登陆注册
37957400000047

第47章 THREE VAGABONDS OF TRINIDAD(5)

Indeed, thanks to some mysterious power they had of utter immobility, it was wonderful how they could efface themselves, through quiet and the ******st environment. The lee side of a straggling vine in the meadow, or even the thin ridge of cast-up drift on the shore, behind which they would lie for hours motionless, was a sufficient barrier against prying eyes. In this occupation they no longer talked together, but followed each other with the blind instinct of animals--yet always unerringly, as if conscious of each other's plans. Strangely enough, it was the REAL animal alone--their nameless dog--who now betrayed impatience and a certain human infirmity of temper. The concealment they were resigned to, the sufferings they mutely accepted, he alone resented! When certain scents or sounds, imperceptible to their senses, were blown across their path, he would, with bristling back, snarl himself into guttural and strangulated fury. Yet, in their apathy, even this would have passed them unnoticed, but that on the second night he disappeared suddenly, returning after two hours' absence with bloody jaws--replete, but still slinking and snappish. It was only in the morning that, creeping on their hands and knees through the stubble, they came upon the torn and mangled carcass of a sheep. The two men looked at each other without speaking--they knew what this act of rapine meant to themselves.

It meant a fresh hue and cry after them--it meant that their starving companion had helped to draw the net closer round them.

The Indian grunted, Li Tee smiled vacantly; but with their knives and fingers they finished what the dog had begun, and became equally culpable. But that they were heathens, they could not have achieved a delicate ethical responsibility in a more Christian-like way.

Yet the rice-fed Li Tee suffered most in their privations. His habitual apathy increased with a certain physical lethargy which Jim could not understand. When they were apart he sometimes found Li Tee stretched on his back with an odd stare in his eyes, and once, at a distance, he thought he saw a vague thin vapor drift from where the Chinese boy was lying and vanish as he approached.

When he tried to arouse him there was a weak drawl in his voice and a drug-like odor in his breath. Jim dragged him to a more substantial shelter, a thicket of alder. It was dangerously near the frequented road, but a vague idea had sprung up in Jim's now troubled mind that, equal vagabonds though they were, Li Tee had more claims upon civilization, through those of his own race who were permitted to live among the white men, and were not hunted to "reservations" and confined there like Jim's people. If Li Tee was "heap sick," other Chinamen might find and nurse him. As for Li Tee, he had lately said, in a more lucid interval: "Me go dead--allee samee Mellikan boy. You go dead too--allee samee," and then lay down again with a glassy stare in his eyes. Far from being frightened at this, Jim attributed his condition to some enchantment that Li Tee had evoked from one of his gods--just as he himself had seen "medicine-men" of his own tribe fall into strange trances, and was glad that the boy no longer suffered. The day advanced, and Li Tee still slept. Jim could hear the church bells ringing; he knew it was Sunday--the day on which he was hustled from the main street by the constable; the day on which the shops were closed, and the drinking saloons open only at the back door.

The day whereon no man worked--and for that reason, though he knew it not, the day selected by the ingenious Mr. Skinner and a few friends as especially fitting and convenient for a chase of the fugitives. The bell brought no suggestion of this--though the dog snapped under his breath and stiffened his spine. And then he heard another sound, far off and vague, yet one that brought a flash into his murky eye, that lit up the heaviness of his Hebraic face, and even showed a slight color in his high cheek-bones. He lay down on the ground, and listened with suspended breath. He heard it now distinctly. It was the Boston boy calling, and the word he was calling was "Jim."

Then the fire dropped out of his eyes as he turned with his usual stolidity to where Li Tee was lying. Him he shook, saying briefly:

"Boston boy come back!" But there was no reply, the dead body rolled over inertly under his hand; the head fell back, and the jaw dropped under the pinched yellow face. The Indian gazed at him slowly, and then gravely turned again in the direction of the voice. Yet his dull mind was perplexed, for, blended with that voice were other sounds like the tread of clumsily stealthy feet.

But again the voice called "Jim!" and raising his hands to his lips he gave a low whoop in reply. This was followed by silence, when suddenly he heard the voice--the boy's voice--once again, this time very near him, saying eagerly:--

"There he is!"

Then the Indian knew all. His face, however, did not change as he took up his gun, and a man stepped out of the thicket into the trail:--

"Drop that gun, you d----d Injin."

The Indian did not move.

"Drop it, I say!"

The Indian remained erect and motionless.

A rifle shot broke from the thicket. At first it seemed to have missed the Indian, and the man who had spoken cocked his own rifle.

But the next moment the tall figure of Jim collapsed where he stood into a mere blanketed heap.

The man who had fired the shot walked towards the heap with the easy air of a conqueror. But suddenly there arose before him an awful phantom, the incarnation of savagery--a creature of blazing eyeballs, flashing tusks, and hot carnivorous breath. He had barely time to cry out "A wolf!" before its jaws met in his throat, and they rolled together on the ground.

