登陆注册
8961600000014

第14章 NARRATIVE OF SHORTY.(5)

Messner made a well-feigned gesture of helplessness. "I really don't know. It is one of those impossible situations against which there can be no provision."

"All three of us cannot remain the night in this cabin."

Messner nodded affirmation.

"Then somebody must get out."

"That also is incontrovertible," Messner agreed. "When three bodies cannot occupy the same space at the same time, one must get out."

"And you're that one," Womble announced grimly. "It's a ten-mile pull to the next camp, but you can make it all right."

"And that's the first flaw in your reasoning," the other objected.

"Why, necessarily, should I be the one to get out? I found this cabin first."

"But Tess can't get out," Womble explained. "Her lungs are already slightly chilled."

"I agree with you. She can't venture ten miles of frost. By all means she must remain."

"Then it is as I said," Womble announced with finality.

Messner cleared his throat. "Your lungs are all right, aren't they?"

"Yes, but what of it?"

Again the other cleared his throat and spoke with painstaking and judicial slowness. "Why, I may say, nothing of it, except, ah, according to your own reasoning, there is nothing to prevent your getting out, hitting the frost, so to speak, for a matter of ten miles. You can make it all right."

Womble looked with quick suspicion at Theresa and caught in her eyes a glint of pleased surprise.

"Well?" he demanded of her.

She hesitated, and a surge of anger darkened his face. He turned upon Messner.

"Enough of this. You can't stop here."

"Yes, I can."

"I won't let you." Womble squared his shoulders. "I'm running things."

"I'll stay anyway," the other persisted.

"I'll put you out."

"I'll come back."

Womble stopped a moment to steady his voice and control himself.

Then he spoke slowly, in a low, tense voice.

"Look here, Messner, if you refuse to get out, I'll thrash you.

This isn't California. I'll beat you to a jelly with my two fists."

Messner shrugged his shoulders. "If you do, I'll call a miners' meeting and see you strung up to the nearest tree. As you said, this is not California. They're a ****** folk, these miners, and all I'll have to do will be to show them the marks of the beating, tell them the truth about you, and present my claim for my wife."

The woman attempted to speak, but Womble turned upon her fiercely.

"You keep out of this," he cried.

In marked contrast was Messner's "Please don't intrude, Theresa."

What of her anger and pent feelings, her lungs were irritated into the dry, hacking cough, and with blood-suffused face and one hand clenched against her chest, she waited for the paroxy** to pass.

Womble looked gloomily at her, noting her cough.

"Something must be done," he said. "Yet her lungs can't stand the exposure. She can't travel till the temperature rises. And I'm not going to give her up."

Messner hemmed, cleared his throat, and hemmed again, semi- apologetically, and said, "I need some money."

Contempt showed instantly in Womble's face. At last, beneath him in vileness, had the other sunk himself.

"You've got a fat sack of dust," Messner went on. "I saw you unload it from the sled."

"How much do you want?" Womble demanded, with a contempt in his voice equal to that in his face.

"I made an estimate of the sack, and I - ah - should say it weighed about twenty pounds. What do you say we call it four thousand?"

"But it's all I've got, man!" Womble cried out.

"You've got her," the other said soothingly. "She must be worth it. Think what I'm giving up. Surely it is a reasonable price."

"All right." Womble rushed across the floor to the gold-sack.

"Can't put this deal through too quick for me, you - you little worm!"

"Now, there you err," was the smiling rejoinder. "As a matter of ethics isn't the man who gives a bribe as bad as the man who takes a bribe? The receiver is as bad as the thief, you know; and you needn't console yourself with any fictitious moral superiority concerning this little deal."

"To hell with your ethics!" the other burst out. "Come here and watch the weighing of this dust. I might cheat you."

And the woman, leaning against the bunk, raging and impotent, watched herself weighed out in yellow dust and nuggets in the scales erected on the grub-box. The scales were small, ****** necessary many weighings, and Messner with precise care verified each weighing.

"There's too much silver in it," he remarked as he tied up the gold-sack. "I don't think it will run quite sixteen to the ounce.

You got a trifle the better of me, Womble."

He handled the sack lovingly, and with due appreciation of its preciousness carried it out to his sled.

Returning, he gathered his pots and pans together, packed his grub- box, and rolled up his bed. When the sled was lashed and the complaining dogs harnessed, he returned into the cabin for his mittens.

"Good-by, Tess," he said, standing at the open door.

She turned on him, struggling for speech but too frantic to word the passion that burned in her.

"Good-by, Tess," he repeated gently.

"Beast!" she managed to articulate.

She turned and tottered to the bunk, flinging herself face down upon it, sobbing: "You beasts! You beasts!"

John Messner closed the door softly behind him, and, as he started the dogs, looked back at the cabin with a great relief in his face.

At the bottom of the bank, beside the water-hole, he halted the sled. He worked the sack of gold out between the lashings and carried it to the water-hole. Already a new skin of ice had formed. This he broke with his fist. Untying the knotted mouth with his teeth, he emptied the contents of the sack into the water.

