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The Indian village was deserted and he wandered through its scattered
lodges of saplings wattled with the peeled bark of willows. The
Indians had not long departed. The ash of their fires was still warm,
tufts of buffalo hair and bright scraps of calico were caught on the
bushes, yet it already had an air of desolation, the bleakness of the
human habitation when the dweller has crossed the threshold and gone. Shadows were filling the hollow like a thin cold wine rising on the
edges of a cup, when he left it and gained the upper levels. Doubtful
of his course he stood for a moment looking about, conscious of a
curious change in the prospect, a deepening of its colors, a stillness
no longer dreamy, but heavy with suspense. The sky was sapphire clear,
but on the western horizon a rampart of cloud edged up, gray and
ominous, against the blue. As he looked it mounted, unrolled and
expanded, swelling into forms of monstrous aggression. A faint air,
fresh and damp, passed across the grass, and the clouds swept, like
smoke from a world on fire, over the sun. With the sudden darkening, dread fell on the face of the land. It came
first in a hush, like a holding of the breath, attentive, listening,
expectant. Then this broke and a quiver, the goose-flesh thrill of
fear, stirred across the long ridges. The small, close growing leafage
cowered, a frightened trembling seized the trees. David saw the sweep
of the landscape growing black under the blackness above. He began to
run, the sky sinking lower like a lid shutting down on the earth. He
thought that it was hard to get it on right, for in front of him a line
of blue still shone over which the lid had not yet been pressed down.
The ground was pale with the whitened terror of upturned leaves, the
high branches of the cotton-woods whipping back and forth in wild
agitation. He felt the first large drops, far apart, falling with a
reluctant splash, and he ran, a tiny figure in the tragic and
tremendous scene. When he reached the camp the rush of the rain had begun. Through a
network of boughs he caught the red eye of the fire and beyond had a
vision of stampeding mules with the men in pursuit. Then crashing
through the bushes he saw why the fire still burned - Susan was holding
an umbrella over it, the rain spitting in the hot ash, a pan of
biscuits balanced in the middle. Behind her the tent, one side
concave, the other bellying out from restraining pegs, leaped and
jerked at its moorings. A rumble of thunder rolled across the sky and
the rain came at them in a slanting wall. "We're going to have biscuits for supper if the skies fall," Susan
shouted at him, and he had a glimpse of her face, touched with
firelight, laughing under the roof of the umbrella. A furious burst of wind cut off his answer, the blue glare of lightning
suddenly drenched them, and the crackling of thunder tore a path across
the sky. The umbrella was wrenched from Susan and her wail as the
biscuits fell pierced the tumult with the thin, futile note of human
dole. He had no time to help her, for the tent with an exultant wrench
tore itself free on one side, a canvas wing boisterously leaping, while
the water dived in at the blankets. As he sped to its rescue he had an
impression of the umbrella, handle up, filling with water like a large
black bowl and Susan groveling in the ashes for her biscuits.
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