Where the Trail Divides eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 273 pages of information about Where the Trail Divides.

Where the Trail Divides eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 273 pages of information about Where the Trail Divides.

The woman sat down beside him, her hand on his knee.

“Don’t keep it from me,” she requested steadily.  “You’ve seen something.”

In the brier bowl before his face the tobacco glowed more brightly as Rowland drew hard.

“Tell me, please,” repeated Margaret.  “Are they here?”

The pipe left the man’s mouth.  The great bushy head nodded reluctant corroboration.

“Yes,” he said.

“You—­saw them?”

Again the man’s head spoke an affirmative.  “It’s perhaps as well, after all, for you to know.”  One hand indicated the foot of the rise before them.  “They waylaid Mueller there.”

“And you—­”

“It was all over in a second.”  Puff, puff.  “After all he—­Margaret!”

“Don’t mind me.  I was thinking of baby.  The hideous suggestion!”

“Margaret!” He held her tight, so tight he could feel the quiver of her body against his, the involuntary catch of her breath.  “Forgive me, Margaret.”

“You’re not to blame.  Perhaps—­Oh, Sam, Sam, our baby!”

Hotter and hotter beat down the sun.  Thicker and thicker above the scorching earth vibrated the curling heat waves.  The very breath of prairie seemed dormant, stifled.  Not the leaf of a sunflower stirred, or a blade of grass.  In the tiny patch of Indian corn each individual plant drooped, almost like a sensate thing, beneath the rays, each broad leaf contracted, like a roll of parchment, tight upon the parent stalk.  In sympathy the colour scheme of the whole lightened from the appearance of the paler green under-surface.  Though silently, yet as plainly as had done Hans Mueller when fighting for life, they lifted the single plea:  “Water!  Water!  Give us drink!”

Silent now, the storm over, side by side sat the man and the woman; like children awed by the sudden realisation of their helplessness, their hands clasped in mute sympathy, mute understanding.  Usually at this time of day with nothing to do they slept; but neither thought of sleep now.  As passed the slow time and the sun sank lower and lower, came the hour of supper; but likewise hunger passed them by.  Something very like fascination held them there on the doorstep, gazing out, out at motionless impassive nature, at the seemingly innocent earth that nevertheless concealed so certain a menace, at the patch of sod corn again in cycle growing darker as the broad leaves unfolded in preparation for the dew of evening.  Out, out they looked, out, out—.

“Sam!”

“Yes.”

“You saw, too?”

An answering pressure of the hand.

“The eyes of him, only the eyes—­out there at the edge of the corn!”

“It’s the third time, Margaret.”  Despite the man’s effort his breath tightened.  “They’re all about:  a score at least—­I don’t know how many.  The tall grass there to the east is alive—­”

“Sam!  They’re there again—­the eyes!  Oh, I’m afraid—­Sam—­baby!”

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Project Gutenberg
Where the Trail Divides from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.