Big Timber: A Story of the Northwest
The Imperial Limited lurched with a swing around the last hairpin curve of the Yale canyon. Ahead opened out a timbered valley,—narrow on its floor, flanked with bold mountains, but nevertheless a valley,—down which the rails lay straight and shining on an easy grade. The river that for a hundred miles had boiled and snarled parallel to the tracks, roaring through the granite sluice that cuts the Cascade Range, took a wider channel and a leisurely flow. The mad haste had fallen from it as haste falls from one who, with time to spare, sees his destination near at hand; and the turgid Fraser had time to spare, for now it was but threescore miles to tidewater. So the great river moved placidly—as an old man moves when all the headlong urge of youth is spent and his race near run.
On the river side of the first coach behind the diner, Estella Benton nursed her round chin in the palm of one hand, leaning her elbow on the window sill. It was a relief to look over a widening valley instead of a bare-walled gorge all scarred with slides, to see wooded heights lift green in place of barren cliffs, to watch banks of fern massed against the right of way where for a day and a night parched sagebrush, brown tumble-weed, and such scant growth as flourished in the arid uplands of interior British Columbia had streamed in barren monotony, hot and dry and still.
She was near the finish of her journey. Pensively she considered the end of the road. How would it be there? What manner of folk and country? Between her past mode of life and the new that she was hurrying toward lay the vast gulf of distance, of custom, of class even. It was bound to be crude, to be full of inconveniences and uncouthness. Her brother's letters had partly prepared her for that. Involuntarily she shrank from it, had been shrinking from it by fits and starts all the way, as flowers that thrive best in shady nooks shrink from hot sun and rude winds. Not that Estella Benton was particularly flower-like. On the contrary she was a healthy, vigorous-bodied young woman, scarcely to be described as beautiful, yet undeniably attractive. Obviously a daughter of the well-to-do, one of that American type which flourishes in families to which American politicians unctuously refer as the backbone of the nation. Outwardly, gazing riverward through the dusty pane, she bore herself with utmost serenity. Inwardly she was full of misgivings.
Bertrand W. Sinclair
---
BIG TIMBER
A Story of the Northwest
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I
GREEN FIELDS AND PASTURES NEW
CHAPTER II
MR. ABBEY ARRIVES
CHAPTER III
HALFWAY POINT
CHAPTER IV
A FORETASTE OF THINGS TO COME
CHAPTER V
THE TOLL OF BIG TIMBER
CHAPTER VI
THE DIGNITY (?) OF TOIL
CHAPTER VII
SOME NEIGHBORLY ASSISTANCE
CHAPTER VIII
DURANCE VILE
CHAPTER IX
JACK FYFE'S CAMP
CHAPTER X
ONE WAY OUT
CHAPTER XI
THE PLUNGE
CHAPTER XII
AND SO THEY WERE MARRIED
CHAPTER XIII
IN WHICH EVENTS MARK TIME
CHAPTER XIV
A CLOSE CALL AND A NEW ACQUAINTANCE
CHAPTER XV
A RESURRECTION
CHAPTER XVI
THE CRISIS
CHAPTER XVII
IN WHICH THERE IS A FURTHER CLASH
CHAPTER XVIII
THE OPENING GUN
CHAPTER XIX
FREE AS THE WIND
CHAPTER XX
ECHOES
CHAPTER XXI
AN UNEXPECTED MEETING
CHAPTER XXII
THE FIRE BEHIND THE SMOKE
CHAPTER XXIII
A RIDE BY NIGHT
CHAPTER XXIV
"OUT OF THE NIGHT THAT COVERS ME"