书城公版Tales of Trail and Town
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第40章 THE JUDGMENT OF BOLINAS PLAIN(3)

"Gettin' the dust off me," he said, in hurried explanation; "be down in a second." Indeed, in another moment he had resumed his shirt and flannel coat, and swung himself to the floor with a like grace and dexterity, that was to her the revelation of a descending god.She found herself face to face with him,--his features cleansed of dirt and grime, his hair plastered in wet curls on his low forehead.It was a face of cheap adornment, not uncommon in his profession--unintelligent, unrefined, and even unheroic; but she did not know that.Overcoming a sudden timidity, she nevertheless told him briefly and concisely of the arrival and departure of his pursuers.

His low forehead wrinkled."Thar's no getting away until they come back," he said without looking at her."Could ye keep me in here to-night?""Yes," she returned simply, as if the idea had already occurred to her; "but you must lie low in the loft.""And could you"--he hesitated, and went on with a forced smile--"you see, I've eaten nothing since last night.Could you"--"I'll bring you something," she said quickly, nodding her head.

"And if you had"--he went on more hesitatingly, glancing down at his travel-torn and frayed garments--"anything like a coat, or any other clothing? It would disguise me also, you see, and put 'em off the track."She nodded her head again rapidly: she had thought of that too;there was a pair of doeskin trousers and a velvet jacket left by a Mexican vaquero who had bought stock from them two years ago.

Practical as she was, a sudden conviction that he would look well in the velvet jacket helped her resolve.

"Did they say"--he said, with his forced smile and uneasy glance--"did they--tell you anything about me?"

"Yes," she said abstractedly, gazing at him.

"You see," he began hurriedly, "I'll tell you how it was.""No, don't!" she said quickly.She meant it.She wanted no facts to stand between her and this single romance of her life."I must go and get the things," she added, turning away, "before he gets back.""Who's HE?" asked the man.

She was about to reply, "My husband," but without knowing why stopped and said, "Mr.Beasley," and then ran off quickly to the house.

She found the vaquero's clothes, took some provisions, filled a flask of whiskey in the cupboard, and ran back with them, her mouth expanded to a vague smile, and pulsating like a schoolgirl.She even repressed with difficulty the ejaculation "There!" as she handed them to him.He thanked her, but with eyes fixed and fascinated by the provisions.She understood it with a new sense of delicacy, and saying, "I'll come again when he gets back," ran off and returned to the house, leaving him alone to his repast.

Meantime her husband, lounging lazily along the high road, had precipitated the catastrophe he wished to avoid.For his slouching figure, silhouetted against the horizon on that monotonous level, had been the only one detected by the deputy sheriff and the constable, his companion, and they had charged down within fifty yards of him before they discovered their mistake.They were not slow in ****** this an excuse for abandoning their quest as far as Lowville: in fact, after quitting the distraction of Mrs.Beasley's presence they had, without in the least suspecting the actual truth, become doubtful if the fugitive had proceeded so far.He might at that moment be snugly ensconced behind some low wire-grass ridge, watching their own clearly defined figures, and waiting only for the night to evade them.The Beasley house seemed a proper place of operation in beating up the field.Ira's cold reception of the suggestion was duly disposed of by the deputy."I have the RIGHT, ye know," he said, with a grim pleasantry, "to summon ye as my posse to aid and assist me in carrying out the law; but I ain't the man to be rough on my friends, and I reckon it will do jest as well if I 'requisition' your house." The dreadful recollection that the deputy had the power to detail him and the constable to scour the plain while he remained behind in company with Sue stopped Ira's further objections.Yet, if he could only get rid of her while the deputy was in the house,--but then his nearest neighbor was five miles away! There was nothing left for him to do but to return with the men and watch his wife keenly.Strange to say, there was a certain stimulus in this which stirred his monotonous pulses and was not without a vague pleasure.There is a revelation to some natures in newly awakened jealousy that is a reincarnation of love.

As they came into the house a slight circumstance, which an hour ago would have scarcely touched his sluggish sensibilities, now appeared to corroborate his fear.His wife had changed her cuffs and collar, taken off her rough apron, and evidently redressed her hair.This, with the enhanced brightness of her eyes, which he had before noticed, convinced him that it was due to the visit of the deputy.There was no doubt that the official was equally attracted and fascinated by her prettiness, and although her acceptance of his return was certainly not a cordial one, there was a kind of demure restraint and over-consciousness in her manner that might be coquetry.Ira had vaguely observed this quality in other young women, but had never experienced it in his brief courtship.There had been no rivalry, no sexual diplomacy nor insincerity in his capture of the motherless girl who had leaped from the tail-board of her father's wagon almost into his arms, and no man had since come between them.The idea that Sue should care for any other than himself had been simply inconceivable to his placid, matter-of-fact nature.That their sacrament was final he had never doubted.If his two cows, bought with his own money or reared by him, should suddenly have developed an inclination to give milk to a neighbor, he would not have been more astonished.But THEY could have been brought back with a rope, and without a heart throb.