登陆注册
5468800000021

第21章 CHAPTER III(5)

I had my tricky reasons. I know these greaser sheep-herders an' I know the respect Texans have for a gunman. Some say I bragged.

Some say I'm an old fool in his dotage, ravin' aboot a favorite son.

But they are people who hate me an' are afraid. True, son, I talked with a purpose, but shore I was mighty cold an' steady when I did it.

My feelin' was that you'd do what I'd do if I were thirty years younger.

No, I reckoned you'd do more. For I figured on your blood. Jean, you're Indian, an' Texas an' French, an' you've trained yourself in the Oregon woods. When you were only a boy, few marksmen I ever knew could beat you, an' I never saw your equal for eye an' ear, for trackin' a hoss, for all the gifts that make a woodsman. . . . Wal, rememberin' this an' seein' the trouble ahaid for the Isbels, I just broke out whenever I had a chance. I bragged before men I'd reason to believe would take my words deep. For instance, not long ago I missed some stock, an', happenin' into Greaves's place one Saturday night, I shore talked loud. His barroom was full of men an' some of them were in my black book. Greaves took my talk a little testy. He said. 'Wal, Gass, mebbe you're right aboot some of these cattle thieves livin' among us, but ain't they jest as liable to be some of your friends or relatives as Ted Meeker's or mine or any one around heah?' That was where Greaves an' me fell out. I yelled at him: 'No, by God, they're not!

My record heah an' that of my people is open. The least I can say for you, Greaves, an' your crowd, is that your records fade away on dim trails.' Then he said, nasty-like, 'Wal, if you could work out all the dim trails in the Tonto you'd shore be surprised.' An' then I roared. Shore that was the chance I was lookin' for. I swore the trails he hinted of would be tracked to the holes of the rustlers who made them. I told him I had sent for you an' when you got heah these slippery, mysterious thieves, whoever they were, would shore have hell to pay. Greaves said he hoped so, but he was afraid I was partial to my Indian son. Then we had hot words. Blaisdell got between us.

When I was leavin' I took a partin' fling at him. 'Greaves, you ought to know the Isbels, considerin' you're from Texas. Maybe you've got reasons for throwin' taunts at my claims for my son Jean. Yes, he's got Indian in him an' that 'll be the worse for the men who will have to meet him. I'm tellin' you, Greaves, Jean Isbel is the black sheep of the family. If you ride down his record you'll find he's shore in line to be another Poggin, or Reddy Kingfisher, or Hardin', or any of the Texas gunmen you ought to remember. . . . Greaves, there are men rubbin' elbows with you right heah that my Indian son is goin' to track down!' "

Jean bent his head in stunned cognizance of the notoriety with which his father had chosen to affront any and all Tonto Basin men who were under the ban of his suspicion. What a terrible reputation and trust to have saddled upon him! Thrills and strange, heated sensations seemed to rush together inside Jean, forming a hot ball of fire that threatened to explode. A retreating self made feeble protests.

He saw his own pale face going away from this older, grimmer man.

"Son, if I could have looked forward to anythin' but blood spillin' I'd never have given you such a name to uphold," continued the rancher.

"What I'm goin' to tell you now is my secret. My other sons an' Ann have never heard it. Jim Blaisdell suspects there's somethin' strange, but he doesn't know. I'll shore never tell anyone else but you.

An' you must promise to keep my secret now an' after I am gone."

"I promise," said Jean.

"Wal, an' now to get it out," began his father, breathing hard.

His face twitched and his hands clenched. "The sheepman heah I have to reckon with is Lee Jorth, a lifelong enemy of mine. We were born in the same town, played together as children, an' fought with each other as boys. We never got along together. An' we both fell in love with the same girl. It was nip an' tuck for a while.

Ellen Sutton belonged to one of the old families of the South.

She was a beauty, an' much courted, an' I reckon it was hard for her to choose. But I won her an' we became engaged. Then the war broke out. I enlisted with my brother Jean. He advised me to marry Ellen before I left. But I would not. That was the blunder of my life.

Soon after our partin' her letters ceased to come. But I didn't distrust her. That was a terrible time an' all was confusion.

Then I got crippled an' put in a hospital. An' in aboot a year I was sent back home."

At this juncture Jean refrained from further gaze at his father's face.

Lee Jorth had gotten out of goin' to war," went on the rancher, in lower, thicker voice. "He'd married my sweetheart, Ellen. . . .

I knew the story long before I got well. He had run after her like a hound after a hare. . . . An' Ellen married him. Wal, when I was able to get aboot I went to see Jorth an' Ellen. I confronted them.

I had to know why she had gone back on me. Lee Jorth hadn't changed any with all his good fortune. He'd made Ellen believe in my dishonor.

But, I reckon, lies or no lies, Ellen Sutton was faithless. In my absence he had won her away from me. An' I saw that she loved him as she never had me. I reckon that killed all my generosity. If she'd been imposed upon an' weaned away by his lies an' had regretted me a little I'd have forgiven, perhaps. But she worshiped him. She was his slave. An' I, wal, I learned what hate was.

"The war ruined the Suttons, same as so many Southerners. Lee Jorth went in for raisin' cattle. He'd gotten the Sutton range an' after a few years he began to accumulate stock. In those days every cattleman was a little bit of a thief. Every cattleman drove in an' branded calves he couldn't swear was his. Wal, the Isbels were the strongest cattle raisers in that country. An' I laid a trap for Lee Jorth, caught him in the act of brandin' calves of mine I'd marked, an' I proved him a thief. I made him a rustler. I ruined him. We met once.

