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"It was the man that killed Brady. Lyin' there on the buffalo skin, he
told them all about it - how he done it and the lie he fixed up. Death
was comin', and the way he'd hated so he couldn't keep his hand from
murder was all one now. He wanted to get it off his mind and sorter
square himself. When he'd struck out alone he went on for a spell,
killin' enough game and always hopin' for the sight of the river. Then
one day he caught his gun in a willow tree and it went off, sending the
charge into his thigh and breaking the bone. He was stunned for a
while and then tried to move on, tried to crawl. He crawled for six
days and at the end of the sixth found a place with water and knowed
he'd come to the end of his rope. He tore a strip off his blanket and
tied it to the barrel of his rifle and stuck it end up. The Pawnees
found him there and treated him kind, as them Indians will do
sometimes. They took him to their village and cared for him, but it
was too late. He wanted to see a white man and tell and then die
peaceful, and that's what he done. While the trappers was with him he
died and they buried him there decent outside the village." The speaker's voice ceased and in the silence the others turned to look
at the black shape of the island riding the gleaming waters like a
funeral barge. In its dark isolation, cut off from the land by the
quiet current, it seemed a fitting theater for the grim tragedy. They
gazed at it, chilled into dumbness, thinking of the murderer moving to
freedom under the protection of his lie, then overtaken, and in his
anguish, alone in the silence, meeting the question of his conscience. Once more the words came back to David: "Behold, He that keepeth Israel
shall neither slumber nor sleep." Susan pressed against her father, awed and cold, and from old Joe,
stretched in his blanket, came a deep and peaceful snore.
CHAPTER III Susan was riding alone on the top of the bluffs. The evening before,
three men returning from the Oregon country to the States, had
bivouacked with them and told them that the New York Company was a
day's march ahead, so she had gone to the highlands to reconnoiter. Just here the bluffs swept inward toward the river, contracting the
bottom to a valley only a few miles in width. Through it the road lay,
a well-worn path crossed as with black stripes by the buffalo runs.
Susan's glance, questing ahead for the New York train, ran to the
distance where the crystal glaze of the stream shrunk to a silver
thread imbedded in green velvet. There was a final point where green
and silver converged in a blinding dazzle, and over this the sun hung,
emerging from a nebulous glare to a slowly defining sphere. Turning to the left her gaze lost itself in the endlessness of the
plains. It was like looking over the sea, especially at the horizon
where the land was drawn in a straight, purplish line. She could
almost see sails there, small sails dark against a sky that was so
remote its color had faded to an aerial pallor. As the journey had
advanced the influence of these spacious areas had crept upon her. In
the beginning there had been times when they woke in her an unexplained
sadness. Now that was gone and she loved to ride onward, the one item
of life in the silence, held in a new correspondence with the solemn
immensity. It affected her as prayer does the devotee. Under its
inspiration she wondered at old worries and felt herself impervious to
new ones.
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