Riders of the Purple Sage Zane Grey (great book club books txt) š
- Author: Zane Grey
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āIt was to find I hadnāt any home, no more. Father had been dead a year. Frank Erne still lived in the house where Milly had left him. I stayed with him awhile, anā I grew old watchinā him. His farm had gone to weed, his cattle had strayed or been rustled, his house weathered till it wouldnāt keep out rain nor wind. Anā Frank set on the porch and whittled sticks, anā day by day wasted away. There was times when he ranted about like a crazy man, but mostly he was always sittinā anā starinā with eyes that made a man curse. I figured Frank had a secret fear that I needed to know. Anā when I told him Iād trailed Milly for near three years anā had got trace of her, anā saw where sheād had her baby, I thought he would drop dead at my feet. Anā when heād come round more natural-like he begged me to give up the trail. But he wouldnāt explain. So I let him alone, anā watched him day enā night.
āAnā I found there was one thing still precious to him, anā it was a little drawer where he kept his papers. This was in the room where he slept. Anā it āpeared he seldom slept. But after beinā patient I got the contents of that drawer anā found two letters from Milly. One was a long letter written a few months after her disappearance. She had been bound anā gagged anā dragged away from her home by three men, anā she named themā āHurd, Metzger, Slack. They was strangers to her. She was taken to the little town where I found trace of her two years after. But she didnāt send the letter from that town. There she was penned in. āPeared that the proselytes, who had, of course, come on the scene, was not runninā any risks of losinā her. She went on to say that for a time she was out of her head, anā when she got right again all that kept her alive was the baby. It was a beautiful baby, she said, anā all she thought anā dreamed of was somehow to get baby back to its father, anā then sheād thankfully lay down and die. Anā the letter ended abrupt, in the middle of a sentence, enā it wasnāt signed.
āThe second letter was written more than two years after the first. It was from Salt Lake City. It simply said that Milly had heard her brother was on her trail. She asked Frank to tell her brother to give up the search because if he didnāt she would suffer in a way too horrible to tell. She didnāt beg. She just stated a fact anā made the simple request. Anā she ended that letter by sayinā she would soon leave Salt Lake City with the man she had come to love, enā would never be heard of again.
āI recognized Millyās handwritinā, anā I recognized her way of puttinā things. But that second letter told me of some great change in her. Ponderinā over it, I felt at last sheād either come to love that feller anā his religion, or some terrible fear made her lie anā say so. I couldnāt be sure which. But, of course, I meant to find out. Iāll say here, if Iād known Mormons then as I do now Iād left Milly to her fate. For mebbe she was right about what sheād suffer if I kept on her trail. But I was young anā wild them days. First I went to the town where sheād first been taken, anā I went to the place where sheād been kept. I got that skunk who owned the place, anā took him out in the woods, anā made him tell all he knowed. That wasnāt much as to length, but it was pure hellās-fire in substance. This time I left him some incapacitated for any more skunk work short of hell. Then I hit the trail for Utah.
āThat was fourteen years ago. I saw the incominā of most of the Mormons. It was a wild country anā a wild time. I rode from town to town, village to village, ranch to ranch, camp to camp. I never stayed long in one place. I never had but one idea. I never rested. Four years went by, anā I knowed every trail in northern Utah. I kept on anā as time went by, anā Iād begun to grow old in my search, I had firmer, blinder faith in whatever was guidinā me. Once I read about a feller who sailed the seven seas anā traveled the world, anā he had a story to tell, anā whenever he seen the man to whom he must tell that story he knowed him on sight. I was like that, only I had a question to ask. Anā always I knew the man of whom I must ask. So I never really lost the trail, though for many years it was the dimmest trail ever followed by any man.
āThen come a change in my luck. Along in Central Utah I rounded up Hurd, anā I whispered somethinā in his ear, anā watched his face, anā then throwed a gun against his bowels. Anā he died with his teeth so tight shut I couldnāt have pried them open with a knife. Slack anā Metzger that same year both heard me whisper the same question, anā neither would they speak a word when they lay dyinā. Long before Iād learned no man of this breed or
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