she bent her head forward in
order to still scan the road.
"Here they are!"
There was something very theatrical in the sudden appearance of these
men to the eyes of the girl. It was as if a scene had been shifted. The
forest suddenly disclosed them--a dozen brown-faced troopers in
blue--galloping.
"Oh, look!" breathed the girl. Her mouth was puckered into an expression
of strange fascination as if she had expected to see the troopers change
into demons and gloat at her. She was at last looking upon those curious
beings who rode down from the North--those men of legend and colossal
tale--they who were possessed of such marvellous hallucinations.
The little troop rode in silence. At its head was a youthful fellow with
some dim yellow stripes upon his arm. In his right hand he held his
carbine, slanting upward, with the stock resting upon his knee. He was
absorbed in a scrutiny of the country before him.
At the heels of the sergeant the rest of the squad rode in thin column,
with creak of leather and tinkle of steel and tin. The girl scanned the
faces of the horsemen, seeming astonished vaguely to find them of the
type she knew.
The lad at the head of the troop comprehended the house and its
environments in two glances. He did not check the long, swinging stride
of his horse. The troopers glanced for a moment like casual tourists,
and then returned to their study of the region in front. The heavy
thudding of the hoofs became a small noise. The dust, hanging in sheets,
slowly sank.
The sobs of the woman on the bed took form in words which, while strong
in their note of calamity, yet expressed a querulous mental reaching for
some near thing to blame. "And it'll be lucky fer us if we ain't both
butchered in our sleep--plundering and running off horses--old Santo's
gone--you see if he ain't--plundering----"
"But, ma," said the girl, perplexed and terrified in the same moment,
"they've gone."
"Oh, but they'll come back!" cried the mother, without pausing her wail.
"They'll come back--trust them for that--running off horses. O John,
John! why did you, why did you?" She suddenly lifted herself and sat
rigid, staring at her daughter. "Mary," she said in tragic whisper, "the
kitchen door isn't locked!" Already she was bended forward to listen,
her mouth agape, her eyes fixed upon her daughter.
"Mother," faltered the girl.
Her mother again whispered, "The kitchen door isn't locked."
Motionless and mute t
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