
The story opens in the remote, wind‑swept expanses of Patagonia, a land where towering cliffs frame restless rivers and solitary valleys cling to life amid endless scrub and sand. The narrative paints a vivid picture of the region’s fierce wildlife—condors soaring above, guanacos perched on crags, and the relentless howl of the quya—creating a backdrop of both stark beauty and harsh isolation.
Into this desolate panorama rides a lone rider, a thirty‑year‑old figure half‑indigenous, half‑European, clad in a weathered poncho and a wide‑brimmed straw hat. His sharp, predatory features and the iron‑clad confidence of a gaucho set him apart, while the rifle at his side hints at a life forged by danger and ambition. He pauses at a tangled crossroads of ancient paths, confronting the vast emptiness that stretches before him.
Choosing a trail that leads farther from the familiar Rio‑Colorado, he plunges deeper into the arid plain, his horse’s steady tread the only sound breaking the silence. This deliberate step marks the beginning of a journey that will draw him into the hidden councils and mysteries that linger in Patagonia’s unforgiving heart.
Language
fr
Duration
~5 hours (338K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Rénald Lévesque
Release date
2007-04-17
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1818–1883
Best remembered for fast-paced adventure novels set in the American West and Mexico, this 19th-century French writer turned years of travel into stories full of scouts, frontier conflict, and dramatic escapes. His books helped feed Europe's fascination with the Wild West.
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