Zane Grey

The Rainbow Trail


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       Zane Grey

      The Rainbow Trail

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664649256

       FOREWORD

       THE RAINBOW TRAIL

       I. RED LAKE

       II. THE SAGI

       III. KAYENTA

       IV. NEW FRIENDS

       V. ON THE TRAIL

       VI. IN THE HIDDEN VALLEY

       VII. SAGO-LILIES

       VIII. THE HOGAN OF NAS TA BEGA

       IX. IN THE DESERT CRUCIBLE

       X. STONEBRIDGE

       XI. AFTER THE TRIAL

       XII. THE REVELATION

       XIII. THE STORY OF SURPRISE VALLEY

       XIV. THE NAVAJO

       XV. WILD JUSTICE

       XVI. SURPRISE VALLEY

       XVII. THE TRAIL TO NONNEZOSHE

       XVIII. AT THE FOOT OF THE RAINBOW

       XIX. THE GRAND CANYON OF THE COLORADO

       XX. WILLOW SPRINGS

       EPILOGUE

       Table of Contents

      The spell of the desert comes back to me, as it always will come. I see the veils, like purple smoke, in the canyon, and I feel the silence. And it seems that again I must try to pierce both and to get at the strange wild life of the last American wilderness—wild still, almost, as it ever was.

      While this romance is an independent story, yet readers of “Riders of the Purple Sage” will find in it an answer to a question often asked.

      I wish to say also this story has appeared serially in a different form in one of the monthly magazines under the title of “The Desert Crucible.” ZANE GREY.

      June, 1915.

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      Shefford halted his tired horse and gazed with slowly realizing eyes.

      A league-long slope of sage rolled and billowed down to Red Lake, a dry red basin, denuded and glistening, a hollow in the desert, a lonely and desolate door to the vast, wild, and broken upland beyond.

      All day Shefford had plodded onward with the clear horizon-line a thing unattainable; and for days before that he had ridden the wild bare flats and climbed the rocky desert benches. The great colored reaches and steps had led endlessly onward and upward through dim and deceiving distance.

      A hundred miles of desert travel, with its mistakes and lessons and intimations, had not prepared him for what he now saw. He beheld what seemed a world that knew only magnitude. Wonder and awe fixed his gaze, and thought remained aloof. Then that dark and unknown northland flung a menace at him. An irresistible call had drawn him to this seamed and peaked border of Arizona, this broken battlemented wilderness of Utah upland; and at first sight they frowned upon him, as if to warn him not to search for what lay hidden beyond the ranges. But Shefford thrilled with both fear and exultation. That was the country which had been described to him. Far across the red valley, far beyond the ragged line of black mesa and yellow range, lay the wild canyon with its haunting secret.

      Red Lake must be his Rubicon. Either he must enter the unknown to seek, to strive, to find, or turn back and fail and never know and be always haunted. A friend's strange story had prompted his singular journey; a beautiful rainbow with its mystery and promise had decided him. Once in his life he had answered a wild call to the kingdom of adventure within him, and once in his life he had been happy. But here in the horizon-wide face of that up-flung and cloven desert he grew cold; he faltered even while he felt more fatally drawn.

      As if impelled Shefford started his horse down the sandy trail, but he checked his former far-reaching gaze. It was the month of April, and the waning sun lost heat and brightness. Long shadows crept down the slope ahead of him and the scant sage deepened its gray. He watched the lizards shoot like brown streaks across the sand, leaving their slender tracks; he heard the rustle of pack-rats as they darted into their brushy homes; the whir of a low-sailing hawk startled his horse.

      Like ocean waves the slope rose and fell, its hollows choked with sand, its ridge-tops showing scantier growth of sage and grass and weed. The last ridge was a sand-dune, beautifully ribbed and scalloped and lined by the wind, and from its knife-sharp crest a thin wavering sheet of sand blew, almost like smoke. Shefford wondered why the sand looked red at a distance, for here it seemed almost white. It rippled everywhere, clean and glistening, always leading down.

      Suddenly Shefford became aware of a house looming out of the bareness of the slope. It dominated that long white incline. Grim, lonely, forbidding, how strangely it harmonized with the surroundings! The structure