A Texas Ranger eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 287 pages of information about A Texas Ranger.

A Texas Ranger eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 287 pages of information about A Texas Ranger.

For all the impression she made the girdle round her waist might have been of steel.  Without moving, he held her as she struggled, his brown muscular fingers slowly tightening round her wrist.  Her stifled cry was of pain this time, and before it had died the revolver fell to the ground from her paralyzed grip.

But her exclamation had been involuntary and born of the soft tender flesh.  The wild eyes that flamed into his asked for no quarter and received none.  He drew her slowly down toward him, inch by inch, till she lay crushed and panting against him, but still unconquered.  Though he held the stiff resistant figure motionless she still flashed battle at him.

He looked into the storm and fury of her face, hiding he knew not what of terror, and laughed in insolent delight.  Then, very deliberately, he kissed her lips.

“You—­ coward!” came instantly her choking defiance.

“Another for that,” he laughed, kissing her again.

Her little fist beat against his face and he captured it, but as he looked at her something that had come into the girl’s face moved his not very accessible heart.  The salt of the adventure was gone, his victory worse than a barren one.  For stark fear stared at him, naked and unconcealed, and back of that he glimpsed a subtle something that he dimly recognized for the outraged maidenly modesty he had so ruthlessly trampled upon.  His hands fell to his side reluctantly.

She stumbled back against the tree trunk, watching him with fascinated eyes that searched him anxiously.  They found their answer, and with a long ragged breath the girl turned and burst into hysterical tears.

The man was amazed.  A moment since the fury of a tigress had possessed her.  Now she was all weak womanish despair.  She leaned against the cottonwood and buried her face in her arm, the while uneven sobs shook her slender body.  He frowned resentfully at this change of front, and because his calloused conscience was disturbed he began to justify himself.  Why didn’t she play it out instead of coming the baby act on him?  She had undertaken to hold him up and he had made her pay forfeit.  He didn’t see that she had any kick coming.  If she was this kind of a boarding-school kid she ought not to have monkeyed with the buzz-saw.  She was lucky he didn’t take her to El Paso with him and have her jailed.

“I reckon we’ll listen to explanations now,” he said grimly after a minute of silence interrupted only by her sobs.

The little fist that had struck at his face now bruised itself in unconscious blows at the bark of the tree.  He waited till the staccato breaths had subsided, then took her by the shoulders and swung her round.

“You have the floor, ma’am.  What does this gun-play business mean?”

Through the tears her angry eyes flashed starlike.

“I sha’n’t tell you,” she flamed.  “You had no right to—­ How dared you insult me as you have?”

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
A Texas Ranger from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.