登陆注册
26269300000101

第101章 XXIX. WORD TO BENNINGTON(3)

"Perhaps I can do something to-night at Mrs. Taylor's," she said, looking at her paper.

On it were a few words crossed out. This was all she had to show.

At this set task in letter-writing, the cow-puncher had greatly excelled the schoolmarm!

But that night, while he lay quite fast asleep in his bed, she was keeping vigil in her room at Mrs. Taylor's.

Accordingly, the next day, those three letters departed for the mail, and Mrs. Taylor consequently made her exclamation, "It's come!"

On the day before the Virginian returned to take up his work at Judge Henry's ranch, he and Molly announced their news. What Molly said to Mrs. Taylor and what Mrs. Taylor said to her, is of no interest to us, though it was of much to them.

But Mr. McLean happened to make a call quite early in the morning to inquire for his friend's health.

"Lin," began the Virginian, "there is no harm in your knowing an hour or so before the rest, I am--"

"Lord!" said Mr. McLean, indulgently. Everybody has knowed that since the day she found yu' at the spring."

"It was not so, then," said the Virginian, crossly.

"Lord! Everybody has knowed it right along."

"Hmp!" said the Virginian. "I didn't know this country was that rank with gossips."

Mr. McLean laughed mirthfully at the lover. "Well," he said, "Mrs. McLean will be glad. She told me to give yu' her congratulations quite a while ago. I was to have 'em ready just as soon as ever yu' asked for 'em yourself." Lin had been made a happy man some twelve months previous to this. And now, by way of an exchange of news, he added: "We're expectin' a little McLean down on Box Elder. That's what you'll be expectin' some of these days, I hope."

"Yes," murmured the Virginian, "I hope so too."

"And I don't guess," said Lin, "that you and I will do much shufflin' of other folks' children any more."

Whereupon he and the Virginian shook hands silently, and understood each other very well.

On the day that the Virginian parted with Molly, beside the weight of farewell which lay heavy on his heart, his thoughts were also grave with news. The cattle thieves had grown more audacious. Horses and cattle both were being missed, and each man began almost to doubt his neighbor.

"Steps will have to be taken soon by somebody, I reckon," said the lover.

"By you?" she asked quickly.

"Most likely I'll get mixed up with it."

"What will you have to do?""Can't say. I'll tell yu' when I come back.

So did he part from her, leaving her more kisses than words to remember.

And what was doing at Bennington, meanwhile, and at Dunbarton?

Those three letters which by their mere outside had so moved Mrs.

Taylor, produced by their contents much painful disturbance.

It will be remembered that Molly wrote to her mother, and to her great-aunt. That announcement to her mother was undertaken first.

Its composition occupied three hours and a half, and it filled eleven pages, not counting a postscript upon the twelfth. The letter to the great-aunt took only ten minutes. I cannot pretend to explain why this one was so greatly superior to the other; but such is the remarkable fact. Its beginning, to be sure, did give the old lady a start; she had dismissed the cow-boy from her probabilities.

"Tut, tut, tut!" she exclaimed out loud in her bedroom. "She has thrown herself away on that fellow!"

But some sentences at the end made her pause and sit still for a long while. The severity upon her face changed to tenderness, gradually. "Ah, me," she sighed. "If marriage were as ****** as love!" Then she went slowly downstairs, and out into her garden, where she walked long between the box borders. "But if she has found a great love," said the old lady at length. And she returned to her bedroom, and opened an old desk, and read some old letters.

There came to her the next morning a communication from Bennington. This had been penned frantically by poor Mrs. Wood.

As soon as she had been able to gather her senses after the shock of her daughter's eleven pages and the postscript, the mother had poured out eight pages herself to the eldest member of the family. There had been, indeed, much excuse for the poor lady. To begin with, Molly had constructed her whole opening page with the express and merciful intention of preparing her mother.

Consequently, it made no sense whatever. Its effect was the usual effect of remarks designed to break a thing gently. It merely made Mrs. Wood's head swim, and filled her with a sickening dread. "Oh, mercy, Sarah," she had cried, "come here. What does this mean?" And then, fortified by her elder daughter, she had turned over that first page and found what it meant on the top of the second. "A savage with knives and pistols!" she wailed.

"Well, mother, I always told you so," said her daughter Sarah.

"What is a foreman?" exclaimed the mother. "And who is Judge Henry?" "She has taken a sort of upper servant," said Sarah. "If it is allowed to go as far as a wedding, I doubt if I can bring myself to be present." (This threat she proceeded to make to Molly, with results that shall be set forth in their proper place.) "The man appears to have written to me himself," said Mrs. Wood. "He knows no better," said Sarah. "Bosh!" said Sarah's husband later. "It was a very manly thing to do." Thus did consternation rage in the house at Bennington. Molly might have spared herself the many assurances that she gave concerning the universal esteem in which her cow-puncher was held, and the fair prospects which were his. So, in the first throes of her despair, Mrs. Wood wrote those eight not maturely considered pages to the great-aunt.

