Children of Tomorrow by Arthur Leo Zagat (little readers .TXT) š
Marilee's fingers were cold on Dikar's arm, but her laugh rippled like a little stream running over pebbles in its bed. They walked slowly away from the fire reached the shadowy edge of the woods, were closed around by the forest darkness.
"Now!" Dikar said, and he was flitting through the forest night, Marilee a silent shadow behind him. It was like her to stay close behind, like her to ask no questions as he ran through the woods to the cave again.
At the cave-mouth Dikar stopped a moment, sniffing the air. "Yes," he said, more to himself than to Marilee. "I can still smell the smoke of the fire-stick. The wet night air holds smells a long time." Then he was moving again, following the sharp tang of smoke in the air, following it away from the cave and away from the clearing.
The scent-trail led him downhill. Soon the laugh of a streamlet came to his ears and then Dikar pushed through tangling bushes and came out into starli
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āForgive you, Danhall?ā The words fell like stones from Dikarās lips. āYou didnāt knowāSure, I forgive you for killinā Marilee.ā
āKillinā her!ā Bengreen exclaimed. āBunk! Sheās not killed. Look at the way sheās bleedinā. Iāve killed too many deer not to know bleedinā stops when oneās dead. Sheās alive, you nuts, but she wonāt be alive long if you keep on sittinā there, holdinā her like a ninny anā lettinā her bleed.ā
āNot dead,ā Dikar whispered, staring down at the redness that welled out of Marileeās side and ran down over his thighs. āSheās notāā
He could think again, could move again. He lifted Marilee across his arms, laid her gently down on a bed of soft moss near the foot of the tree out of which Danhall had shot her, knelt again.
āFind me some of those leaves that stop bleedinā,ā he threw over his shoulder. āQuick.ā He saw now that the arrow had gone deep in Marileeās side, but its point had hit bone and so it had not gone in far enough to kill her, not even far enough for its barbs to be held except by a little skin. Dikar pulled the arrow out, flung it away. Blood spurted and he put his hands down on the wound, pressed.
āLift hanās up, you fella!ā a new voice ordered, hoarse and terrible. āHurry befoh you get one big lot lead in you.ā
Dikarās hands were red with Marileeās blood, but the bleeding had stopped and if he lifted them it would start again. He turned his head to say so, saw a great long gun pointing from out in the light, saw the black hands that held the gun, and the man against whose shoulder the hands held the gun.
The man stood straddle-legged out in the yellow field. He was dressed in dark green, and the little round things that held the green together were yellow bright in the fading light. His black face was flat-nosed and shiny, animal like. His thick, purplish lips snarled like those of a wildcat, just before it pounces on its prey.
The brush rustled, a little way from Dikar, where Bengreen and Danhall and Henfield had been looking for the leaves Dikar needed. āCome out you fella,ā the black man ordered. His big eyes, that had too much white in them, moved back and forth a little and his long gun moved back and forth. āCome out fom dere.ā
Dikarās heart bumped his ribs. Neither eyes nor gun were moving quite to where he was. The black man hadnāt seen him! The black man was out there in the light but Dikar, bent down behind the tall brush that marked off the field and the woods, was in the deep shadow of the woods and so the man with the gun hadnāt seen Dikar at all.
Arms above his head, Bengreen came out in the field, and Henfield and Danhall came out beside him. āStop dere,ā the man said, and the look on his black face, gaping at them, was funny. āWat kind fella you are?ā the black gasped. āWāere your cloāes?ā
āWhat clothes?ā Bengreen asked, grinning. āThis aināt winter, is it?ā Dikar looked down at his hands. They were red with Marileeās blood but she wasnāt bleeding any more. If he took his hands away she would start bleeding again, and she would die.
āYou one fella tink you smart, huh?ā Dikar heard the black manās hoarse voice, but Dikar was remembering what he had seen men like him do to white women, that dreadful day when he had been in this far land before. Better for Marilee to die than that. āBut Jubal smarter,ā he heard. āJubal know you āscape from one fella jail camp anā take all cloāes off so if you get killed nobody know wat guards you pay to let you āscape. See? No use try fool Jubal. You tell Jubal were you come from, so Jubal get rewahd, anā Jubal make fings easier foh you.ā
Dikar took his hands away from the wound in Marileeās side. āA good sleep to you, Marilee,ā he whispered. āA good night. Iāll be with you soon.ā
āWāere you come from?ā Jubal asked again, slow and hoarse, and there was something in his voice that made Dikar shiver. A gust of wind brought the smell of Jubal to Dikar, and that was worse than his voice.
Dikar pulled an arrow from his quiver, looked around for his bow. āIf we told you,āāthe grin was still in Bengreenās voiceāāyou would know as much as we do.ā Dikar remembered that his bow was out there in the field, dropped there when he jumped to catch Marilee. The arrow was no good without the bow.
āWāat you gonna know after Jubal blow you to little pieces witā dis gun? Donāt fink Jubal, no do it. Tāree more dead āMerican make no diffārence, Jubal kill plenty already.ā
āGo ahead. Blow us to pieces anā see if we care. I dare you, anā doubleāā Dikar didnāt hear the rest of what Bengreen was saying because Dikar had slithered silent as a snake, behind the great trunk of the tree. And now he was erect, was leaping high to the treeās lowermost bough, was lying motionless along that bough while all about him was the rustle of leaves, loud and terrifying.
