[The Gringos by B. M. Bower]@TWC D-Link book
The Gringos

CHAPTER XXV
19/21

"And I hope," he added, "I'll never see the place again!" "But, Senor!" Valencia rode alongside to protest almost tearfully, "The valley, it is not to be blame.

Saw you ever a sweeter land than this ?" He flung his arm outward to include the whole beautiful expanse of it.
"The valley, it is glorious! Am I not right?
Blame not the beautiful land, Senor, for the trouble that has come; for trouble will find a man out, though he climb the loneliest mountain peak and hide himself among the rocks there! And the valley--Senors, the valley will hold friends that are true to thee." Jack flushed at the reproach; flushed and owned himself wrong.

"I'll remember the friends," he said.

"And I'll forget the things that hurt; I'm a selfish brute--whee-ee! I should say!" He pulled up as short as Solano would let him, and stared from Dade to Valencia with guilty eyes.
"Diego--I forgot that Injun, Dade; and next to you, I believe he's the best friend I've got on earth! I was so wrapped up in my own bruises that I clean overlooked something that I ought to be mighty grateful for.

Dade, do you think he'd like to go along to the mine?
You know his wife died a few months ago, and he's kind of alone; do you think he'd go ?" "I think the chance to go would look like a ticket to glory," Dade assured him sententiously.
Whereupon Jack dismounted, that he might write a few lines as he had written the note to Bill Wilson, a couple of months before: with a leaf from his memorandum book and a bullet for pencil.
"Give that to Don Andres, will you, Valencia?
It's to ask how much is Diego's debt, and to say that I'll pay it if the peon wants to come with me.


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