The Country Beyond eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 319 pages of information about The Country Beyond.

The Country Beyond eBook

James Oliver Curwood
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 319 pages of information about The Country Beyond.
when there came the sudden quick snapping of a bone—­but even then he turned his head so that he could thrust out his hot tongue against the back of his man-friend’s hand.  And Jolly Roger, as he worked, was giving instructions to the girl, who was quick as a bird to bring him cloth which she tore into bandages, so that at the end of ten minutes Peter’s right hind leg was trussed up so tightly that it was as stiff and as useless as a piece of wood.

“His hip was dislocated and his leg-bone broken,” said Jolly Roger when he had finished.  “He is all right now, and inside of three weeks will be on his feet again.”

He lifted Peter gently, and made him a nest among the blankets in his bunk.  And then, still with that strange, gray look in his face, he turned to Nada.

She was standing partly facing the door, her eyes straight on him.  And Jolly Roger saw in them that wonderful something which had given his storm-beaten soul a glimpse of paradise earlier that day.  They were blue, so blue that he had never seen violets like them—­and he knew that in her heart there was no guile behind which she could hide the secret they were betraying.  A yearning such as had never before come into his life urged him to open his arms to her, and he knew that she would have come into them; but a still mightier will held them tense and throbbing at his side.  Her cheeks were aflame as she looked at him, and he told himself that God could not have made a lovelier thing, as she stood there in her worn dress and her ragged shoes, with that light of glory in her face, and her damp hair waving and curling about her in the last light of the day.

“I knew you’d fix him, Mister-Roger,” she whispered, a great pride and faith and worship in the low thrill of her voice.  “I knew it!”

Something choked Jolly Roger, and he turned to the stove and began spearing the crisp brown potatoes on the end of a fork.  And he said, with his back toward her,

“You came just in time for supper, Nada.  We’ll eat—­and then I’ll go home with you, as far as the Ridge.”

Peter watched them.  His pain was gone, and it was nice and comfortable in Jolly Roger’s blanket, and with his whiskered face on his fore-paws his bright eyes followed every movement of these two who so completely made up his world.  He heard that sweet little laugh which came only now and then from Nada’s lips, when for a moment she was happy; he saw her shake out her hair in the glow of the lamp which Jolly Roger lighted, and he observed Jolly Roger standing at the stove—­looking at her as she did it—­a worship in his face which changed the instant her eyes turned toward him.  In Peter’s active little brain this gave birth to nothing of definite understanding, except that in it all he sensed happiness, for—­somehow—­there was always that feeling when they were with Jolly Roger, no matter whether the sun was shining or the day was dark and filled with gloom.  Many times

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Project Gutenberg
The Country Beyond from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.