The U.P. Trail | Page 5

Zane Grey

"Go child--go!" entreated Mrs. Durade.
Others urged her, but she shook her head. Horn's big hand trembled as
he held it out, and for once there was no trace of hardness about his
face.
"Allie, I never had no lass of my own.... I wish you'd go with him.
You'd be safe--an' you could take my--"
"No!" interrupted the girl.
Slingerland gave her a strange, admiring glance, then turned his quick
gray eyes upon Horn. "Anythin' I can take?"
Horn hesitated. "No. It was jest somethin' I wanted the girl to hev."
Slingerland touched his shaggy horse and called over his shoulder:
"Rustle out of hyar!" Then he galloped down the trail, leaving the
travelers standing aghast.
"Break camp!" thundered Horn.
A scene of confusion followed. In a very short while the prairie-
schooners were lumbering down the valley. Twilight came just as the
flight got under way. The tired oxen were beaten to make them run. But
they were awkward and the loads were heavy. Night fell, and the road

was difficult to follow. The wagons rolled and bumped and swayed
from side to side; camp utensils and blankets dropped from them. One
wagon broke down. The occupants, frantically gathering together their
possessions, ran ahead to pile into the one in front.
Horn drove on and on at a gait cruel to both men and beasts. The
women were roughly shaken. Hours passed and miles were gained.
That valley led into another with an upgrade, rocky and treacherous.
Horn led on foot and ordered the men to do likewise. The night grew
darker. By and by further progress became impossible, for the oxen
failed and a wild barrier of trees and rocks stopped the way.
Then the fugitives sat and shivered and waited for dawn. No one slept.
All listened intently to the sounds of the lonely night, magnified now
by their fears. Horn strode to and fro with his rifle- -a grim, dark, silent
form. Whenever a wolf mourned, or a cat squalled, or a night bird
voiced the solitude, or a stone rattled off the cliff, the fugitives started
up quiveringly alert, expecting every second to hear the screeching yell
of the Sioux. They whispered to keep up a flickering courage. And the
burly Horn strode to and fro, thoughtful, as though he were planning
something, and always listening. Allie sat in one of the wagons close to
her mother. She was wide awake and not so badly scared. All through
this dreadful journey her mother had not seemed natural to Allie, and
the farther they traveled eastward the stranger she grew. During the ride
that night she had moaned and shuddered, and had clasped Allie close;
but when the flight had come to a forced end she grew silent.
Allie was young and hopeful. She kept whispering to her mother that
the soldiers would come in time.
"That brave fellow in buckskin--he'll save us," said Allie.
"Child, I feel I'll never see home again," finally whispered Mrs.
Durade.
"Mother!"
"Allie, I must tell you--I must!" cried Mrs. Durade, very low and

fiercely. She clung to her daughter.
"Tell me what?" whispered Allie.
"The truth--the truth! Oh, I've deceived you all your life!"
"Deceived me! Oh, mother! Then tell me--now."
"Child--you'll forgive me--and never--hate me?" cried the mother,
brokenly.
"Mother, how can you talk so! I love you." And Allie clasped the
shaking form closer. Then followed a silence during which Mrs.
Durade recovered her composure.
"Allie, I ran off with Durade before you were born," began the mother,
swiftly, as if she must hurry out her secret. "Durade is not your father....
Your name is Lee. Your father is Allison Lee. I've heard he's a rich man
now.... Oh, I want to get back--to give you to him--to beg his
forgiveness.... We were married in New Orleans in 1847. My father
made me marry him. I never loved Allison Lee. He was not a kind
man--not the sort I admired.... I met Durade. He was a Spaniard--a
blue-blooded adventurer. I ran off with him. We joined the
gold-seekers traveling to California. You were born out there in 1850....
It has been a hard life. But I taught you--I did all I 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
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