George Barr McCutcheon

The Rose in the Ring


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       George Barr McCutcheon

      The Rose in the Ring

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066214340

       BOOK ONE

       CHAPTER I — THE FUGITIVE

       CHAPTER II — IN THE DRESSING-TENT

       CHAPTER III — DAVID ENTERS THE SAWDUST RING

       CHAPTER IV — A STRANGER APPEARS ON THE SCENE

       CHAPTER V — SOMETHING ABOUT THE BRADDOCKS

       CHAPTER VI — DAVID JENISON'S STORY

       CHAPTER VII — THE BROTHERS CRONK

       CHAPTER VIII — AN INVITATION TO SUPPER

       CHAPTER IX — A THIEF IN THE NIGHT

       CHAPTER X — LOVE WINGS A TIMID DART

       CHAPTER XI — ARTFUL DICK GOES VISITING

       CHAPTER XII — IN WHICH MANY THINGS HAPPEN

       CHAPTER XIII — THE SALE

       BOOK TWO

       CHAPTER I — THE DAUGHTER OF COLONEL GRAND

       CHAPTER II — THE STRANGER AT THE HALL

       CHAPTER III — THE MAN WHO SERVED HIS TIME

       CHAPTER IV — THE DELIVERY OF A TELEGRAM

       CHAPTER V — THE LOVE THAT WAS STAUNCH

       CHAPTER VI — DOOR-STEPS

       CHAPTER VII — TOM BRADDOCK'S PROMISE

       CHAPTER VIII — COLONEL GRAND AND THE CRONKS

       CHAPTER IX — IN THE LITTLE TRIANGULAR "SQUARE"

       CHAPTER X — THE BLACK HEADLINES

       THE END

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      The gaunt man led the way. At his heels, doggedly, came the two short ones, fagged, yet uncomplaining; all of them drenched to the skin by the chill rain that swirled through the Gap, down into the night-ridden valley below. Sky was never so black. Days of incessant storm had left it impenetrably overcast.

      These men trudged—or stumbled—along the slippery road which skirted the mountain's base. Soggy, unseen farm lands and gardens to their left, Stygian forests above and to their right. Ahead, the far-distant will-o-the-wisp flicker of many lights, blinking in the foggy shroud. Three or four miles lay between the sullen travelers and the town that cradled itself in the lower end of the valley.

      Night had stolen early upon the dour spring day. The tall man who led carried a rickety, ill-smelling lantern that sent its feeble rays no farther ahead than a dozen paces; it served best to reveal the face of the huge silver watch which frequently was drawn from its owner's coat pocket.

      Eight o'clock—no more—and yet it seemed to these men that they had plowed forever through the blackness of this evil night, through a hundred villainous shadows by unpointed paths. Mile after mile, they had traversed almost impassable roads, unwavering persistence in command of their strength, heavy stoicism their burden. Few were the words that had passed between them during all those weary miles. An occasional oath, muffled but impressive, fell from the lips of one or the other of those who followed close behind the silent, imperturbable leader. The tall man was as silent as the unspeakable night itself.

      It was impossible to distinguish the faces of these dogged night-farers. The collars of their coats were turned up, their throats were muffled, and the broad rims of their rain-soaked hats were far down over the eyes. There was that about them which suggested the unresented pressure of firearms inside the dry breast-pockets of long coats.

      This was an evening in the spring of 1875, and these men were forging their way along a treacherous mountain road in Southwestern Virginia. A word in passing may explain the exigency which forced the travelers to the present undertaking. The washing away of a bridge ten miles farther down the valley had put an end to all thought of progress by rail, for the night, at least. Rigid necessity compelled them to proceed in the face of the direst hardships. Their mission was one which could not be stayed so long as they possessed legs and stout hearts. Checked by the misfortune at the bridge, there was nothing left for them but to make the best of the situation: they set forth on foot across the mountain, following the short but more arduous route from the lower to the upper valley. Since three o'clock in the afternoon they had been struggling along their way, at times by narrow wagon roads, not infrequently by trails and foot paths that made for economy in distance.

      The tall man strode onward with never decreasing strength and confidence; his companions, on the contrary, were faint and sore and scowling. They were not to the mountains born; they came from the gentle lowlands by the sea—from broad plantations and pleasant byways, from the tidewater country. He was the leader on this ugly night, and yet they were the masters;