"Tut, tut, tut!" said the great-aunt as she read them. Her face was much more severe today. "You'd suppose," she said, "that the girl had been kidnapped! Why, she has kept him waiting three years!" And then she read more, but soon put the letter down with laughter. For Mrs. Wood had repeated in writing that early outburst of hers about a savage with knives and pistols. "Law!" said the great-aunt. "Law, what a fool Lizzie is!"

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 欲念的仆人

    欲念的仆人

    这是一个真实的故事有感而写的,是一部想给大家带来正能量的文。一日吸毒,终身戒毒,希望大家能明白其中的缘由。
  • 女帝的后宫日常

    女帝的后宫日常

    当不学无术的吃货被告知是女皇陛下。“爱卿啊爱卿,谁是本国最有权势的人?”“是陛下您。”“爱卿啊爱卿,谁是本国最劳累的人?”“是臣。陛下,臣想请个假!”“不准!”“臣想告老还乡!”“太傅!朕错了!朕这就起床早朝……”流落民间三年的女帝重返朝堂,她却失忆得彻底。
  • 强悍宝宝:傲娇妈咪不要钱

    强悍宝宝:傲娇妈咪不要钱

    宝宝文啦~宝宝文啦~宝宝文啦~宝宝文啦~宝宝文啦~宝宝文啦~宝宝文啦~宝宝文啦~宝宝文啦~宝宝文啦~宝宝文啦~宝宝文啦~
  • 故乡怪谈

    故乡怪谈

    我们每个人出生的故乡,都会有一些传说,这些传说神秘诡异,更重要的,有些还很真实,我的故乡就有些真人真事的诡异传说,这些传说都曾确确实实的发生过。现在我把他们整理出来,说给你们听听,你准备好了吗?
  • 网游之盾舞

    网游之盾舞

    《暗黑与光明》一个不要当成游戏来玩的游戏,一个只有在游戏里才能正常的玩家,一个不停创造,刷新纪录的团队,一个能让人用热血,生命守护的信仰,一段可歌可泣的传奇故事。
  • 你好,陌生人

    你好,陌生人

    你好,陌生人——华语版《EAT,PRAY,LOVE》,城市综合症疗伤手册,闺蜜般的心灵成长书!和张亚东、曹方、闹闹、卡奇社……一起寻找最完美的自我!
  • 求求你别闹了!

    求求你别闹了!

    有没有搞错?拜托,他真的很忙,求求她别闹了!她家大业大,长得既美能力又强,要什么好对象没有,何必找他这个一穷二白的寒酸兽医?哼,他穷归穷,可还是有气节的!可是这女人竟拿他长久以来的梦想引诱他!唉,面对伟大的梦想,他还要不要坚持呢?--情节虚构,请勿模仿
  • 浮华若梦之你的前世我的今生

    浮华若梦之你的前世我的今生

    叶很轻,载着思念浮浮沉沉;云很轻,盛着风儿划满伤痕;断线的纸鸢,飘渺的心愿,冰冷了手心是等谁来牵。冬去春回冰雪释,几度轮回难见君,没有回眸望,不曾解心伤,只一句轻描淡写幽幽叹,却换满身伤,怎思量?!陌生的时空,熟悉的脸孔,她,又该何去何从?以为逃离了心底的渴望,就可以过的安然无恙,却终究不过是一种空想。
  • 灵戒风云

    灵戒风云

    《灵异异灵》系列I:《灵戒风云》一枚戒指,两千年前曾被封印沉睡,然而却被两枚玉石无意触发唤醒。它拥有强大能力,领七煞,通神术,实力可傲视群雄震慑整个巫界。此等实力,谁能阻挡?《灵戒风云》将带你闯入一个全新的世界,让你认识何为七煞,何为神术。七煞:蛊术、赶尸、降头、占卜、茅山、厌胜、黑巫咒。神术:冥火、驭冰、紫灵、流凌、驭心...【巫界争霸,谁与争锋!】《灵异异灵》系列简介这是个梦魇?一次普通的旅游,却把萧森带进了无穷的虚幻世界。他无法逃离,这是一个拥有七煞与神术的世界,这是一个善与恶相斗争的世界。萧森的真实身份又是什么?为何他会被卷入到这场风雨里?想知道当中的一切,《灵异异灵》系列为你揭秘。
  • 道之外幻想

    道之外幻想

    《杨过篇》已经完结:作为道的罗彬进入梦的世界,重生为杨过。罗彬并不知道《神雕侠侣》的故事,只是凭着自己的性格(我的心情)行事。剧情设定依靠原著,文笔欠佳……