Charlie to the Rescue by R. M. Ballantyne (unputdownable books .txt) đ
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- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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âRight, Jackson,â returned Dick, âbut Black Polly is not used to travellinâ night anâ day. If she was, Iâd take her back to-night, for moonlight is good enough for a man that has twice taken soundinâs along the road, anâ whoâs well up in all the buoys, beacons, anâ landmarks, but it would be cruelty to the good mare.â
âDuty first, Dick, the mare second. You donât need to trouble about her. Iâll lend ye one oâ my best horses anâ take good care oâ Black Polly till Hunky Ben claims her.â
âThank âee, Jackson, but Iâll not part wiâ Black Polly till Iâve delivered her to her owner. I wonât accept your invite to stop here three or four days, but neither will I start off to-night. Iâve too much regard for the good mare to do that.â
âHo! ho!â thought his host, with an inward chuckle, âitâs not so much the mare as Mary that youâve a regard for, my young sailor!â
But in spite of his name the man was much too polite to express this opinion aloud. He merely said, âWell, Dick, you know that youâre welcome to squat here as long or as short a time as you like, anâ use the best oâ my horses, if so disposed, or do the postboy business on Black Polly. Do as ye like wiâ me anâ mine, boy, for itâs only fair to say that but for your help this day my Mary anâ me would have bin done for.â
They reached the stable as he was speaking, and Jackson at once turned the conversation on the horses, thus preventing a reply from Dickâin regard to which the latter was not sorry.
In the stall the form of Black Polly looked grander than ever, for her head nearly touched the roof as she raised it and turned a gleaming eye on the visitors, at the same time uttering a slight whinny of expectation.
âWhy, I do believe she has transferred her affections to you, Dick,â said Jackson. âI never heard her do that before except to Hunky Ben, and sheâs bin many a time in that stall.â
âMore likely that she expected Ben had come to bid her good-night,â returned the sailor.
But the way in which the beautiful creature received Dickâs caresses induced Jackson to hold to his opinion. It is more probable, however, that some similarity of disposition between Dick Darvall and Hunky Ben had commended itself to the mare, which was, as much as many a human being, of an amiable, loving disposition. She thoroughly appreciated the tenderness and forbearance of her master, and, more recently, of Dick. No doubt the somewhat rough way in which she had been thrown to the ground that day may have astonished her, but it evidently had not soured her temper.
That night Dick did not see much of Mary. She was far too busy attending to, and providing for, the numerous guests at the ranch to be able to give individual attention to any one in particularâeven had she been so disposed.
Buttercup of course lent able assistance to her mistress in these domestic duties, and, despite her own juvenilityâwe might perhaps say, in consequence of itâgave Mary much valuable advice.
âDat manâs in a bad way,â said she, as, with her huge lips pouting earnestly, she examined the contents of a big pot on the fire. The black maidenâs lips were so pronounced and expressive that they might almost be said to constitute her face!
âWhat man?â asked Mary, who, with her sleeves tucked up to the elbows, was manipulating certain proportions of flour, water, and butter.
âWhy, Dick, oh course. Heâs de only man wuth speakinâ about.â
Mary blushed a little in spite of herself, and laughed hilariously as she repliedâ
âDear me, Butter, I didnât think he had made such a deep impression on you.â
ââS not onây on me heâs made a âmpressân,â returned the maid, carelessly. âHe makes de same âmpressân on eberybody.â
âHow dâyou know?â asked Mary.
ââCause I see,â answered the maid.
She turned her eyes on her mistress as she spoke, and immediately a transformation scene was presented. The eyes dwindled into slits as the cheeks rose, and the serious pout became a smile so magnificent that ivory teeth and scarlet gums set in ebony alone met the gaze of the beholder.
âButtercup,â exclaimed Mary, stamping her little foot firmly, âitâs boiling over!â
She was right. Teeth and gums vanished. The eyes returned, so did the pout, and the pot was whipped off the fire in a twinkling, but not before a mighty hiss was heard and the head of the black maiden was involved in a cloud of steam and ashes!
âI told you so!â cried Mary, quoting from an ancient Manuscript.
âNo, you diânât,â retorted her servitor, speaking from the depths of her own consciousness.
We refrain from following the conversation beyond this point, as it became culinary and flat.
Next day Dick Darvall, refreshedâand, owing to some quite inexplicable influences, enlivenedâmounted Black Polly and started off alone for Traitorâs Trap, leaving his heart and a reputation for cool pluck behind him.
Of course he was particularly watchful and circumspect on the way up, but saw nothing to call for a further display of either pluck or coolness. On arriving at the cave he found his friends there much as he had left them. Buck Tom, owing to the skilled attentions which he had received from that amateur surgeon, Hunky Ben, and a long refreshing sleepâthe result of partial relief from painâwas a good deal better; and poor Leather, cheered by the hope thus raised of his friendâs recovery, was himself considerably improved in health and spirits.
