登陆注册
37946200000075

第75章 CHAPTER XI(3)

Ellen felt the sun now on her left cheek and knew that the day was waning and that Colter was swinging farther to the northwest. She had never before ridden through such heavy forest and down and up such wild canyons. Toward sunset the deepest and ruggedest canyon halted their advance. Colter rode to the right, searching for a place to get down through a spruce thicket that stood on end. Presently he dismounted and the others followed suit. Ellen found she could not lead Spades because he slid down upon her heels, so she looped the end of her reins over the pommel and left him free. She herself managed to descend by holding to branches and sliding all the way down that slope.

She heard the horses cracking the brush, snorting and heaving. One pack slipped and had to be removed from the horse, and rolled down. At the bottom of this deep, green-walled notch roared a stream of water.

Shadowed, cool, mossy, damp, this narrow gulch seemed the wildest place Ellen had ever seen. She could just see the sunset-flushed, gold-tipped spruces far above her. The men repacked the horse that had slipped his burden, and once more resumed their progress ahead, now turning up this canyon. There was no horse trail, but deer and bear trails were numerous. The sun sank and the sky darkened, but still the men rode on; and the farther they traveled the wilder grew the aspect of the canyon.

At length Colter broke a way through a heavy thicket of willows and entered a side canyon, the mouth of which Ellen had not even descried.

It turned and widened, and at length opened out into a round pocket, apparently inclosed, and as lonely and isolated a place as even pursued rustlers could desire. Hidden by jutting wall and thicket of spruce were two old log cabins joined together by roof and attic floor, the same as the double cabin at the Jorth ranch.

Ellen smelled wood smoke, and presently, on going round the cabins, saw a bright fire. One man stood beside it gazing at Colter's party, which evidently he had heard approaching.

"Hullo, Queen!" said Colter. How's Tad?"

"He's holdin' on fine," replied Queen, bending over the fire, where he turned pieces of meat.

"Where's father?" suddenly asked Ellen, addressing Colter.

As if he had not heard her, he went on wearily loosening a pack.

Queen looked at her. The light of the fire only partially shone on his face. Ellen could not see its expression. But from the fact that Queen did not answer her question she got further intimation of an impending catastrophe. The long, wild ride had helped prepare her for the secrecy and taciturnity of men who had resorted to flight. Perhaps her father had been delayed or was still off on the deadly mission that had obsessed him; or there might, and probably was, darker reason for his absence. Ellen shut her teeth and turned to the needs of her horse.

And presently. returning to the fire, she thought of her uncle.

"Queen, is my uncle Tad heah?" she asked.

"Shore. He's in there," replied Queen, pointing at the nearer cabin.

Ellen hurried toward the dark doorway. She could see how the logs of the cabin had moved awry and what a big, dilapidated hovel it was.

As she looked in, Colter loomed over her--placed a familiar and somehow masterful hand upon her. Ellen let it rest on her shoulder a moment.

Must she forever be repulsing these rude men among whom her lot was cast?

Did Colter mean what Daggs had always meant? Ellen felt herself weary, weak in body, and her spent spirit had not rallied. Yet, whatever Colter meant by his familiarity, she could not bear it. So she slipped out from under his hand.

"Uncle Tad, are y'u heah?" she called into the blackness. She heard the mice scamper and rustle and she smelled the musty, old, woody odor of a long-unused cabin.

"Hello, Ellen!" came a voice she recognized as her uncle's, yet it was strange. "Yes. I'm heah--bad luck to me! . . . How 're y'u buckin' up, girl?"

"I'm all right, Uncle Tad--only tired an' worried. I--"

"Tad, how's your hurt?" interrupted Colter.

"Reckon I'm easier," replied Jorth, wearily, "but shore I'm in bad shape.

I'm still spittin' blood. I keep tellin' Queen that bullet lodged in my lungs-but he says it went through."

"Wal, hang on, Tad!" replied Colter, with a cheerfulness Ellen sensed was really indifferent.

"Oh, what the hell's the use!" exclaimed Jorth. "It's all--up with us--Colter!"

"Wal, shut up, then," tersely returned Colter. "It ain't doin' y'u or us any good to holler."

Tad Jorth did not reply to this. Ellen heard his breathing and it did not seem natural. It rasped a little--came hurriedly--then caught in his throat. Then he spat. Ellen shrunk back against the door.

He was breathing through blood.

"Uncle, are y'u in pain?" she asked.

"Yes, Ellen--it burns like hell," he said.

"Oh! I'm sorry. . . . Isn't there something I can do?"

