Riders of the Purple Sage Zane Grey (great book club books txt) đ
- Author: Zane Grey
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âForever,â replied Jane.
âI fired Withersteen House,â said Lassiter.
âDyer?â questioned Venters, sharply.
âI reckon where Dyerâs gone there wonât be any kidnappinâ of girls.â
âAh! I knew it. I told Judkinsâ âAnd Tull?â went on Venters, passionately.
âTull wasnât around when I broke loose. By now heâs likely on our trail with his riders.â
âLassiter, youâre going into the Pass to hide till all this storm blows over?â
âI reckon thatâs Janeâs idea. Iâm thinkinâ the stormâll be a powerful long time blowinâ over. I was cominâ to join you in Surprise Valley. Youâll go back now with me?â
âNo. I want to take Bess out of Utah. Lassiter, Bess found gold in the valley. Weâve a saddlebag full of gold. If we can reach Sterlingâ ââ
âMan! howâre you ever goinâ to do that? Sterlinâ is a hundred miles.â
âMy plan is to ride on, keeping sharp lookout. Somewhere up the trail weâll take to the sage and go round Cottonwoods and then hit the trail again.â
âItâs a bad plan. Youâll kill the burros in two days.â
âThen weâll walk.â
âThatâs more bad anâ worse. Better go back down the Pass with me.â
âLassiter, this girl has been hidden all her life in that lonely place,â went on Venters. âOldringâs men are hunting me. Weâd not be safe there any longer. Even if we would be Iâd take this chance to get her out. I want to marry her. She shall have some of the pleasures of lifeâ âsee cities and people. Weâve goldâ âweâll be rich. Why, life opens sweet for both of us. And, by Heaven! Iâll get her out or lose my life in the attempt!â
âI reckon if you go on with them burros youâll lose your life all right. Tull will have riders all over this sage. You canât get out on them burros. Itâs a fool idea. Thatâs not doinâ best by the girl. Come with me enâ take chances on the rustlers.â
Lassiterâs cool argument made Venters waver, not in determination to go, but in hope of success.
âBess, I want you to know. Lassiter says the tripâs almost useless now. Iâm afraid heâs right. Weâve got about one chance in a hundred to go through. Shall we take it? Shall we go on?â
âWeâll go on,â replied Bess.
âThat settles it, Lassiter.â
Lassiter spread wide his hands, as if to signify he could do no more, and his face clouded.
Venters felt a touch on his elbow. Jane stood beside him with a hand on his arm. She was smiling. Something radiated from her, and like an electric current accelerated the motion of his blood.
âBern, youâd be right to die rather than not take Elizabeth out of Utahâ âout of this wild country. You must do it. Youâll show her the great world, with all its wonders. Think how little she has seen! Think what delight is in store for her! You have gold, You will be free; you will make her happy. What a glorious prospect! I share it with you. Iâll think of youâ âdream of youâ âpray for you.â
âThank you, Jane,â replied Venters, trying to steady his voice. âIt does look bright. Oh, if we were only across that wide, open waste of sage!â
âBern, the tripâs as good as made. Itâll be safeâ âeasy. Itâll be a glorious ride,â she said, softly.
Venters stared. Had Janeâs troubles made her insane? Lassiter, too, acted queerly, all at once beginning to turn his sombrero round in hands that actually shook.
âYou are a rider. She is a rider. This will be the ride of your lives,â added Jane, in that same soft undertone, almost as if she were musing to herself.
âJane!â he cried.
âI give you Black Star and Night!â
âBlack Star and Night!â he echoed.
âItâs done. Lassiter, put our saddlebags on the burros.â
Only when Lassiter moved swiftly to execute her bidding did Ventersâs clogged brain grasp at literal meanings. He leaped to catch Lassiterâs busy hands.
âNo, no! What are you doing?â he demanded, in a kind of fury. âI wonât take her racers. What do you think I am? Itâd be monstrous. Lassiter! stop it, I say!â ââ ⊠Youâve got her to save. Youâve miles and miles to go. Tull is trailing you. There are rustlers in the Pass. Give me back that saddlebag!â
âSonâ âcool down,â returned Lassiter, in a voice he might have used to a child. But the grip with which he tore away Ventersâs grasping hands was that of a giant. âListenâ âyou fool boy! Janeâs sized up the situation. The burrosâll do for us. Weâll sneak along anâ hide. Iâll take your dogs anâ your rifle. Why, itâs the trick. The blacks are yours, anâ sure as I can throw a gun youâre goinâ to ride safe out of the sage.â
âJaneâ âstop himâ âplease stop him,â gasped Venters. âIâve lost my strength. I canât doâ âanything. This is hell for me! Canât you see that? Iâve ruined youâ âit was through me you lost all. Youâve only Black Star and Night left. You love these horses. Oh! I know how you must love them now! Andâ âyouâre trying to give them to me. To help me out of Utah! To save the girl I love!â
âThat will be my glory.â
Then in the white, rapt face, in the unfathomable eyes, Venters saw Jane Withersteen in a supreme moment. This moment was one wherein she reached up to the height for which her noble soul had ever yearned. He, after disrupting the calm tenor of her peace, after bringing down on her head the implacable hostility of her churchmen, after teaching her a bitter lesson of lifeâ âhe was to be her salvation. And he turned away again, this time shaken to the core of his soul. Jane Withersteen was the incarnation of selflessness. He experienced wonder and terror, exquisite pain and rapture. What were all the shocks life had dealt him compared to the thought of such loyal and generous friendship?
And instantly, as if by some divine insight, he knew himself in the remakingâ âtried, found wanting; but stronger, better, surerâ âand he wheeled to Jane
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