Fortunately for his own peace of mind, it never seemed to occur to Shank that a return to health meant for Buck Tom, death on the gallows. Perhaps his own illness had weakened Shankâs powers of thought. It may be, his naturally thoughtless disposition helped to render him oblivious of the solemn fact, and no one was cruel enough to remind him of it. But Buck himself never forgot it; yet he betrayed no symptom of despondency, neither did he indicate any degree of hope. He was a man of resolute purpose, and had the power of subduingâat least of absolutely concealingâhis feelings. To those who nursed him he seemed to be in a state of gentle, colourless resignation.
Charlie Brooke and Hunky Ben, having been out together, had returned well laden with game; and Leather was busy at the fire preparing a savoury mess of the same for his sick friend when Dick arrived.
âNews from the old country!â he exclaimed, holding up the letters on entering the cave. âTwo for Charles Brooke, Esquire, and one for Mister Leather!â
âThey might have been more polite to me. Hand it here,â said the latter, endeavouring to conceal under a jest his excitement at the sight of a letter from home; for his wild life had cut him off from communication for a very long time.
âOne of mine is from old Jacob Crossley,â said Charlie, tearing the letter open with eager interest.
âAnâ mine is from sister May,â exclaimed Shank.
If any one had observed Buck Tom at that moment, he would have seen that the outlaw started and rose almost up on one elbow, while a deep flush suffused his bronzed countenance. The action and the flush were only momentary, however he sank down again and turned his face to the wall.
Charlie also started and looked at Shank when the name of May was mentioned, and the eye of Hunky Ben was on him at the moment. But Hunky of course could not interpret the start. He knew little of our heroâs past historyânothing whatever about May. Being a western scout, no line of his mahogany-looking face indicated that the start aroused a thought of any kind.
While the recipients of the letters were busily perusing their missives, Dick Darvall gave the scout a brief outline of his expedition to the ranch, reserving the graphic narration of incidents to a more fitting occasion, when all the party could listen.
âDick, youâre a trump,â said the scout.
âIâm a lucky fellow, anyhow,â returned Dick.
âIn very truth ye are, lad, to escape from such a big bunch oâ Redskins without a scratch; whyââ
âPooh!â interrupted the sailor, âthatâs not the luck Iâm thinkinâ of. Havinâ overhauled Roarinâ Bull anâ his little girl in time to help rescue them, thatâs what I call luckâdâee see?â
âYes, I see,â was Hunky Benâs laconic reply.
Perhaps the scout saw more than was intended, for he probably observed the glad enthusiasm with which the bold seaman mentioned Roaring Bullâs little girl. We cannot tell. His wooden countenance betrayed no sign, and he may have seen nothing; but he was a western scout, and accustomed to take particular note of the smallest signs of the wilderness.
âCapitalâfirst-rate!â exclaimed Charlie, looking up from his letter when he had finished it.
âJust what I was going to say, or something of the same sort,â said Leather, as he folded his epistle.
âThen thereâs nothing but good news?â said Charlie.
âNothing. I suppose itâs the same with you, to judge from your looks,â returned Shank.
âExactly. Perhaps,â said Charlie, âit may interest you all to hear my letter. There are no secrets in it, and the gentleman who writes it is a jolly old fellow, Jacob Crossley by name. You know him, Dick, as the owner of the Walrus, though youâve never seen him.â
âAll right. I remember; fire away,â said Dick.
âIt is dated from his office in London,â continued our hero, âand runs thus:â
âMy Dear Brooke,âWe were all very glad to hear of your safe arrival in New York, and hope that long before this reaches your hand you will have found poor Leather and got him to some place of comfort, where he may recover the health that we have been given to understand he has lost.
âI chanced to be down at Sealford visiting your mother when your letter arrived; hence my knowledge of its contents. Mrs Leather and her daughter May were then as usual. By the way, what a pretty girl May has become! I remember her such a rumpled up, dress-anyhow, harum-scarum sort of a girl, that I find it hard to believe the tall, graceful, modest creature I meet with now is the same person! Captain Stride says she is the finest craft he ever saw, except that wonderful âMaggie,â about whose opinions and sayings he tells us so much.
âBut this is a double digression. To return: your letter of course gave us all great pleasure. It also gave your mother and May some anxiety, where it tells of the necessity of your going up to that wild-west place, Traitorâs Trap, where poor Leather is laid up. Take care of yourself, my dear boy, for Iâm told that the red savages are still given to those roasting, scalping, and other torturing that one has read of in the pages of Fenimore Cooper.
âBy the way, before I forget it, let me say, in reference to the enclosed bill, it is a loan which I have obtained for Leather, at very moderate interest, and when more is required more can be obtained on the same terms. Let him understand this, for I donât wish that he should think, on the one hand, that he is drawing on his motherâs slender resources, or, on the other hand, that he is under obligation to any one. I send the bill because I feel quite sure that you started on this expedition with too little. It is drawn in your name, and I think you will be able to cash it at any civilised townâeven in the far west!
âTalking of Captain Strideâwas I talking of him? Well, no matter. As he is past work now, but thinks himself very far indeed from that condition, I have prevailed on him to accept a new and peculiar post arising out of
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