
CHAPTER I - SALLY CREIGHTON
CHAPTER II - SALLY TAKES CHARGE
CHAPTER III - WYLLARD ASSENTS
CHAPTER IV - A CRISIS
CHAPTER V - THE OLD COUNTRY
CHAPTER VI - HER PICTURE
CHAPTER VII - AGATHA DOES NOT FLINCH
CHAPTER VIII - THE TRAVELING COMPANION
CHAPTER IX - THE FOG
CHAPTER X - DISILLUSION
A bitter frost blankets the endless prairie, turning the rolling fields around Lander’s into a moon‑lit sea of white. In this remote settlement of wooden houses, a modest hotel and a handful of barns, the residents cling to a hard‑won optimism, staking their meager savings and relentless toil on the promise of a brighter future. The scene is set in Stukely’s warm barn, where a glowing stove fights the cold and a keg of Ontario cider invites anyone to help themselves.
Inside, a lively mix of newcomers—Englishmen, Scots, French Canadians, and Ontario bushmen—fills the space with music and dance. A fiery‑haired Highlander drives a fierce fiddle while a quieter French Canadian counters with low, clanging chords, their sounds weaving a vibrant tapestry that spurs the crowd into a spirited quadrille. Among them stands Gregory Hawtrey, a tall, blue‑eyed Englishman whose boyish grin and easy confidence make him instantly likable, even as the harsh landscape tests every newcomer’s resolve.
Language
en
Duration
~10 hours (584K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2008-06-28
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1866–1945
Best known for vivid adventure stories set in western Canada, this English novelist drew on years spent at sea and in the colonies to give his fiction a strong sense of place. His books became popular for their frontier settings, practical detail, and steady, readable storytelling.
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