The Virginian: A Horseman of the Plains by Owen Wister (children's ebooks online .txt) π
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- Author: Owen Wister
Read book online Β«The Virginian: A Horseman of the Plains by Owen Wister (children's ebooks online .txt) πΒ». Author - Owen Wister
My vision, as I rode, took in serenely the dim foot-hills,βto-morrow's goal,βand nearer in the vast wet plain the clump of cottonwoods, and still nearer my lodging for to-night with the dotted cattle round it. And now my horse neighed. I felt his gait freshen for the journey's end, and leaning to pat his neck I noticed his ears no longer slack and inattentive, but pointing forward to where food and rest awaited both of us. Twice he neighed, impatiently and long; and as he quickened his gait still more, the packhorse did the same, and I realized that there was about me still a spice of the tenderfoot: those dots were not cattle; they were horses.
My horse had put me in the wrong. He had known his kind from afar, and was hastening to them. The plainsman's eye was not yet mine; and I smiled a little as I rode. When was I going to know, as by instinct, the different look of horses and cattle across some two or three miles of plain?
These miles we finished soon. The buildings changed in their aspect as they grew to my approach, showing their desolation more clearly, and in some way bringing apprehension into my mood. And around them the horses, too, all standing with ears erect, watching me as I cameβthere was something about them; or was it the silence? For the silence which I had liked until now seemed suddenly to be made too great by the presence of the deserted buildings. And then the door of the stable opened, and men came out and stood, also watching me arrive. By the time I was dismounting more were there. It was senseless to feel as unpleasant as I did, and I strove to give to them a greeting that should sound easy. I told them that I hoped there was room for one more here to-night. Some of them had answered my greeting, but none of them answered this; and as I began to be sure that I recognized several of their strangely imperturbable faces, the Virginian came from the stable; and at that welcome sight my relief spoke out instantly.
βI am here, you see!β
βYes, I do see.β I looked hard at him, for in his voice was the same strangeness that I felt in everything around me. But he was looking at his companions. βThis gentleman is all right,β he told them.
βThat may be,β said one whom I now knew that I had seen before at Sunk Creek; βbut he was not due to-night.β
βNor to-morrow,β said another.
βNor yet the day after,β a third added.
The Virginian fell into his drawl. βNone of you was ever early for anything, I presume.β
One retorted, laughing, βOh, we're not suspicioning you of complicity.β
And another, βNot even when we remember how thick you and Steve used to be.β
Whatever jokes they meant by this he did not receive as jokes. I saw something like a wince pass over his face, and a flush follow it. But he now spoke to me. βWe expected to be through before this,β he began. βI'm right sorry you have come to-night. I know you'd have preferred to keep away.β
βWe want him to explain himself,β put in one of the others. βIf he satisfies us, he's free to go away.β
βFree to go away!β I now exclaimed. But at the indulgence in their frontier smile I cooled down. βGentlemen,β I said, βI don't know why my movements interest you so much. It's quite a compliment! May I get under shelter while I explain?β
No request could have been more natural, for the rain had now begun to fall in straight floods. Yet there was a pause before one of them said, βHe might as well.β
The Virginian chose to say nothing more; but he walked beside me into the stable. Two men sat there together, and a third guarded them. At that sight I knew suddenly what I had stumbled upon; and on the impulse I murmured to the Virginian, βYou're hanging them to-morrow.β
He kept his silence.
βYou may have three guesses,β said a man behind me.
But I did not need them. And in the recoil of my insight the clump of cottonwoods came into my mind, black and grim. No other trees high enough grew within ten miles. This, then, was the business that the Virginian's letter had so curtly mentioned. My eyes went into all corners of the stable, but no other prisoners were here. I half expected to see Trampas, and I half feared to see Shorty; for poor stupid Shorty's honesty had not been proof against frontier temptations, and he had fallen away from the company of his old friends. Often of late I had heard talk at Sunk Creek of breaking up a certain gang of horse and cattle thieves that stole in one Territory and sold in the next, and knew where to hide in the mountains between. And now it had come to the point; forces had been gathered, a long expedition made, and here they were, successful under the Virginian's lead, but a little later than their calculations. And here was I, a little too early, and a witness in consequence. My presence seemed a simple thing to account for; but when I had thus accounted for it, one of them said with good nature:β βSo you find us here, and we find you here. Which is the most surprised, I wonder?β
βThere's no telling,β said I, keeping as amiable as I could; βnor any telling which objects the most.β
βOh, there's no objection here. You're welcome to stay. But not welcome to go, I expect. He ain't welcome to go, is he?β
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