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Автор: Ridgwell Cullum
Издательство: Bookwire
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Жанр произведения: Языкознание
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isbn: 4057664611024
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       Ridgwell Cullum

      The Hound From The North

      Published by Good Press, 2019

       [email protected]

      EAN 4057664611024

       CHAPTER I

       IN THE MOUNTAINS

       CHAPTER II

       MR. ZACHARY SMITH

       CHAPTER III

       MR. ZACHARY SMITH SMOKES

       CHAPTER IV

       ‘YELLOW BOOMING––SLUMP IN GREY’

       CHAPTER V

       THE RETURN OF THE PRODIGAL

       CHAPTER VI

       THE PROGRESSIVE EUCHRE PARTY

       CHAPTER VII

       LESLIE GREY FULFILS HIS DESTINY

       CHAPTER VIII

       GREY’S LAST WORDS

       CHAPTER IX

       LONELY RANCH AT OWL HOOT

       CHAPTER X

       THE GRAVEYARD AT OWL HOOT

       CHAPTER XI

       CANINE VAGARIES

       CHAPTER XII

       THE BREAKING OF THE STORM

       CHAPTER XIII

       BLACKMAIL

       CHAPTER XIV

       A STAB IN THE DARK

       CHAPTER XV

       THE MAGGOT AT THE CORE

       CHAPTER XVI

       AN ECHO FROM THE ALASKAN MOUNTAINS

       CHAPTER XVII

       THE LAST OF LONELY RANCH

       CHAPTER XVIII

       THE FOREST DEMON PURSUES

       CHAPTER XIX

       THE AVENGER

       IN CONCLUSION

      1

      THE HOUND FROM THE NORTH

       Table of Contents

       Table of Contents

      A pallid sun, low, gleaming just over a rampart of mountain-tops. Sundogs––heralds of stormy weather––fiercely staring, like sentries, upon either hand of the mighty sphere of light. Vast glaciers shimmering jewel-like in the steely light of the semi-Arctic evening. Black belts of gloomy pinewoods on the lower slopes of the mountains; the trees snow-burdened, but black with the darkness of night in their melancholy depths. The earth white; snow to the thickness of many feet on all. Life none; not a beast of the earth, nor a fowl of the air, nor the hum of an insect. Solitude. Cold––grey, pitiless cold. Night is approaching.

      The hill ranges which backbone the American continent––the northern extremity of the Rocky Mountains. The barrier which confronts the traveller as he journeys from the Yukon Valley to the Alaskan seaboard. Land where the foot of man but rarely treads. And mid-winter.

      2

      But now, in the dying light of day, a man comes slowly, painfully into the picture. What an atom in that infinity of awful grandeur. One little life in all that desert of snow and ice. And what a life. The poor wretch was swathed in furs; snow-shoes on his feet, and a long staff lent his drooping figure support. His whole attitude told its own tale of exhaustion. But a closer inspection, one glance into the fierce-burning eyes, which glowered from the depths of two cavernous sockets, would have added a sequel of starvation. The eyes had a frenzied look in them, the look of a man without hope, but with still that instinct of life burning in his brain. Every now and again he raised one mitted hand and pressed it to nose and cheeks. He knew his face was frozen, but he had no desire to stop to thaw it out. He was beyond such trifles. His upturned