But it was no wolf--as a second shot proved--only Jim's slinking dog; the only one of the outcasts who at that supreme moment had gone back to his original nature.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 快穿之游戏指南

    快穿之游戏指南

    晨鸽新入了一个恋爱游戏纯情医生轻咳,耳朵早已绯红:“只要是你想要的,我都会给你。”校园男神笑得肆意:“魔法?当然是用来秀恩爱的。”网游大神耳朵耷拉:“你不愿意,收我为徒吗?”晨鸽:适度游戏益脑,沉迷游戏伤身啊!
  • 再生战甲

    再生战甲

    生前最后的记忆,便是“太极”核弹爆炸时带来的极光…然而,片刻后的睁眼,却发现自己来到了末世十年之前!那个病毒爆发的前夜!人类、丧尸、进化兽、变异植物、虫族、海族!这六大种族之间,将会爆发各种争斗…最后,让我们向着天际出发!
  • BOOS大人的小娇妻

    BOOS大人的小娇妻

    “夜少你……你干嘛”看着一张俊脸不断靠近,“乖叫冰”…………………!!分界线………………………………在机场“林冉冉你休想拜托我”
  • 超凡入灭

    超凡入灭

    当你超凡,你会做点什么?成为超能者没那么好也没那么坏,当你拥有超凡能力之时,不代表你就比谁高贵,我们还是人类中的一员。请不要产生傲慢、偏见以及自命不凡的优越感。超凡的力量确实容易让人迷失,但力量的界定不是靠谁打得过谁,谁能主宰谁生命而展现。我不求每位超能者都能抛头颅洒热血,为人类的进化而前赴后继,无所畏惧。我只是一个能力一般,兢兢业业研究基因生命并仰望星空的普通老人,幸运地聆听到生命密码与宇宙真理八重奏,然后大致的提供并记录方向。而你,和你们这些展现人类生命进化方向的人,你们用自己的双腿一步一步去丈量,用生命一点一滴的去对赌。你们要面对高山、要跨过深谷、要行至险徒......没有你们的摸黑践行,我们的研究指引毫无意义。感谢你们,这是来自灵魂的高度。(这是一本饱含精气神,家国情怀的故事)
  • 晴天迷雾

    晴天迷雾

    处在地狱绝境中看谁都像是自己的救赎顾常安拼命抓住最后的稻草可是稻草始终是稻草世俗间所有的恩怨情仇终将化为尘埃飘散在这凡尘世间顾明远:“常安,新年到了,许个愿吧。”
  • 惊世邪妃逆九天

    惊世邪妃逆九天

    次奥!!什么鬼,老娘好歹也是金牌杀手殇璃。闹个啥玩意嘞,说传就传。亏着不是魂穿,老娘穿就要有老娘的特色,不就穿个越嘛,矫情个啥,还有,旁边这个妖孽谁家的,憋放出来祸害人间好啵!!!
  • 魔幻少女夜可

    魔幻少女夜可

    是个好学分子,为了借书看意外地私自闯入了图书馆,本来打算拿了书就走人的,没想到竟然拿到了一本魔法技能书,还被书中的守护兽带到了异时空魔法校园......
  • 冷王霸宠,医妃毒谋天下

    冷王霸宠,医妃毒谋天下

    一朝穿越,秦歌凭着透视眼仗走天下,励志尝遍天下美食,毒便江湖小人之辈,研发武器,高科技探秘天眼小菜一碟!秦歌身为陆战队高级间谍医馆,一越成了相府替嫁二小姐,本是皇上钦点的太子妃却被栽赃嫁祸成了杀人犯,忍?不是她风格?这一越她要搅个天翻地覆,斗法后母,扮小白莲,陪渣男玩儿,她样样精通,无奈,皇上钦点的皇妃转而成了王妃,还好那王爷还是个残废!本以为能废物利用,没成想冤家路窄,从此他说往东,她偏往西。三年后,画面一转,她上房他揭瓦,她埋尸他挖坑。爱你我可以奉你为天,助你横走天下,生死相陪。恨你,挫骨扬灰,搭上我这条命也绝不罢休!--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 明天还下雨

    明天还下雨

    该书由一个序,八个章节组成,25万字。小说叙写了上世纪六十年代初至八十年代末发生在龙源省的知识分子和普通劳动者的故事。茅危庐、斯逸民的坎坷命运,苏明华、张亚军的人生遭遇。小说以在华南大学上学的茅危庐住院期间认识护士蒋倩芷开始,到茅危庐考取该大学经济系研究生暑假看望他曾经的狱友斯逸民,知道斯逸民去世后在他的坟前的平静独白结束。
  • 一念威鸣

    一念威鸣

    我之意天地万物,我之意视你唯一,为你唯吾独尊,为你舞悼封心......