"I reckon not. Queen did all anybody could do for me--now--unless it's pray."

Colter laughed at this--the slow, easy, drawling laugh of a Texan.

But Ellen felt pity for this wounded uncle. She had always hated him.

He had been a drunkard, a gambler, a waster of her father's property; and now he was a rustler and a fugitive, lying in pain, perhaps mortally hurt.

"Yes, uncle--I will pray for y'u," she said, softly.

The change in his voice held a note of sadness that she had been quick to catch.

"Ellen, y'u're the only good Jorth--in the whole damned lot," he said.

"God! I see it all now. . . . We've dragged y'u to hell!"

"Yes, Uncle Tad, I've shore been dragged some--but not yet--to hell," she responded, with a break in her voice.

"Y'u will be--Ellen--unless--"

"Aw, shut up that kind of gab, will y'u?" broke in Colter, harshly.

It amazed Ellen that Colter should dominate her uncle, even though he was wounded. Tad Jorth had been the last man to take orders from anyone, much less a rustler of the Hash Knife Gang. This Colter began to loom up in Ellen's estimate as he loomed physically over her, a lofty figure, dark motionless, somehow menacing.

同类推荐
  • 前汉书平话

    前汉书平话

    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。
  • The Book of Tea

    The Book of Tea

    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。
  • 下第有感

    下第有感

    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。
  • 樵语

    樵语

    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。
  • 佛说妙吉祥菩萨所问大乘法螺经

    佛说妙吉祥菩萨所问大乘法螺经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 错孕小秘书

    错孕小秘书

    她不过是不小心上错了床,他用得着连续数夜向她索欢吗?呜呜,才不要捏,她要逃,逃的远远地,叫他找不着她……却没想到,那数夜的肌肤之亲已经让她有了他的宝宝啦……
  • 诸天最强拯救

    诸天最强拯救

    我的过去竟然是大能。还为自己制定了一个系统,凭借系统我可以去诸天万界融合我的分魂。我的分魂是万圭,高要,石小猛,……想要融合,必须满足他们的心愿。
  • 异界轮回纵横

    异界轮回纵横

    七世轮回,终成神。看遍人界丑恶,唯有他,她看不透。当她不再是一个人时,她发现,原来还有信任和温情这一说。第七世,若你无法成神,那我便陪你沉沦。
  • 职场女神志

    职场女神志

    职场中是否存在奇迹?是的!但是奇迹只青睐那些已经准备好了的人。职场的成功向来都是蓄势已久,从一个个平凡、坚韧和无奈的日子中成长起来的。
  • 我的个人反派系统

    我的个人反派系统

    一次意外,穿越到正火热的游戏中,而且担任游戏里的反派?幸运的是,在游戏开始前,还有3个月时光,可以准备……
  • 异变王征

    异变王征

    也许会在未来的某一天,人类将不再是这个世界的顶端生物。面对未知的危机,唯有进化才能更加安全的生存下去。强大将会是这个新世界唯一的法则,弱者只能任由强者支配。这是游戏吗?不,这不是!这只是另一种进化的征程。
  • 天生我倒霉(神鬼皆愁系列之一)

    天生我倒霉(神鬼皆愁系列之一)

    都是“力量”惹的祸!拥有超能力又不是他的错!为什么竟会被卷入魔界大纷争呢?危险人物变成前世的未婚妻,自己被丢来一堆根本不想要的责任和记忆。就连熟悉的哥哥也要变成终极大BOSS!呜——难道真的是天生“我”倒霉吗?一千年前就深深埋下情感的沼泽,今生难道他再也不能从容逃脱了吗?
  • 南陵街口

    南陵街口

    誰都需要得到一份一往情深純純的愛,希望這是個王子與公主的故事。
  • 菜根

    菜根

    六界八荒之时,不周山之崩塌,女娲大神以补天力挽狂澜,解救苍生,残余之石,生于地脉,千百年后,一座玉山拔地而起。我菜根就只知道这么多啦。可我天赋在于攻玉。识得天下美器玉宝。闲来无事酿酿酒,自作神仙。
  • 不曾迟到的邂逅

    不曾迟到的邂逅

    小镇上的普通姑娘张欢一和妹妹张文欢,从小便成为了留守儿童,在通过自己一系列的努力后,张欢一终于成为了一名畅销作家,在一次无意之中,张欢一和一个明星(肖顾)竟在不知晓对方的情况下加了微信,俩人在微信上聊得很好,终于肖顾安排了网友见面,张欢一看见是他,惊喜交加……从此开启高甜生活……