The Call Of The Canyon by Zane Grey (most inspirational books .txt) π
Laid The Letter In Her Lap And Gazed Dreamily Through The Window.
It Was A Day Typical Of Early April In New York, Rather Cold And Gray, With
Steely Sunlight. Spring Breathed In The Air, But The Women Passing Along
Fifty-Seventh Street Wore Furs And Wraps. She Heard The Distant Clatter Of
An L Train And Then The Hum Of A Motor Car. A Hurdy-Gurdy Jarred Into The
Interval Of Quiet.
"Glenn Has Been Gone Over A Year," She Mused, "Three Months Over A Year--
And Of All His Strange Letters This Seems The Strangest Yet."
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- Author: Zane Grey
Read book online Β«The Call Of The Canyon by Zane Grey (most inspirational books .txt) πΒ». Author - Zane Grey
But At That Moment Of Outraged Womanhood, And Of Revolt Against The West,
She Would Not Listen. It Might, Too, Have Been The Still Small Voice Of
Conscience. But Decision Of Mind And Energy Coming To Her Then, She Threw
Off The Burden Of Emotion And Perplexity, And Forced Herself Into Composure
Before The Arrival Of Glenn.
The Dust Had Ceased To Blow, Although The Wind Had By No Means Died Away.
Sunset Marked The West In Old Rose And Gold, A Vast Flare. Carley Espied A
Horseman Far Down The Road, And Presently Recognized Both Rider And Steed.
He Was Coming Fast. She Went Out And, Mounting Her Mustang, She Rode Out To
Meet Glenn. It Did Not Appeal To Her To Wait For Him At The Cabin; Besides
Hoof Tracks Other Than Those Made By Her Mustang Might Have Been Noticed By
Glenn. Presently He Came Up To Her And Pulled His Loping Horse.
"Hello! I Sure Was Worried," Was His Greeting, As His Gloved Hand Went Out
To Her. "Did You Run Into That Sandstorm?"
"It Ran Into Me, Glenn, And Buried Me," She Laughed.
Chapter 6 Pg 106
His Fine Eyes Lingered On Her Face With Glad And Warm Glance, And The Keen,
Apprehensive Penetration Of A Lover.
"Well, Under All That Dust You Look Scared," He Said.
"Scared! I Was Worse Than That. When I First Ran Into The Flying Dirt I Was
Only Afraid I'd Lose My Way--And My Complexion. But When The Worst Of The
Storm Hit Me--Then I Feared I'd Lose My Breath."
"Did You Face That Sand And Ride Through It All?" He Queried.
"No, Not All. But Enough. I Went Through The Worst Of It Before I Reached
The Cabin," She Replied.
"Wasn't It Great?"
"Yes--Great Bother And Annoyance," She Said, Laconically.
Whereupon He Reached With Long, Arm And Wrapped It Round Her As They
Rocked Side By Side. Demonstrations Of This Nature Were Infrequent With Glenn.
Despite Losing One Foot Out Of A Stirrup And Her Seat In The Saddle Carley
Rather Encouraged It. He Kissed Her Dusty Face, And Then Set Her Back.
"By George! Carley, Sometimes I Think You've Changed Since You've Been
Here," He Said, With Warmth. "To Go Through That Sandstorm Without One
Kick--One Knock At My West!"
"Glenn, I Always Think Of What Flo Says--The Worst Is Yet To Come," Replied
Carley, Trying To Hide Her Unreasonable And Tumultuous Pleasure At Words Of
Praise From Him.
"Carley Burch, You Don't Know Yourself," He Declared, Enigmatically.
"What Woman Knows Herself? But Do You Know Me?"
"Not I. Yet Sometimes I See Depths In You--Wonderful Possibilities--
Submerged Under Your Poise--Under Your Fixed, Complacent Idle Attitude
Toward Life."
This Seemed For Carley To Be Dangerously Skating Near Thin Ice, But She
Could Not Resist A Retort:
"Depths In Me? Why I Am A Shallow, Transparent Stream Like Your West Fork!
. . . And As For Possibilities--May I Ask What Of Them You Imagine You See?"
Chapter 6 Pg 107
"As A Girl, Before You Were Claimed By The World, You Were Earnest At
Heart. You Had Big Hopes And Dreams. And You Had Intellect, Too. But You
Have Wasted Your Talents, Carley. Having Money, And Spending It, Living For
Pleasure, You Have Not Realized Your Powers. . . . Now, Don't Look Hurt.
I'm Not Censuring You, It's Just The Way Of Modern Life. And Most Of Your
Friends Have Been More Careless, Thoughtless, Useless Than You. The Aim Of
Their Existence Is To Be Comfortable, Free From Work, Worry, Pain. They
Want Pleasure, Luxury. And What A Pity It Is! The Best Of You Girls Regard
Marriage As An Escape, Instead Of Responsibility. You Don't Marry To Get
Your Shoulders Square Against The Old Wheel Of American Progress--To Help
Some Man Make Good--To Bring A Troop Of Healthy American Kids Into The
World. You Bare Your Shoulders To The Gaze Of The Multitude And Like It
Best If You Are Strung With Pearls."
"Glenn, You Distress Me When You Talk Like This," Replied Carley, Soberly.
"You Did Not Use To Talk So. It Seems To Me You Are Bitter Against Women."
"Oh No, Carley! I Am Only Sad," He Said. "I Only See Where Once I Was
Blind. American Women Are The Finest On Earth, But As A Race, If They Don't
Change, They're Doomed To Extinction."
"How Can You Say Such Things?" Demanded Carley, With Spirit.
