
In the summer of 1676 Plymouth is awash with the aftermath of King Philip’s War. A triumphant regiment rolls through the town, its soldiers glittering with swords and pistols, while a captive boy—pale as fresh snow—trails behind the procession. The crowd, long‑suppressed Puritans now intoxicated by victory, erupts in a chaotic mix of laughter, song, and uneasy revelry as the gruesome trophy of the slain sachem’s head is paraded before them.
Amid the clamor, a young woman watches from the fringe, her thoughts drifting between the spectacle and the lingering shadows of fear that still haunt the colony. She senses that the triumph is fragile, that the war’s wounds run deeper than the blood‑stained streets, and that whispers of old powers begin to stir in the surrounding woods. Her curiosity and courage set her on a path that will test both her heart and the limits of the world she knows.
Language
en
Duration
~10 hours (595K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United States: R. F. Fenno & Company, 1901.
Credits
Mary Glenn Krause, Charlene Taylor, Barry Abrahamsen, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)
Release date
2022-06-05
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1869–1911
A versatile early-20th-century American novelist, he moved easily from Nevada mining-camp stories to adventure tales, detective fiction, and speculative romances. His work was widely serialized in major magazines, and several of his best-known books are linked to the Sagebrush School of Western writing.
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