The Black Stallion's Ghost

Read Online The Black Stallion's Ghost by Walter Farley - Free Book Online Page B

Book: The Black Stallion's Ghost by Walter Farley Read Free Book Online
Authors: Walter Farley
Ads: Link
and hay for him and put his bed straight. He had made sure the stall door was locked, so there was no possibility of the Black’s getting to the mare—but he knew his horse’s squeals would go on most of the night. There was nothing more to be done except wait for morning, when he could leave.
    He wondered if it had been a mistake to stay. Perhaps he should have tried to make it, even going with Odin part of the way. But he didn’t trust the old man. A short while ago, he had seen him disappear into the gravelike hush of the swamp, taking to the Seminole village the message which the captain had given him. No, Alec decided, he would not have wanted to go along with Odin.
    Yet how much safer was he here? Alec tried to shrug off this line of thought. It was silly to think he was in any danger. He was with another horseman who had been good enough to put him up for the night.
    A mist hung over the silver-blue sheen of the swamp; the stars shone like primrose diamonds in the heavens. It was really a very beautiful night. Nothing moved. Nothing stirred. One should feel a great peace on such a night, and yet …
    Alec felt no peace, only a sudden dread. He tried to shake it off and couldn’t. He had the crazy thought that the captain would
not
have let him leave the hammock even if it hadn’t been for the storm. Why did the captain want him there?
    The strange house where he must spend the night loomed before him.

I MAGES AND O MENS
7
    Alec was given a bedroom on the second floor. After washing, he went to the open window that looked out over the swamp to the south and west. He still had no idea why the captain was in the Everglades. It had to be for reasons other than privacy, although Alec was sure that must have something to do with it. Was it, as well, to retrace the steps of his long-dead ancestor, the guide to a Spanish Conquistador? If so,
why
?
    Alec could feel the throbbing in his temples; he knew it to be a self-warning of danger despite the aura of peace and quiet that had settled over the hammock and the swamp.
    Why did he feel the need to be so alert when everything appeared to be perfectly all right? The message had been sent to Sugarfoot Ranch. In the light of early morning, he would be on his way back.
    Yet appearances could be deceptive, and the captain seemed anything but normal. Alec remained at thewindow, his face silhouetted against the light, breathing in the night air.
    He wasn’t afraid, he told himself, only concerned and cautious. If he had been afraid, he would have been able to smell his fear; it had a scent of its own and was unmistakable. He hated it.
    He had every right to be suspicious. He couldn’t be certain Odin had taken the message to the Indian village and that it would reach the ranch. However, there was nothing he could do about it except to be alert every minute he remained on the hammock. Caution was not cowardice. Caution was born of wisdom that he had acquired the hard way. Like the captain, he, too, was a professional.
    Alec gazed at the vast expanse of saw grass and wondered how much of it was tinder-dry. The afternoon storm had done little to relieve the drought, but at least it was the forerunner of the wet season to come, when torrential rains would help keep the Everglades alive.
    He saw no evidence of smoke or fire as a result of the lightning. Yet he knew that in some areas the deep deposits of peat soil were powder-dry and, once ignited, might smolder for days, if not weeks. There was always the danger of the sea of grass becoming a sea of fire from such a storm. It was not a prospect to make one feel at ease. He turned away from the window and left the room.
    He had reached the top of the dimly lit stairs when he heard the music. It was very faint at first, then it swelled, mounting to a clash of cymbals before fading away again.
    Alec started down the stairs. The captain must be playing a record on the phonograph he had seen earlier. The

Similar Books

Fenway 1912

Glenn Stout

Two Bowls of Milk

Stephanie Bolster

Crescent

Phil Rossi

Command and Control

Eric Schlosser

Miles From Kara

Melissa West

Highland Obsession

Dawn Halliday

The Ties That Bind

Jayne Ann Krentz