Rayton: A Backwoods Mystery
Illustrated by JOHN GOSS
BOSTON L. C. PAGE & COMPANY MDCCCCXII
Copyright, 1910, by Street & Smith
Copyright, 1910, by La Salle Publishing Company
Copyright, 1912, by L. C. Page & Company (INCORPORATED)
All rights reserved
First Impression, January, 1912
Electrotyped and Printed by THE COLONIAL PRESS C. H. Simonds & Co., Boston, U. S. A.
Samson's Mill Settlement had, for the past fifteen years, prided itself on its absolute respectability; and then came Reginald Baynes Rayton, with his unfailing good humor, his riding breeches, and constant haw-haw —and corrupted the community. So it happened that five representative men of the settlement, and Mr. Rayton, sat and played poker one October night in Rayton's snug living room. They had done it before—only last week, in fact—but the sense of guilty novelty had not yet worn off. Only Rayton and old Wigmore were absolutely at their ease. White beans had to do in the place of the usual chips. The standard of play was very moderate—a one-cent ante and a five-cent limit —but it seemed reckless to some of those representative citizens.
Jane questioned me pretty sharp, to-night, said Benjamin Samson, the owner of the mill that sawed lumber and ground buckwheat for the whole Beaver Brook valley; but I give her a bagful of evasive answers. Yes, sir-ee! I guess she suspicioned something. She's been kinder expectin' me to fall from grace ever since she first married me.
Haw-haw! brayed Mr. Rayton. Mrs. Samson is a clever woman. She knows a bad egg, Benjamin, without having to break the shell.
Theodore Goodridge Roberts
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RAYTON:
Nell Harley
CONTENTS
LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
RAYTON:
THE GAME THAT WAS NOT FINISHED
"JIM HARLEY SNATCHED UP THE CARD"
JIM HARLEY TELLS AN OLD STORY
DAVID MARSH DECIDES TO SPEAK—AND DOESN'T
THE TRAPPER'S CONFESSION
DOCTOR NASH'S SUSPICIONS—YOUNG MARSH'S MISFORTUNE
"HE ADVANCED SLOWLY, PAINFULLY, A PITIFUL FIGURE"
DAVID TAKES A MISFORTUNE IN A POOR SPIRIT
MR. BANKS TAKES A HAND IN THE GAME
RAYTON GOES TO BORROW A SAUCEPAN
RAYTON CONFESSES
RED CROSSES AGAIN
AN UNFORTUNATE MOMENT FOR THE DOCTOR
"PLUNGED AT RAYTON, WITH HIS FISTS FLYING"
RAYTON IS REMINDED OF THE RED CROSSES
CAPTAIN WIGMORE SUGGESTS AN AMAZING THING
FEAR FORGOTTEN—AND RECALLED
"'IT IS BECAUSE—BECAUSE I CARE SO FOR YOU—'"
MR. BANKS IS STUNG
THE LITTLE CAT AND THE BIG MOUSE
"THEN HE HALTED AND RECOILED, CLUTCHING AT THE COLD WALLS!"
AN ASTONISHING DISCOVERY
DICK GOODINE RETURNS UNEXPECTEDLY
THE CAPTAIN'S CHARGE
THE CHOSEN INSTRUMENT OF FATE
THE DEATH OF THE CURSE
IN THE WAY OF HAPPINESS
THE END.