Trail's End
E-text prepared by Roger Frank and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net/c/)
Made in the United States of America
Copyright A. C. McClurg & Co. 1921
Published September, 1921
Copyrighted in Great Britain
Bones.
Bones of dead buffalo, bones of dead horses, bones of dead men. The tribute exacted by the Kansas prairie: bones. A waste of bones, a sepulcher that did not hide its bones, but spread them, exulting in its treasures, to bleach and crumble under the stern sun upon its sterile wastes. Bones of deserted houses, skeletons of men's hopes sketched in the dimming furrows which the grasses were reclaiming for their own.
A land of desolation and defeat it seemed to the traveler, indeed, as he followed the old trail along which the commerce of the illimitable West once was borne. Although that highway had belonged to another generation, and years had passed since an ox train toiled over it on its creeping journey toward distant Santa Fé, the ruts of old wheels were deep in the soil, healed over by the sod again, it is true, but seamed like scars on a veteran's cheek. One could not go astray on that broad highway, for the eye could follow the many parallel trails, where new ones had been broken when the old ones wore deep and rutted.
Present-day traffic had broken a new trail between the old ones; it wound a dusty gray line through the early summer green of the prairie grass, endless, it seemed, to the eyes of the leg-weary traveler who bent his footsteps along it that sunny morning. This passenger, afoot on a road where it was almost an offense to travel by such lowly means, was a man of thirty or thereabout, tall and rather angular, who took the road in long strides much faster than the freighters' trains had traveled it in the days of his father. He carried a black, dingy leather bag swinging from his long arm, a very lean and unpromising repository, upon which the dust of the road lay spread.
George W. Ogden
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CHAPTER I
THE UNCONQUERED LAND
CHAPTER II
THE MEAT HUNTER
CHAPTER III
FIRST BLOOD
CHAPTER IV
THE OPTIMIST EXPLAINS
CHAPTER V
ASCALON AWAKE
CHAPTER VI
RIDERS OF THE CHISHOLM TRAIL
CHAPTER VII
A GENTLE COWBOY JOKE
CHAPTER VIII
THE AVATISM OF A MAN
CHAPTER IX
NEWS FROM ASCALON
CHAPTER X
THE HOUR OF VENGEANCE
CHAPTER XI
THE PENALTY
CHAPTER XII
IN PLACE OF A REGIMENT
CHAPTER XIII
THE HAND OF THE LAW
CHAPTER XIV
SOME FOOL WITH A GUN
CHAPTER XV
WILL HIS LUCK HOLD?
CHAPTER XVI
THE MEAT HUNTER COMES
CHAPTER XVII
WITH CLEAN HANDS
CHAPTER XVIII
A BONDSMAN BREATHES EASIER
CHAPTER XIX
THE CURSE OF BLOOD
CHAPTER XX
UNCLEAN
CHAPTER XXI
AS ONE THAT IS DEAD
CHAPTER XXII
WHINERS AT THE FUNERAL
CHAPTER XXIII
ASCALON CURLS ITS LIP
CHAPTER XXIV
MADNESS OF THE WINDS
CHAPTER XXV
A SUMMONS AT SUNRISE
CHAPTER XXVI
IN THE SQUARE AT ASCALON
CHAPTER XXVII
ABSOLUTION
CHAPTER XXVIII
SUNSET
Transcriber's Notes