The Heart of the Desert eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 251 pages of information about The Heart of the Desert.

The Heart of the Desert eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 251 pages of information about The Heart of the Desert.

Rhoda raised her eyebrows.  After all the fearful lessons, DeWitt had not yet come to a full realization of the skill and resourcefulness of Kut-le.  The girl said nothing, however, but left the leadership to DeWitt.  The sun was setting, turning to clear red and pale lavender a distant peak that then merged with the dusk, one could not tell when nor how.  Rhoda and DeWitt sat at the foot of an inhospitable crag whose distant top, baring itself to the heavens, was a fearful climb above them.

Rhoda watched the sunset a little wistfully.  She must impress on her memory every one that she saw now.  She felt that her days in the desert were numbered.

DeWitt shook his empty canteen.

“It was mighty clever of you to bring a canteen.  We’ve got to be careful of the water question.  Of course, I’m confident we will reach camp this evening, but you can’t be too careful of water anyhow.  Lord!  Think of Jack Newman’s face when we come strolling in!  We ought to be back at the ranch in five days.”

“Do you know it’s going to be strange to talk with Katherine!” exclaimed Rhoda.  “She’s a white woman, you know!”

DeWitt took both of Rhoda’s brown little hands in his.

“I’m not appearing very sympathetic, sweetheart,” he said.  “But I’m so crazy with joy at having you again and of finding you so well that I don’t know what I’m saying.”

“John,” said Rhoda slowly, “I don’t need any sympathy!  I tell you that this has been the most wonderful experience that ever came into my life.  I have suffered!” Her voice trembled and John’s hold on her hands tightened.  “God only knows how I have suffered!  But I have learned things that were worth the misery!”

DeWitt looked at her wide-eyed.

“You’re a wonder!” he exclaimed.

Rhoda laughed softly.

“You ought to hear the Indians’ opinion of me!  Do you know what I’ve thought of lots of times lately?  You know that place on the Hudson where men go when they are nervous wrecks and the doctor cures them by grilling them mentally and physically clear beyond endurance?  Well, that’s the sort of cure I’ve had, except that I’ve had two doctors, the Indian and the desert!”

DeWitt answered slowly.

“I don’t quite see it!  But I know one thing.  You are about the gamest little thoroughbred I ever heard of!”

The moon was rising and DeWitt watched Rhoda as she sat with her hands clasping her knee in the boyish attitude that had become a habit.

“You are simply fascinating in those clothes, Rhoda.  You are like a beautiful slender boy in them.”

“They are very comfortable,” said Rhoda, in such a sedate matter-of-fact tone despite her blush that DeWitt chuckled.  He threw his arm across her shoulder and hugged her to him ecstatically.

“Rhoda!  Rhoda!  You are the finest ever!  I can’t believe that this terrible nightmare is over!  And to think that instead of finding you all but dead, you are a thousand times more fit than I am myself.  Rhoda, just think!  You are going to live!  To live!  You will not be my wife just for a few months, as we thought, but for years and years!”

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Project Gutenberg
The Heart of the Desert from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.