Wildfire eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 401 pages of information about Wildfire.

Wildfire eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 401 pages of information about Wildfire.

But Bostil did not sleep nor rest.

Next morning early he rode down to the river.  Somers and Shugrue had finished the boat and were waiting.  Other men were there, curious and eager.  Joel Creech, barefooted and ragged, with hollow eyes and strange actions, paced the sands.

The boat was lying bottom up.  Bostil examined the new planking and the seams.  Then he straightened his form.

“Turn her over,” he ordered.  “Shove her in.  An’ let her soak up to-day.”

The men seemed glad and relieved.  Joel Creech heard and he came near to Bostil.

“You’ll—­you’ll fetch Dad’s hosses over?” he queried.

“Sure.  To-morrow,” replied Bostil, cheerily.

Joel smiled, and that smile showed what might have been possible for him under kinder conditions of life.  “Now, Bostil, I’m sorry fer what I said,” blurted Joel.

“Shut up.  Go tell your old man.”

Joel ran down to his skiff and, leaping in, began to row vigorously across.  Bostil watched while the workmen turned the boat over and slid it off the sand-bar and tied it securely to the mooring.  Bostil observed that not a man there saw anything unusual about the river.  But, for that matter, there was nothing to see.  The river was the same.

That night when all was quiet in and around the village Bostil emerged from his house and took to his stealthy stalk down toward the river.

The moment he got out into the night oppression left him.  How interminable the hours had been!  Suspense, doubt, anxiety, fear no longer burdened him.  The night was dark, with only a few stars, and the air was cool.  A soft wind blew across his heated face.  A neighbor’s dog, baying dismally, startled Bostil.  He halted to listen, then stole on under the cottonwoods, through the sage, down the trail, into the jet-black canyon.  Yet he found his way as if it had been light.  In the darkness of his room he had been a slave to his indecision; now in the darkness of the looming cliffs he was free, resolved, immutable.

The distance seemed short.  He passed out of the narrow canyon, skirted the gorge over the river, and hurried down into the shadowy amphitheater under the looming walls.

The boat lay at the mooring, one end resting lightly the sand-bar.  With strong, nervous clutch Bostil felt the knots of the cables.  Then he peered into the opaque gloom of that strange and huge V-shaped split between the great canyon walls.  Bostil’s mind had begun to relax from the single idea.  Was he alone?  Except for the low murmur of the river there was dead silence—­a silence like no other—­a silence which seemed held under imprisoning walls.  Yet Bostil peered long into the shadows.  Then he looked up.  The ragged ramparts far above frowned bold and black at a few cold stars, and the blue of its sky was without the usual velvety brightness.  How far it was up to that corrugated rim!  All of a sudden Bostil hated this vast ebony pit.

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Project Gutenberg
Wildfire from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.