The Call of the Canyon | Page 2

Zane Grey

is noble and beautiful. Whatever the changes in me for the worse, my
love for you, at least, has grown better, finer, purer.
And now for your second question, "Are you coming home as soon as
you are well again?" . . . Carley, I am well. I have delayed telling you
this because I knew you would expect me to rush back East with the
telling. But- -the fact is, Carley, I am not coming--just yet. I wish it
were possible for me to make you understand. For a long time I seem to
have been frozen within. You know when I came back from France I
couldn't talk. It's almost as bad as that now. Yet all that I was then
seems to have changed again. It is only fair to you to tell you that, as I
feel now, I hate the city, I hate people, and particularly I hate that
dancing, drinking, lounging set you chase with. I don't want to come
East until I am over that, you know. . . Suppose I never get over it?
Well, Carley, you can free yourself from me by one word that I could
never utter. I could never break our engagement. During the hell I went
through in the war my attachment to you saved me from moral ruin, if
it did not from perfect honor and fidelity. This is another thing I despair
of making you understand. And in the chaos I've wandered through
since the war my love for you was my only anchor. You never guessed,
did you, that I lived on your letters until I got well. And now the fact

that I might get along without them is no discredit to their charm or to
you.
It is all so hard to put in words, Carley. To lie down with death and get
up with death was nothing. To face one's degradation was nothing. But
to come home an incomprehensibly changed man--and to see my old
life as strange as if it were the new life of another planet--to try to slip
into the old groove--well, no words of mine can tell you how utterly
impossible it was.
My old job was not open to me, even if I had been able to work. The
government that I fought for left me to starve, or to die of my maladies
like a dog, for all it cared.
I could not live on your money, Carley. My people are poor, as you
know. So there was nothing for me to do but to borrow a little money
from my friends and to come West. I'm glad I had the courage to come.
What this West is I'll never try to tell you, because, loving the luxury
and excitement and glitter of the city as you do, you'd think I was
crazy.
Getting on here, in my condition, was as hard as trench life. But now,
Carley--something has come to me out of the West. That, too, I am
unable to put into words. Maybe I can give you an inkling of it. I'm
strong enough to chop wood all day. No man or woman passes my
cabin in a month. But I am never lonely. I love these vast red canyon
walls towering above me. And the silence is so sweet. Think of the
hellish din that filled my ears. Even now--sometimes, the brook here
changes its babbling murmur to the roar of war. I never understood
anything of the meaning of nature until I lived under these looming
stone walls and whispering pines.
So, Carley, try to understand me, or at least be kind. You know they
came very near writing, "Gone west!" after my name, and considering
that, this "Out West" signifies for me a very fortunate difference. A
tremendous difference! For the present I'll let well enough alone.
Adios. Write soon. Love from

GLEN
Carley's second reaction to the letter was a sudden upflashing desire to
see her lover--to go out West and find him. Impulses with her were
rather rare and inhibited, but this one made her tremble. If Glenn was
well again he must have vastly changed from the moody, stone-faced,
and haunted-eyed man who had so worried and distressed her. He had
embarrassed her, too, for sometimes, in her home, meeting young men
there who had not gone into the service, he had seemed to retreat into
himself, singularly aloof, as if his world was not theirs.
Again, with eager eyes and quivering lips, she read the letter. It
contained words that lifted her heart. Her starved love greedily
absorbed them. In them she had excuse for any resolve that might bring
Glenn closer to her. And she pondered over this longing to go to him.
Carley had the
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