同类推荐
  • A Drift from Redwood Camp

    A Drift from Redwood Camp

    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。
  • 奉使京西

    奉使京西

    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。
  • 王梵志诗集

    王梵志诗集

    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。
  • 佛说梵摩难国王经

    佛说梵摩难国王经

    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。
  • 道行般若波罗蜜经

    道行般若波罗蜜经

    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。
热门推荐
  • 抢到一个世界

    抢到一个世界

    新书《继承三千年》(创世首发)已肥,敬请支持!***我的人生都靠抢!抢到一个世界,成为最大赢家!让人感到遗憾的是:我的实力还是太低,只能初步认主大世界,想要从凶兽遍地的大世界中得到什么,还得靠抢。于是——抢到九级镭射枪一把抢到灵泉一眼抢到星内飞车一辆抢到能量块制造工厂一座抢到长寿草一丛抢到五级机甲一套抢到基因进化液一箱抢到蟠桃林一片抢到三级星际战舰一艘抢到灵宝一件......在这个灵气复苏的时代,你想进化吗?来求我吧!
  • 皎皎白驹,在彼空谷

    皎皎白驹,在彼空谷

    书的封面上写着“杀千刀”三个字。“爷爷,这是武功秘籍?这个名字怎么有些……”杀千刀?这不是骂人吗!
  • 墨尔本,算到爱

    墨尔本,算到爱

    厦门-墨尔本,纽约-佛罗伦萨。爱情里的时尚,数学里的浪漫。一个品牌的世界梦想。[神光群:454173;书友群:590118637]
  • 肯·福莱特悬疑经典全三辑

    肯·福莱特悬疑经典全三辑

    通宵小说大师、《巨人的陨落》作者肯·福莱特的悬疑经典15本全收录。肯·福莱特,爱伦·坡终身大师奖得主。在欧美出版界,肯·福莱特这个名字就是畅销的保证。柏林市政府为了感谢肯·福莱特写出《永恒的边缘》,送给他一块柏林墙。肯·福莱特等身铜像已成为西班牙维多利亚市的热门景点,书迷从世界各地赶来合影。肯·福莱特的小说World Without end上市10天就登顶了西班牙所有畅销排行榜。萨基诺谷州立大学为他建立了一座档案馆,那里存放着许多他的资料和手稿。
  • 毕大卫传

    毕大卫传

    本书是大思想家爱德华滋根据自己的好友毕大卫的日记为其编纂的传记,也是爱德华滋编纂的唯一一本传记。毕大卫(1718—1747年)成年后大部分时间都在北美土著印第安人中工作,是跨种族、跨文化交流的先驱和重要纽带。因他短暂的一生经历诸多苦难,他的传记和日志真实记录了他的心路历程,失败之后的反思和蒙恩典之后的感激,朴实而真切,激励了一代又一代的人。此书1749年甫一出版,即广受赞誉,一版再版,经久不衰。毕大卫的生平不仅激励人心,对美国高等教育也影响颇深。因耶鲁大学开除毕大卫并拒绝再次接纳他,此事促成了普林斯顿大学的前身——新泽西学院的成立。
  • 芃娜的小屋

    芃娜的小屋

    父母突然去世,家中境况变得窘迫,自己在学校遭受到了校园暴力,与此同时,备受打击的外婆记忆力也开始退化……这一切把本就胆小怯弱的芃娜几乎逼向了绝境。可是她一直生活的小屋子中的老座钟、勺子、猴子布偶都幻化成精灵给了她无穷的勇气和力量。在一次次的冒险中,她开始成长和觉悟。虽然这座魔法小屋只存在于她的幻想中,却真正拯救了她和外婆的生活。就像书中老座钟所说的:“你总是习惯放大困难,为什么不放大你的勇气呢?”
  • 维新

    维新

    本书叙述了由改良派发动、光绪帝主导的维新运动正如火如荼进行,却一夜之间被慈禧太后扼杀的全过程。慈禧是为求自保杀康党,还是恋栈权柄擒光绪?康有为是百日维新之首脑功臣,还是变法失败之罪魁祸首?袁世凯是力推新政领先锋,还是背叛改革真告密?本书将为您揭晓答案。戊戌政变彻底斩断了维新变法之路,刚看到一丝曙光的晚清政府再一次跌入黑暗的深渊。
  • 守护上官瑾瑜

    守护上官瑾瑜

    千万年,足以使一颗石头进化成一块玉石,也足以让锦鲤变成少女,而促使她变成人的,却是一具冷冰冰的尸体。人死了以后还可以死而复生么?锦鲤觉得,只要心诚就可以,只要雪域精灵们配合,就可以!男人或是女人,妖精或是人类,有什么事情是不可以的?
  • 他的星辰大海

    他的星辰大海

    电竞高冷大神和智商不高的团宠遇见你之前没有想过结婚,遇见你之后没有想过别人。他一对我笑,我就想把我的全世界捧到他眼前,温柔的问他,你要吗?都给你。
  • 民间歌手

    民间歌手

    刚刚从乡上开会回来的村支书说,今年“五·一”劳动节期间,乡上要举办一次“劳动者之歌”歌王演唱大赛,全乡干部群众都可以报名参加。不仅如此,为了促进农村精神文明建设,让农村群众共享文化盛宴,乡上还明文规定,每个村至少要选派一名以上代表参加这次歌王大赛,这项工作要和村“两委”的年终考核挂钩,作为本年度的一个政绩工程来考评。据村支书在村民小组长会议上的说法,这次“劳动者之歌”歌王大赛,乡上的领导非常重视,目的是为了通过劳动者的歌声来体现全乡劳动人民的精神风貌。