The Foreigner - BestLightNovel.com
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Once clear of the Saskatchewan River, the trail led over rolling prairie, set out with numerous "bluffs" of western maple and poplar, and diversified with sleughs and lakes of varying size, a country as richly fertile and as fair to look upon as is given the eyes of man to behold anywhere in G.o.d's good world. In the dullest weather this rolling, tree-decked, sleugh-gemmed prairie presents a succession of scenes surpa.s.singly beautiful, but with a westering sun upon it, and on a May day, it offers such a picture as at once entrances the soul and lives forever in the memory. The waving lines, the rounded hills, the changing colour, the chasing shadows on gra.s.s and bluff and s.h.i.+mmering water, all combine to make in the soul high music unto G.o.d.
For an hour and more the buckboard hummed along the trail smooth and winding, the bronchos pulling hard on the lines without a sign of weariness, till the bluffs began to grow thicker and gradually to close into a solid belt of timber. Beyond this belt of timber lay the Ruthenian Colony but newly placed. The first intimation of the proximity of this colony came in quite an unexpected way.
Swinging down a sharp hill through a bluff, the bronchos came upon a man with a yoke of oxen hauling a load of hay. Before their course could be checked the ponies had pitched heavily into the slow moving and terrified oxen, and so disconcerted them that they swerved from the trail and upset the load. Immediately there rose a volley of shrill execrations in the Galician tongue.
"Whoa, buck! Steady there!" cried Jack French cheerily as he steered his team past the wreck. "Too bad that, we must go back and help to repair damages."
He tied the bronchos securely to a tree and went back to offer aid.
The Galician, a heavily-built man, was standing on the trail with a stout stake in his hand, viewing the ruins of his load and expressing his emotions in voluble Galician profanity with a bad mixture of halting and broken English. Kalman stood beside French with wrath growing in his face.
"He is calling you very bad names!" he burst out at length.
French glanced down at the boy's angry face and smiled.
"Oh, well, it will do him good. He will feel better when he gets it all out. And besides, he has rather good reason to be angry."
"He says he is going to kill you," said Kalman in a low voice, keeping close to French's side.
"Oh! indeed," said French cheerfully, walking straight upon the man.
"That is awkward. But perhaps he will change his mind."
This calm and cheerful front produced its impression upon the excited Galician.
"Too bad, neighbour," said French in a loud, cheerful tone as he drew near.
The Galician, who had recovered something of his fury, damped to a certain extent by French's calm and cheerful demeanour, began to gesticulate with his stake. French turned his back upon him and proceeded to ascertain the extent of the wreck, and to advise a plan for its repair. As he stooped to examine the wagon for breakages, the wrathful Galician suddenly swung his club in the air, but before the blow fell, Kalman shrieked out in the Galician tongue, "You villain! Stop!"
This unexpected cry in his own speech served at once to disconcert the Galician's aim, and to warn his intended victim. French, springing quickly aside, avoided the blow and with one stride he was upon the Galician, wrenched the stake from his grasp, and, taking him by the back of the neck, faced him toward the front wheels of the wagon, saying, as he did so, "Here, you idiot!
take hold and pull."
The strength of that grip on his neck produced a salutary effect upon the excited Galician. He stood a few moments dazed, looking this way and that way, as if uncertain how to act.
"Tell the fool," said French to Kalman quietly, "to get hold of those front wheels and pull."
The boy stood amazed.
"Ain't you going to lick him?" he said.
"Haven't time just now," said French cheerfully.
"But he might have killed you."
"Would have if you hadn't yelled. I'll remember that too, my boy.
But he didn't, and he won't get another chance. Tell him to take hold and pull."
Kalman turned to the subdued and uncertain Galician, and poured forth a volume of angry abuse while he directed him as to his present duty. Humbly enough the Galician took hold, and soon the wagon was put to rights, and after half an hour's work, was loaded again and ready for its further journey.
By this time the man had quite recovered his temper and stood for some time after all was ready, silent and embarra.s.sed. Then he began to earnestly address French, with eager gesticulations.
"What is it?" said French.
"He says he is very sorry, and feels very bad here," said Kalman, pointing to his heart, "and he wants to do something for you."
"Tell him," said French cheerfully, "only a fool loses his temper, and only a cad uses a club or a knife when he fights."
Kalman looked puzzled.
"A cat?"
"No, a cad. Don't you know what a cad is? Well, a cad is--hanged if I know how to put it--you know what a gentleman is?"
Kalman nodded.
"Well, the other thing is a cad."
The Galician listened attentively while Kalman explained, and made humble and deprecating reply.
"He says," interpreted Kalman, "that he is very sorry, but he wants to know what you fight with. You can't hurt a man with your hands."
"Can't, eh?" said French. "Tell him to stand up here to me."
The Galician came up smiling, and French proceeded to give him his first lesson in the manly art, Kalman interpreting his directions.
"Put up your hands so. Now I am going to tap your forehead."
Tap, tap, went French's open knuckles upon the Galician's forehead.
"Look out, man."
Tap, tap, tap, the knuckles went rapping on the man's forehead, despite his flying arms.
"Now," said French, "hit me."
The Galician made a feeble attempt.
"Oh, don't be afraid. Hit me hard."
The Galician lunged forward, but met rigid arms.
"Come, come," said French, reaching him sharply on the cheek with his open hand, "try better than that."
Again the Galician struck heavily with his huge fists, and again French, easily parrying, tapped him once, twice, thrice, where he would, drawing tears to the man's eyes. The Galician paused with a scornful exclamation.
"He says that's nothing," interpreted Kalman. "You can't hurt a man that way."
"Can't, eh? Tell him to come on, but to look out."
Again the Galician came forward, evidently determined to land one blow at least. But French, taking the blow on his guard, replied with a heavy left-hander fair on the Galician's chest, lifted him clear off his feet and hurled him breathless against his load of hay. The man recovered himself, grinning sheepishly, nodding his head vigorously and talking rapidly.