[Selected Stories by Bret Harte]@TWC D-Link bookSelected Stories PART II--IN THE FLOOD 24/402
There was another figure in the room; a heavy shawl drawn over her graceful outline, and her long black hair hiding the hands that buried her downcast face.
I did not seem to notice her, and, retiring presently, left the loving and loved together. When we were again beside the crackling fire, in the shifting shadows of the great chamber, Altascar told me how he had that morning met the horse of George Tryan swimming on the prairie; how that, farther on, he found him lying, quite cold and dead, with no marks or bruises on his person; that he had probably become exhausted in fording the creek, and that he had as probably reached the mound only to die for want of that help he had so freely given to others; that, as a last act, he had freed his horse.
These incidents were corroborated by many who collected in the great chamber that evening--women and children--most of them succored through the devoted energies of him who lay cold and lifeless above. He was buried in the Indian mound--the single spot of strange perennial greenness which the poor aborigines had raised above the dusty plain.
A little slab of sandstone with the initials "G.
T." is his monument, and one of the bearings of the initial corner of the new survey of the "Espiritu Santo Rancho." AN EPISODE OF FIDDLETOWN In 1858 Fiddletown considered her a very pretty woman.
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