The Wild OnesSt. Martin's Publishing Group, 07/01/2002 - 277 páginas In the 1870s the frontier was a battleground, where the U.S. Army fought Plains warriors, outlaws terrorized the land, and lawmen took no prisoners. Into the West came a family of New York City stage performers: a widowed father, his son, and a daughter whose beauty and singing voice could make the most hardened frontiersmen weep. |
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... turned twenty-two, he was a solid six-footer, with chiseled features and a shock of wavy dark hair. His head bobbed to the sway of the coach and his eyes were closed in a light slumber. He seemed intent on sleeping his way through ...
... turned to pneumonia, and two days later she died in a New York hospital. Her loss devastated Alistair, who stayed drunk for a week, and left Lillian and Chester undone by grief. Estell was the bulwark of the family, wife, mother, and ...
... turned her gaze out the window. Abilene, for all her father's cheery bluster, hardly seemed to her a grand adventure. The middle of nowhere sounded a bit more like it. She, too, wished for New York. The train hurtled through the hamlet ...
... turned to her father. “Oh, Papa, you were wonderful!” “Yes,” Fontaine agreed. “I surprised myself.” Twilight slowly faded to dusk. Fontaine stared off at the shelterbelt of woods where the riders had disappeared. Abruptly, his legs gone ...
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Índice
CHAPTER 14 | 141 |
CHAPTER 15 | 153 |
CHAPTER 16 | 165 |
CHAPTER 17 | 177 |
CHAPTER 18 | 189 |
CHAPTER 19 | 201 |
CHAPTER 20 | 213 |
CHAPTER 21 | 225 |
CHAPTER 9 | 85 |
CHAPTER 10 | 97 |
CHAPTER 11 | 107 |
CHAPTER 12 | 119 |
CHAPTER 13 | 129 |
CHAPTER 22 | 237 |
CHAPTER 23 | 249 |
CHAPTER 24 | 261 |
Epilogue | 273 |