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a first family of tasajara-第23部分

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pull upon her bit。  To her consternation the mustang stopped short

almost instantly;planting his two fore feet rigidly in the dust

and even sliding forward with the impetus。  Had her seat been less

firm she might have been thrown; but she recovered herself;

although in doing so she still bore upon the bit; when to her

astonishment the mustang deliberately stiffened himself as if for a

shock; and then began to back slowly; quivering with excitement。

She did not know that her native…bred animal fondly believed that

he was participating in a rodeo; and that to his equine intelligence

his fair mistress had just lassoed something!  In vain she urged him

forward; he still waited for the shock!  When the cloud of dust in

which she had been enwrapped drifted away; she saw to her amazement

that she was alone。  The entire party had disappeared into one of

the canyons;but which one she could not tell!



When she succeeded at last in urging her mustang forward again she

determined to take the right…hand canyon and trust to being either

met or overtaken。  A more practical and less adventurous nature

would have waited at the point of divergence for the return of some

of the party; but Mrs。 Ashwood was; in truth; not sorry to be left

to herself and the novel scenery for a while; and she had no doubt

but she would eventually find her way to the hotel at San Mateo;

which could not be far away; in time for luncheon。



The road was still well defined; although it presently began to

wind between ascending ranks of pines and larches that marked the

terraces of hills; so high that she wondered she had not noticed

them from the plains。  An unmistakable suggestion of some haunting

primeval solitude; a sense of the hushed and mysterious proximity

of a nature she had never known before; the strange half…

intoxicating breath of unsunned foliage and untrodden grasses and

herbs; all combined to exalt her as she cantered forward。  Even her

horse seemed to have acquired an intelligent liberty; or rather to

have established a sympathy with her in his needs and her own

longings; instinctively she no longer pulled him with the curb; the

reins hung loosely on his self…arched and unfettered neck; secure

in this loneliness she found herself even talking to him with

barbaric freedom。  As she went on; the vague hush of all things

animate and inanimate around her seemed to thicken; until she

unconsciously halted before a dim and pillared wood; and a vast and

heathless opening on whose mute brown lips Nature seemed to have

laid the finger of silence。  She forgot the party she had left; she

forgot the luncheon she was going to; more important still she

forgot that she had already left the traveled track far behind her;

and; tremulous with anticipation; rode timidly into that arch of

shadow。



As her horse's hoofs fell noiselessly on the elastic moss…carpeted

aisle she forgot even more than that。  She forgot the artificial

stimulus and excitement of the life she had been leading so long;

she forgot the small meannesses and smaller worries of her well…to…

do experiences; she forgot herself;rather she regained a self she

had long forgotten。  For in the sweet seclusion of this half

darkened sanctuary the clinging fripperies of her past slipped from

her as a tawdry garment。  The petted; spoiled; and vapidly

precocious girlhood which had merged into a womanhood of aimless

triumphs and meaner ambitions; the worldly but miserable triumph of

a marriage that had left her delicacy abused and her heart sick and

unsatisfied; the wifehood without home; seclusion; or maternity;

the widowhood that at last brought relief; but with it the

consciousness of hopelessly wasted youth;all this seemed to drop

from her here as lightly as the winged needles or noiseless

withered spray from the dim gray vault above her head。  In the

sovereign balm of that woodland breath her better spirit was

restored; somewhere in these wholesome shades seemed to still lurk

what should have been her innocent and nymph…like youth; and to

come out once more and greet her。  Old songs she had forgotten; or

whose music had failed in the discords of her frivolous life; sang

themselves to her again in that sweet; grave silence; girlish

dreams that she had foolishly been ashamed of; or had put away with

her childish toys; stole back to her once more and became real in

this tender twilight; old fancies; old fragments of verse and

childish lore; grew palpable and moved faintly before her。  The

boyish prince who should have come was there; the babe that should

have been hers was there!she stopped suddenly with flaming eyes

and indignant color。  For it appeared that a MAN was there too; and

had just risen from the fallen tree where he had been sitting。





CHAPTER VIII。





She had so far forgotten herself in yielding to the spell of the

place; and in the revelation of her naked soul and inner nature;

