Tales from Blackwood - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"Whom you?" asked the judge.
"_Whom I killed!_" said Bob, in a hollow whisper.
"Killed?" exclaimed the judge. "You killed him? Who?"
"Ah! who? Why don't you let me speak? You always interrupt me with your palaver," growled Bob.
"You are getting saucy, Bob," said the judge impatiently. "Go on, however. I reckon it's only one of your usual tantrums."
Bob shook his head. The judge looked keenly at him for a moment, and then resumed in a sort of confidential, encouraging tone.
"Under the Patriarch; and how did he come under the Patriarch?"
"I dragged him there, and buried him there," replied Bob.
"Dragged him there! Why did you drag him there?"
"Because he couldn't go himself, with more than half an ounce of lead in his body."
"And _you_ put the half ounce of lead into him, Bob? Well, if it was Johnny, you've done the country a service, and saved it a rope."
Bob shook his head negatively.
"It wasn't Johnny, although----But you shall hear all about it. It's just ten days since you paid me twenty dollars fifty."
"I did so, Bob; twenty dollars fifty cents; and I advised you at the same time to let the money lie till you had a couple of hundred dollars, or enough to buy a quarter or an eight of Sitio land; but advice is thrown away upon you."
"When I got the money, I thought I'd go down to San Felipe, to the Mexicans, and try my luck, and, at the same time, see the doctor about my fever. As I was goin' there, I pa.s.sed near Johnny's house, and fancied a gla.s.s, but determined not to get off my horse. I rode up to the window, and looked in. There was a man sittin' at the table, havin'
a hearty good dinner of steaks and potatoes, and was.h.i.+n' it down with a stiff gla.s.s of grog. I began to feel hungry myself, and while I was considerin' whether I should 'light or not, Johnny came sneakin' out, and whispered to me to come in, that there was a man inside with whom somethin' might be done if we went the right way to work; a man who had a leather belt round his waist cram-full of hard Jackson; and that, if we got out the cards and pretended to play a little together he would soon take the bait and join us.
"I wasn't much inclined," continued Bob; "but Johnny bothered me so to go in, that I got off my horse. As I did so, the dollars c.h.i.n.ked in my pocket, and the sound was like the devil's voice 'ticing me to play.
"I went in; and Johnny fetched the whisky bottle. One gla.s.s followed another. There were beefsteaks and potatoes too, but I only eat a couple of mouthfuls. When I had drank two, three, ay, four gla.s.ses, Johnny brought the cards and dice. 'Hallo, Johnny!' says I; 'cards and dice, Johnny! I've twenty dollars fifty in my pocket. Let's have a game! But no more drink for me; for I know you, Johnny, I know you----'
"Johnny larfed slyly, and rattled the dice, and we sat down to play. I hadn't meant to drink any more, but play makes one thirsty; and with every gla.s.s I got more eager, and my dollars got fewer. I reckoned, however, that the stranger would join us, and that I should be able to win back from him; but not a bit of it: he sat quite quiet, and ate and drank as if he didn't see we were there. I went on playin' madder than ever, and before half an hour was over, I was cleaned out; my twenty dollars fifty gone to the devil, or what's the same thing, into Johnny's pocket.
"When I found myself without a cent, I _was_ mad, I reckon. It warn't the first time, nor the hundredth, that I had lost money. Many bigger sums than that--ay, hundreds and thousands of dollars had I played away--but they had none of them cost me the hundredth or thousandth part of the trouble to get that these twenty dollars fifty had; two full months had I been slavin' away in the woods and prairies to airn them, and caught the fever there. The fever I had still, but no money to cure it with. Johnny only larfed in my face, and rattled my dollars. I made a hit at him, which, if he hadn't jumped on one side, would have cured him of larfin' for a week or two.
"Presently, however, he came sneakin' up to me, and winkin' and whisperin'; and, 'Bob!' says he, 'is it come to that with you? are you grown so chicken-hearted that you don't see the beltful of money round his body?' said he lookin' at it. 'No end of hard coin, I guess; and all to be had for little more than half an ounce of lead.'"
"Did he say that?" asked the judge.
