Zane Grey - The Mysterious Rider

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The story of a terrible gunfighter with a strange history and Columbine Bellounds, a lost child brought up by a stern old rancher who expects her to marry his rascally son out of gratitude.
Review
This is an earlier Zane Grey work (1921 copyright) but it is well worth the reading. I would highly recommend it for the younger generation, boys or girls. I found the book very enjoyable. If you want to read a western about shootouts, and that sort of thing, then this is not your book. But for a good, descriptive drama, that grabs you and makes the pages turn, then this is the book for you. Rancher Bill Belllounds had brought up Columbine as though she were his daughter. Out of affection for her foster father, Columbine had agreed to marry Bills son, Jack-a drunkard, gambler, coward, and thief. But the man she really loved was cowboy Wilson Moore, and he was everything Belllounds son should have been. Then the strange, clairvoyant little man they called Hell-Bent Wade came to work at the ranch. You can believe me when I say somethin will happen, he declared prophetically. Columbine isn't going to marry Jack Belllounds. I loved to read the dialogue, Zane Greys books may be a little dated to the time period when he wrote them, but its still a good book.

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“Well, if you work hard for dad, learn to handle the cowboys, and never take up those old bad habits—”

“You mean drink and cards? I swear I'd forgotten them for three years—until yesterday. I reckon I've the better of them.”

“Then you'll make dad and me happy. You'll be happy, too.”

Columbine thrilled at the touch of fineness coming out in him. There was good in him, whatever the mad, wild pranks of his boyhood.

“Dad wants us to marry,” he said, suddenly, with shyness and a strange, amused smile. “Isn't that funny? You and me—who used to fight like cat and dog! Do you remember the time I pushed you into the old mud-hole? And you lay in wait for me, behind the house, to hit me with a rotten cabbage?”

“Yes, I remember,” replied Columbine, dreamily. “It seems so long ago.”

“And the time you ate my pie, and how I got even by tearing off your little dress, so you had to run home almost without a stitch on?”

“Guess I've forgotten that,” replied Columbine, with a blush. “I must have been very little then.”

“You were a little devil.... Do you remember the fight I had with Moore—about you?”

She did not answer, for she disliked the fleeting expression that crossed his face. He remembered too well.

“I'll settle that score with Moore,” he went on. “Besides, I won't have him on the ranch.”

“Dad needs good hands,” she said, with her eyes on the gray sage slopes. Mention of Wilson Moore augmented the aloofness in her. An annoyance pricked along her veins.

“Before we get any farther I'd like to know something. Has Moore ever made love to you?”

Columbine felt that prickling augment to a hot, sharp wave of blood. Why was she at the mercy of strange, quick, unfamiliar sensations? Why did she hesitate over that natural query from Jack Belllounds?

“No. He never has,” she replied, presently.

“That's damn queer. You used to like him better than anybody else. You sure hated me.... Columbine, have you outgrown that?”

“Yes, of course,” she answered. “But I hardly hated you.”

“Dad said you were willing to marry me. Is that so?”

Columbine dropped her head. His question, kindly put, did not affront her, for it had been expected. But his actual presence, the meaning of his words, stirred in her an unutterable spirit of protest. She had already in her will consented to the demand of the old man; she was learning now, however, that she could not force her flesh to consent to a surrender it did not desire.

“Yes, I'm willing,” she replied, bravely.

“Soon?” he flashed, with an eager difference in his voice.

“If I had my way it'd not be—too soon,” she faltered. Her downcast eyes had seen the stride he had made closer to her, and she wanted to run.

“Why? Dad thinks it'd be good for me,” went on Belllounds, now, with strong, self-centered thought. “It'd give me responsibility. I reckon I need it. Why not soon?”

“Wouldn't it be better to wait awhile?” she asked. “We do not know each other—let alone care—”

“Columbine, I've fallen in love with you.” he declared, hotly.

“Oh, how could you!” cried Columbine, incredulously.