āWāat dat,ā he heard Jubalās shout. āWāat dat in de tree?ā All of Dikar, inside him, pulled together, waiting for the thunder of Jubalās gun, waiting for Jubalās lead to tear through him, but he managed to make a sound through his rounded mouth, the ākoooo-hoooā of an owl.
āNothinā but an owl, Jubal,ā Danball laughed. āAināt you ashamed, beinā scared by an owl?ā
Dikar slid along the bough, slowly, very slowly, very carefully, and now the treeās leaves made no more sound than as if the wind were blowing through them.
āJubal no scared,ā the blackās voice came up to him. āJubal not scared of notāinā, but you better be big fella scared of Jubal. You tell were you come from, befoh Jubal count five or Jubal shoot. One on end, with yella hair, first. All right. Oneāā
Dikar could see them now, through the leaves, the three Boys from the Mountain standing in a line, their arms over their beads, brown and naked except for their little aprons, Jubal, spraddle-legged, black and huge, his eyes small now, and red, his long gun butted against his green shoulder and pointing straight at Henfield.
āTwoāā
The Boys were under the tip of the tree boughs, but Jubal was farther out in the field, seven paces at least. Dikar slid further out along the swaying bough.
āThreeāā
Dikar was almost to the end of the bough, and it was bending with his weight. If Jubal looked up now, he would see Dikar, couldnāt help but see him.
āFourāā
Dikar, gathering his legs under him, saw cords stand out on the back of the black hand whose finger was curled around the little thing on the gun that, pulled, would shoot it off. Jubal was going to say five now, and thenā
āNo,ā Henfield screamed. āDonāt shoot. Donāt shoot me. Iāll tell. Weāre fromāā
Dikar leaped, the whip of the bough added to the lash of his muscles sending him out, far out over the heads of the Boys. He hurtled down, straight down on top of Jubal, pounding the black down. Thunder deafened Dikar but his hand slashed down, the arrow clenched in it, lifted and slashed down again on the heaving, screaming thing beneath him, and warm wetness spurted over Dikarās hand and that which was beneath him heaved no longer.
Dikar was on his feet, and the Boys were around him, jabbering words he could not get. Dikar saw Henfieldās face, eyes still wide, mouth still agape. Dikarās hand lashed out, slapped, open-palmed, across Henfieldās cheek.
āYou yellow-belly,ā Dikar heard himself say. āYou lousy yellow-belly,ā and then he was striding, stiff-legged, back to Marilee, was once more kneeling beside her.
Marilee lay on the green moss, terribly still and terribly white except where the blood was scarlet on her side and browning at the edges. Browning! The blood flowed no more out of Marileeās wound. Sheād stopped bleedingā
But Dikar saw the pale nostrils flutter, and he breathed again. Her wound, he saw, had closed of itself. That was why sheād stopped bleeding. The wound wasnāt bad, Dikar saw now. Many of the Bunch had been hurt lots worse and none had diedā¦
āHereās your bow, Dikar,ā Bengreen said, bending to him, āAnā Jubalās gun.ā Dikar looked up.
āYou keep the gun,ā he said, āanā take the Boys back to the Mountain. Go in the tops of the trees, that way youāll leave no trail. It will be night very soon now, anā you have a good chance to get back without their beinā able to follow you.ā
āTo follow us!ā Bengreen exclaimed. āWhat about you? What about Marilee?ā
āMarilee canāt be carried through the treetops,ā Dikar sat back on his haunches, āwithout openinā her wound, anā so she will surely bleed to death on the way. If we make somethinā on which to carry her along the ground, we will make so many signs that we would lead them straight to the Mountain. So Marilee must stay here. I will stay with her, but I promise you that if they come, they will not find either of us alive. Now go, Boys. The quicker you start, the better your chances. Go.ā
Bengreen shook his head. āNo, Dikar. We do not go without you anā Marilee. But you are right about leavinā a trail to the Mountain if we carry her, so we must stay here with you. I must stay, I should say. I have no right to speak for the others.ā
āYou speak also for me, Bengreen,ā Danhall said. āI do not go back to the Bunch without you anā Dikar and Marilee.ā
āI speak for myself.ā Henfield stood straight in the forest shadows that had grown so dark that he too, seemed a shadow. āDikar! You slapped my face. You called me a yellow-belly. Did you have a gun pointinā at you? Did you bear a voice count, āOne, two, three, four,ā very slow, anā know that when it counted āfive,ā you would die?ā
āNo, Henfield.ā
āThen what right did you have to slap my face anā call me a yellow-belly?ā
āI suppose I had no right, Henfield. I suppose I was no fair.ā
āYou had no right, Dikar, but you were right to call me that. I was a yellow-belly, but I am not, anā never will be again. I looked death in the face, anā I did not die, anā I never again will be afraid to die. Dikar, will you let me stay with you anā Bengreen anā Danhall anā Marilee? Because I want to. I want to very much.ā
Dikar lifted to his feet, put his arm around Henfieldās shoulder, and smiled. āYou are no yellow-belly,ā he said, very quietly. āBut I will not let you stay, anā I will not let Bengreen or Danhall stay. The Bunch needs you three, anā you can do nothinā by stayinā here. I am still your Boss, Boys, anā I order you to go, anā it is for the good of the Bunch that I order youāā Dikar whirled to a rustle in the brush, saw that a formless shape blotched
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