The Man of the Forest by Zane Grey (fb2 epub reader .txt) 📕
"Old Al won't listen to me," pondered Dale. "An' even if he did, he wouldn't believe me. Maybe nobody will. . . . All the same, Snake Anson won't get that girl."
With these last words Dale satisfied himself of his own position, and his pondering ceased. Taking his rifle, he descended from the loft and peered out of the door. The night had grown darker, windier, cooler; broken clouds were scudding across the sky; only a few stars showed; fine rain was blowing from the northwest; and the forest seemed full of a low, dull roar.
"Reckon I'd better hang up here," he said, and turned to the fire. The coals were red now. From the depths of his hunting-coat he procured a little bag of salt and some strips of dried meat. These strips he laid for a moment on the hot embers, until they began to sizzle and curl; then with a sharpened stick he removed them and ate like a hungry hunter grateful for little
Read free book «The Man of the Forest by Zane Grey (fb2 epub reader .txt) 📕» - read online or download for free at americanlibrarybooks.com
- Author: Zane Grey
- Performer: -
Read book online «The Man of the Forest by Zane Grey (fb2 epub reader .txt) 📕». Author - Zane Grey
ever bother your head again about him. I’ll bet they’re all
men out here. And I wouldn’t be in Harve Riggs’s boots for a
lot.”
After that Bo talked of her uncle and his fatal illness, and
from that she drifted back to the loved ones at home, now
seemingly at the other side of the world, and then she broke
down and cried, after which she fell asleep on Helen’s
shoulder.
But Helen could not have fallen asleep if she had wanted to.
She had always, since she could remember, longed for a
moving, active life; and for want of a better idea she had
chosen to dream of gipsies. And now it struck her grimly
that, if these first few hours of her advent in the West
were forecasts of the future, she was destined to have her
longings more than fulfilled.
Presently the stage rolled slower and slower, until it came
to a halt. Then the horses heaved, the harnesses clinked,
the men whispered. Otherwise there was an intense quiet. She
looked out, expecting to find it pitch-dark. It was black,
yet a transparent blackness. To her surprise she could see a
long way. A shooting-star electrified her. The men were
listening. She listened, too, but beyond the slight sounds
about the stage she heard nothing. Presently the driver
clucked to his horses, and travel was resumed.
For a while the stage rolled on rapidly, evidently downhill,
swaying from side to side, and rattling as if about to fall
to pieces. Then it slowed on a level, and again it halted
for a few moments, and once more in motion it began a
laborsome climb. Helen imagined miles had been covered. The
desert appeared to heave into billows, growing rougher, and
dark, round bushes dimly stood out. The road grew uneven and
rocky, and when the stage began another descent its violent
rocking jolted Bo out of her sleep and in fact almost out of
Helen’s arms.
“Where am I?” asked Bo, dazedly.
“Bo, you’re having your heart’s desire, but I can’t tell you
where you are,” replied Helen.
Bo awakened thoroughly, which fact was now no wonder,
considering the jostling of the old stage.
“Hold on to me, Nell! … Is it a runaway?”
“We’ve come about a thousand miles like this, I think,”
replied Helen. “I’ve not a whole bone in my body.”
Bo peered out of the window.
“Oh, how dark and lonesome! But it’d be nice if it wasn’t so
cold. I’m freezing.”
“I thought you loved cold air,” taunted Helen.
“Say, Nell, you begin to talk like yourself,” responded Bo.
It was difficult to hold on to the stage and each other and
the cloak all at once, but they succeeded, except in the
roughest places, when from time to time they were bounced
around. Bo sustained a sharp rap on the head.
“Oooooo!” she moaned. “Nell Rayner, I’ll never forgive you
for fetching me on this awful trip.”
“Just think of your handsome Las Vegas cowboy,” replied
Helen.
Either this remark subdued Bo or the suggestion sufficed to
reconcile her to the hardships of the ride.
