The Heart of Canyon Pass. Thomas K. Holmes

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Название The Heart of Canyon Pass
Автор произведения Thomas K. Holmes
Жанр Языкознание
Серия
Издательство Языкознание
Год выпуска 0
isbn 4064066498610



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       Thomas K. Holmes

      The Heart of Canyon Pass

      e-artnow, 2021

       Contact: [email protected]

      EAN: 4064066498610

       Chapter I. Discontent at Canyon Pass

       Chapter II. Discontent at Ditson Corners

       Chapter III. A Shadow Thrown Before

       Chapter IV. Philosophy Bound in Homespun

       Chapter V. How the Passonians Took It

       Chapter VI. The Approach

       Chapter VII. The First Trick

       Chapter VIII. A Flower in the Mire

       Chapter IX. A Beginning

       Chapter X. Mutterings of a Storm

       Chapter XI. The Storm About to Burst

       Chapter XII. Tolley’s Tale

       Chapter XIII. Plans are Made

       Chapter XIV. The Great Day Arrives

       Chapter XV. Pep and a Little Pepper

       Chapter XVI. Love and Longing

       Chapter XVII. A Battle in a Girl’s Heart

       Chapter XVIII. The Shadow on Betty’s Path

       Chapter XIX. A Good Deal of a Man

       Chapter XX. Murder will Out

       Chapter XXI. The Drama of a Lie

       Chapter XXII. A Face in the Storm

       Chapter XXIII. A Great Light Dawns

       Chapter XXIV. The Barrier Down—For a Moment

       Chapter XXV. Understanding

       Chapter XXVI. Threatening Weather

       Chapter XXVII. Several Conclusions

       Chapter XXVIII. Catastrophe

       Chapter XXIX. His Last Card

       Chapter XXX. Clearing Skies

      CHAPTER I

       DISCONTENT AT CANYON PASS

       Table of Contents

      The bluebird was no harbinger of spring at Canyon Pass. Most of the inhabitants had never seen that feathered songster and many had never heard of it. Incidentally these same Passonians would not have known a harbinger in any case, presuming possibly that it was one of those new-fangled nipples for the hydraulic pipes at the Eureka Washings, or something fancy that Bill Judson was selling in cans at the Three Star Grocery.

      But spring had unmistakably arrived at Canyon Pass when those two irrepressible pocket-hunters, Steve Siebert and Andy McCann, got together their frayed and rusty outfits, exchanged the hard-earned money each had toiled for during the winter over the counter of the Three Star for supplies and loaded each his burro till the sad-eyed little brutes almost buckled under the weight of flour, beans, salt pork, coffee, and prospectors’ tools.

      Each ancient then mounted his moth-eaten cayuse, jerked the towline of his objecting burro, and proceeded out of town, Steve making the ford through the East Fork, while Andy plodded through the shallows of the West Fork, both bound down the canyon for the desert country which they hated with an unbelievably bitter hatred, yet which dragged the old men back to its grim barrens as soon as the spring freshets cleared the canyon and gulches of winter’s accumulation of snow.

      Canyon Pass was no beauty spot over which an artist might rave; nor was the landscape surrounding it even passably attractive to the eye. Man, in delving for nature’s treasures in the rocky headlands and along the benches of the East and West Forks, had marred past redemption what little beauty of form and color the rugged wedge of land at the head of the canyon once possessed.

      But on this morning there was a soft blur of blue haze padding the sharp outlines of the canyon walls and brooding over the higher hills. The streams flowing on either side of the town crooned instead of foaming boisterously in their beds, and where they joined to make Runaway River, which followed the bed of the canyon southerly, the thunder of their waters seemed hushed.

      It was not yet sunrise, but a pearl-gray radiance flooded the town and canyon as far south as one could see. Lights wavered drunkenly behind the window-panes of the all-night saloons and dance halls. This enticing spring morning followed the dregs of another riotous night in Canyon Pass.

      The day before had been pay day at the Eureka Washings and the Oreode Company’s diggings and at most of the major mining prospects in the vicinity. At noon the miners and other workmen had knocked off work, drawn their pay, and, cleaned up and dressed in holiday attire, had sought the amusement places of the town. From dark till dawn they had as usual torn the town wide open like a paper sack, to quote Bill Judson, as he stood in the doorway of his store and watched the two old desert rats leaving the dulling merriment and drunkenness behind them as they weaved their several ways out of sight on either bank of Runaway River.

      “They’ve been doing this for twenty years,” added Judson, pointing with his pipe stem to the disappearing prospectors. “An’ to my knowledge and belief ain’t neither of ’em struck a smell of paying color in all that time.”