The Mountain Girl by Emma Payne Erskine Chapter 1 Page 4

track with a speed that caused the coaches to rock and sway; and thus they reached Carew’s Crossing, dropping down to it like a rushing torrent.

Immediately Thryng found himself deposited in the melting snow some distance from the station platform, and at the same instant, above the noise of the retreating train, he heard a cry: “Oh, suh, help him, help him! It’s poor little Hoyle!” The girl whom he had watched, and about whom he had been wondering, flashed by him and caught at the bridle of a fractious colt, that was rearing and plunging near the corner of the station.

“Poor little Hoyle! Help him, suh, help him!” she cried, clinging desperately, while the frantic animal swung her off her feet, close to the flying heels of the kicking mule at his side.