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								 - Libros en formato MOBI - 
								
								 The 
								Border Legion Joan Randle 
								reined in her horse on the crest of the cedar 
								ridge, and with remorse and dread beginning to 
								knock at her heart she gazed before her at the 
								wild and looming mountain range.
 “Jim wasn't fooling me,” she said. “He meant it. 
								He's going straight for the border... Oh, why 
								did I taunt him!”
 It was indeed a wild place, that southern border 
								of Idaho, and that year was to see the ushering 
								in of the wildest time probably ever known in 
								the West. The rush for gold had peopled 
								California with a horde of lawless men of every 
								kind and class. And the vigilantes and then the 
								rich strikes in Idaho had caused a reflux of 
								that dark tide of humanity. Strange tales of 
								blood and gold drifted into the camps, and 
								prospectors and hunters met with many unknown 
								men.
 Joan had quarreled with Jim Cleve, and she was 
								bitterly regretting it. Joan was twenty years 
								old, tall, strong, dark. She had been born in 
								Missouri, where her father had been well-to-do 
								and prominent, until, like many another man of 
								his day, he had impeded the passage of a bullet. 
								Then Joan had become the protegee of an uncle 
								who had responded to the call of gold; and the 
								latter part of her life had been spent in the 
								wilds...
 
 
   Desert 
								Gold A FACE haunted Cameron—a woman's face. It 
								was there in the white heart of the dying 
								campfire; it hung in the shadows that hovered 
								over the flickering light; it drifted in the 
								darkness beyond.
 This hour, when the day had closed and the 
								lonely desert night set in with its dead silence, 
								was one in which Cameron's mind was thronged 
								with memories of a time long past—of a home back 
								in Peoria, of a woman he had wronged and lost, 
								and loved too late. He was a prospector for 
								gold, a hunter of solitude, a lover of the drear, 
								rock-ribbed infinitude, because he wanted to be 
								alone to remember.
 A sound disturbed Cameron's reflections. He bent 
								his head listening. A soft wind fanned the 
								paling embers, blew sparks and white ashes and 
								thin smoke away into the enshrouding circle of 
								blackness. His burro did not appear to be moving 
								about. The quiet split to the cry of a coyote. 
								It rose strange, wild, mournful—not the howl of 
								a prowling upland beast baying the campfire or 
								barking at a lonely prospector, but the wail of 
								a wolf, full-voiced, crying out the meaning of 
								the desert and the night. Hunger throbbed in it—hunger 
								for a mate, for offspring, for life. When it 
								ceased, the terrible desert silence smote 
								Cameron, and the cry echoed in his soul. He and 
								that wandering wolf were brothers.
 Then a sharp clink of metal on stone and soft 
								pads of hoofs in sand prompted Cameron to reach 
								for his gun, and to move out of the light of the 
								waning campfire. He was somewhere along the wild 
								border line between Sonora and Arizona; and the 
								prospector who dared the heat and barrenness of 
								that region risked other dangers sometimes as 
								menacing...
 
 
								 
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