登陆注册
4816400000025

第25章 HYGEIA AT THE SOLITO(2)

McGuire sat, collapsed into his corner of the seat, receiving with acid suspicion the conversation of the cattleman. What was the "game"of this big "geezer" who was carrying him off? Altruism would have been McGuire's last guess. "He ain't no farmer," thought the captive, "and he ain't no con man, for sure. W'at's his lay? You trail in, Cricket, and see how many cards he draws. You're up against it, anyhow. You got a nickel and gallopin' consumption, and you better lay low. Lay low and see w'at's his game."At Rincon, a hundred miles from San Antonio, they left the train for a buckboard which was waiting there for Raidler. In this they travelled the thirty miles between the station and their destination. If anything could, this drive should have stirred the acrimonious McGuire to a sense of his ransom. They sped upon velvety wheels across an exhilarant savanna. The pair of Spanish ponies struck a nimble, tireless trot, which gait they occasionally relieved by a wild, untrammelled gallop. The air was wine and seltzer, perfumed, as they absorbed it, with the delicate redolence of prairie flowers. The road perished, and the buckboard swam the uncharted billows of the grass itself, steered by the practised hand of Raidler, to whom each tiny distant mott of trees was a signboard, each convolution of the low hills a voucher of course and distance. But McGuire reclined upon his spine, seeing nothing but a desert, and receiving the cattleman's advances with sullen distrust. "W'at's he up to?" was the burden of his thoughts; "w'at kind of a gold brick has the big guy got to sell?"McGuire was only applying the measure of the streets he had walked to a range bounded by the horizon and the fourth dimension.

A week before, while riding the prairies, Raidler had come upon a sick and weakling calf deserted and bawling. Without dismounting he had reached and slung the distressed bossy across his saddle, and dropped it at the ranch for the boys to attend to. It was impossible for McGuire to know or comprehend that, in the eyes of the cattleman, his case and that of the calf were identical in interest and demand upon his assistance. A creature was ill and helpless; he had the power to render aid--these were the only postulates required for the cattleman to act. They formed his system of logic and the most of his creed.

McGuire was the seventh invalid whom Raidler had picked up thus casually in San Antonio, where so many thousand go for the ozone that is said to linger about its contracted streets. Five of them had been guests of Solito Ranch until they had been able to leave, cured or better, and exhausting the vocabulary of tearful gratitude. One came too late, but rested very comfortably, at last, under a ratama tree in the garden.

So, then, it was no surprise to the ranchhold when the buckboard spun to the door, and Raidler took up his debile /protege/ like a handful of rags and set him down upon the gallery.

McGuire looked upon things strange to him. The ranch-house was the best in the country. It was built of brick hauled one hundred miles by wagon, but it was of but one story, and its four rooms were completely encircled by a mud floor "gallery." The miscellaneous setting of horses, dogs, saddles, wagons, guns, and cow-punchers' paraphernalia oppressed the metropolitan eyes of the wrecked sportsman.

"Well, here we are at home," said Raidler, cheeringly.

"It's a h--l of a looking place," said McGuire promptly, as he rolled upon the gallery floor in a fit of coughing.

"We'll try to make it comfortable for you, buddy," said the cattleman gently. "It ain't fine inside; but it's the outdoors, anyway, that'll do you the most good. This'll be your room, in here. Anything we got, you ask for it."He led McGuire into the east room. The floor was bare and clean. White curtains waved in the gulf breeze through the open windows. A big willow rocker, two straight chairs, a long table covered with newspapers, pipes, tobacco, spurs, and cartridges stood in the centre.

Some well-mounted heads of deer and one of an enormous black javeli projected from the walls. A wide, cool cot-bed stood in a corner.

Nueces County people regarded this guest chamber as fit for a prince.

McGuire showed his eyeteeth at it. He took out his nickel and spun it up to the ceiling.

"T'ought I was lyin' about the money, did ye? Well, you can frisk me if you wanter. Dat's the last simoleon in the treasury. Who's goin' to pay?"The cattleman's clear grey eyes looked steadily from under his grizzly brows into the huckleberry optics of his guest. After a little he said simply, and not ungraciously, "I'll be much obliged to you, son, if you won't mention money any more. Once was quite a plenty. Folks I ask to my ranch don't have to pay anything, and they very scarcely ever offers it. Supper'll be ready in half an hour. There's water in the pitcher, and some, cooler, to drink, in that red jar hanging on the gallery.""Where's the bell?" asked McGuire, looking about.

"Bell for what?"

"Bell to ring for things. I can't--see here," he exploded in a sudden, weak fury, "I never asked you to bring me here. I never held you up for a cent. I never gave you a hard-luck story till you asked me. Here I am fifty miles from a bellboy or a cocktail. I'm sick. I can't hustle. Gee! but I'm up against it!" McGuire fell upon the cot and sobbed shiveringly.

Raidler went to the door and called. A slender, bright-complexioned Mexican youth about twenty came quickly. Raidler spoke to him in Spanish.

