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The Andre Norton Megapack - 15 Classic Novels and Short Stories

The Andre Norton Megapack - 15 Classic Novels and Short Stories

Titel: The Andre Norton Megapack - 15 Classic Novels and Short Stories Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Andre Norton
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agreed. “You swim?” he asked the other two.
    There had been ponds at home where both of them in childhood had paddled about with most of the young male populations of Red Springs and Oak Hill. But whether they could trust that somewhat limited skill to get them over this flood was another matter.
    “Some.” Boyd appeared to have discovered caution.
    “Me, I’m not sayin’ yet,” Kirby commented. “Splashin’ ’round some in a little-bitty wadin’ pool, an’ gittin’ out in this, don’t balance none. Ain’t every hoss takes kindly to water, neither. I’d say we’d better see what’s the chances of knockin’ together a raft or somethin’. ’Less we can find us a boat.”
    But boats were not to be found, unless they were willing to risk discovery by trying to cross near a well-settled district. And when Captain Campbell joined them that afternoon he insisted on the need of speed over a longer reconnaissance.
    “The Yankees are closing in,” he told the trio by the river. “If we try to cross at a town, they’ll have a point to center on. Rafts, yes, we can try to build rafts—have to ferry over the men who can’t swim, and our gear. This is the time we must push—fast.”
    The remote section of bank which Drew had chosen became a scene of activity as the company came in—a tight bunch—not long after Campbell. The stragglers came later, pushing beat-out horses, one or two riding double. They had no tools other than bowie knives, and their attempts at raft-building were not only awkward but in the most cases futile. When they did have a mat which would stick together after a fashion, they were determined to put it to the test at once.
    None of them had much practice in getting horses over such a wide body of water, and there were a great many freely voiced suggestions concerning the best methods.
    Kirby stood watching the first attempt, his face blank of expression, a sign Drew had come to recognize as the Texan’s withdrawal from a situation or action of which he did not approve. There were five men squeezed together on the flimsy-looking raft and they had strung out their mounts in a line, the head of one horse linked by leading rope to the tail of the one before him.
    “You don’t think it’s goin’ to work?” Drew asked Kirby.
    The Texan shrugged. “Maybe, only hosses don’t think like men. An’ a lotta hosses don’t take kindly to gittin’ wheah theah ain’t no footin’. Me, I want to see a little more, ’fore I roll out—”
    Kirby’s misgivings were amply justified. For that first voyage was doomed to a tragic and speedy end. The second horse in line, losing footing as the river bed fell away beneath him, reared in fright, caught his forefeet over the rope linking him to his fellow, and so jerked his head underwater by his own frenzied struggles. Before the men on the wildly dipping raft were able to cut the now fright-maddened animals loose, three in that string had drowned themselves by their uncontrolled plunges, and the others were being dragged under.
    Boyd dived from the upper bank before Drew could stop him. It was madness to go anywhere near the struggling horses. But somehow Boyd’s blond head broke water at the side of the last gasping animal. He took a grip on the water-logged mane, his body bobbing up and down with the jerks of the horse’s forequarters, until he had sawed through the lead cord and was able to start the mount back toward the shore, swimming beside him.
    Drew was waiting with Kirby to give Boyd a hand up the bank.
    “You could have been pulled under!”
    Boyd was grinning. “But I wasn’t. And the horse’s all right, too.” He patted the wet haunch of the shivering animal. “That was bad—they pulled each other down.”
    It was a disheartening beginning. But as the hours slipped by they had better success. One horse, two, three could be towed on separate ropes behind the raft. And in the morning there was a cockleshell of a boat oared in by one of the men who had found it downriver.
    They had ferried and crossed well into the dusk of the evening. And at the first dawn they were at it again. Drew tried to remember how many times he had made that trip, swimming or rowing, always with some mount as his special charge. More than half the company had sworn they could not swim, and so the burden of the transfer fell upon their fellows.
    “Rennie—” That was Campbell climbing up from the raft after another weary passage across.

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