
Two rugged prospectors—one a towering giant, the other a stocky, red‑haired dwarf—are bound for the gold‑rich north, riding the Santa Fe Railway after a narrow escape from a Mexican frontier. Their silence is a hard‑won habit, a refuge after days of danger and endless, exhausted conversation. When a flamboyantly dressed stranger, “Lucky” Cochran, plops his alligator‑skin suitcase in the aisle and insists on sitting beside them, the quiet carriage erupts into a torrent of bragging, anecdotes, and relentless chatter.
Cochran’s self‑celebrated tales of oil strikes, sudden fortunes, and larger‑than‑life swagger clash with the prospectors’ preference for listening rather than speaking. As the train barrels toward San Francisco, the pair must decide whether to endure his endless monologue or seek a quieter corner of the car. Their struggle to maintain peace amid a sea of talkers hints at the larger challenges awaiting them on the untamed frontier.
Language
en
Duration
~39 minutes (37K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
New York: Street & Smith Corporation, 1920.
Credits
Roger Frank and Sue Clark (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)
Release date
2023-08-11
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1869–1942
A prolific American newspaperman turned storyteller, he wrote adventure fiction, westerns, and early science-fiction tales that were widely published in popular magazines. Several of his novels, including The Plunderer and The Mediator, were later adapted for the screen.
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