
In the shadow of a bitter conflict that has left the town of Louisburg bruised and its streets echoing with the distant rumble of artillery, two venerable families— the Fairfaxes and the Beauchamps— cling to the familiar rhythms of duty and propriety. Young Henry Fairfax is poised to inherit his father’s legal legacy, while the beautiful Ellen Beauchamp is expected to fulfill the role of a perfect daughter‑in‑law, her future already plotted by generations of tradition.
Amid the turmoil, Ellen finds herself drawn to a modest refuge on the outskirts of town—a halfway house that shelters those displaced by the war. There, she encounters a world far removed from the polished parlors of her upbringing, where compassion and resilience are measured in daily survival. As the war’s tide threatens to upend the orderly lives of the elite, Ellen’s quiet strength begins to challenge the expectations placed upon her, hinting at choices that could reshape both her heart and the community around her.
Full title
The Girl at the Halfway House A Story of the Plains
Language
en
Duration
~8 hours (463K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-02-07
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1857–1923
A lawyer-turned-writer who helped shape the popular American Western, he turned frontier history and outdoor adventure into bestselling fiction. His novels, including The Mississippi Bubble and North of 36, brought the sweep of the American past to a wide audience.
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