"Ylario, it is in my mind that I promised you the position of /vaquero/ on the San Carlos range at the fall /rodeo/.""/Si, senor/, such was your goodness.""Listen. This /senorito/ is my friend. He is very sick. Place yourself at his side. Attend to his wants at all times. Have much patience and care with him. And when he is well, or--and when he is well, instead of /vaquero/ I will make you /mayordomo/ of the Rancho de las Piedras.

/Esta bueno/?"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 宸璃梦:公主倒追记

    宸璃梦:公主倒追记

    吝星璃,她是拂菻国唯一的公主,简单而不单纯,坚强却也害怕受伤,热情起来仿佛是灼灼地烈火,冷漠起来似寒冷的冰。她就是这样一个洒脱、倔强的女子。因为一系列与皇甫宸相关的梦境——他们前世的一些刻苦铭心的经历。而恋上那个让她醉心的男子。遇到他,她变得很低很低,低到了尘埃里。但她心里是欣喜的,从尘埃里开出了花。
  • 仙家有田

    仙家有田

    本仙有田,田里有泉,材料自产。跟人打个架,杯具地穿了。问个路,洗具地被拐了。入了修真门派,因为年纪太大,餐具地只能打水烧饭。人生啊……好在小手链里自成天地,师兄的地里偷点草,长老院里捞个蛋。别惹我,我随时可能发火!别跟我扯皮,拳头才是硬道理!新书:《聚宝铃》书号:1918542简介:身怀聚宝铃,聚天下灵物。那欺她的,压她的,且看谁能笑到最后!
  • 荣耀之战,王者之巅

    荣耀之战,王者之巅

    【2018王者荣耀文学大赛·征文参赛作品】王者当立于巅峰之上,吾之荣耀无人可亵渎。
  • 柯南之萌哀一生

    柯南之萌哀一生

    哈佛大学博士研究生毕业。世界万千人心中的信仰,心理界的翘楚,代号“Mara”,特工之王。行踪诡秘,行事散漫。当这样一个人,穿越到了名侦探柯南世界,是正是恶,是红还是黑?让我们,拭目以待。『PS;不拆原CP。』
  • 沐斩:末世变革

    沐斩:末世变革

    西历2260年的某一天,城市外,突然有妖族降临,他们摧毁家园,抢夺人类资源,俘虏人类为奴隶,一位少年,在父母的帮助下,躲过了这次劫难;然而,他却孤身一人,为了找到自己的父母,救出家人,他决定踏上冒险之路。在离开家园之时,却在一处地下研究所里,找到了一根传说中的神兵,如意金箍棒,这根神兵,非常厉害,他决定带着这根神兵,动身前往外界。冒险的过程之中,每次总会遇到各种强敌。
  • 青丝如白染

    青丝如白染

    如果,你的生命中,突然少了一个守护你七年的女孩,你,会不会难过,伤心,甚至…心痛?我记得,白化病折磨了我10年,而他,折磨了我7年。
  • 风起:伏鸾

    风起:伏鸾

    (本文相对慢热一点点,故事情节需要满满铺垫,各位宝宝稍安勿躁~)何为心头朱砂?便是那遥遥相望一眼,就恍若一世相安。漫漫风雪路,他一路艰辛,幸得有她相伴,偷得浮世半生策马长歌。这大晋风云瞬息变幻,前路莫测,他步步为营,却独独失算了她。待到明日天涯,陌上花开几载,他策马而归,尽头是否仍有那人,闪烁着那双璀璨明眸,翘首以待?
  • 漫笔

    漫笔

    邹韬奋(1895—1944),原名恩润,乳名荫书,曾用名李晋卿。1922年在黄炎培等创办的中华职业教育社任编辑部主任,开始从事教育和编辑工作。1926年接任生活周刊主编,以犀利之笔,力主正义舆论,抨击黑暗势力。1933年1月,邹韬奋参加了宋庆龄、蔡元培、鲁迅等发起的中国民权保障同盟,并当选为执行委员。主要作品有:《大众集》、《坦白集》、《漫笔》、《展望》、《经历》、《韬奋言论集》等。
  • 东藏记

    东藏记

    《东藏记》系《云南文学丛书》之一种,选自宗璞系列长篇小说《野葫芦引》,小说以抗日战争时期的云南为背景,生动描述了这一艰苦卓绝时期中国社会的真实情况和各阶层的生存状况,刻画了以明仑大学孟樾等为代表的一群知识分子坚守信仰,关心国事,关注民生,为理想与追求敢冒风险与牺牲的高尚品格。小说张弛有度,疏密有序,从众多不同专业的人物塑造中体现了作者广博、深厚的学识,熟练使用的各地方言俚语及形形色色的贩夫走卒的描摹,展示了作者的聪慧、天赋。该小说因其深刻的内涵、精准的刻画及散文诗般的语言获第六届“茅盾文学奖”。
  • 海力布传奇

    海力布传奇

    善良勇敢、与世无争的草原王子海力布,在暗流涌动、危机四伏的皇室权谋中,被动卷入了汗位继承的漩涡。遭人暗算,前途未卜的他在经历了一系列奇幻旅程后,收获友谊,邂逅真爱。并通过生死抉择的历练和考验,成长为一代草原英雄。各位读者大大如果有什么想法建议想直接跟作者交流,欢迎加入《海力布传奇》读者QQ群:739471703