登陆注册
37824200000039

第39章 CHAPTER X(3)

Duane doubted that there was a man among them who did not realize his moral wreck and ruin. He had met poor, half witted wretches who knew it. He believed he could enter into their minds and feel the truth of all their lives--the hardened outlaw, coarse, ignorant, bestial, who murdered as Bill Black had murdered, who stole for the sake of stealing, who craved money to gamble and drink, defiantly ready for death, and, like that terrible outlaw, Helm, who cried out on the scaffold, "Let her rip!"The wild youngsters seeking notoriety and reckless adventure;the cowboys with a notch on their guns, with boastful pride in the knowledge that they were marked by rangers; the crooked men from the North, defaulters, forgers, murderers, all pale-faced, flat-chested men not fit for that wilderness and not surviving;the dishonest cattlemen, hand and glove with outlaws, driven from their homes; the old grizzled, bow-legged genuine rustlers--all these Duane had come in contact with, had watched and known, and as he felt with them he seemed to see that as their lives were bad, sooner or later to end dismally or tragically, so they must pay some kind of earthly penalty--if not of conscience, then of fear; if not of fear, then of that most terrible of all things to restless, active men--pain, the pang of flesh and bone.

Duane knew, for he had seen them pay. Best of all, moreover, he knew the internal life of the gun-fighter of that select but by no means small class of which he was representative. The world that judged him and his kind judged him as a machine, a killing-machine, with only mind enough to hunt, to meet, to slay another man. It had taken three endless years for Duane to understand his own father. Duane knew beyond all doubt that the gun-fighters like Bland, like Alloway, like Sellers, men who were evil and had no remorse, no spiritual accusing Nemesis, had something far more torturing to mind, more haunting, more murderous of rest and sleep and peace; and that something was abnormal fear of death. Duane knew this, for he had shot these men; he had seen the quick, dark shadow in eyes, the presentiment that the will could not control, and then the horrible certainty. These men must have been in agony at every meeting with a possible or certain foe--more agony than the hot rend of a bullet. They were haunted, too, haunted by this fear, by every victim calling from the grave that nothing was so inevitable as death, which lurked behind every corner, hid in every shadow, lay deep in the dark tube of every gun. These men could not have a friend; they could not love or trust a woman.

They knew their one chance of holding on to life lay in their own distrust, watchfulness, dexterity, and that hope, by the very nature of their lives, could not be lasting. They had doomed themselves. What, then, could possibly have dwelt in the depths of their minds as they went to their beds on a starry night like this, with mystery in silence and shadow, with time passing surely, and the dark future and its secret approaching every hour--what, then, but hell?

The hell in Duane's mind was not fear of man or fear of death.

He would have been glad to lay down the burden of life, providing death came naturally. Many times he had prayed for it. But that overdeveloped, superhuman spirit of defense in him precluded suicide or the inviting of an enemy's bullet.

Sometimes he had a vague, scarcely analyzed idea that this spirit was what had made the Southwest habitable for the white man.

Every one of his victims, singly and collectively, returned to him for ever, it seemed, in cold, passionless, accusing domination of these haunted hours. They did not accuse him of dishonor or cowardice or brutality or murder; they only accused him of Death. It was as if they knew more than when they were alive, had learned that life was a divine mysterious gift not to be taken. They thronged about him with their voiceless clamoring, drifted around him with their fading eyes.

同类推荐
  • 大乘无量寿经

    大乘无量寿经

    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。
  • 钓矶立谈

    钓矶立谈

    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。
  • 快园道古

    快园道古

    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。
  • 角虎集

    角虎集

    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。
  • 解拳论

    解拳论

    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。
热门推荐
  • 纯洁如斯

    纯洁如斯

    ‘家’中的扼杀,让秦逸意外的重生到了七年前的车祸现场。他第一个要做的,就是救下在车祸中去世的父母。然后凭借自己前世的经验,去解决一个月后那件改变了自己一生的大事。之后,再再向自己暗恋已久的女孩表白…………
  • 穿书之末世心慌慌