"I Say Them Because They Are True. Carley, On The Level Now, Tell Me How
Many Of Your Immediate Friends Have Children."
Put To A Test, Carley Rapidly Went Over In Mind Her Circle Of Friends, With
The Result That She Was Somewhat Shocked And Amazed To Realize How Few Of
Them Were Even Married, And How The Babies Of Her Acquaintance Were Limited
To Three. It Was Not Easy To Admit This To Glenn.
"My Dear," Replied He, "If That Does Not Show You The Handwriting On The
Wall, Nothing Ever Will."
"A Girl Has To Find A Husband, Doesn't She?" Asked Carley, Roused To
Defense Of Her Sex. "And If She's Anybody She Has To Find One In Her Set.
Well, Husbands Are Not Plentiful. Marriage Certainly Is Not The End Of
Existence These Days. We Have To Get Along Somehow. The High Cost Of Living
Is No Inconsderable Factor Today. Do You Know That Most Of The Better-Class
Apartment Houses In New York Will Not Take Children? Women Are Not All To
Chapter 6 Pg 108Blame. Take The Speed Mania. Men Must Have Automobiles. I Know One Girl Who
Wanted A Baby, But Her Husband Wanted A Car. They Couldn't Afford Both."
"Carley, I'm Not Blaming Women More Than Men," Returned Glenn. "I Don't
Know That I Blame Them As A Class. But In My Own Mind I Have Worked It All
Out. Every Man Or Woman Who Is Genuinely American Should Read The Signs Of
The Times, Realize The Crisis, And Meet It In An American Way. Otherwise We
Are Done As A Race. Money Is God In The Older Countries. But It Should
Never Become God In America. If It Does We Will Make The Fall Of Rome Pale
Into Insignificance."
"Glenn, Let's Put Off The Argument," Appealed Carley. "I'm Not--Just Up To
Fighting You Today. Oh--You Needn't Smile. I'm Not Showing A Yellow Streak,
As Flo Puts It. I'll Fight You Some Other Time."
"You're Right, Carley," He Assented. "Here We Are Loafing Six Or Seven
Miles From Home. Let's Rustle Along."
Riding Fast With Glenn Was Something Carley Had Only Of Late Added To Her
Achievements. She Had Greatest Pride In It. So She Urged Her Mustang To
Keep Pace With Glenn's Horse And Gave Herself Up To The Thrill Of The
Motion And Feel Of Wind And Sense Of Flying Along. At A Good Swinging Lope
Calico Covered Ground Swiftly And Did Not Tire. Carley Rode The Two Miles
To The Rim Of The Canyon, Keeping Alongside Of Glenn All The Way. Indeed,
For One Long Level Stretch She And Glenn Held Hands. When They Arrived At
The Descent, Which Necessitated Slow And Careful Riding, She Was Hot And
Tingling And Breathless, Worked By The Action Into An Exuberance Of
Pleasure. Glenn Complimented Her Riding As Well As Her Rosy Cheeks. There
Was Indeed A Sweetness In Working At A Task As She Had Worked To Learn To
Ride In Western Fashion. Every Turn Of Her Mind Seemed To Confront Her With
Sobering Antitheses Of Thought. Why Had She Come To Love To Ride Down A
Lonely Desert Road, Through Ragged Cedars Where The Wind Whipped Her Face
With Fragrant Wild Breath, If At The Same Time She Hated The West? Could
She Hate A Country, However Barren And Rough, If It Had Saved The Health
And Happiness Of Her Future Husband? Verily There Were Problems For Carley
To Solve.
Early Twilight Purple Lay Low In The Hollows And Clefts Of The Canyon. Over
Chapter 6 Pg 109The Western Rim A Pale Ghost Of The Evening Star Seemed To Smile At Carley,
To Bid Her Look And Look. Like A Strain Of Distant Music, The Dreamy Hum Of
Falling Water, The Murmur And Melody Of The Stream, Came Again To Carley's
Sensitive Ear.
"Do You Love This?" Asked Glenn, When They Reached The Green-Forested
Canyon Floor, With The Yellow Road Winding Away Into The Purple Shadows.
"Yes, Both The Ride--And You," Flashed Carley, Contrarily. She Knew He Had
Meant The Deep-Walled Canyon With Its Brooding Solitude.
"But I Want You To Love Arizona," He Said.
"Glenn, I'm A Faithful Creature. You Should Be Glad Of That. I Love New
York."
"Very Well, Then. Arizona To New York," He Said, Lightly Brushing Her Cheek
With His Lips. And Swerving Back Into His Saddle, He Spurred His Horse And
Called Back Over His Shoulder: "That Mustang And Flo Have Beaten Me Many A
Time. Come On."
It Was Not So Much His Words As His Tone And Look That Roused Carley. Had
He Resented Her Loyalty To The City Of Her Nativity? Always There Was A
Little Rift In The Lute. Had His Tone And Look Meant That Flo Might Catch
Him If Carley Could Not? Absurd As The Idea Was, It Spurred Her To
Recklessness. Her Mustang Did Not Need Any More Than To Know She Wanted Him
To Run. The Road Was Of Soft Yellow Earth Flanked With Green Foliage And
Overspread By Pines. In A Moment She Was Racing At A Speed She Had Never
Before Half Attained On A Horse. Down The Winding Road Glenn's Big Steed
Sped, His Head Low, His Stride Tremendous, His Action Beautiful. But Carley
Saw The Distance Between Them Diminishing. Calico Was Overtaking The Bay.
She Cried Out In The
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