书城公版A Phyllis Of The Sierras
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第5章

He, however, began to apply himself to the task given to him with his usual conscientiousness of duty, and presently acquired a certain manual dexterity in the operation.It was "good fun" to throw the cast-off husks into the mighty unfathomable void before him, and watch them linger with suspended gravity in mid air for a moment--apparently motionless--until they either lost themselves, a mere vanishing black spot in the thin ether, or slid suddenly at a sharp angle into unknown shadow.How deuced odd for him to be sitting here in this fashion!It would be something to talk of hereafter, and yet,--he stopped--it was not at all in the line of that characteristic adventure, uncivilized novelty, and barbarous ******* which for the last month he had sought and experienced.It was not at all like his meeting with the grizzly last week while wandering in a lonely canyon; not a bit in the line of his chance acquaintance with that notorious ruffian, Spanish Jack, or his witnessing with his own eyes that actual lynching affair at Angels.

No!Nor was it at all characteristic, according to his previous ideas of frontier rural seclusion--as for instance the Pike County cabin of the family where he stayed one night, and where the handsome daughter asked him what his Christian name was.No!

These two young women were very unlike her; they seemed really quite the equals of his family and friends in England,--perhaps more attractive,--and yet, yes, it was this very attractiveness that alarmed his inbred social conservatism regarding women.With a man it was very different; that alert, active, intelligent husband, instinct with the throbbing life of his saw-mill, creator and worker in one, challenged his unqualified trust and admiration.

He had become conscious for the last minute or two of thinking rapidly and becoming feverishly excited; of breathing with greater difficulty, and a renewed tendency to cough.The tendency increased until he instinctively put aside the pan from his lap and half rose.But even that slight exertion brought on an accession of coughing.He put his handkerchief to his lips, partly to keep the sound from disturbing the women in the kitchen, partly because of a certain significant taste in his mouth which he unpleasantly remembered.When he removed the handkerchief it was, as he expected, spotted with blood.He turned quickly and re-entered the house softly, regaining the bedroom without attracting attention.

An increasing faintness here obliged him to lie down on the bed until it should pass.

Everything was quiet.He hoped they would not discover his absence from the veranda until he was better; it was deucedly awkward that he should have had this attack just now--and after he had made so light of his previous exertions.They would think him an effeminate fraud, these two bright, active women and that alert,energetic man.A faint color came into his cheek at the idea, and an uneasy sense that he had been in some way foolishly imprudent about his health.Again, they might be alarmed at missing him from the veranda; perhaps he had better have remained there; perhaps he ought to tell them that he had concluded to take their advice and lie down.He tried to rise, but the deep blue chasm before the window seemed to be swelling up to meet him, the bed slowly sinking into its oblivious profundity.He knew no more.

He came to with the smell and taste of some powerful volatile spirit, and the vague vision of Mr. Bradley still standing at the window of the mill and vibrating with the machinery; this changed presently to a pleasant lassitude and lazy curiosity as he perceived Mr. Bradley smile and apparently slip from the window of the mill to his bedside."You're all right now," said Bradley,cheerfully.

He was feeling Mainwaring's pulse.Had he really been ill and was Bradley a doctor?

Bradley evidently saw what was passing in his mind."Don't be alarmed," he said gayly."I'm not a doctor, but I practise a little medicine and surgery on account of the men at the mill, and accidents, you know.You're all right now; you've lost a little blood: but in a couple of weeks in this air we'll have that tubercle healed, and you'll be as right as a trivet."

"In a couple of weeks!" echoed Mainwaring, in faint astonishment.

"Why, I leave here to-morrow."

"You'll do nothing of the kind" said Mrs. Bradley, with smiling peremptoriness, suddenly slipping out from behind her husband.

"Everything is all perfectly arranged.Jim has sent off messengers to your friends, so that if you can't come to them, they can come to you.You see you can't help yourself!If you WILL walk fifteen miles with such lungs, and then frighten people to death, you must abide by the consequences."

"You see the old lady has fixed you," said Bradley, smiling; "and she's the master here.Come, Mainwaring, you can send any other message you like, and have who and what you want here; but HERE you must stop for a while."

"But did I frighten you really?" stammered Mainwaring, faintly, to Mrs. Bradley.

"Frighten us!" said Mrs. Bradley."Well, look there!"

She pointed to the window, which commanded a view of the veranda.

Miss Macy had dropped into the vacant chair, with her little feet stretched out before her, her cheeks burning with heat and fire,her eyes partly closed, her straw hat hanging by a ribbon round her neck, her brown hair clinging to her ears and forehead in damp tendrils, and an enormous palm-leaf fan in each hand violently playing upon this charming picture of exhaustion and abandonment.

"She came tearing down to the mill, bare-backed on our half-broken mustang, about half an hour ago, to call me 'to help you,'"explained Bradley."Heaven knows how she managed to do it!"