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The Railwalkers

America, 1887. In a country healing from the horrors of the Civil War, the American West has never been more treacherous. Evil men do as they please, and the often faulty and corrupt justice system does little to nothing to help their victims.<br><br>Enter the Railwalkers. Bandits whose only goal is to punish those whom the law has allowed to walk free. Some think they're an 28 legend, meant to scare would-be criminals into submission. Some see them as no different than the murderers they kill, while to others, they are angels of mercy. To Violet Donovan, they are family.<br><br>Growing up as the sole heiress to the sizable Donovan estate, Violet's place of privilege allowed her wild spirit to flourish. Despite the pressures of her sex -- find a husband, stay pretty, have children, be subservient, don't speak out of line -- Violet is passionate, loud, stubborn, and untamed. However, at the ripe, marriageable age of twenty, Violet faces the fact that she may have to give in to her mother's wishes and marry mean, ugly Eustace Carpenter, the only other family name in their little town with comparable worth.<br><br>But Violet's life changes forever when she is saved from an attacker by a strange woman. A woman who, like Violet, doesn't exactly fit the mold. Unfortunately Violet gets mixed up in a murder charge and has to leave everything she knows for a life on the run from the law. Through divine intervention, she and the woman cross paths again, and Violet comes to know her and her comrades.<br><br>They are Mei Wong, Linus Cooper, Sitting Bear, and Rory McNab. The infamous Railwalker gang.

Ruth Hanson · Urbano
Classificações insuficientes
189 Chs

Chapter 126

“I’m worried,” Violet admitted during supper.

“About the man at the outpost?” Mei asked.

Violet nodded. “He looked like he knew you.”

“Probably did,” Linus said. “But it doesn’t make a difference now. For all he knows we could be halfway to California. So long as you didn’t tell him where we were heading.”

“Of course not,” said Violet. “I didn’t know if we could trust him.”

Linus smiled and held up his canteen of water in a toast. “Then we got nothing to fret about.”

Deep down, Violet wanted to argue, but knew better than to doubt Linus’s wisdom. Twisting herself up for no good reason was no help to anybody. So, pushing away the doubt in her gut, she curled up on the floor while her outer clothes dried, and listened to the storm rage outside.

* * * *

“There she is,” said Mei. “Finally.”