登陆注册
4792600000020

第20章

She was apparently waiting for this, and waved him an adieu with the humble pan he had borrowed. It flashed a moment dazzlingly as it caught the declining sun, and then went out, even obliterating the little figure behind it.

PART II

Mr. Jack Fleming was indeed "not much of a miner." He and his partners--both as young, hopeful, and inefficient as himself--had for three months worked a claim in a mountain mining settlement which yielded them a certain amount of healthy exercise, good-humored grumbling, and exalted independence. To dig for three or four hours in the morning, smoke their pipes under a redwood-tree for an hour at noon, take up their labors again until sunset, when they "washed up" and gathered sufficient gold to pay for their daily wants, was, without their seeking it, or even knowing it, the realization of a charming socialistic ideal which better men than themselves had only dreamed of. Fleming fell back into this refined barbarism, giving little thought to his woodland experience, and no revelation of it to his partners. He had transacted their business at the mining town. His deviations en route were nothing to them, and small account to himself.

The third day after his return he was lying under a redwood when his partner approached him.

"You aren't uneasy in your mind about any unpaid bill--say a wash bill--that you're owing?""Why?"

"There's a big nigger woman in camp looking for you; she's got a folded account paper in her hand. It looks deucedly like a bill.""There must be some mistake," suggested Fleming, sitting up.

"She says not, and she's got your name pat enough! Faulkner" (his other partner) "headed her straight up the gulch, away from camp, while I came down to warn you. So if you choose to skedaddle into the brush out there and lie low until we get her away, we'll fix it!""Nonsense! I'll see her."

His partner looked aghast at this temerity, but Fleming, jumping to his feet, at once set out to meet his mysterious visitor. This was no easy matter, as the ingenious Faulkner was laboriously leading his charge up the steep gulch road, with great politeness, but many audible misgivings as to whether this was not "Jack Fleming's day for going to Jamestown."He was further lightening the journey by cheering accounts of the recent depredations of bears and panthers in that immediate locality. When overtaken by Fleming he affected a start of joyful surprise, to conceal the look of warning which Fleming did not heed,--having no eyes but for Faulkners companion. She was a very fat negro woman, panting with exertion and suppressed impatience.

Fleming's heart was filled with compunction.

"Is you Marse Fleming?" she gasped.

"Yes," said Fleming gently. "What can I do for you?""Well! Ye kin pick dis yar insek, dis caterpillier," she said, pointing to Faulkner, "off my paf. Ye kin tell dis yar chipmunk dat when he comes to showin' me mule tracks for b'ar tracks, he's barkin' up de wrong tree! Dat when he tells me dat he sees panfers a-promenadin' round in de short grass or hidin' behime rocks in de open, he hain't talkin' to no nigger chile, but a growed woman! Ye kin tell him dat Mammy Curtis lived in de woods afo' he was born, and hez seen more b'ars and mountain lyuns dan he hez hairs in his mustarches."The word "Mammy" brought a flash of recollection to Fleming.

"I am very sorry," he began; but to his surprise the negro woman burst into a good-tempered laugh.

"All right, honey! S'long's you is Marse Fleming and de man dat took dat 'ar pan offer Tinka de odder day, I ain't mindin' yo' frens' bedevilments. I've got somefin fo' you, yar, and a little box," and she handed him a folded paper.

Fleming felt himself reddening, he knew not why, at which Faulkner discreetly but ostentatiously withdrew, conveying to his other partner painful conviction that Fleming had borrowed a pan from a traveling tinker, whose negro wife was even now presenting a bill for the same, and demanding a settlement. Relieved by his departure, Fleming hurriedly tore open the folded paper. It was a letter written upon a leaf torn out of an old account book, whose ruled lines had undoubtedly given his partners the idea that it was a bill. Fleming hurriedly read the following, traced with a pencil in a schoolgirl's hand:--Mr. J. FLEMING.

Dear Sir,--After you went away that day I took that pan you brought back to mix a batch of bread and biscuits. The next morning at breakfast dad says: "What's gone o' them thar biscuits--my teeth is just broke with them--they're so gritty--they're abominable!

What's this?" says he, and with that he chucks over to me two or three flakes of gold that was in them. You see what had happened, Mr. Fleming, was this! You had better luck than you was knowing of! It was this way! Some of the gold you washed had got slipped into the sides of the pan where it was broke, and the sticky dough must have brought it out, and I kneaded them up unbeknowing. Of course I had to tell a wicked lie, but "Be ye all things to all men," says the Book, and I thought you ought to know your good luck, and I send mammy with this and the gold in a little box. Of course, if dad was a hunter of Mammon and not of God's own beasts, he would have been mighty keen about finding where it came from, but he allows it was in the water in our near spring. So good-by.

