登陆注册
19627400000010

第10章 III. STEVE TREATS(1)

It was for several minutes, I suppose, that I stood drawing these silent morals. No man occupied himself with me. Quiet voices, and games of chance, and glasses lifted to drink, continued to be the peaceful order of the night. And into my thoughts broke the voice of that card-dealer who had already spoken so sagely. He also took his turn at moralizing.

"What did I tell you?" he remarked to the man for whom he continued to deal, and who continued to lose money to him, "Tell me when?"

"Didn't I tell you he'd not shoot?" the dealer pursued with complacence. "You got ready to dodge. You had no call to be concerned. He's not the kind a man need feel anxious about."

The player looked over at the Virginian, doubtfully. "Well," he said, "I don't know what you folks call a dangerous man."

"Not him!" exclaimed the dealer with admiration. "He's a brave man. That's different."

The player seemed to follow this reasoning no better than I did.

"It's not a brave man that's dangerous," continued the dealer.

"It's the cowards that scare me." He paused that this might sink home.

"Fello' came in here las' Toosday," he went on. "He got into some misunderstanding about the drinks. Well, sir, before we could put him out of business, he'd hurt two perfectly innocent onlookers.

They'd no more to do with it than you have," the dealer explained to me.

"Were they badly hurt?" I asked.

"One of 'em was. He's died since."

"What became of the man?"

"Why, we put him out of business, I told you. He died that night.

But there was no occasion for any of it; and that's why I never like to be around where there's a coward. You can't tell. He'll always go to shooting before it's necessary, and there's no security who he'll hit. But a man like that black-headed guy is (the dealer indicated the Virginian) need never worry you. And there's another point why there's no need to worry about him:

IT'D BE TOO LATE."

These good words ended the moralizing of the dealer. He had given us a piece of his mind. He now gave the whole of it to dealing cards. I loitered here and there, neither welcome nor unwelcome at present, watching the cow-boys at their play. Saving Trampas, there was scarce a face among them that had not in it something very likable. Here were lusty horsemen ridden from the heat of the sun, and the wet of the storm, to divert themselves awhile.

Youth untamed sat here for an idle moment, spending easily its hard-earned wages. City saloons rose into my vision, and I instantly preferred this Rocky Mountain place. More of death it undoubtedly saw, but less of vice, than did its New York equivalents.

And death is a thing much cleaner than vice. Moreover, it was by no means vice that was written upon these wild and manly faces.

Even where baseness was visible, baseness was not uppermost.

Daring, laughter, endurance--these were what I saw upon the countenances of the cow-boys. And this very first day of my knowledge of them marks a date with me. For something about them, and the idea of them, smote my American heart, and I have never forgotten it, nor ever shall, as long as I live. In their flesh our natural passions ran tumultuous; but often in their spirit sat hidden a true nobility, and often beneath its unexpected shining their figures took on heroic stature.

The dealer had styled the Virginian "a black-headed guy." This did well enough as an unflattered portrait. Judge Henry's trustworthy man, with whom I was to drive two hundred and sixty-three miles, certainly had a very black head of hair. It was the first thing to notice now, if one glanced generally at the table where he sat at cards. But the eye came back to him--drawn by that inexpressible something which had led the dealer to speak so much at length about him.

Still, "black-headed guy" justly fits him and his next performance. He had made his plan for this like a true and (I must say) inspired devil. And now the highly appreciative town of Medicine Bow was to be treated to a manifestation of genius.

He sat playing his stud-poker. After a decent period of losing and winning, which gave Trampas all proper time for a change of luck and a repairing of his fortunes, he looked at Steve and said amiably:"How does bed strike you?"

I was beside their table, learning gradually that stud-poker has in it more of what I will call red pepper than has our Eastern game. The Virginian followed his own question:"Bed strikes me," he stated.

Steve feigned indifference. He was far more deeply absorbed in his bet and the American drummer than he was in this game; but he chose to take out a fat, florid gold watch, consult it elaborately, and remark, "It's only eleven."

"Yu' forget I'm from the country," said the black-headed guy.

"The chickens have been roostin' a right smart while."

His sunny Southern accent was again strong. In that brief passage with Trampas it had been almost wholly absent. But different moods of the spirit bring different qualities of utterance--where a man comes by these naturally. The Virginian cashed in his checks.

"Awhile ago," said Steve, "you had won three months' salary."

"I'm still twenty dollars to the good," said the Virginian.

"That's better than breaking a laig."

Again, in some voiceless, masonic way, most people in that saloon had become aware that something was in process of happening.

Several left their games and came to the front by the bar.

"If he ain't in bed yet--" mused the Virginian.

"I'll find out," said I. And I hurried across to the dim sleeping room, happy to have a part in this.

They were all in bed; and in some beds two were sleeping. How they could do it--but in those days I was fastidious. The American had come in recently and was still awake.