The river was shallow at that point, and two feet beneath the surface he could see the bottom dull-yellow in the fading light.

At the sight of it, he spat into the hole.

He started the dogs along the Yukon trail. Whining spiritlessly, they were reluctant to work. Clinging to the gee-pole with his right band and with his left rubbing cheeks and nose, he stumbled over the rope as the dogs swung on a bend.

"Mush-on, you poor, sore-footed brutes!" he cried. "That's it, mush-on!"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 当代孔师

    当代孔师

    【师者,传业授道解惑也!】没什么说的,看下去你就明白了,这是一个退学学生认真办学,然后将学校打理成世界第一学府的故事!本书系统流,不喜勿入!心智不健全者,请在监护人或医师指导下阅读,请勿与现实做任何比较。重点突出:大学生请保持理智,请勿与现实做任何勾连,最好在辅导员的陪同下一起看书:益智,健康,有利于身心发展!(不喜勿喷)
  • 复仇公主逆袭吧

    复仇公主逆袭吧

    本来很幸福的四个小姑娘,可就在那一夕之间四个小姑娘失去了一切,决心一定要为自己报仇,他们去了“幽鬼岛”进行磨练,十年过去啦,他们变得十分强大,而他们也变得冷酷无情了,他们要报仇,.....................
  • 注目:一位文艺记者的职场遇见

    注目:一位文艺记者的职场遇见

    本书分两部分:一是“注目”,作者以记者的身份,采访了国内最知名的作家、文化名人等共二十几位,其中有冯唐、张嘉佳、海岩、几米、九把刀,安妮宝贝 ,梁晓声, 朱天衣,吴念真等,听他们讲述自己如何走上写作的道路、成名前的艰苦岁月、他们对现代文化的理解、对当前文学市场的现状分析及文学发展前景预测等等。第二部分“回望”记录了作者一些人生感悟的随笔和对周华健、李宗盛等明星的采访。
  • 极暗之时

    极暗之时

    爱情?友情?快乐?幸福?我们只是想活下去罢了!在电影无限可能性之中找寻属于自己的光芒,我们都是有缺陷的人但谁也无法否认我们是传奇的一部分。
  • 脚上有路一个修脚工的中国梦

    脚上有路一个修脚工的中国梦

    人们常说“路在脚下”,可是对于本文主人公郑远元而言,似乎用“路在脚上”更为适宜和恰当,因为他的创业之路、成功之路是从修脚开始走出来的,他在脚上演绎了一个出彩人生的传奇。是的,一个从深山僻壤里走出去谋生的农村娃,从靠体力务工到靠智力学艺,从当技工、技师到开店创业,从摆地摊修脚起步,发展到在全国17个省、自治区、直辖市,拥有600多家专业脚病修治连锁店、专业技师5000余名,成为全国同行业领军企业的掌门人,这的确不是一般人所能比肩的,太了不起了!
  • 转生到修仙世界里做商人

    转生到修仙世界里做商人

    王德发是一个失业青年,一次意外的车祸让他英年早逝,在转生的过程中孟婆给他喝错了汤?他前世穷苦一生,为人打工受气,今生那就自立门户赚成首富“地阶功法,全网最低价!”“极品丹药,买三送一!”“武器?买丹药功法送武器咯!”
  • 这系统有亿点不正经

    这系统有亿点不正经

    花无良被强制穿越到另一个纬度,最强大佬化为系统,白送的老婆竟是系统闺女?……看着到处沾花惹草的系统本统,花无良表示心累(??Д`)再说你惹去吧,问题是你这藏品有点多啊,每次撩完就非要顺走人家的一些秘密东西,一天天跟个社会头子似的。花无良举手高喊我想换一个系统,这个太给力了,顶不住啊!
  • 世界十大文豪——海明威

    世界十大文豪——海明威

    1899年7月21日,诞生于美国芝加哥的郊区小镇“橡树园”的海明威,孩童时代就表现出非凡的文学天赋及与众不同的性格。六岁时,进入霍姆斯文法学校开始了他的学生时代。在学校里,以他的多才多艺以及争强好胜成为学校的“名人”。毕业后,在堪萨斯城任《堪萨斯星报》记者。在这里,年轻的记者看到了真正的社会。1918年4月,应召入伍,使他有了一段永远也抹不去的战争伤痕。从此开始了他的小说创作,《初升的太阳》、《永别了·武器》、《丧钟为谁而鸣》、《老人与海》伴随着他独特而传奇的经历应运而生。在这里,我们看到了一位战士,他开创了“迷惘的一代”文学流派,记录下了一个时代的历史。
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 泛娱乐明星

    泛娱乐明星

    梦中也能天上掉馅饼,平凡而普通的宅男得到了来自全民娱乐的外星球最高科技。对于娱乐圈一无所知的菜鸟就这样一头扎进了娱乐圈,却走上了娱乐圈中不务正业的不归路……