that it was with something of the instinct of outraged modesty that

she seemed to shrink before this apparition of the outer world and

outer worldliness。  In an instant the nearer past returned; she

remembered where she was; how she had come there; from whom she had

come; and to whom she was returning。  She could see that she had

not only aimlessly wandered from the world but from the road; and

for that instant she hated this man who had reminded her of it;

even while she knew she must ask his assistance。  It relieved her

slightly to observe that he seemed as disturbed and impatient as

herself; and as he took a pencil from between his lips and returned

it to his pocket he scarcely looked at her。



But with her return to the world of convenances came its repression;

and with a gentlewoman's ease and modulated voice she leaned over

her mustang's neck and said: 〃I have strayed from my party and am

afraid I have lost my way。  We were going to the hotel at San Mateo。

Would you be kind enough to direct me there; or show me how I can

regain the road by which I came?〃



Her voice and manner were quite enough to arrest him where he stood

with a pleased surprise in his fresh and ingenuous face。  She

looked at him more closely。  He was; in spite of his long silken

mustache; so absurdly young; he might; in spite of that youth; be

so absurdly man…like!  What was he doing there?  Was he a farmer's

son; an artist; a surveyor; or a city clerk out for a holiday?  Was

there perhaps a youthful female of his species somewhere for whom

he was waiting and upon whose tryst she was now breaking?  Was he

terrible thought!the outlying picket of some family picnic?  His

dress; neat; simple; free from ostentatious ornament; betrayed

nothing。  She waited for his voice。



〃Oh; you have left San Mateo miles away to the right;〃 he said with

quick youthful sympathy; 〃at least five miles!  Where did you leave

your party?〃



His voice was winning; and even refined; she thought。  She answered

it quite spontaneously: 〃At a fork of two roads。  I see now I took

the wrong turning。〃



〃Yes; you took the road to Crystal Spring。  It's just down there in

the valley; not more than a mile。  You'd have been there now if you

hadn't turned off at the woods。〃



〃I couldn't help it; it was so beautiful。〃



〃Isn't it?〃



〃Perfect。〃



〃And such shadows; and such intensity of color。〃



〃Wonderful!and all along the ridge; looking down that defile!〃



〃Yes; and that point where it seems as if you had only to stretch

out your hand to pick a manzanita berry from the other side of the

canyon; half a mile across!〃



〃Yes; and that first glimpse of the valley through the Gothic

gateway of rocks!〃



〃And the color of those rocks;cinnamon and bronze with the light

green of the Yerba buena vine splashing over them。〃



〃Yes; but for color DID you notice that hillside of yellow poppies

pouring down into the valley like a golden Niagara?〃



〃Certainly;and the perfect clearness of everything。〃



〃And yet such complete silence and repose!〃



〃Oh; yes!〃



〃Ah; yes!〃



They were both gravely nodding and shaking their heads with

sparkling eyes and brightened color; looking not at each other but

at the far landscape vignetted through a lozenge…shaped wind

opening in the trees。  Suddenly Mrs。 Ashwood straightened herself

in the saddle; looked grave; lifted the reins and apparently the

ten years with them that had dropped from her。  But she said in her

easiest well…bred tones; and a half sigh; 〃Then I must take the

road back again to where it forks?〃



〃Oh; no! you can go by Crystal Spring。  It's no further; and I'll

show you the way。  But you'd better stop and rest yourself and your

horse for a little while at the Springs Hotel。  It's a very nice

place。  Many people ride there from San Francisco to luncheon and

return。  I wonder that your party didn't prefer it; and if they are

looking for you;as they surely must be;〃 he said; a
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