Meanwhile, as they talked and maintained silence and tried
to sleep, the driver of the stage kept at his task after the
manner of Western men who knew how to get the best out of
horses and bad roads and distance.
By and by the stage halted again and remained at a
standstill for so long, with the men whispering on top, that
Helen and Bo were roused to apprehension.
Suddenly a sharp whistle came from the darkness ahead.
“Thet’s Roy,” said Joe Beeman, in a low voice.
“I reckon. An’ meetin’ us so quick looks bad,” replied Dale.
“Drive on, Bill.”
“Mebbe it seems quick to you,” muttered the driver, “but if
we hain’t come thirty mile, an’ if thet ridge thar hain’t
your turnin’-off place, why, I don’t know nothin’.”
The stage rolled on a little farther, while Helen and Bo sat
clasping each other tight, wondering with bated breath what
was to be the next thing to happen.
Then once more they were at a standstill. Helen heard the
thud of boots striking the ground, and the snorts of horses.
“Nell, I see horses,” whispered Bo, excitedly. “There, to
the side of the road … and here comes a man… . Oh,
if he shouldn’t be the one they’re expecting!”
Helen peered out to see a tall, dark form, moving silently,
and beyond it a vague outline of horses, and then pale
gleams of what must have been pack-loads.
Dale loomed up, and met the stranger in the road.
“Howdy, Milt? You got the girl sure, or you wouldn’t be
here,” said a low voice.
“Roy, I’ve got two girls — sisters,” replied Dale.
The man Roy whistled softly under his breath. Then another
lean, rangy form strode out of the darkness, and was met by
Dale.
“Now, boys — how about Anson’s gang?” queried Dale.
“At Snowdrop, drinkin’ an’ quarrelin’. Reckon they’ll leave
there about daybreak,” replied Roy.
“How long have you been here?”
“Mebbe a couple of hours.”
“Any horse go by?”
“No.”
“Roy, a strange rider passed us before dark. He was hittin’
the road. An’ he’s got by here before you came.”
“I don’t like thet news,” replied Roy, tersely. “Let’s
rustle. With girls on hossback you’ll need all the start you
can get. Hey, John?”
“Snake Anson shore can foller hoss tracks,” replied the
third man.
“Milt, say the word,” went on Roy, as he looked up at the
stars. “Daylight not far away. Here’s the forks of the road,
an’ your hosses, an’ our outfit. You can be in the pines by
sunup.”
In the silence that ensued Helen heard the throb of her
heart and the panting little breaths of her sister. They
both peered out, hands clenched together, watching and
listening in strained attention.
“It’s possible that rider last night wasn’t a messenger to
Anson,” said Dale. “In that case Anson won’t make anythin’
of our wheel tracks or horse tracks. He’ll go right on to
meet the regular stage. Bill, can you go back an’ meet the
stage comin’ before Anson does?”
“Wal, I reckon so — an’ take it easy at thet,” replied
Bill.
“All right,” continued Dale, instantly. “John, you an’ Joe
an’ Hal ride back to meet the regular stage. An’ when you
meet it get on an’ be on it when Anson holds it up.”
“Thet’s shore agreeable to me,” drawled John.
“I’d like to be on it, too,” said Roy, grimly.
“No. I’ll need you till I’m safe in the woods. Bill, hand
down the bags. An’ you, Roy, help me pack them. Did you get
all the supplies I wanted?”
“Shore did. If the young ladies ain’t powerful particular
you can feed them well for a couple of months.”
Dale wheeled and, striding to the stage, he opened the door.
“Girls, you’re not asleep? Come,” he called.
Bo stepped down first.
“I was asleep till this — this vehicle fell off the road
back a ways,” she replied.
Roy Beeman’s low laugh was significant. He took off his
sombrero and stood silent. The old driver smothered a loud
guffaw.
“Veehicle! Wal, I’ll be doggoned! Joe, did you hear thet?
All the spunky gurls ain’t born out West.”
