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Me Smith

Me Smith

Titel: Me Smith
Autoren: 1870-1962 Caroline Lockhart
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reservation priest, was given the credit for having instilled into her some of his own shrewdness and thrift.
    In the corral the Indian woman came upon Smith. He turned his head slowly and looked at her. For a second, two, three seconds, or more, they looked into each other’s eyes. His gaze was confident, masterful, compelling; hers was wondering, until finally she dropped her eyes in the submissive, modest, half-shy way of Indian women.
    Smith moistened his short upper lip with the tip of his tongue, while the shadow of a smile lurked at the corner of his mouth. He turned to his saddle, again, and without speaking, she watched him until he had gone into the barn. His saddle lay on the ground, half covering his blankets. Something in this heap caught the woman’s eyes and held them. Swooping forward, she caught a protruding corner between her thumb and finger and pulled a gay, striped blanket from the rest. Lifting it to her nose, she smelled it. Smith saw the act as he came out of the door, but there was neither consternation nor fear in his face. Smith knew Indian women.
----
    III
THE EMPTY CHAIR
    Peter McArthur came into the big living-room of the ranch-house bearing tenderly in his arms a long brown sack. He set it upon a chair, and, as he patted it affectionately, he said to the Indian woman in explanation:
    “These are some specimens which I have been fortunate enough to find in a limestone formation in the country through which we have just passed. No doubt you will be amused, madam, but the wealth of Crœsus could not buy from me the contents of this canvas sack.”
    “I broke a horse for that son-of-a-gun onct. He owes me a dollar and six bits for the job yet,” remarked Tubbs.
    The fire of enthusiasm died in McArthur’s eyes as they rested upon his man.
    “What for a prospect do you aim to open up in a limestone formation?”
    Smith, tipped on the rear legs of his chair, with his head resting comfortably against the unbleached muslin sheeting which lined the walls, winked at Tubbs as he asked the question.
    “‘What for a prospect’?” repeated McArthur.
    “Yes, ‘prospect’—that’s what I said. You say you’ve got your war-bag full of spec’mens.”
    McArthur laughed heartily.
    “Ah, my dear sir, I understand. You are referring to mines—to mineral specimens. These are the specimens of which I am speaking.”
    Opening the sack, McArthur held up for inspection what looked to be a lump of dried mud.
    “This is a magnificent specimen of the crustacean period,” he declared.
    The Indian woman looked from the prized object to his animated face; then, with puzzled eyes, she looked at Smith, who touched his forehead with his finger, making a spiral, upward gesture which in the sign language says “crazy.”
    The woman promptly gathered up the rag rug she was braiding and moved to a bench in the farthermost corner of the room.
    “I can get you a wagon-load of chunks like that.”
    “Oh, my dear sir——”
    “Smith’s my name.”
    “But, Mr. Smith——”
    “I trusts no man that ’Misters’ me,” Smith scowled. “Every time I’ve ever been beat in a deal, it’s been by some feller that’s called me ’Mister.’ Jest Smith suits me better.”
    “Certainly, if you prefer,” amicably replied McArthur, although unenlightened by the explanation.
    He replaced his specimen and tied the sack, convinced that it would be useless to explain to this person that fossils like this were not found by the wagon-load; that perhaps in the entire world there was not one in which the branchiocardiac grooves were so clearly defined, in which the emostigite and the ambulatory legs were so perfectly preserved.
    He seemed a singular person, this Smith. McArthur was not sure that he fancied him.
    “Say, Guv’ner, what business do you follow, anyhow?” Tubbs asked the question in the tone of one who really wanted to get at the bottom of a matter which had troubled him. “Air you a bug-hunter by trade, or what? I’ve hauled you around fer more’n a month now, and ain’t figgered it out what you’re after. We’ve dug up ant-hills and busted open most of the rocks between here and the North Fork of Powder River, but I’ve never seen you git anything yet that anybuddy’d want.”
    In the beginning of their tour, Tubbs’s questions and caustic comment would have given McArthur offense, but a longer acquaintance had taught him that none was intended; that his words were merely those of a man
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