Rainbow's End eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 437 pages of information about Rainbow's End.

Rainbow's End eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 437 pages of information about Rainbow's End.

“So that is the butcher of babies!” exclaimed the boy.  “Well, now, I should enjoy cutting his heart out.”

O’Reilly’s emotions were not entirely unlike those of his small companion.  His lips became dry and white as he tried to speak.

“What a brute!  That face—­Ugh!”

He found himself shaking weakly, and discovered that a new and wholly unaccountable feeling of discouragement had settled upon him.  He tried manfully to shake it off, but somehow failed, for the sight of Rosa’s arch-enemy and the man’s overbearing personality had affected him queerly.  Cobo’s air of confidence and authority seemed to emphasize O’Reilly’s impotence and bring it forcibly home to him.  To think of his lustful persecution of Rosa Varona, moreover, terrified him.  The next day he resumed his hut-to-hut search, but with a listlessness that came from a firm conviction that once again he was too late.

That afternoon found the two friends among the miserable hovels which encircled the foot of La Cumbre, about the only quarter they had not explored.  Below lay San Severino, the execution-place; above was the site of the old Verona home.  More than once on his way about the city O’Reilly had lifted his eyes in the direction of the latter, feeling a great hunger to revisit the scene of his last farewell to Rosa, but through fear of the melancholy effect it would have upon him he had thus far resisted the impulse.  To-day, however, he could no longer fight the morbid desire and so, in spite of Jacket’s protest at the useless expenditure of effort, he set out to climb the hill.  Of course the boy would not let him go alone.

Little was said during the ascent.  The La Cumbre road seemed very long and very steep.  How different the last time O’Reilly had swung up it!  The climb had never before tired him as it did now, and he reasoned that hunger must have weakened him even more than he realized.  Jacket felt the exertion, too; he was short of breath and he rested frequently.  O’Reilly saw that the boy’s bare, brown legs had grown bony since he had last noticed them, and he felt a sudden pang at having brought the little fellow into such a plight as this.

“Well, hombre,” he said when they paused to rest, “I’m afraid we came too late.  I’m afraid we’re licked.”

Jacket nodded listlessly; his optimism, too, was gone.  “They must all be dead or we would have found them before this,” said he.  When O’Reilly made no answer he continued, “It is time we thought of getting away from here, eh?”

Johnnie was sitting with his face in his hands.  Without lifting his head he inquired:  “How are we going to get away?  It is easy enough to get into Matanzas, but—­” He shrugged hopelessly.

From where the two sat they could see on the opposite hillside a section of the ditch and the high barbed-wire fence which girdled the city and made of it a huge corral.  Spaced at regular intervals along the intrenchments were slow-moving, diminutive figures, sentries on their well-worn paths.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Rainbow's End from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.