The Cassowary; What Chanced in the Cleft Mountains

audiobook

The Cassowary; What Chanced in the Cleft Mountains

by Stanley Waterloo

EN·~7 hours·30 chapters

Chapters

30 total

THE CASSOWARY

0:50

CHAPTER I

11:20

CHAPTER II

8:48

CHAPTER III

9:03

CHAPTER IV

28:47

CHAPTER V

8:42

CHAPTER VI

21:17

CHAPTER VII

6:06

CHAPTER VIII

20:45

CHAPTER IX

15:29

Description

A ferocious blizzard has turned the narrow Cleft Mountain pass into a white, swirling wall that swallows the trans‑continental train as it barrels forward. The locomotive, a massive iron beast, lunges into the growing snow buttress, only to grind to a trembling halt, its whistle wailing like a desperate cry in the storm. With each futile thrust the train slips deeper into nature’s grip, leaving the crew stranded on a frozen canyon floor.

The situation turns urgent when the crew discovers they possess every tool for a telegraph repair—spikes, cutters, gloves—yet none of the men can actually operate the equipment. The red‑faced, mustachioed conductor roams the cars, his booming voice echoing through the rattling compartments, searching for a hidden telegrapher who might summon help. As the storm howls outside, the men must decide whether to wait for a distant rescue snow‑plow or devise a daring solution themselves, setting the stage for a tense battle of human resolve against an unforgiving winter.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~7 hours (444K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Suzanne Shell, Matthew Wheaton and 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

2011-09-22

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Stanley Waterloo

Stanley Waterloo

1846–1913

Best known for the prehistoric adventure The Story of Ab, this American writer moved easily between journalism, history, and fiction. His work helped bring late-19th-century readers everything from newspaper reporting to imaginative tales set in the distant past.

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