even old John Sprague raised some hay, beets, turnips. Jorth's cattle and horses fared ill during the winter. Ellen remembered how they used to clean up four-inch oak saplings and aspens. Many of them died in the snow. The flocks of sheep, however, were driven down into the Basin in the fall, and across the Reno Pass to Phoenix and Maricopa.

Ellen could not discover a fence post on the ranch. nor a piece of salt for the horses and cattle, nor a wagon, nor any sign of a sheep-shearing outfit. She had never seen any sheep sheared.

Ellen could never keep track of the many and different horses running loose and hobbled round the ranch. There were droves of horses in the woods, and some of them wild as deer. According to her long-established understanding, her father and her uncles were keen on horse trading and buying.

Then the many trails leading away from the Jorth ranch--these grew to have a fascination for Ellen; and the time came when she rode out on them to see for herself where they led. The sheep ranch of Daggs, supposed to be only a few miles across the ridges, down in Bear Canyon, never materialized at all for Ellen. This circumstance so interested her that she went up to see her friend Sprague and got him to direct her to Bear Canyon, so that she would be sure not to miss it. And she rode from the narrow, maple-thicketed head of it near the Rim down all its length. She found no ranch, no cabin, not even a corral in Bear Canyon. Sprague said there was only one canyon by that name. Daggs had assured her of the exact location on his place, and so had her father. Had they lied? Were they mistaken in the canyon? There were many canyons, all heading up near the Rim, all running and widening down for miles through the wooded mountain, and vastly different from the deep, short, yellow-walled gorges that cut into the Rim from the Basin side.

Ellen investigated the canyons within six or eight miles of her home, both to east and to west. All she discovered was a couple of old log cabins, long deserted. Still, she did not follow out all the trails to their ends. Several of them led far into the deepest, roughest, wildest brakes of gorge and thicket that she had seen. No cattle or sheep had ever been driven over these trails.

This riding around of Ellen's at length got to her father's ears.

Ellen expected that a bitter quarrel would ensue, for she certainly would refuse to be confined to the camp; but her father only asked her to limit her riding to the meadow valley, and straightway forgot all about it. In fact, his abstraction one moment, his intense nervousness the next, his harder drinking and fiercer harangues with the men, grew to be distressing for Ellen. They presaged his further deterioration and the ever-present evil of the growing feud.

One day Jorth rode home in the early morning, after an absence of two nights. Ellen heard the clip-clop of, horses long before she saw them.

"Hey, Ellen! Come out heah," called her father.

Ellen left her work and went outside. A stranger had ridden in with her father, a young giant whose sharp-featured face appeared marked by ferret-like eyes and a fine, light, fuzzy beard. He was long, loose jointed, not heavy of build, and he had the largest hands and feet Ellen bad ever seen. Next Ellen espied a black horse they had evidently brought with them. Her father was holding a rope halter. At once the black horse struck Ellen as being a beauty and a thoroughbred.

"Ellen, heah's a horse for you," said Jorth, with something of pride.

"I made a trade. Reckon I wanted him myself, but he's too gentle for me an' maybe a little small for my weight."

Delight visited Ellen for the first time in many days. Seldom had she owned a good horse, and never one like this.

"Oh, dad! " she exclaimed, in her gratitude.

"Shore he's yours on one condition," said her father.

"What's that?" asked Ellen, as she laid caressing hands on the restless horse.

"You're not to ride him out of the canyon."

"Agreed. . . . All daid black, isn't he, except that white face?

同类推荐
  • 瑜伽师地论略纂

    瑜伽师地论略纂

    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。
  • 送徐大夫赴南海

    送徐大夫赴南海

    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。
  • 淋浊遗精门

    淋浊遗精门

    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。
  • APHORISMS

    APHORISMS

    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。
  • 海壑吟稿

    海壑吟稿

    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。
热门推荐
  • 紫曦旧忆颜

    紫曦旧忆颜

    灵世界里,一个母亲被杀的少年带着自己弟弟妹妹闯荡世界的故事。
  • 阿胡拉神冠

    阿胡拉神冠

    解密世界第五大宗教祆教!一个让饮食界为之震惊的厨艺天才竟是神刀米最得意的关门弟子,年轻的考古博士张思翰,一夜间成为杀害师父的最大嫌疑人,为了解开师父的死亡之谜,他毅然“畏罪潜逃”。尔虞我诈的安史两派斗争延续千年,目的是寻找阿胡拉神冠,但是阿胡拉神冠却被一个神秘的诅咒笼罩。《阿胡拉神冠》情节曲折起伏,精彩刺激——环环相扣的杀机与不断面临的谜题,高潮迭起,险象环生,另有庞大的人物体系以及强大的文化支持。
  • 十六岁的时光

