
THE INDIAN'S HAND - By Lorimer Stoddard
Copyright, 1892, by J. B. Lippincott & Co.
The story opens on a remote frontier settlement where the men have ridden off to the hills, leaving women, children, and a few old men behind. Daily life seems simple—laughter, dancing, the promise of fresh game—but an uneasy whisper runs through the camp about the return of the Indians. The settlers dismiss the danger with bravado, yet a solitary woman in black watches the plains with a hard, haunted stare, clutching memories of a lost child.
When the distant sound of hooves becomes a thunderous charge, the peaceful routine shatters. The Indians, fierce and relentless, storm the settlement, dragging the grieving mother from her home and binding her to a horse. As the raid spreads, she fights with a desperation born of loss, her thoughts fixed on the boy she left behind. The narrative captures her raw courage and the brutal clash between the fragile hopes of frontier life and the unforgiving reality of the surrounding wilderness.
Full title
The Indian's Hand 1892 1892
Language
en
Duration
~17 minutes (16K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by David Widger
Release date
2007-10-24
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1864–1901
Born into a literary New York family, this short-lived writer moved between fiction and the stage, leaving behind a small body of work that still feels vivid and theatrical. He is best remembered for dark, atmospheric storytelling and for adapting popular novels for major actresses of his day.
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