Do you care for your ring now as much as you did?

Yours very respectfully, KATINKA JALLINGER.

同类推荐
  • Misalliance

    Misalliance

    Tarleton, an ordinary young business man of thirty or less, is taking his weekly Friday to Tuesday in the house of his father, John Tarleton, who has made a great deal of money out of Tarleton is Underwear.汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 桐谱

    桐谱

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 太上神咒延寿妙经

    太上神咒延寿妙经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 洞真太上八素真经受食日月皇华诀

    洞真太上八素真经受食日月皇华诀

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 道德经-龙兴观碑本

    道德经-龙兴观碑本

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 骨源纪

    骨源纪

    骨源出,骨技现,无骨绝痕,秘骨破世。骨源大陆蛰居多年的黑火宫秘密收集天下所有高级骨技,却忽视了一本超越黑色骨技的无骨天书。盗墓贼吴元龙误打误撞获得了第一卷浩瀚经,又邂逅大周国公主,却在古老的灵族坟墓被夺舍,后续如何,尽在骨源纪!帖皇交流群:256229629
  • 中国现代传记文学史论

    中国现代传记文学史论

    主要辨析现代传记文学的本质特征,强调其文学属性。在史传传统与西学东渐的背景下,宏观梳理中国传记文学现代转型的历史,从文体演变的角度探讨梁启超、胡适、鲁迅、郁达夫、郭沫若、巴金、等在传记文学的理论与实践方面的独特历史贡献,研究现代传记文学理论的诗学建构。全书视野开阔,论述集中,观点鲜明,文献资料丰富。
  • 网游之隐逆天命

    网游之隐逆天命

    《天命》,首款可以连接不同星域的,超大容量的虚拟游戏;也是唯一可以让所有人,都可以与异星域的智慧生命进行实时交流的超大型系统。隐,一个刚刚成年的普通青少年。当两者相遇,一个影响全族未来的事件,正在慢慢发酵。。。
  • 社交金口财

    社交金口财

    《社交金口财》以社交口才为基点,旨在传授如何让你运用口才在社会交往中立于不败之地。对于每个人来说,只要你有良好的口才,在社交时就会讨人喜欢、人见人爱,你只要肯下功夫,学习他人的方法,吸收他人的经验,并在实践中运用这些方法和经验,那么,你就能成为演说家、口才大师、社交高手。
  • 灵天世界

    灵天世界

    一个神秘的小铁塔,一个奇幻的空间,且看意外得到巅峰强者武学的尘灵,会如何跨过无数域,走向他的强者之路。
  • 西汉三大帝之汉武大帝

    西汉三大帝之汉武大帝

    第一回汉夷合流有匈奴惊天动地出汉武…………3第二回栗王二妃争太子英帝三岁爱娇娃…………15第三回小刘彻计除政敌俏公主喜留英雄…………28第四回卫仲卿义结两将俏佳人力荐情郎…………38第五回金屋阿娇承雨露一代英帝继大统…………48第六回瞒天过海罢墨尊儒感恩戴德忠臣直谏………57第七回女主一怒杀忠臣英帝三思设期门…………71第八回演战阵誓灭匈奴访公主喜得子夫…………84第九回卫子夫含泪昨苦佣汉武帝遇险幸女红…
  • 幻灯片爱人

    幻灯片爱人

    年轻作家顾念的未婚夫离开了她,却以另一种方式存在。。。
  • 心的每一天

    心的每一天

    一行行饱含深情的文字,一个个温馨鲜活的故事,一幅幅寓意深刻的画面,简洁、凝练地勾勒出了一个“特殊群体”心灵悸动的每一天,也形象、生动地描绘出了一项“拯救灵魂”宏伟工程的艰难而神圣。
  • 时朽之永夜沧海

    时朽之永夜沧海

    一场意外,王羽卷入了漩涡里。一场际遇,他遇到了良人。云司城的风烟镇里,良知少年抬头看天,却不知他心底的波澜云涌。
  • 永别了,武器

    永别了,武器

    本书讲述美国青年弗里德里克·亨利在第一次世界大战后期志愿参加红十字会驾驶救护车,在意大利北部战线抢救伤员。在一次执行任务时,亨利被炮弹击中受伤,在米兰医院养伤期间得到了英国籍护士凯瑟琳的悉心护理,两人陷入了热恋。亨利伤愈后重返前线,随意大利部队撤退时目睹战争的种种残酷景象,毅然脱离部队,和凯瑟琳会合后逃往瑞士。结果凯瑟琳在难产中死去。通过描述二人的爱情,本书揭示了战争的荒唐和残酷的本质,反映了战争中人与人之间的相互残杀以及战争对人的精神和情感的毁灭。