    十六岁的时光

    来自不同学校的三个女生,善良,成绩优异的赵舒蔚,活泼可爱的秦语樱,古灵精怪的蔡梦萱成为了形影不离的闺蜜,遇上了帅气男生程枫,带有体香的彭嘉豪和喜欢招惹人的尹子轩.....程枫在用喻永言来嘲笑赵舒蔚的同时好像喜欢上了她,可能是缘分,他们做了三年同桌,而就在有希望考进同一重点学校的时候,程枫突然转学,这让赵舒蔚该怎么办...
  • 俗物与天才(精典教育)

    俗物与天才(精典教育)

    本书前半部分,作者塞德兹先阐释了自己独特的教育理念而在后半部分,又以小塞德兹的成长经历为主线,论述了天才教育法的实践过程。
  • 天盘穹顶

    天盘穹顶

    浩瀚天界,大陆交汇;七绝禁地,生死刹那!数万年前,七绝禁地从天界中选出一批绝世杰才来参加试炼,天界借此机缘,妄图占统禁地,却曾想,引来天诛之灾,七绝禁地中,六大禁地妖魔邪灵入侵天界,百族奋力抵抗,战火燎天,涂炭苍生,血染天地,经数百年征战后,最终惨胜。自此天界立下契约--任何一族不得踏入禁地,违令:诛灭九族!万年后,当禁地渐渐被世人淡忘,一个从当年大战,唯一没有参与其中大战的禁地内的一个少年,当他重生到一个家族子弟身上,他的结局将会何去何从?
  • 武松纪

    武松纪

    重生少年武二郎,拜师周侗走天涯,结识好汉遇娇娘,逐鹿天下拓封疆。群号:611895475
  • 天降灵女之妖孽小弃妃

    天降灵女之妖孽小弃妃

    唐果很郁闷,不就是不小心掉井里吗?虽然没有淹死,但阴差阳错的闯进了历史上架空的朝代。某男轻轻一笑,宛如百花盛放:“嫁给我,保你只生不死。”唐果挑起他的下巴,红唇微启:“做梦!”结果...一个逃,一个追。爱一个人,是有目的的吗?深陷情网的唐果以为她会是整个穿越史上最幸福的,谁知下一秒,就被无情的打入了地狱。地狱与天堂,一念之差,却相隔万千。
  • 领主你好

    领主你好

    如果现在有人说领主就是土皇帝,就是地主。那肖克一定会呲之以鼻,并且告诉你领主就是一个苦哈哈的包工头。肖克,一个典型的宅男。一次意外让他成为了泽雅大陆的一个小领主。本以为终于可以过上幸福生活的他,发现他的领地已经负债累累,随时都有失去的可能。看肖克如何逆转命运,又是怎么样发展科技,鼓励农业,打造一个异界版的科技帝国。
  • 重生二蛋传奇

    重生二蛋传奇

    穷困潦倒,被当废物看待的张蛋蛋在玩LOL的时候,遇到地震,意外带着LOL的召唤师技能幽灵疾步和闪现,还有一个占卜宝珠,回到了自己上初中的年代,上一世对自己失望的父母,为自己付出很多的兄弟,给自己耻辱的女孩。这一世,张蛋蛋发誓,父母回为自己骄傲,兄弟会为自己喝彩,那些曾经狠狠的用冷水泼自己的人,自己会把冷水烧开了再泼回去!且这三个神奇的技能怎么让重活一次的张蛋蛋主宰命运吧!
  • 爱在细微之处

    爱在细微之处

    以章节题目为主的短篇故事,以爱为名,或是温暖,或是悲情,或是无奈,千般姿态只是为你。