"Grey, Zane - The U.P. Trail" - читать интересную книгу автора (Grey Zane)could for you. I kept my secret from you--and his! ... Lately I could
endure it no longer. I've run off from Durade." "Oh, mother, I knew we were running off from him!" cried Allie, breathlessly. "And I know he will follow us." "Indeed, I fear he will," replied the mother. "But Lord spare me his revenge!" "Mother! Oh, it is terrible! ... He is not my father. I never loved him. I couldn't.... But, mother, you must have loved him!" "Child, I was Durade's slave," she replied, sadly. "Then why did you run away? He was kind--good to us." "Allie, listen. Durade was a gambler--a man crazy to stake all on the fall of a card. He did not love gold. But he loved games of chance. It was a terrible passion with him. Once he meant to gamble my honor away. But that other gambler was too much of a man. There are gamblers who are men! ... I think I began to hate Durade from that time.... He was a dishonest gambler. He made me share in his guilt. My face lured miners to his dens.... My face--for I was beautiful once! ... Oh, I sunk so low! But he forced me.... Thank God I left him--before it was too late--too late for you." "Mother, he will follow us!" cried Allie. "But he shall never have you. I'll kill him before I let him get you," replied the mother. "He'd never harm me, mother, whatever he is," murmured Allie. "Child, he would use you exactly as he used me. He wanted me to let him have you--already. He wanted to train you--he said you'd be beautiful some day." "Mother!" gasped Allie, "is THAT what he meant?" "Forget him, child. And forget your mother's guilt! ... I've suffered. I've repented.... All I ask of God is to take you safely home to Allison Lee--the father whom you have never known." The night hour before dawn grew colder and blacker. A great silence seemed wedged down between the ebony hills. The stars were wan. No cry of wolf or moan of wind disturbed the stillness. And the stars grew warmer. The black east changed and paled. Dawn was at hand. An opaque and obscure grayness filled the world; all had changed, except that strange, oppressive, and vast silence of the wild. |
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