The Ranchman. Charles Alden Seltzer
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Charles Alden Seltzer
The Ranchman
Published by Good Press, 2021
EAN 4057664609168
Table of Contents
CHAPTER VII—THE SHADOW OF THE PAST
CHAPTER VIII—CONCERNING “SQUINT”
CHAPTER XI—“NO FUN FOOLING HER”
CHAPTER XIII—THE SHADOW OF TROUBLE
CHAPTER XIV—THE FACE OF A FIGHTER
CHAPTER XVI—A MAN BECOMES A BRUTE
CHAPTER XX—A FIGHT TO A FINISH
CHAPTER XXII—LOOKING FOR TROUBLE
CHAPTER XXIII—A WORLD-OLD LONGING
CHAPTER XXV—KEATS LOOKS FOR “SQUINT”
CHAPTER XXVI—KEATS FINDS “SQUINT”
CHAPTER XXX—PARSONS HAS HUMAN INSTINCTS
CHAPTER XXXII—TAYLOR BECOMES RILED
CHAPTER XXXIV—THE WILL OF THE MOB
CHAPTER I—CONCERNING DAWES
The air in the Pullman was hot and, despite the mechanical contrivances built into the coach to prevent such a contingency, the dust from the right-of-way persisted in filtering through crevices.
Even the electric fans futilely combated the heat; their droning hum bespoke terrific revolutions which did not materially lessen the discomfort of the occupants of the coach; and the dry, dead dust of the desert, the glare of a white-hot sun, the continuing panorama of waste land, rolling past the car windows, afforded not one cool vista to assuage the torture of travel.
For hours after leaving Kansas City, several of the passengers had diligently gazed out of the windows. But when they had passed the vast grass plains and had entered the desert, where their eyes met nothing but endless stretches of feathery alkali dust, beds of dead lava, and clumps of cacti with thorny spire and spatula blade defiantly upthrust as though in mockery of all life—the passengers drew the shades and settled down in their seats to endure the discomfort of it all.
A blasé tourist forward reclined in one seat and rested his legs on another. From under the peak of a cap pulled well down over his eyes he smiled cynically at his fellow-passengers, noting the various manifestations of their discomfort. The tourist was a transcontinental traveler of note and he had few expectations. It amused him to watch those who had.
A girl of about twenty, seated midway in the coach to the left of the tourist, had been an intent watcher of the desert. With the covert eye of the tourist upon her she stiffened, stared sharply out of the window, then drew back, shuddering, a queer pallor on her face.
“She’s seen something unpleasant,” mused the tourist. “A heap of bleached bones—which would be the skeleton of a steer; or a rattlesnake—or most anything. She’s got nerves.”
One passenger in the car had no nerves—of that the tourist was convinced. The tourist had observed him closely, and the tourist was a judge of men. The nerveless one was a young man who sat in a rear seat staring intently out into the inferno of heat and sand, apparently absorbed in his thoughts and unaware of any physical