Selected Stories of Bret Harte eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 447 pages of information about Selected Stories of Bret Harte.

Selected Stories of Bret Harte eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 447 pages of information about Selected Stories of Bret Harte.

His tone and manner were so peculiar that I stepped quickly before him, laid my hands on his shoulders, and looked down into his face.  But the actual devil which I now for the first time saw in his eyes went out of them suddenly, and he relapsed again in affected languishment in his chair.  “I shall be there, friend Pancho,” he said, with a preposterous gasp.  “I shall nerve my arm to lasso the bull, and tumble him before her at her feet.  I shall throw the ‘buck-jump’ mustang at the same sacred spot.  I shall pluck for her the buried chicken at full speed from the ground, and present it to her.  You shall see it, friend Pancho.  I shall be there.”

He was as good as his word.  When Don Pedro Amador, his uncle, installed Miss Mannersley, with Spanish courtesy, on a raised platform in the long valley where the rodeo took place, the gallant Enriquez selected a bull from the frightened and galloping herd, and, cleverly isolating him from the band, lassoed his hind legs, and threw him exactly before the platform where Miss Mannersley was seated.  It was Enriquez who caught the unbroken mustang, sprang from his own saddle to the bare back of his captive, and with the lasso for a bridle, halted him on rigid haunches at Miss Mannersley’s feet.  It was Enriquez who, in the sports that followed, leaned from his saddle at full speed, caught up the chicken buried to its head in the sand, without wringing its neck, and tossed it unharmed and fluttering toward his mistress.  As for her, she wore the same look of animation that I had seen in her face at our previous meeting.  Although she did not bring her sketchbook with her, as at the bullfight, she did not shrink from the branding of the cattle, which took place under her very eyes.

Yet I had never seen her and Enriquez together; they had never, to my actual knowledge, even exchanged words.  And now, although she was the guest of his uncle, his duties seemed to keep him in the field, and apart from her.  Nor, as far as I could detect, did either apparently make any effort to have it otherwise.  The peculiar circumstance seemed to attract no attention from anyone else.  But for what I alone knew—­or thought I knew—­of their actual relations, I should have thought them strangers.

But I felt certain that the fiesta which took place in the broad patio of Don Pedro’s casa would bring them together.  And later in the evening, as we were all sitting on the veranda watching the dancing of the Mexican women, whose white-flounced sayas were monotonously rising and falling to the strains of two melancholy harps, Miss Mannersley rejoined us from the house.  She seemed to be utterly absorbed and abstracted in the barbaric dances, and scarcely moved as she leaned over the railing with her cheek resting on her hand.  Suddenly she arose with a little cry.

“What is it?” asked two or three.

“Nothing—­only I have lost my fan.”  She had risen, and was looking abstractedly on the floor.

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Selected Stories of Bret Harte from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.