"Thought you were to sleep at the store?" said he.

So then I invented a little lie, and explained that I was in search of the Virginian "Better search the dives," said he. "These cow-boys don't get to town often."

At this point I stumbled sharply over something.

"It's my box of Consumption Killer," explained the drummer;

"Well, I hope that man will stay out all night."

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 殿下太正经

    殿下太正经

    在雪山深处生活了五千年的她终于踏出外界,却在阴错阳差之下将封在冰洞里几千年的殿下救了出来。此殿下甚合她意,可是这个殿下太正经,无论她怎么勾搭都坐怀不乱。
  • 血战风雨桥

    血战风雨桥

    得澄恩仇怨,血战风雨桥。千百年来,神州大地,江湖间恩怨仇杀,一成不改。
  • 变体

    变体

    为了防止世界被破坏为了维护世界的和平贯彻爱与真实的邪恶可爱又迷人的反派角色武藏……小次郎……我们是穿梭在银河中的火箭队白洞,白色的明天在等着我们就是这样……喵……喵……
  • 小四劝退师

    小四劝退师

    体面的家室,轻松的工作,英俊多金的男朋友......都市7分女颜苒本是众人羡慕的对象,怎么都不会想到会有一天被小三。“我爱上他的时候不知道他已婚,凭什么我来承担小三的污名?”感情之事,谁人能凭借对错选择去留?这畸形的社会如果不能忍受,就要学会享受。既然无意间影响了他人的家庭,那就以自己的方式来赎罪。帮正房,斗小四,保护孩子,加把劲~看非传统反典型性小三如何在劝退小四的过程中,升职副经理,嫁给高富帅,走上人生巅峰,觅到此生挚爱。“开玩笑,小三劝退师现在是多高薪的职业!而我,小四劝退师,LEVEL直接高了一个档次了好么?”“颜苒,你是不是脑子有问题?”“你有药啊?”
  • 坠天使的复仇倾城恋

    坠天使的复仇倾城恋

    她,冰冷如雪,高傲的她,将所有人的看的不屑,却对妹妹们是关爱有加,一颗被冰封的心,有谁可以将她融化?她,热情如火,开放的她,因为她快死在雪地,因此她恨透了纯白的雪,看起来热情如火,但心却是冷漠无情,又有谁能走进她那锁闭的心?她,温柔如水,可爱的她,总是喜欢在别人面前卖萌,卡哇伊的女孩,虽然温柔的她,可爱的她,但面对自己的仇人是恨之入骨,被冰封住的心,谁可以将她融化?她何时可以释放她那纯真的心?她们该如何选择自己的爱情?在爱情的过程又有怎样的火花?在复仇的过程中又会发生怎样的故事?
  • 孟三山

    孟三山

    碧波天上涌,流云水中来;满目盈盈皆青翠,何必忧忧满心怀。人到中年,本以为此生将浑浑老矣,却不料误入仙山。护树碑上留名,看到的却是一场平静背后的乱战。本以为活着就为了落叶归根,然而登到高处才明白,你若求安求稳,必有万千人阻你。既然如此,我必踏平前路,翻手为天。三山之中皆念我名,威名也好,凶名也罢。九州之上,我所过处,必是乐土......
  • 百变邪少

    百变邪少

    以七情六欲为根本进行修行的武者来到了一个充满现代化的都市会出现什么样的故事呢!
  • 千金嫡女:谁都别惹我

    千金嫡女:谁都别惹我

    全身异能的她穿越到一个任人欺负的将军府嫡女身上,二娘,二妹的狠毒她一下子给灭了,收了紫色眸子的妖孽弟弟,带着两个呆萌美男侍卫,开始报复欺负她的人,来一个送死的,她收了,来一个又一个美男,有点招架不住,跑到哪里又来一个,又来一个……【情节虚构,请勿模仿】
  • 艾伦的魔幻之旅

    艾伦的魔幻之旅

    一块奇幻瑰丽的大陆,一段荡气回肠的传奇。不同的地域,不同的种族,不同的国家;不同的历史,不同的文明,不同的人民。这是一部曲折离奇的冒险之旅,也是一部可歌可泣的大陆史。这不是一部打怪升级的小说,战斗的篇幅很少,涉及到主角的战斗更少。这不是一部爽文,但可以让人思考,让人发笑,让人垂泪。
  • 门第

    门第

    幼年跟随多病的爷爷从闽南到北京乞讨的珍珠,因偶遇音乐学院梁教授而彻底改变命运,然而于卑微出身中幻化出的高贵梦想却因遭遇致命对手成为绝唱。一曲钢琴的挽歌让她在十八岁时挥泪饮恨,超越血缘的爱伴随她渐渐成长。与两个不同家庭背景的男子相逢,则让她在爱情与门第之间饱受煎熬,演绎出另类的一往情深。