    穿书之末世心慌慌

    秦雪进入了自己的梦里,没错,梦里,如果是美男梦秦雪也就忍了,偏偏进入了末世的梦里,丧尸横行,强者为尊,秦雪表示,三十六计,抱大腿为上策,然而,本来想抱大腿的秦雪,却发现,自己抱的这个大腿,好像有点不对劲啊……一切的一切,似乎发展到自己不可预估的方面了,这是,……圈套?
  • 魔兽英雄异界纵横

    魔兽英雄异界纵横

    什么?穿越了!可有逆天神器助我纵横天下?没有?那还说个茄子!召唤兽是什么?龙骑士算不算?斗气别太冲,等我成了剑圣再比试。战武又是什么梗,听说还能开七门,怕是想上天!别动手,有话好......美丽的魔法师小姐姐别误会,其实我也是自己人,真的,你看,我可以召唤火鸡宝宝,特别的可爱。乖巧的魂师小妹妹别害怕,我的灵魂很纯净,让我们来一场没有隔阂的灵魂共鸣。勇敢的冒险者,听说有一冕王冠,我一定要戴在头上,还要披上鲜红的披风,站在魔兽山脉的最高峰,洒一碗最热血的毒鸡汤。兽族很凶猛,魔族很虚荣,巫族在搞鬼,人族笑着打断腿。本想平凡过一生,却迫不得已拿起剑!辱我者,来日必报!欺我者,来日必报!伤我朋友者,来日必报!不要笑,我是认真的!不信的话,动我一下试试,绝对记你一辈子!
  • 如果可以不懂爱

    如果可以不懂爱

    隐婚两年,彼此形同陌路。林深深以为他厌恶自己,从小被家人抛弃的她不想再经历对任何人上心,然后又抛弃的惨状,所以冷淡疏离,却不料一点一点爱上他依赖他……安以恒“放任”了她两年,不闻不问,唾弃她为进豪门算计他的婚姻!可是当他一次次看到自己的兄弟对她温柔体贴,他终于明白自己的心意……接近她了解她,直到她的身世曝光,直到自己的兄弟知道他们的婚姻后出了车祸,他才知道他们之间存在着跨不过去的鸿沟……
  • 苦涩的十七岁

    苦涩的十七岁

    本小说写的是女主姜悦在十七岁这个年纪所遇到的苦涩和美好。
  • 被迫成为最强打工仔

    被迫成为最强打工仔

    买瓶水的功夫你跟我说我嗝屁了?然后又稀里糊涂的让我给你打工?林霄此时一脸懵的看着眼前这个神经病,谁知醒来后的变化让他真的走上了‘打工’的道路。
  • 妾本女儿身之公子芳华

    妾本女儿身之公子芳华

    “你说什么?大点声!!你说我是女的???”芳华公子揪着老和尚的领子恶狠狠地问道。“这是幻玉,相见即是有缘,公子若是不想成为女儿身,将此玉暂戴于身,五年内在旁人眼中公子还是公子”。说罢老和尚闪身消失不见。臭名昭著的风流商公子芳华原为女儿身,这消息要是传了出去…想到这里,碧儿狠狠地打了一个激灵,恨不得自己看不见听不着。风流商公子颜芳华,15岁,是为风靡大陆的中华商团掌舵人,斗纨绔,戏长嫂,抢公主,藏人妻,只有别人想不到,没有公子做不到。公子的人生目标就是找到始祖皇祖训中的完颜女娶其为妻,看看始祖皇口中得完颜女者的天下的完颜女究竟是个什么样子,有何能耐能得天下。
  • 我要刷副本

    我要刷副本

    赵赫来到一个满是副本的异世界。为了生存,他只好不停刷副本。
  • 王爷银子拿来

    王爷银子拿来

    本是富家千金谁知道未婚夫居然和闺蜜好上未婚夫只为钱财一对狗男女在床被逮谁知被推出阳台。老天待我不薄,我居然扯淡般的穿越了!!还被腹黑好色的王爷劫色解毒,奉旨(子)成婚。王爷和福晋能欢喜冤家走到最后么...
  • 六界上尊

    六界上尊

    大世惊现,天才辈出,人杰林立,宝藏尽出。一个个宗门闪现,又一个个悄声毁灭。一位少年从都市走出,进入到这万千世界。尔虞我诈,爱恨情仇,众叛亲离。这些都将发生在他的身上,他能否挺过这些,登上那至尊宝座。