[Riders of the Purple Sage by Zane Grey]@TWC D-Link book
Riders of the Purple Sage

CHAPTER IV
11/43

Ring loped in the lead and Whitie loped in the rear.

Wrangle settled gradually into an easy swinging canter, and Venters's thoughts, now that the rush and flurry of the start were past, and the long miles stretched before him, reverted to a calm reckoning of late singular coincidences.
There was the night ride of Tull's, which, viewed in the light of subsequent events, had a look of his covert machinations; Oldring and his Masked Rider and his rustlers riding muffled horses; the report that Tull had ridden out that morning with his man Jerry on the trail to Glaze, the strange disappearance of Jane Withersteen's riders, the unusually determined attempt to kill the one Gentile still in her employ, an intention frustrated, no doubt, only by Judkin's magnificent riding of her racer, and lastly the driving of the red herd.

These events, to Venters's color of mind, had a dark relationship.

Remembering Jane's accusation of bitterness, he tried hard to put aside his rancor in judging Tull.

But it was bitter knowledge that made him see the truth.


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