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Louis LAmour - The Rider of the Ruby Hills

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Contents
________________

Foreword

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T HE STORIES PRESENTED in this volume are more bits of history from my early days as a writer when my work was being published exclusively in magazines. The life of a young writer is never easy, and at the time these stories were written it was a struggle to eat more than occasionally. The book and movie sales did not come until much later.

When World War II came along I was just beginning to see my work on the magazine stands. But during the four years I was first in the Army, then the Tank Destroyers, and later the Transportation Corps, I rarely found time to write. Returning home from overseas duty, I found all had changed at the magazines. I literally had to begin again by convincing a new crop of editors that I could write.

The stories I published back then were classified by their length. The short-short, often with a surprise ending, had been made popular by O. Henry and usually ran to 1,500 words, more or less. A short story rarely was more than 6,000 words. A novelette, or novella, usually amounted to 9,000 to 15,000 words. A novel, which the stories collected here are, rarely consisted of more than 40,000 words. By comparison, a novel published as a book is usually at least 60,000 words, but theres no upward length limit.

The editors of the magazines in which these stories originally appeared, affectionately known then and now as pulps, demanded I stress actionswift and hard hitting. Little time was to be devoted to atmosphere, characterization, or background. Yet a good writer knows that action always derives from character and situation, so some of us tried to push on to tell a better story in a more complete fashion. Yet some stories need development, time and space, and the pulps gave neither.

Often a writer will live so closely with a character he has created that he cannot leave him alone but must return to relate more of his story. Once accepted as a novelist I was able to realize my long-held wish to redo my magazine novels for publication as books. Over the years, the works herein were revised and slightly expanded, often with new characters and additional plot lines, into novels I published as full-length paperbacks under other titles.

These particular early magazine versions of my books seem to be a source of considerable speculation and curiosity among fans who have requested the opportunity to read all the stories I have written. So much so is this the case of late, that Ive decided to bring four of my magazine novels back into print in this book.

The title story of this volume, The Rider of the Ruby Hills, was my first telling of the novel Where the Long Grass Blows. It was also once filmed as The Treasure of Ruby Hills, a movie with Zachary Scott, Carole Matthews, and Raymond Hatton among the players. Showdown Trail, the original version of The Tall Stranger, was the basis for a movie with the latter title, starring Joel McCrea and Virginia Mayo.

A Man Called Trent became The Mountain Valley War and is the second in a trilogy of stories about Lance Kilkenny. The Trail to Peach Meadow Canyon was the original version of Son of a Wanted Man. In it, I was able to follow in more detail what happened to the various groups of outlaws operating out of their canyon hideout and bring them into contact with two law officers of the time and area, Tyrel Sackett and Borden Chantry, neither of whom is aware that they are distantly related. (Nor did I tell the reader, for that is Another Story!)

I do not think of the protagonists of these or any of my stories as heroes. They are simply people living their lives within the circumstances of their time. Most stories cover only a few hours, days, or weeks in the life of a character. The characters in my stories are people. They are born, they live, and they die. Much happens in the lives of the people youll meet in the following pages that I havent told you. Perhaps Ill do that in future books.

AUTHORS NOTE

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T HE R IDER OF THE R UBY H ILLS

O FTEN THE MOST beautiful parts of western states are only to be found far from highways; a casual traveler can pass through, say, Arizona or Nevada, without being able to see much of what the areas have to offer. For example, in Arizona the great pine forests of the White Mountain area, their running, rushing streams and wild game, lie hidden away from major highways, although the roads through them are usually excellent.

Monument Valley, the San Francisco Mountains, and other places, also lie off the highways.

In Nevada, the beautiful Ruby Mountains lie somewhat to the south of Elko and its highway. The Rubies soar up to 11,000 feet, with several beautiful lakes and the waterfalls of Lamoille Canyon. It is lovely, inspiring country, and every pass and every canyon has its story of Indians, mining, and cattle, of lost mines, buried treasure, and gun battles.

T HE R IDER OF THE R UBY H ILLS

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CHAPTER I
Losing Bet

T HERE WAS A lonely place where the trail ran up to the sky. It turned sharply left on the very point of a lofty promontory overlooking the long sweep of the valley below. Here the trail offered to the passerby a vision at this hour. Rosy-tipped peaks and distant purple mountains could be seen, beyond the far reach of the tall grass range.

Upon the very lip of the rocky shelf sat a solitary horseman. He was a man tall in the saddle, astride a strangely marked horse. Its head was held high; its ears were pricked forward with attention riveted upon the valley, as though in tune with the thoughts of its riderthoughts that said there lay a new country, with new dangers, new rewards, and new trails.

The rider was a tall man, narrow hipped and powerful of chest and shoulder. His features were blunt and rugged, so that a watcher might have said, Here is a man who is not handsome, but a fighter. Yet he was good-looking in his own hard, confident way. He looked now upon this valley as Cortez might have looked upon the Valley of Mexico.

He came alone and penniless, but he did not come as one seeking favors. He did not come hunting a job. He came as a conqueror.

For Ross Haney had made his decision. At twenty-seven he was broke. He sat in the middle of all he owned, a splendid Appaloosa gelding, a fine California saddle, a .44 Winchester rifle, and two walnut-stocked Colt .44 pistols. These were his all. Behind him was a life that had taken him from a cradle in a covered wagon to the hurricane deck of many a hardheaded bronc.

It was a life that had left him rich in experience but poor in goods of the world. The experience was the hard-fisted experience of hard winters, dry ranges, and the dusty bitterness of cattle drives. He had fought Comanches and rustlers, hunted buffalo and horse thieves. Now he had decided that it all had brought him nothing but grief and more riding. Now he was going to ride for himself, to fight for himself.

His keen dark eyes from under the flat black brim of his hat studied the country below with a speculative glint. His judgment of terrain would have done credit to a general, and in his own way Ross Haney was a general. His arrival in the Ruby Valley country was, in its way, an invasion.

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