登陆注册
19650900000057

第57章 MISS PEGGY'S PROTEGES(3)

But, fortunately for Peggy, the most favored of her cherished possessions was not obliged to be kept secret. That one exception was an Indian dog! This was also a gift, and had been procured with great "difficulty" by a "packer" from an Indian encampment on the Oregon frontier. The "difficulty" was, in plain English, that it had been stolen from the Indians at some peril to the stealer's scalp. It was a mongrel to all appearances, of no recognized breed or outward significance, yet of a quality distinctly its own. It was absolutely and totally uncivilized. Whether this was a hereditary trait, or the result of degeneracy, no one knew. It refused to enter a house; it would not stay in a kennel. It would not eat in public, but gorged ravenously and stealthily in the shadows. It had the slink of a tramp, and in its patched and mottled hide seemed to simulate the rags of a beggar. It had the tirelessness without the affected limp of a coyote. Yet it had none of the ferocity of barbarians. With teeth that could gnaw through the stoutest rope and toughest lariat, it never bared them in anger. It was cringing without being amiable or submissive; it was gentle without being affectionate.

Yet almost insensibly it began to yield to Peggy's faith and kindness. Gradually it seemed to single her out as the one being in this vast white-faced and fully clothed community that it could trust. It presently allowed her to half drag, half lead it to and fro from school, although on the approach of a stranger it would bite through the rope or frantically endeavor to efface itself in Peggy's petticoats. It was trying, even to the child's sweet gravity, to face the ridicule excited by its appearance on the road; and its habit of carrying its tail between its legs--at such an inflexible curve that, on the authority of Sam Bedell, a misstep caused it to "turn a back somersault"--was painfully disconcerting.

But Peggy endured this, as she did the greater dangers of the High Street in the settlement, where she had often, at her own risk, absolutely to drag the dazed and bewildered creature from under the wheels of carts and the heels of horses. But this shyness wore off--or rather was eventually lost in the dog's complete and utter absorption in Peggy. His limited intelligence and imperfect perceptions were excited for her alone. His singularly keen scent detected her wherever or how remote she might be. Her passage along a "blind trail," her deviations from the school path, her more distant excursions, were all mysteriously known to him. It seemed as if his senses were concentrated in this one faculty. No matter how unexpected or unfamiliar the itinerary, "Lo, the poor Indian"--as the men had nicknamed him (in possible allusion to his "untutored mind")--always arrived promptly and silently.

It was to this singular faculty that Peggy owed one of her strangest experiences. One Saturday afternoon she was returning from an errand to the village when she was startled by the appearance of Lo in her path. For the reason already given, she no longer took him with her to these active haunts of civilization, but had taught him on such occasions to remain as a guard outside the stockade which contained her treasures. After reading him a severe lecture on this flagrant abandonment of his trust, enforced with great seriousness and an admonitory forefinger, she was concerned to see that the animal appeared less agitated by her reproof than by some other disturbance. He ran ahead of her, instead of at her heels, as was his usual custom, and barked--a thing he rarely did. Presently she thought she discovered the cause of this in the appearance from the wood of a dozen men armed with guns. They seemed to be strangers, but among them she recognized the deputy sheriff of the settlement. The leader noticed her, and, after a word or two with the others, the deputy approached her.

"You and Lo had better be scooting home by the highroad, outer this--or ye might get hurt," he said, half playfully, half seriously.

Peggy looked fearlessly at the men and their guns.

"Look ez ef you was huntin'?" she said curiously.

"We are!" said the leader.

"Wot you huntin'?"

The deputy glanced at the others. "B'ar!" he replied.

"Ba'r!" repeated the child with the quick resentment which a palpable falsehood always provoked in her. "There ain't no b'ar in ten miles! See yourself huntin' b'ar! Ho!"

The man laughed. "Never you mind, missy," said the deputy, "you trot along!" He laid his hand very gently on her head, faced her sunbonnet towards the near highway, gave the usual parting pull to her brown pigtail, added, "Make a bee-line home," and turned away.

Lo uttered the first growl known in his history. Whereat Peggy said, with lofty forbearance, "Serve you jest right ef I set my dog on you."

But force is no argument, and Peggy felt this truth even of herself and Lo. So she trotted away. Nevertheless, Lo showed signs of hesitation. After a few moments Peggy herself hesitated and looked back. The men had spread out under the trees, and were already lost in the woods. But there was more than one trail through it, and Peggy knew it.

And here an alarming occurrence startled her. A curiously striped brown and white squirrel whisked past her and ran up a tree.

Peggy's round eyes became rounder. There was but one squirrel of that kind in all the length and breadth of Blue Cement Ridge, and that was in the menagerie! Even as she looked it vanished. Peggy faced about and ran back to the road in the direction of the stockade, Lo bounding before her. But another surprise awaited her. There was the clutter of short wings under the branches, and the sunlight flashed upon the iris throat of a wood-duck as it swung out of sight past her. But in this single glance Peggy recognized one of the latest and most precious of her acquisitions.

