it forward while she sits there like Thetis guiding
her sea-horses. Then, as the sun flings down
more fervid showers, together they beach the boat and
scamper up the sand, where old Disney, who has been
dredging for oysters in the great bed below, crowns
his basket with little Ray, and bears him off perched
aloft on his bent back. Vivia walks beside the
old slave in her infantile dignity, and disregards
the sundry attempts of Ray’s outstretched arms,
till of a sudden the beating play of hoofs runs along
the ground, and Beltran, with his morning’s game,
races by on his fiery mustang, and, scarcely checking
his speed as he passes, stoops from the saddle and
lifts the little girl before him. Vivia would
look back in triumph upon Ray in his ignoble conveyance,
but the affair has already been too much for him,
he has flung himself on the instant from old Disney’s
basket, as if he were careless whether he fell under
the horse’s feet or not, but knowing perfectly
well that Beltran will catch him. And Beltran,
suddenly pulling up with a fierce rein, does catch
him, bestows him with Vivia, slightly to her dainty
discomfort, and dashes on. Noon deepens; Vivia
does not sleep, she seeks Ray, Ray who does not sleep
either, but who is not to be beguiled. For, one
day, the child in his troubled dreams had been found
by Beltran with a white coil of fangs and venom for
his pillow; and never since has Beltran taken his
noontide siesta but Ray watches beside him till the
thick brown lashes lift themselves once more.
For, if Ray knows what worship is, he would show you
Beltran enshrined in his heart, this brother a dozen
years his elder, who had hailed his birth with stormy
tears of joy, who had carried him for years when he
was yet too weak to walk, who in his own full growth
would seem to have absorbed the younger’s share,
were it not that, tiny as Ray may be, his every nerve
is steel, made steel, though, by the other, and so
trained and suppled and put at his service. It
was Beltran who had first flung him astride the saddle
and sent him loping off to town alone, but who had
secretly followed him from thicket to thicket, and
stood ready in the market-place at last to lift him
down; it was Beltran who had given him his own rifle,
had taught him to take the bird on the wing, had led
him out at night to see the great silent alligator
in his scale-armor sliding over the land from the coast
and plunging into the fresh waters of the bay,—who
took him with him on the long journeys for gathering
in the cattle of the vast stock-farm, let him sleep
beside himself on the bare prairie-floor, like a man,
with his horse tethered to his boot, told him the
spot in the game on which to draw his bead, showed
him what part to dress, and made him chef de cuisine
in every camp they crossed; it was he who had taught
him how to hold himself in any wild stampede, on the
prairie how to conquer fire with fire, to find water
as much his element as air; it is Beltran, in short,