The Flockmaster of Poison Creek. George W. Ogden
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Название: The Flockmaster of Poison Creek

Автор: George W. Ogden

Издательство: Bookwire

Жанр: Языкознание

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isbn: 4064066239114

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СКАЧАТЬ my father,” she returned. “This is my brother Charley; there are eight more of us at home.”

      Charley grinned, his shyness still over him, but his alarm quieted, and gave Mackenzie his hand.

      “The ranch is about thirteen or fifteen miles on up the creek from here,” she said, “You haven’t had your breakfast, have you?”

      “No; I just about finished my grub yesterday.”

      “I didn’t see any grease around your gills,” said the girl, in quite a matter-of-fact way, no flippancy in her manner. “Charley, stir up the fire, will you? I can’t offer you much, Mr. Mackenzie, but you’re welcome to what there is. How about a can of beans?”

      “You’ve hit me right where I live, Miss Sullivan.”

      The collies came warily up, stiff-legged, with backs still ruffled, and sniffed Mackenzie over. They seemed to find him harmless, turning from him presently to go and lie beside Charley, their faces toward the flock, alert ears lifted, white breasts gleaming in the sun like the linen of fastidious gentlemen.

      41

      “Do you want me to get any water, Joan?” Charley inquired.

      Joan answered from inside the wagon that no water was needed, there was coffee enough in the pot. She handed the smoke-blackened vessel out to Mackenzie as she spoke, telling him to go and put it on the fire.

      Joan turned the beans into the pan after cooking the bacon, and sent Charley to the wagon for a loaf of bread.

      “We don’t have to bake bread in this camp, that’s one blessing,” she said. “Mother keeps us supplied. Some of these sheepherders never taste anything but their cold-water biscuits for years at a time.”

      “It must get kind of tiresome,” Mackenzie reflected, thinking of his own efforts at bread-making on the road.

      “It’s too heavy to carry around in the craw,” said Joan.

      Charley watched Mackenzie curiously as he ate, whispering once to his sister, who flushed, turned her eyes a moment on her visitor, and then seemed to rebuke the lad for passing confidences in such impolite way. Mackenzie guessed that his discolored neck and bruised face had been the subject of the boy’s conjectures, but he did not feel pride enough in his late encounter to speak of it even in explanation. Charley opened the way to it at last when Joan took the breakfast things back to the wagon.

      “Have you been in a fight?” the boy inquired.

      “Not much of a one,” Mackenzie told him, rather wishing that the particulars might be reserved.

      “Your neck’s black like somebody’d been chokin’ you, 42 and your face is bunged up some, too. Who done it?”

      “Do you know Swan Carlson?” Mackenzie inquired, turning slowly to the boy.

      “Swan Carlson?” Charley’s face grew pale at the name; his eyes started in round amazement. “You couldn’t never ’a’ got away from Swan; he choked two fellers to death, one in each hand. No man in this country could whip one side of Swan.”

      “Well, I got away from him, anyhow,” said Mackenzie, in a manner that even the boy understood to be the end of the discussion.

      But Charley was not going to have it so. He jumped up and ran to meet Joan as she came from the wagon.

      “Mr. Mackenzie had a fight with Swan Carlson––that’s what’s the matter with his neck!” he said. There was unbounded admiration in the boy’s voice, and exultation as if the distinction were his own. Here before his eyes was a man who had come to grips with Swan Carlson, and had escaped from his strangling hands to eat his breakfast with as much unconcern as if he had no more than been kicked by a mule.

      Joan came on a little quicker, excitement reflected in her lively eyes. Mackenzie was filling his pipe, which had gone through the fight in his pocket in miraculous safety––for which he was duly grateful––ashamed of his bruises, now that the talk of them had brought them to Joan’s notice again.

      “I hope you killed him,” she said, coming near, looking down on Mackenzie with full commendation; “he keeps his crazy wife chained up like a dog!”

      “I don’t think he’s dead, but I’d like to know for 43 sure,” Mackenzie returned, his eyes bent thoughtfully on the ground.

      “Nobody will ever say a word to you if you did kill him,” Joan assured. “They’d all know he started it––he fusses with everybody.”

      She sat on the ground near him, Charley posting himself a little in front, where he could admire and wonder over the might of a man who could break Swan Carlson’s hold upon his throat and leave his house alive. Before them the long valley widened as it reached away, the sheep a dusty brown splotch in it, spread at their grazing, the sound of the lambs’ wailing rising clear in the pastoral silence.

      “I stopped at Carlson’s house after dark last night,” Mackenzie explained, seeing that such explanation must be made, “and turned his wife loose. Carlson resented it when he came home. He said I’d have to fight him. But you’re wrong when you believe what Carlson says about that woman; she isn’t crazy, and never was.”

      That seemed to be all the story, from the way he hastened it, and turned away from the vital point of interest. Joan touched his arm as he sat smoking, his speculative gaze on the sheep, his brows drawn as if in troubled thought.

      “What did you do when he said you had to fight him?” she inquired, her breath coming fast, her cheeks glowing.

      Mackenzie laughed shortly. “Why, I tried to get away,” he said.

      “Why didn’t you, before he got his hands on you?” Charley wanted to know.

      44

      “Charley!” said Joan.

      “Carlson locked the door before I could get out.” Mackenzie nodded to the boy, very gravely, as one man to another. Charley laughed.

      “You didn’t tear up no boards off the floor tryin’ to git away!” said he.

      Joan smiled; that seemed to express her opinion of it, also. She admired the schoolmaster’s modest reluctance when he gave them a bare outline of what followed, shuddering when he laughed over Mrs. Carlson’s defense of her husband with the ax.

      “Gee!” said Charley, “I hope dad’ll give you a job.”

      “But how did you get out of there?” Joan asked.

      “I took an unfair advantage of Swan and hit him with a table leg.”

      “Gee! dad’s got to give you a job,” said Charley; “I’ll make him.”

      “I’ll hold you to that, Charley,” Mackenzie laughed.

      In the boy’s eyes Mackenzie was already a hero, greater than any man that had come into the sheeplands in his day. Sheep people are not fighting folks. They never have been since the world’s beginning; СКАЧАТЬ