同类推荐
  • 法观经

    法观经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 文赋

    文赋

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 十诵羯磨比丘要用

    十诵羯磨比丘要用

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 百字碑

    百字碑

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 词说

    词说

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 英雄联盟之命运的抉择

    英雄联盟之命运的抉择

    命运其实就是一场豪赌,好的赌徒会抓住一切机会用出自己的筹码参与到赌局当中,然后赢得更多。赌术的高低不在乎赌注多少,千术如何,而在于会不会利用每一个机会。即使拿到一手再烂的底牌也不要紧,只要你想赢,总有比底牌更好的明牌,总有比你更烂的底牌。崔斯特一直以为自己是那种最聪明的赌徒,直到他遇见了。。。。。。
  • 神丑

    神丑

    世界不知何时已经被窃取神之力量的五大使徒掌控,动荡不安的大地面临崩裂……此刻,来自异界的勇者悄然降临,背负夺回神之世界的使命,同时拥有传说中可以改变一切的时之刻痕,在被划分为五个领域的大陆上展开奇幻的冒险!神之道化的白色幻境,是驱魔师与恶魔的宿命谜团……黑色死神的迷失之地,死神的归途不知何方……斗神的绝对领域,排兵布阵,一骑当千,征兵伐谋,智谋与武力的最强挑战……游戏之王的极乐国度,卡牌的极致法则与运气……片翼天使的妄想天国,剑术的最强巅峰……执念!本能!意志!命运!极限!五大历练之后的主角能否挑战神呢?
  • 极道魔师

    极道魔师

    在这强者为尊的世界,谁主浮沉?在这以实力说话的世界,何为黑白?楚晗枫冷笑:你嘴脸已然歪曲,是非不分,就让我教你如何重新做人,另附送轮回之旅。
  • 恶魔公主太邪魅

    恶魔公主太邪魅

    她拥有世界上最好的东西,可谁也不知到她玩世不恭的外表下不堪的往事。她应该放弃仇恨还是华丽归来让他们过上生不如死的生活,让她们活在忏悔中。
  • 孟魂

    孟魂

    一代刀神陈风,因得到一部灭世神功被众多高手追杀陨落。当他醒过来的时候,发现自己不仅变成了一个八岁的孩子而且这是一个前所未有的新大陆···新人新作品需要您的点击收藏2010年1月26日本书的处女收被一个幸运的人拿走了!谢谢
  • 重生之玩转豪门

    重生之玩转豪门

    天才网络小说家重生豪门少奶奶,宅系腹黑女,一夜间轻松玩转豪门!哼,玩阴谋?她从来不在话下!世家争斗,她讥诮一笑,从容应对。小人阴招,她必一一“回报”!当岁月洗尽铅华,当年净身出户的她,如今吸引的又是多少人追随的目光?
  • 理财高手(现代生活实用丛书)

    理财高手(现代生活实用丛书)

    本书着眼于我国经济社会发展对家庭、个人财产进行管理提出的新要求,立足于成为理财高手,从理财观念、理财规划、理财工具三个方面人手,将家庭、个人理财作为一项系统工程,结合相关案例,由浅入深进行了阐述,提出了具体的操作建议,具有知识性、通俗性和可操作性,是家庭和个人理财的指南。
  • 异世吞天

    异世吞天

    万花同窟。百美一怀。废物天才。灭寂归来。凤凰涅槃。在战巅峰。新书等级:灵肉、奥义、天人、神变、仙灵、无极、圣灵。每境十重。每个人心中都有一个自己的仙侠,这是我的仙侠。
  • 万年破冰后

    万年破冰后

    冰封万年,恍如昨日破冰之时,冰雪万里飘一个平庸的青年,无意间在万年后的某一天破冰而出,睁开双眼之时,冰雪世界,雪花飘零,岁月飞逝,一个又一个熟悉的身影,呈现在他眼前的却是一束束冰雕,昔日的故人与亲人,尽数被一层奇异的薄冰封在里面......那么绝代佳人已在何方?站在万年后的大陆之上,面对着一个又一个的艰难,一生苦苦维持的信仰,到底能伴随他走多久?尽在《万年破冰后》一一呈现而出!!!
  • 清华浮梦

    清华浮梦

    她顾凉城是一个孤儿,一次偶然的机会被一个组织的人带走,她从小就经历了许多同龄人不会经历的痛苦一次任务她爱上了目标,为了救自己心爱的人,独自一人在火海里烧死。她是季南国顾将军的孙女顾凉城,嚣张跋扈,所有人都讨厌她,恨她。她为了那个叫三王爷的人不惜一切。可是却被自己的妹妹陷害在三王府撞到假山失血过多死亡。一次偶然的机会她穿越到这里,她睁开眼发现自己躺在棺材。她性情真我、哭笑随心,只因深信人活的真实。她放弃了过去的自己重新开始说:“既然死过一回,这世再为人,何不尝遍酸甜苦辣,”为了生存不惜一切,只为了保护自己在乎的人