As Helen followed with cloak and bag Roy assisted her, and
she encountered keen eyes upon her face. He seemed both
gentle and respectful, and she felt his solicitude. His
heavy gun, swinging low, struck her as she stepped down.
Dale reached into the stage and hauled out baskets and bags.
These he set down on the ground.
“Turn around, Bill, an’ go along with you. John an’ Hal will
follow presently,” ordered Dale.
“Wal, gurls,” said Bill, looking down upon them, “I was shore
powerful glad to meet you-all. An’ I’m ashamed of my country
— offerin’ two sich purty gurls insults an’ lowdown
tricks. But shore you’ll go through safe now. You couldn’t
be in better company fer ridin’ or huntin’ or marryin’ or
gittin’ religion —”
“Shut up, you old grizzly!” broke in Dale, sharply.
“Haw! Haw! Good-by, gurls, an’ good luck!” ended Bill, as he
began to whip the reins.
Bo said good-by quite distinctly, but Helen could only
murmur hers. The old driver seemed a friend.
Then the horses wheeled and stamped, the stage careened and
creaked, presently to roll out of sight in the gloom.
“You’re shiverin’,” said Dale, suddenly, looking down upon
Helen. She felt his big, hard hand clasp hers. “Cold as
ice!”
“I am c-cold,” replied Helen. “I guess we’re not warmly
dressed.”
“Nell, we roasted all day, and now we’re freezing,” declared
Bo. “I didn’t know it was winter at night out here.”
“Miss, haven’t you some warm gloves an’ a coat?” asked Roy,
anxiously. “It ‘ain’t begun to get cold yet.”
“Nell, we’ve heavy gloves, riding-suits and boots — all
fine and new — in this black bag,” said Bo,
enthusiastically kicking a bag at her feet.
“Yes, so we have. But a lot of good they’ll do us,
to-night,” returned Helen.
“Miss, you’d do well to change right here,” said Roy,
earnestly. “It’ll save time in the long run an’ a lot of
sufferin’ before sunup.”
Helen stared at the young man, absolutely amazed with his
simplicity. She was advised to change her traveling-dress
for a riding-suit — out somewhere in a cold, windy desert
— in the middle of the night — among strange young men!
“Bo, which bag is it?” asked Dale, as if she were his
sister. And when she indicated the one, he picked it up.
“Come off the road.”
Bo followed him, and Helen found herself mechanically at
their heels. Dale led them a few paces off the road behind
some low bushes.
“Hurry an’ change here,” he said. “We’ll make a pack of your
outfit an’ leave room for this bag.”
Then he stalked away and in a few strides disappeared.
Bo sat down to begin unlacing her shoes. Helen could just
see her pale, pretty face and big, gleaming eyes by the
light of the stars. It struck her then that Bo was going to
make eminently more of a success of Western life than she
was.
“Nell, those fellows are n-nice,” said Bo, reflectively.
“Aren’t you c-cold? Say, he said hurry!”
It was beyond Helen’s comprehension how she ever began to
disrobe out there in that open, windy desert, but after she
had gotten launched on the task she found that it required
more fortitude than courage. The cold wind pierced right
through her. Almost she could have laughed at the way Bo
made things fly.
“G-g-g-gee!” chattered Bo. “I n-never w-was so c-c-cold in
all my life. Nell Rayner, m-may the g-good Lord forgive
y-you!”
Helen was too intent on her own troubles to take breath to
talk. She was a strong, healthy girl, swift and efficient
with her hands, yet this, the hardest physical ordeal she
had ever experienced, almost overcame her. Bo outdistanced
her by moments, helped her with buttons, and laced one whole
boot for her. Then, with hands that stung, Helen packed the
traveling-suits in the bag.
“There! But what an awful mess!” exclaimed Helen. “Oh, Bo,
our pretty traveling-dresses!”
“We’ll press them t-to-morrow — on a l-log,” replied Bo,
and she giggled.
They started for the road. Bo,
Comments (0)