
RAY'S DAUGHTER - A Story of Manila
RAY'S DAUGHTER
A weary train snakes across a sun‑baked desert, its rattling cars hauling a mix of mail, baggage, hopeful emigrants and a ragged troop of volunteers bound for the Pacific front of the Spanish‑American War. Inside the cramped, dust‑choked compartments, young men from the Midwest endure the heat, the clatter of rusted wheels, and the uneasy camaraderie that forms when strangers share a rough ride. The narrator’s vivid eye captures the stark landscape—ashen plains, skeletal cattle bones, and the relentless plume of dust that seems to swallow the horizon—setting the tone for a journey that is as much about the harsh environment as it is about the men aboard.
Amid the chaos, a solitary, aging tourist car, barely more than a coal‑bin, becomes a reluctant refuge for a handful of recruits and the quiet presence of a young woman whose connection to a soldier named Ray hints at deeper ties. As the train lurches toward the looming Sierras, the characters confront the uncertainty of war, the strain of travel, and the fragile bonds that begin to knit them together, promising a tale of endurance and unexpected kinship.
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (366K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2006-10-06
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1844–1933
A career soldier who turned frontier experience into bestselling fiction, this American writer brought army life and the early West vividly to readers. His novels mix action, discipline, and everyday detail drawn from years in uniform.
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