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susy, a story of the plains-第4部分

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more or less sympathetic disturbance which is apt to linger after

the impelling cause is harmlessly spent。  The fright which the girls

had unsuccessfully attempted to produce in the heart of their escort

had passed him to become a panic elsewhere。  Judge Peyton; riding

near the gateway of his rancho; was suddenly confronted by the

spectacle of one of his vacqueros driving on before him the two

lassoed and dusty ponies; with a face that broke into violent

gesticulating at his master's quick interrogation。



〃Ah!  Mother of God!  It was an evil day!  For the bronchos had run

away; upset the buggy; and had only been stopped by a brave

Americano of an ox…team; whose lasso was even now around their

necks; to prove it; and who had been dragged a matter of a hundred

varas; like a calf; at their heels。  The senoritas;ah! had he not

already said they were safe; by the mercy of Jesus!picked up by

the coach; and would be here at this moment。〃



〃But where was Pedro all the time?  What was he doing?〃 demanded

Peyton; with a darkened face and gathering anger。



The vacquero looked at his master; and shrugged his shoulders

significantly。  At any other time Peyton would have remembered that

Pedro; as the reputed scion of a decayed Spanish family; and

claiming superiority; was not a favorite with his fellow…retainers。

But the gesture; half of suggestion; half of depreciation; irritated

Peyton still more。



〃Well; where is this American who DID something when there wasn't a

man among you all able to stop a child's runaway ponies?〃 he said

sarcastically。  〃Let me see him。〃



The vacquero became still more deprecatory。



〃Ah!  He had driven on with his team towards San Antonio。  He would

not stop to be thanked。  But that was the whole truth。  He;

Incarnacion; could swear to it as to the Creed。  There was nothing

more。〃



〃Take those beasts around the back way to the corral;〃 said Peyton;

thoroughly enraged; 〃and not a word of this to any one at the casa;

do you hear?  Not a word to Mrs。 Peyton or the servants; or; by

Heaven; I'll clear the rancho of the whole lazy crew of you at once。

Out of the way there; and be off!〃



He spurred his horse past the frightened menial; and dashed down the

narrow lane that led to the gate。  But; as Incarnacion had truly

said; 〃It was an evil day;〃 for at the bottom of the lane; ambling

slowly along as he lazily puffed a yellow cigarette; appeared the

figure of the erring Pedro。  Utterly unconscious of the accident;

attributing the disappearance of his charges to the inequalities of

the plain; and; in truth; little interested in what he firmly

believed was his purely artificial function; he had even made a

larger circuit to stop at a wayside fonda for refreshments。



Unfortunately; there is no more illogical sequence of human emotion

than the exasperation produced by the bland manner of the

unfortunate object who has excited it; although that very unconcern

may be the convincing proof of innocence of intention。  Judge

Peyton; already influenced; was furious at the comfortable

obliviousness of his careless henchman; and rode angrily towards

him。  Only a quick turn of Pedro's wrist kept the two men from

coming into collision。



〃Is this the way you attend to your duty?〃 demanded Peyton; in a

thick; suppressed voice; 〃Where is the buggy?  Where is my

daughter?〃



There was no mistaking Judge Peyton's manner; even if the reason of

it was not so clear to Pedro's mind; and his hot Latin blood flew

instinctively to his face。  But for that; he might have shown some

concern or asked an explanation。  As it was; he at once retorted

with the national shrug and the national half…scornful; half…lazy

〃Quien sabe?〃



〃Who knows?〃 repeated Peyton; hotly。  〃I do!  She was thrown out of

her buggy through your negligence and infernal laziness!  The ponies

ran away; and were stopped by a stranger who wasn't afraid of

risking his bones; while you were limping around somewhere like a

slouching; cowardly coyote。〃



The vacquero struggled a moment between blank astonishment and

inarticulate rage。  At last he burst out:



〃I am no coyote!  I was there!  I saw no runaway!〃



〃Don't lie to me; sir!〃 roared Peyton。  〃I tell you the buggy was

smashed; the girls were thrown out and nearly killed〃  He stopped

suddenly。  The sound of youthful laughter had come from the bottom

of the lane; where Susy Peyton and Mary Rogers; just alighted from

the coach; in the reaction of their previous constrained attitude;

were flying hilariously into view。  A slight embarrassment crossed

Peyton's face; a still deeper flush of anger overspread Pedro's

sullen cheek。



Then Pedro found tongue again; his native one; rapidly; violently;

half incoherently。  〃Ah; yes!  It had come to this。  It seems he was

not a vacquero; a companion of the padrone on lands that had been

his own before the Americanos robbed him of it; but a servant; a

lackey of muchachas; an attendant on children to amuse them; orwhy

not?an appendage to his daughter's state!  Ah; Jesus Maria! such a

state! such a muchacha!  A picked…up foundlinga swineherd's

daughterto be ennobled by his; Pedro's; attendance; and for whose

vulgar; clownish tricks;tricks of a swineherd's daughter;he;

