George Barr McCutcheon

Viola Gwyn


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       George Barr McCutcheon

      Viola Gwyn

      Published by Good Press, 2021

       [email protected]

      EAN 4064066166076

       PROLOGUE

       THE BEGINNING

       CHAPTER I — SHELTER FOR THE NIGHT

       CHAPTER II — THE STRANGE YOUNG WOMAN

       CHAPTER III — SOMETHING ABOUT CLOTHES, AND MEN, AND CATS

       CHAPTER IV — VIOLA GWYN

       CHAPTER V — REFLECTIONS AND AN ENCOUNTER

       CHAPTER VI — BARRY LAPELLE

       CHAPTER VII — THE END OF THE LONG ROAD

       CHAPTER VIII — RACHEL CARTER

       CHAPTER IX — BROTHER AND SISTER

       CHAPTER X — MOTHER AND DAUGHTER

       CHAPTER XI — A ROADSIDE MEETING

       CHAPTER XII — ISAAC STAIN APPEARS BY NIGHT

       CHAPTER XIII — THE GRACIOUS ENEMY

       CHAPTER XIV — A MAN FROM DOWN THE RIVER

       . . . . .

       CHAPTER XV — THE LANDING OF THE "PAUL REVERE"

       CHAPTER XVI — CONCERNING TEMPESTS AND INDIANS

       CHAPTER XVII — REVELATIONS

       CHAPTER XVIII — RACHEL DELIVERS A MESSAGE

       CHAPTER XIX — LAPELLE SHOWS HIS TEETH

       CHAPTER XX — THE BLOW

       CHAPTER XXI — THE AFFAIR AT HAWK'S CABIN

       CHAPTER XXII — THE PRISONERS

       . . . . . . . . . . . .

       CHAPTER XXIII — CHALLENGE AND RETORT

       CHAPTER XXIV — IN AN UPSTAIRS ROOM

       CHAPTER XXV — MINDA CARTER

       CHAPTER XXVI — THE FLIGHT OF MARTIN HAWK

       CHAPTER XXVII — THE TRIAL OF MOLL HAWK

       "BARRY LAPELLE."

       CHAPTER XXVIII — THE TRYSTING PLACE OF THOUGHTS

       CHAPTER XXIX — THE ENDING

       THE END

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      Kenneth Gwynne was five years old when his father ran away with Rachel Carter, a widow. This was in the spring of 1812, and in the fall his mother died. His grandparents brought him up to hate Rachel Carter, an evil woman.

      She was his mother's friend and she had slain her with the viper's tooth. From the day that his questioning intelligence seized upon the truth that had been so carefully withheld from him by his broken-hearted mother and those who spoke behind the hand when he was near,—from that day he hated Rachel Carter with all his hot and outraged heart. He came to think of her as the embodiment of all that was evil,—for those were the days when there was no middle-ground for sin and women were either white or scarlet.

      He rejoiced in the belief that in good time Rachel Carter would come to roast in the everlasting fires of hell, grovelling and wailing at the feet of Satan, the while his lovely mother looked down upon her in pity,—even then he wondered if such a thing were possible,—from her seat beside God in His Heaven. He had no doubts about this. Hell and heaven were real to him, and all sinners went below. On the other hand, his father would be permitted to repent and would instantly go to heaven. It was inconceivable that his big, strong, well-beloved father should go to the bad place. But Mrs. Carter would! Nothing could save her! God would not pay any attention to her if she tried to repent; He would know it was only "make-believe" if she got down on her knees and prayed for forgiveness. He was convinced that Rachel Carter could not fool God. Besides, would not his mother be there to remind Him in case He could not exactly remember what Rachel Carter had done? And were there not dozens of good, honest people in the village who would probably be in Heaven by that time and ready to stand before the throne and bear witness that she was a bad woman?

      No, Rachel Carter could never get into Heaven. He was glad. No matter if the Scriptures did say all that about