Some one gently unbuttoned his shirt at the neck,
removed his shoes, and covered him with a blanket. Before he had fully
awakened he was left alone, and quiet settled over the house. A
languorous sense of ease and rest lulled him to sleep again. In another
moment, it seemed to him, he was awake; bright daylight streamed through
the window, and a morning breeze stirred the faded curtain.
The drag in his breathing which was always a forerunner of a
coughing-spell warned him now; he put on coat and shoes and went outside,
where his cough attacked him, had its sway, and left him.
“Good-morning,” sang out August Naab’s cheery voice. “Sixteen hours of
sleep, my lad!”
“I did sleep, didn’t I? No wonder I feel well this morning. A
peculiarity of my illness is that one day I’m down, the next day up.”
“With the goodness of God, my lad, we’ll gradually increase the days up.
Go in to breakfast. Afterward I want to talk to you. This’ll be a busy
day for me, shoeing the horses and packing supplies. I want to start for
home to-morrow.”
Hare pondered over Naab’s words while he ate. The suggestion in them,
implying a relation to his future, made him wonder if the good Mormon
intended to take him to his desert home. He hoped so, and warmed anew to
this friend. But he had no enthusiasm for himself; his future seemed
hopeless.
Naab was waiting for him on the porch, and drew him away from the cottage
down the path toward the gate
“I want you to go home with me.”
“You’re kind–I’m only a sort of beggar–I’ve no strength left to work my
way. I’ll go–though it’s only to die.”
“I haven’t the gift of revelation–yet somehow I see that you won’t die
of this illness. You will come home with me. It’s a beautiful place, my
Navajo oasis. The Indians call it the Garden of Eschtah. If you can get
well anywhere it’ll be there.”
“I’ll go but I ought not. What can I do for you?
“No man can ever tell what he may do for another. The time may come–
well, John, is it settled?” He offered his huge broad hand.
“It’s settled–I–” Hare faltered as he put his hand in Naab’s. The
Mormon’s grip straightened his frame and braced him. Strength and
simplicity flowed from the giant’s toil-hardened palm. Hare swallowed
his thanks along with his emotion, and for what he had intended to say he
substituted: “No one ever called me John. I don’t know the name. Call
me Jack.”
“Very well, Jack, and now let’s see. You’ll need some things from the
store. Can you come with me? It’s not far.”
“Surely. And now what I need most is a razor to scrape the alkali and
stubble off my face.”
The wide street, bordered by cottages peeping out of green and white
orchards, stretched in a straight line to the base of the ascent which
led up to the Pink Cliffs. A green square enclosed a gray church, a
school-house and public hall. Farther down the main thoroughfare were
several weather-boarded whitewashed stores. Two dusty men were riding
along, one on each side of the wildest, most vicious little horse Hare
had ever seen.
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