“Why, I always was moony over you—when we were kids,” he said. “And now to meet you grown up like this—so pretty and sweet—such a—a healthy, blooming girl.... And dad's word that you'd be my wife soon— mine —why, I just went off my head at sight of you.”

Columbine looked up at him and was reminded of how, as a boy, he had always taken a quick, passionate longing for things he must and would have. And his father had not denied him. It might really be that Jack had suddenly fallen in love with her.

“Would you want to take me without my—my love?” she asked, very low. “I don't love you now. I might some time, if you were good—if you made dad happy—if you conquered—”

“Take you! I'd take you if you—if you hated me,” he replied, now in the grip of passion.

“I'll tell dad how I feel,” she said, faintly, “and—and marry you when he says.”

He kissed her, would have embraced her had she not put him back.

“Don't! Some—some one will see.”

“Columbine, we're engaged,” he asserted, with a laugh of possession. “Say, you needn't look so white and scared. I won't eat you. But I'd like to.... Oh, you're a sweet girl! Here I was hating to come home. And look at my luck!”

Then with a sudden change, that seemed significant of his character, he lost his ardor, dropped the half-bold, half-masterful air, and showed the softer side.

“Collie, I never was any good,” he said. “But I want to be better. I'll prove it. I'll make a clean breast of everything. I won't marry you with any secret between us. You might find out afterward and hate me.... Do you have any idea where I've been these last three years?”

“No,” answered Columbine.

“I'll tell you right now. But you must promise never to mention it to any one—or throw it up to me—ever.”

He spoke hoarsely, and had grown quite white. Suddenly Columbine thought of Wilson Moore! He had known where Jack had spent those years. He had resisted a strong temptation to tell her. That was as noble in him as the implication of Jack's whereabouts had been base.

“Jack, that is big of you,” she replied, hurriedly. “I respect you—like you for it. But you needn't tell me. I'd rather you didn't. I'll take the will for the deed.”

Belllounds evidently experienced a poignant shock of amaze, of relief, of wonder, of gratitude. In an instant he seemed transformed.

“Collie, if I hadn't loved you before I'd love you now. That was going to be the hardest job I ever had—to tell you my—my story. I meant it. And now I'll not have to feel your shame for me and I'll not feel I'm a cheat or a liar.... But I will tell you this—if you love me you'll make a man of me!”

CHAPTER III

The rancher thought it best to wait till after the round-up before he turned over the foremanship to his son. This was wise, but Jack did not see it that way. He showed that his old, intolerant spirit had, if anything, grown during his absence. Belllounds patiently argued with him, explaining what certainly should have been clear to a young man brought up in Colorado. The fall round-up was the most important time of the year, and during the strenuous drive the appointed foreman should have absolute control. Jack gave in finally with a bad grace.

It was unfortunate that he went directly from his father's presence out to the corrals. Some of the cowboys who had ridden all the day before and stood guard all night had just come in. They were begrimed with dust, weary, and sleepy-eyed.

“This hyar outfit won't see my tracks no more,” said one, disgustedly. “I never kicked on doin' two men's work. But when it comes to rustlin' day and night, all the time, I'm a-goin' to pass.”

“Turn in, boys, and sleep till we get back with the chuck-wagon,” said Wilson Moore. “We'll clean up that bunch to-day.”

“Ain't you tired, Wils?” queried Bludsoe, a squat, bow-legged cowpuncher who appeared to be crippled or very lame.

“Me? Naw!” grunted Moore, derisively. “Blud, you sure ask fool questions.... Why, you—mahogany-colored, stump-legged, biped of a cowpuncher, I've had three hours' sleep in four nights!”

“What's a biped?” asked Bludsoe, dubiously.

Nobody enlightened him.

“Wils, you-all air the only eddicated cowman I ever loved, but I'm a son-of-a-gun if we ain't agoin' to come to blows some day,” declared Bludsoe.

“He shore can sling English,” drawled Lem Billings. “I reckon he swallowed a dictionary onct.”

“Wal, he can sling a rope, too, an' thet evens up,” added Jim Montana.

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