The Pride of Palomar by Peter B. (Peter Bernard) Kyne
page 11 of 390 (02%)
page 11 of 390 (02%)
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Don Miguel read. Then he carefully folded the telegram and replaced it in the envelope; as deliberately, he returned the envelope to his pocket. Suddenly his hands gripped the bench, and he trembled violently. "Don Mike is dead?" old Pablo queried softly. He possessed all the acute intuition of a primitive people. Don Miguel did not reply; so presently Pablo turned his head and gazed up into the master's face. Then he knew--his fingers trembled slightly as he returned to work on the hondo, and, for a long time, no sound broke the silence save the song of an oriole in the catalpa tree. Suddenly, the sound for which old Pablo had waited so long burst forth from the sage-clad hillside. It was a cock quail calling, and, to the majordomo, it seemed to say: "Don Mike! Come home! Don Mike! Come home!" "Ah, little truant, who has told you that you are safe?" Pablo cried in agony. "For Don Mike shall not come home--no, no--never any more!" His Indian stoicism broke at last; he clasped his hands and fell to his knees beside the bench, sobbing aloud. Don Miguel regarded him not, and when Pablo's babbling became incoherent, the aged master of Palomar controlled his twitching hands sufficiently to roll and light a cigarette. Then he reread the telegram. |
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