The U. P. Trail by Zane Grey (e book reader pc .TXT) đ
- Author: Zane Grey
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âThe crowd seen somethinâ amiss, anâ went quiet, starinâ anâ nudginâ.... Gineral, domâ me if the gurlâs face didnât blaze. I niver seen the loike. Anâ she sthepped anâ come straight fer Lee. Anâ whin she sthopped she wuz close enough to touch him. Her eyes wor great burninâ holes anâ her face shone somethinâ wonderful.
âLee put up a shakinâ hand.
ââGurl,â he sez, âdid yez iver hear of Allison Lee?â
âAnâ all her seemed to lift.
ââHe is my father!â she cried. âI am Allie Lee!â
âAh! thin that crowd wuz split up by a mon wot hurried through. He wuz a greaserâone of thim dandies on dress anâ diamondsâa handsome, wicked-lookinâ gambler. Seeinâ the gurl, he snarled, âGo back there!â anâ he pointed. She niver even looked at him.
âSome wan back of me sez thotâs Durade. Wal, it was! Anâ sudden he seen who the gurl wuz watchinââLee.
âThot Durade turned green anâ wild-eyed anâ stiff. But thot couldnât hould a candle to Lee. Shure he turned into a fiend. He bit out a Spanish name, nothinâ loike Durade.
âAnâ loike a hissinâ snake Durade sez, âAllison Lee!â
âThin there wuz a dead-lock between thim two men, wid the crowd waitinâ fer hell to pay. Life-long inimies, sez I, to meself, anâ I hed the whole story.
âDurade began to limber up. Any man what knows a greaser would have been lookinâ fer blood. âSheâwintâbackâto yez!â panted Durade.
ââNoâthiefâSpanish dog! I have not seen her for nineteen years,â sez Lee.
âThe gurl spoke up: âMother is dead! Killed by Injuns!â
âThin Lee cried out, âDid she leave HIM?â
ââYes, she did,â sez the gurl. âShe wuz goinâ back. Home! Takinâ me home. But the caravan wuz attacked by Injuns. Anâ all but me wor massacred.â
âDurade cut short the gurlâs spache. If I iver seen a reptoile it wuz thin.
ââLee, they both left me,â he hisses. âI tracked them. I lost the mother, but caught the daughter.â
âThin thot Durade lost his spache fer a minnit, foaminâ at the mouth wid rage. If yez niver seen a greaser mad thin yez niver seen the rale thinâ. His face changed yaller anâ ould anâ wrinkled, wid spots of red. His lip curled up loike a wolfâs, anâ his eyesâthey wint down to little black points of hellâs fire. He wuz crazy.
ââLook at her!â he yelled. âAllie Lee! Flesh anâ blood yez canât deny! Her baby!... Anâ sheâs been my slaveâmy dog to beat anâ kick! Sheâs been through Benton! A toy fer the riff-raff of the camps!... Sheâs as vile anâ black anâ lost as her treacherous mother!â
âAllison Lee shrunk under thot shame. But the gurl! Lord! she niver looked wot she was painted by thot devil. She stood white anâ still, like an angel above judgment.
âDurade drew one of thim little derringers. Anâ sudden he hild it on Lee, hissinâ now in his greaser talk. I niver seen sich hellish joy on a human face. Murder was nothinâ to thot look.
âJist thin I seen Neale anâ Slingerland, anâ, by Gawd! I thought Iâd drop. They seemed to loom up. The girl screamed wild-loike anâ she swayed about to fall. Neale leaped in front of Lee.
ââDurade!â he spit out, anâ domâ me if I didnât expect to see the roof fly off.â
McDermott wiped his moist face and tipped his empty glass to his lips, and swallowed hard. His light-blue eyes held a glint.
âGineral,â he went on, âyez know Neale. How big he is! Wot nerve heâs got! There niver wor a mon his equal on the U. P. âceptinâ Casey.... But me, nor any wan, nor yez, either, ever seen Neale loike he wuz thin. He niver hesitated an inch, but wint roight fer Durade. Any domâ fool, even a crazy greaser, would hev seen his finish in Neale. Durade changed quick from hot to cold. Anâ he shot Neale.
âNeale laughed. Funny ringinâ sort of laugh, full of thot same joy Durade hed sung out to Lee. Hate anâ love of blood it wor. Yez would hev thought Neale felt wonderful happy to sthop a bullet.
âThin his hand shot out anâ grabbed Durade.... He jerked him off his feet anâ swung him round. The little derringer flew, anâ Sandy McDermott wuz the mon who picked it up. Itâll be Nealeâs whin I see him.... Durade jabbered fer help. But no wan come. Thot big trapper Slingerland stood there with two guns, anâ shure he looked bad. Neale slung Durade around, spillinâ some fellars who didnât dodge quick, anâ thin he jerked him up backwards.
âAnâ Durade come up with a long knife in the one hand he had free.
âNeale yelled, âLee, take the gurl out!â
âI seen thin she hed fainted in Leeâs arms. He lifted herâmoved awayâanâ thin I seen no more of thim.
âDurade made wild anâ wicked lunges at Neale, only to be jerked off his balance. I heerd the bones crack in the arm Neale held. The greaser screamed. Sudden he wuz turned agin, anâ swung backwards so thot Neale grabbed the other armâthe wan wot held the knife. It wuz a child in the grasp of a giant. Neale shure looked beautiful, I niver wished so much in me loife fer Casey as thin. He would hev enjoyed thot foight, fer he bragged of his friendship fer Neale. Anâââ
âGo on, man, end your story!â ordered the general, breathlessly.
âWal, bâgorra, there wuz more crackinâ of bones, anâ sich screams as I niver heerd from a mon. Tumble, blood-curdlinâ!... Neale held both Duradeâs hands anâ wuz squeezinâ thot knife-handle so the greaser couldnât let go.
âThin Neale drew out thot hand of Duradeâsâthe wan wot held the knifeâanâ made Durade jab himself, low down!... My Gawd! how thot jenteel Spaniard howled! I seen the blade go in anâ come out red. Thin Slingerland tore thim apart, anâ the greaser fell. He warnât killed. Mebbe he ainât goinâ to croak. But heâll shure hev to lâave Roarinâ City, an heâll shure be a cripple fer loife.â
McDermott looked at the empty glass.
âThatâs all, Gineral. Anâ if itâs jist the same to yez Iâll hev another drink.â
32
The mere sight of Warren Neale had transformed life for Allie Lee. The shame of being forced to meet degraded men, the pain from Duradeâs blows, the dread that every hour he would do the worst by her
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