GROSSET & DUNLAP
PUBLISHERS ————— NEW YORK

Copyright, 1922,
BY LITTLE, BROWN, AND COMPANY
All Rights Reserved
Published February, 1922
Reprinted March, 1922

To a Certain Little Gray Lady
who seems to like everything
I write, the main reason being
the fact that she is
MY MOTHER

CONTENTS

[CHAPTER I] [CHAPTER VI] [CHAPTER XI] [CHAPTER XVI] [CHAPTER XXI]
[CHAPTER II] [CHAPTER VII] [CHAPTER XII] [CHAPTER XVII] [CHAPTER XXII]
[CHAPTER III] [CHAPTER VIII] [CHAPTER XIII] [CHAPTER XVIII] [CHAPTER XXIII]
[CHAPTER IV] [CHAPTER IX] [CHAPTER XIV] [CHAPTER XIX] [CHAPTER XXIV]
[CHAPTER V] [CHAPTER X] [CHAPTER XV] [CHAPTER XX] [CHAPTER XXV]

THE WHITE DESERT

CHAPTER I

It was early afternoon. Near by, the smaller hills shimmered in the radiant warmth of late spring, the brownness of their foliage and boulders merging gradually upward to the green of the spruces and pines of the higher mountains, which in turn gave way before the somber blacks and whites of the main range, where yet the snow lingered from the clutch of winter, where the streams ran brown with the down-flow of the continental divide, where every cluster of mountain foliage sheltered a mound of white, in jealous conflict with the sun. The mountains are tenacious of their vicious traits; they cling to the snow and cold and ice long after the seasons have denoted a time of warmth and summer's splendor; the columbine often blooms beside a ten-foot drift.

But down in the hollow which shielded the scrambling little town of Dominion, the air was warm and lazy with the friendliness of May. Far off, along the course of the tumbling stream, turbulently striving to care for far more than its share of the melt-water of the hills, a jaybird called raucously as though in an effort to drown the sweeter, softer notes of a robin nesting in the new-green of a quaking aspen. At the hitching post before the one tiny store, an old horse nodded and blinked,—as did the sprawled figure beside the ramshackle motor-filling station, just opened after the snow-bound months of winter. Then five minutes of absolute peace ensued, except for the buzzing of an investigative bottle-fly before the figure shuffled, stretched, and raising his head, looked down the road. From the distance had come the whirring sound of a motor, the forerunner of a possible customer. In the hills, an automobile speaks before it is seen.