The U. P. Trail eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 500 pages of information about The U. P. Trail.

The U. P. Trail eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 500 pages of information about The U. P. Trail.

He gazed with awe at the tooth-marks on the little book.  How had Casey come by anything of Beauty Stanton’s?  Could it be true that she was dead?

Then again he was accosted in the street.  A heavy hand, a deep voice arrested his progress.  His eyes, sweeping up from the path, saw fringed and beaded buckskin, a stalwart form, a bronzed and bearded face, and keen, gray eyes warm with the light of gladness.  He was gripped in hands of iron.

“Son! hyar you air—­an’ it’s the savin’ of me!” exclaimed a deep, familiar voice.

“Slingerland!” cried Neale, and he grasped his old friend as a drowning man at an anchor-rope.  “My God!  What will happen next? ...  Oh, I’m glad to find you! ...  All these years!  Slingerland, I’m in trouble!”

“Son, I reckon I know,” replied the other.

Neale shivered.  Why did men look at him so?  This old trapper had too much simplicity, too big a heart, to hide his pity.

“Come!  Somewhere—­out of the crowd!” cried Neale, dragging at Slingerland.  “Don’t talk.  Don’t tell me anything.  Wait! ...  I’ve a letter here—­that’s going to be hell!”

Neale stumbled along out of the crowded street, he did not know where, and with death in his soul he opened Beauty Stanton’s book.  And he read: 

You called me that horrible name.  You struck me.  You’ve killed me.  I lie here dying.  Oh, Neale!  I’m dying—­and I loved you.  I came to you to prove it.  If you had not been so blind—­so stupid!  My prayer is that some one will see this I’m writing—­and take it to you.

Ancliffe brought your sweetheart, Allie Lee, to me—­to hide her from Durade.  He told me to find you and then he died.  He had been stabbed in saving her from Durade’s gang.  And Hough, too, was killed.

Neale, I looked at Allie Lee, and then I understood your ruin.  You fool!  She was not dead, but alive.  Innocent and sweet like an angel!  Ah, the wonder of it in Benton!  Neale, she did not know—­did not feel the kind of a woman I am.  She changed me—­crucified me.  She put her face on my breast.  And I have that touch with me now, blessed, softening.

I locked her in a room and hurried out to find you.  For the first time in years I had a happy moment.  I understood why you had never cared for me.  I respected you.  Then I would have gone to hell for you.  It was my joy that you must owe your happiness to me—­that I would be the one to give you back Allie Lee and hope, and the old, ambitious life.  Oh, I gloried in my power.  It was sweet.  You would owe every kiss of hers, every moment of pride, to the woman you had repulsed.  That was to be my revenge.

And I found you, and in the best hour of my bitter life—­when I had risen above the woman of shame, above thought of self—­then you, with hellish stupidity, imagined I was seeking you—­you for myself!  Your annoyance, your scorn, robbed me of my wits.  I could not tell you.  I could only speak her name and bid you come.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The U. P. Trail from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.