The Rainbow Trail eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 371 pages of information about The Rainbow Trail.

The Rainbow Trail eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 371 pages of information about The Rainbow Trail.

And from that night he went at his work and the part he played in the village with a zeal and a cunning that left him free to seek Fay when he chose.

Sometimes in the afternoon, always for a while in the evening, he was with her.  They climbed the walls, and sat upon a lonely height to look afar; they walked under the stars, and the cedars, and the shadows of the great cliffs.  She had a beautiful mind.  Listening to her, he imagined he saw down into beautiful Surprise Valley with all its weird shadows, its colored walls and painted caves, its golden shafts of morning light and the red haze at sunset; and he felt the silence that must have been there, and the singing of the wind in the cliffs, and the sweetness and fragrance of the flowers, and the wildness of it all.  Love had worked a marvelous transformation in this girl who had lived her life in a canyon.  The burden upon her did not weigh heavily.  She could not have an unhappy thought.  She spoke of the village, of her Mormon companions, of daily happenings, of Stonebridge, of many things in a matter-of-fact way that showed how little they occupied her mind.  She even spoke of sealed wives in a kind of dreamy abstraction.  Something had possession of her, something as strong as the nature which had developed her, and in its power she, in her simplicity, was utterly unconscious, a watching and feeling girl.  A strange, witching, radiant beauty lurked in her smile.  And Shefford heard her laugh in his dreams.

The weeks slipped by.  The black mountain took on a white cap of snow; in the early mornings there was ice in the crevices on the heights and frost in the valley.  In the sheltered canyon where sunshine seemed to linger it was warm and pleasant, so that winter did not kill the flowers.

Shefford waited so long for Fay’s awakening that he believed it would never come, and, believing, had not the heart to force it upon her.  Then there was a growing fear with him.  What would Fay Larkin do when she awakened to the truth?  Fay was indeed like that white and fragile lily which bloomed in the silent, lonely canyon, but the same nature that had created it had created her.  Would she droop as the lily would in a furnace blast?  More than that, he feared a sudden flashing into life of strength, power, passion, hate.  She did not hate yet because she did not yet realize love.  She was utterly innocent of any wrong having been done her.  More and more he began to fear, and a foreboding grew upon him.  He made up his mind to broach the subject of Surprise Valley and of escaping with Lassiter and Jane; still, every time he was with Fay the girl and her beauty and her love were so wonderful that he put off the ordeal till the next night.  As time flew by he excused his vacillation on the score that winter was not a good time to try to cross the desert.  There was no grass for the mustangs, except in well-known valleys, and these he must shun.  Spring would soon come.  So the days passed, and he loved Fay more all the time, desperately living out to its limit the sweetness of every moment with her, and paying for his bliss in the increasing trouble that beset him when once away from her charm.

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Project Gutenberg
The Rainbow Trail from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.