Pedro; was to be brought to book and insulted as if she were of

Hidalgo blood!  Ah; Caramba!  Don Juan Peyton would find he could no

more make a servant of him than he could make a lady of her!〃



The two young girls were rapidly approaching。  Judge Peyton spurred

his horse beside the vacquero's; and; swinging the long thong of his

bridle ominously in his clenched fingers; said; with a white face:



〃Vamos!〃



Pedro's hand slid towards his sash。  Peyton only looked at him with

a rigid smile of scorn。



〃Or I'll lash you here before them both;〃 he added in a lower voice。



The vacquero met Peyton's relentless eyes with a yellow flash of

hate; drew his reins sharply; until his mustang; galled by the cruel

bit; reared suddenly as if to strike at the immovable American;

then; apparently with the same action; he swung it around on its

hind legs; as on a pivot; and dashed towards the corral at a furious

gallop。





CHAPTER III。





Meantime the heroic proprietor of the peaceful ox…team; whose valor

Incarnacion had so infelicitously celebrated; was walking listlessly

in the dust beside his wagon。  At a first glance his slouching

figure; taken in connection with his bucolic conveyance; did not

immediately suggest a hero。  As he emerged from the dusty cloud it

could be seen that he was wearing a belt from which a large dragoon

revolver and hunting knife were slung; and placed somewhat

ostentatiously across the wagon seat was a rifle。  Yet the other

contents of the wagon were of a singularly inoffensive character;

and even suggested articles of homely barter。  Culinary utensils of

all sizes; tubs; scullery brushes; and clocks; with several rolls of

cheap carpeting and calico; might have been the wares of some

traveling vender。  Yet; as they were only visible through a flap of

the drawn curtains of the canvas hood; they did not mitigate the

general aggressive effect of their owner's appearance。  A red

bandanna handkerchief knotted and thrown loosely over his shoulders;

a slouched hat pulled darkly over a head of long tangled hair;

which; however; shadowed a round; comfortable face; scantily and

youthfully bearded; were part of these confusing inconsistencies。



The shadows of the team wagon were already lengthening grotesquely

over the flat; cultivated fields; which for some time had taken the

place of the plains of wild oats in the branch road into which they

had turned。  The gigantic shadow of the proprietor; occasionally

projected before it; was in characteristic exaggeration; and was

often obliterated by a puff of dust; stirred by the plodding hoofs

of the peaceful oxen; and swept across the field by the strong

afternoon trades。  The sun sank lower; although a still potent

presence above the horizon line; the creaking wagon lumbered still

heavily along。  Yet at intervals its belligerent proprietor would

start up from his slouching; silent march; break out into violent;

disproportionate; but utterly ineffective objurgation of his cattle;

jump into the air and kick his heels together in some paroxysm of

indignation against them;an act; however; which was received

always with heavy bovine indifference; the dogged scorn of swaying;

repudiating heads; or the dull contempt of lazily flicking tails。



Towards sunset one or two straggling barns and cottages indicated

their approach to the outskirts of a country town or settlement。

Here the team halted; as if the belligerent…looking teamster had

felt his appearance was inconsistent with an effeminate

civilization; and the oxen were turned into an open waste opposite a

nondescript wooden tenement; half farmhouse and half cabin;

evidently of the rudest Western origin。  He may have recognized the

fact that these 〃shanties〃 were not; as the ordinary traveler might

infer; the first rude shelter of the original pioneers or settlers;

but the later makeshifts of some recent Western immigrants who; like

himself; probably found themselves unequal to the settled habits of

the village; and who still retained their nomadic instincts。  It

chanced; however; that the cabin at present was occupied by a New

England mechanic and his family; who had emigrated by ship around

Cape Horn; and who had no experience of the West; the plains; or its

people。  It was therefore with some curiosity and a certain amount

of fascinated awe that the mechanic's only daughter regarded from

the open door of her dwelling the arrival of this wild and lawless…

looking stranger。



Meantime he had opened the curtains of the wagon and taken from its

interior a number of pots; pans; and culinary utensils; which he

proceed
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