American library books ยป Western ยป The Virginian: A Horseman of the Plains by Owen Wister (children's ebooks online .txt) ๐Ÿ“•

Read book online ยซThe Virginian: A Horseman of the Plains by Owen Wister (children's ebooks online .txt) ๐Ÿ“•ยป.   Author   -   Owen Wister



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hero? She wasn't really a-drowndin', you pie-biter.โ€ He rested his serious glance upon the alkali. โ€œShe's not likely to have forgot that mix-up, though. I guess I'll not remind her about grippin' me, and all that. She wasn't the kind a man ought to josh about such things. She had a right clear eye.โ€ Thus, tall and loose in the saddle, did he jog along the sixty miles which still lay between him and the dance.





X. WHERE FANCY WAS BRED

Two camps in the open, and the Virginian's Monte horse, untired, brought him to the Swintons' in good time for the barbecue. The horse received good food at length, while his rider was welcomed with good whiskey. GOOD whiskeyโ€”for had not steers jumped to seventy-five?

Inside the Goose Egg kitchen many small delicacies were preparing, and a steer was roasting whole outside. The bed of flame under it showed steadily brighter against the dusk that was beginning to veil the lowlands. The busy hosts went and came, while men stood and men lay near the fire-glow. Chalkeye was there, and Nebrasky, and Trampas, and Honey Wiggin, with others, enjoying the occasion; but Honey Wiggin was enjoying himself: he had an audience; he was sitting up discoursing to it.

โ€œHello!โ€ he said, perceiving the Virginian. โ€œSo you've dropped in for your turn! Numberโ€”six, ain't he, boys?โ€

โ€œDepends who's a-runnin' the countin',โ€ said the Virginian, and stretched himself down among the audience.

โ€œI've saw him number one when nobody else was around,โ€ said Trampas.

โ€œHow far away was you standin' when you beheld that?โ€ inquired the lounging Southerner.

โ€œWell, boys,โ€ said Wiggin, โ€œI expect it will be Miss Schoolmarm says who's number one to-night.โ€

โ€œSo she's arrived in this hyeh country?โ€ observed the Virginian, very casually.

โ€œArrived!โ€ said Trampas again. โ€œWhere have you been grazing lately?โ€

โ€œA right smart way from the mules.โ€

โ€œNebrasky and the boys was tellin' me they'd missed yu' off the range,โ€ again interposed Wiggin. โ€œSay, Nebrasky, who have yu' offered your canary to the schoolmarm said you mustn't give her?โ€

Nebrasky grinned wretchedly.

โ€œWell, she's a lady, and she's square, not takin' a man's gift when she don't take the man. But you'd ought to get back all them letters yu' wrote her. Yu' sure ought to ask her for them tell-tales.โ€

โ€œAh, pshaw, Honey!โ€ protested the youth. It was well known that he could not write his name.

โ€œWhy, if here ain't Bokay Baldy!โ€ cried the agile Wiggin, stooping to fresh prey. โ€œFound them slippers yet, Baldy? Tell yu' boys, that was turruble sad luck Baldy had. Did yu' hear about that? Baldy, yu' know, he can stay on a tame horse most as well as the schoolmarm. But just you give him a pair of young knittin'-needles and see him make 'em sweat! He worked an elegant pair of slippers with pink cabbages on 'em for Miss Wood.โ€

โ€œI bought 'em at Medicine Bow,โ€ blundered Baldy.

โ€œSo yu' did!โ€ assented the skilful comedian. โ€œBaldy he bought 'em. And on the road to her cabin there at the Taylors' he got thinkin' they might be too big, and he got studyin' what to do. And he fixed up to tell her about his not bein' sure of the size, and how she was to let him know if they dropped off her, and he'd exchange 'em, and when he got right near her door, why, he couldn't find his courage. And so he slips the parcel under the fence and starts serenadin' her. But she ain't inside her cabin at all. She's at supper next door with the Taylors, and Baldy singin' 'Love has conqwered pride and angwer' to a lone house. Lin McLean was comin' up by Taylor's corral, where Taylor's Texas bull was. Well, it was turruble sad. Baldy's pants got tore, but he fell inside the fence, and Lin druv the bull back and somebody stole them Medicine Bow galoshes. Are you goin' to knit her some more, Bokay?โ€

โ€œAbout half that ain't straight,โ€ Baldy commented, with mildness.

โ€œThe half that was tore off yer pants? Well, never mind, Baldy; Lin will get left too, same as all of yu'.โ€

โ€œIs there many?โ€ inquired the Virginian. He was still stretched on his back, looking up at the sky.

โ€œI don't know how many she's been used to where she was raised,โ€ Wiggin answered. โ€œA kid stage-driver come from Point of Rocks one day and went back the next. Then the foreman of the 76 outfit, and the horse-wrangler from the Bar-Circle-L, and two deputy marshals, with punchers, stringin' right along,โ€”all got their tumble. Old Judge Burrage from Cheyenne come up in August for a hunt and stayed round here and never hunted at all. There was that horse thiefโ€”awful good-lookin'. Taylor wanted to warn her about him, but Mrs. Taylor said she'd look after her if it was needed. Mr. Horse-thief gave it up quicker than most; but the schoolmarm couldn't have knowed he had a Mrs. Horse-thief camped on Poison Spider till afterwards. She wouldn't go ridin' with him. She'll go with some, takin' a kid along.โ€

โ€œBah!โ€ said Trampas.

The Virginian stopped looking at the sky, and watched Trampas from where he lay.

โ€œI think she encourages a man some,โ€ said poor Nebrasky.

โ€œEncourages? Because she lets yu' teach her how to shoot,โ€ said Wiggin. โ€œWellโ€”I don't guess I'm a judge. I've always kind o' kep' away from them good women. Don't seem to think of anything to chat about to 'em. The only folks I'd say she encourages is the school kids. She kisses them.โ€

โ€œRiding and shooting and kissing the kids,โ€ sneered Trampas. โ€œThat's a heap too pussy-kitten for me.โ€

They laughed. The sage-brush audience is readily cynical.

โ€œLook for the man, I say,โ€ Trampas pursued. โ€œAnd ain't he there? She leaves Baldy sit on the fence while she and Lin McLeanโ€”โ€

They laughed loudly at the blackguard picture which he drew; and the laugh stopped short, for the Virginian stood over Trampas.

โ€œYou can rise up now, and tell them you lie,โ€ he said.

The man was still for a moment in the dead silence. โ€œI thought you claimed you and her wasn't acquainted,โ€ said he then.

โ€œStand on your laigs, you polecat, and say you're a liar!โ€

Trampas's hand moved behind him.

โ€œQuit that,โ€ said the Southerner, โ€œor I'll break your neck!โ€

The eye of a man is the prince of deadly weapons. Trampas looked in the Virginian's, and slowly rose. โ€œI didn't meanโ€”โ€ he began, and paused, his face poisonously bloated.

โ€œWell, I'll call that sufficient. Keep a-standin' still. I ain' going to trouble yu' long. In admittin' yourself to be a liar you have spoke God's

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