Trailin'! 
 
The Project Gutenberg EBook of Trailin'!, by Max Brand This eBook is 
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Title: Trailin'! 
Author: Max Brand 
Release Date: February 15, 2004 [EBook #11093] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK TRAILIN'! 
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Produced by Suzanne Shell, Bill Walker and PG Distributed 
Proofreaders 
 
TRAILIN'! 
By Max Brand
1919 
To ROBERT HOBART DAVIS Maker of Books and Men 
 
CONTENTS 
 
 
CHAPTER 
I. 
------"LA-A-A-DIES AN' GEN'L'MUN" 
II.-----SPORTING CHANCE 
III.----SOCIAL SUICIDE 
IV.-----A SESSION OF CHAT 
V.------ANTHONY IS LEFT IN THE DARK 
VI.-----JOHN BARD 
VII.----BLUEBEARD'S ROOM 
VIII.---MARTY WILKES 
IX.-----"THIS PLACE FOR REST" 
X.------A BIT OF STALKING 
XI.-----THE QUEST BEGINS 
XII.----THE FIRST DAY
XIII.---A TOUCH OF CRIMSON 
XIV.----LEMONADE 
XV.-----THE DARKNESS IN ELDARA 
XVI.----BLUFF 
XVII.---BUTCH RETURNS 
XVIII.--FOOLISH HABITS 
XIX.----THE CANDLE 
XX.-----JOAN 
XXI.----THE SWIMMING OF THE SAVERACK 
XXII.---DREW SMILES 
XXIII.--THE COMEDY SETTING 
XXIV.---"SAM'L HALL" 
XXV.----HAIR LIKE THE SUNSHINE 
XXVI.---"THE CRITIQUE OF PURE REASON" 
XXVII.--THE STAGE 
XXVIII.-SALLY BREAKS A MIRROR 
XXIX.---THE SHOW 
XXX.----THE LAMP 
XXXI.---NASH STARTS THE FINISH 
XXXII.--TO "APPREHEND" A MAN
XXXIII.-NOTHING NEW 
XXXIV.--CRITICISM 
XXXV.---ABANDON 
XXXVI.--JERRY WOOD 
XXXVII.-"TODO ES PERDO" 
XXXVIII.-BACON 
XXXIX.--LEGAL MURDER 
XL.-----PARTNERS 
XLI.----SALLY WEEPS 
_The characters, places, incidents and situations in this book are 
imaginary and have no relation to any person, place or actual 
happening_. 
 
 
CHAPTER I 
"LA-A-A-DIES AN' GEN'L'MUN" 
All through the exhibition the two sat unmoved; yet on the whole it was 
the best Wild West show that ever stirred sawdust in Madison Square 
Garden and it brought thunders of applause from the crowded house. 
Even if the performance could not stir these two, at least the throng of 
spectators should have drawn them, for all New York was there, from 
the richest to the poorest; neither the combined audiences of a 
seven-day race, a prize-fight, or a community singing festival would 
make such a cosmopolitan assembly.
All Manhattan came to look at the men who had lived and fought and 
conquered under the limitless skies of the Far West, free men, wild 
men--one of their shrill whoops banished distance and brought the 
mountain desert into the very heart of the unromantic East. 
Nevertheless from all these thrills these two men remained immune. 
To be sure the smaller tilted his head back when the horses first swept 
in, and the larger leaned to watch when Diaz, the wizard with the lariat, 
commenced to whirl his rope; but in both cases their interest held no 
longer than if they had been old vaudevillians watching a series of 
familiar acts dressed up with new names. 
The smaller, brown as if a thousand fierce suns and winds had tanned 
and withered him, looked up at last to his burly companion with a faint 
smile. 
"They're bringing on the cream now, Drew, but I'm going to spoil the 
dessert." 
The other was a great, grey man whom age apparently had not 
weakened but rather settled and hardened into an ironlike durability; 
the winds of time or misfortune would have to break that stanch oak 
before it would bend. 
He said: "We've half an hour before our train leaves. Can you play your 
hand in that time?" 
"Easy. Look at 'em now--the greatest gang of liars that never threw a 
diamond hitch! Ride? I've got a ten-year kid home that would laugh at 
'em all. But I'll show 'em up. Want to know my little stunt?" 
"I'll wait and enjoy the surprise." 
The wild riders who provoked the scorn of the smaller man were now 
gathering in the central space; a formidable crew, long of hair and 
brilliant as to bandannas, while the announcer thundered through his 
megaphone:
"La-a-a-dies and gen'l'mun! You see before you the greatest band of 
subduers and breakers of wild horses that ever rode the cattle ranges. 
Death defying, reckless, and laughing at peril, they have never failed; 
they have never pulled leather. I present 'Happy' Morgan!" 
Happy Morgan, yelling like one possessed of ten shrill-tongued demons, 
burst on the gallop away from the others, and spurring his horse cruelly, 
forced the animal to race, bucking and plunging, half way around the 
arena and back to the group. This, then, was a type of the dare-devil 
horse breaker of the Wild West? The cheers travelled in waves around 
and around the house and rocked back and forth like water pitched 
from side to side in a monstrous bowl. 
When the noise abated somewhat, "And this, la-a-a-dies and gen'l'mun, 
is the peerless, cowpuncher, 'Bud Reeves.'" 
Bud at once imitated the example of Happy Morgan, and one after 
another the five remaining riders followed suit. In the meantime a 
number of prancing, kicking, savage-eyed horses    
    
		
	
	
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