"Ay, that did he, but I wouldn't listen to him. I was mad with him for winning my twenty dollars; and I told him that, if he wanted the stranger's purse, he might take it himself, and be d----d; that I wasn't goin' to pull the hot chestnuts out of the fire for him. And I got on my horse, and rode away like mad.
"My head spun round like a mill. I couldn't get over my loss. I took the twenty dollars fifty more to heart than any money I had ever gambled. I didn't know where to go. I didn't dare go back to you, for I knew you would scold me."
"I shouldn't have scolded you, Bob; or, if I had, it would only have been for your good. I should have summoned Johnny before me, called together a jury of twelve of the neighbours, got you back your twenty dollars fifty, and sent Johnny out of the country; or, better still, out of the world."
These words were spoken with much phlegm, but yet with a degree of feeling and sympathy which greatly improved my opinion of the worthy judge. Bob also seemed touched. He drew a deep sigh, and gazed at the Alcalde with a melancholy look.
"It's too late," muttered he; "too late, squire."
"Perhaps not," replied the judge; "but let's hear the rest."
"Well," continued Bob, "I kept ridin' on at random, and when evenin'
came I found myself near the palmetto field on the bank of the Jacinto.
As I was ridin' past it, I heard all at once a tramp of a horse. At that moment the queerest feelin' I ever had came over me; a sort of cold s.h.i.+verin' feel. I forgot where I was; sight and hearin' left me; I could only see two things, my twenty dollars fifty, and the well-filled belt of the stranger I had left at Johnny's. Just then a voice called to me.
"'Whence come, countryman, and whither going?' it said.
"'Whence and whither,' answered I, as surly as could be; 'to the devil at a gallop, and you'd better ride on and tell him I'm comin'.'
"'You can do the errand yourself,' answered the stranger, larfin'; 'my road don't lie that way.'
"As he spoke, I looked round, and saw, what I was pretty sure of before, that it was the man with the belt full of money.
"'Ain't you the stranger I see'd in the inn yonder?' asked he.
"'And if I am,' says I, 'what's that to you?'
"'Nothin',' said he; 'nothin', certainly.'
"'Better ride on,' says I, 'and leave me quiet.'
"'Will so, stranger; but you needn't take it so mighty onkind. A word ain't a tomahawk, I reckon,' said he. 'But I rayther expect your losin's at play ain't put you in a very church-goin' humour; and, if I was you, I'd keep my dollars in my pocket, and not set them on cards and dice.'
"It riled me to hear him cast my losin's in my teeth that way.
"'You're a nice feller,' said I, 'to throw a man's losses in his face. A pitiful chap _you_ are,' says I.
"I thought to provoke him, and that he'd tackle me. But he seemed to have no fancy for a fight, for he said, quite humble like--
"'I throw nothin' in your face; G.o.d forbid I should reproach you with your losses! I'm sorry for you, on the contrary. Don't look like a man who can afford to lose his dollars. Seem to me one who airns his money by hard work.'
"We were just then halted at the further end of the cane-brake, close to the trees that border the Jacinto. I had turned my horse, and was frontin' the stranger. And all the time the devil was busy whisperin' to me, and pointin' to the belt round the man's waist. I could see where it was, plain enough, though he had b.u.t.toned his coat over it.
"'Hard work, indeed,' says I; 'and now I've lost everything; not a cent left for a quid of baccy.'
"'If that's all,' says he, 'there's help for that. I don't chew myself, and I ain't a rich man; I've wife and children, and want every cent I've got, but it's one's duty to help a countryman. You shall have money for tobacco and a dram.'
"And so sayin', he took a purse out of his pocket, in which he carried his change. It was pretty full; there may have been some twenty dollars in it; and as he drew the string, it was as if the devil laughed and nodded to me out of the openin' of the purse.
"'Halves!' cried I.
"'No, not that,' says he; 'I've wife and child, and what I have belongs to them; but half a dollar----'
"'Halves!' cried I again, 'or else----'
"'Or else?' repeated he; and as he spoke, he put the purse back into his pocket, and laid hold of the rifle which was slung on his shoulder.