Part 31 (1/2)

He leaned forward, half kneeling at her feet, and she permitted him to clasp her hand within both his own. ”Tell me, at least, this--is it some one else? Is it Hampton?”

She smiled at him through a mist of tears, a smile the sad sweetness of which he would never forget. ”In the sense you mean, no. No living man stands between us, not even Bob Hampton.”

”Does he know why this cannot be?”

”He does know, but I doubt if he will ever reveal his knowledge; certainly not to you. He has not told me all, even in the hour when he thought himself dying. I am convinced of that. It is not because he dislikes you, Lieutenant Brant, but because he knew his partial revealment of the truth was a duty he owed us both.”

There was a long, painful pause between them, during which neither ventured to look directly at the other.

”You leave me so completely in the dark,” he said, finally; ”is there no possibility that this mysterious obstacle can ever be removed?”

”None. It is beyond earthly power--there lies between us the shadow of a dead man.”

He stared at her as if doubting her sanity.

”A dead man! Not Gillis?”

”No, it is not Gillis. I have told you this much so that you might comprehend how impossible it is for us to change our fate. It is irrevocably fixed. Please do not question me any more; cannot you see how I am suffering? I beseech your pity; I beg you not to prolong this useless interview. I cannot bear it!”

Brant rose to his feet, and stood looking down upon her bowed head, her slender figure shaken by sobs. Whatever it might prove to be, this mysterious shadow of a dead man, there could be no doubting what it now meant to her. His eyes were filled with a love unutterable.

”Naida, as you have asked it, I will go; but I go better, stronger, because I have heard your lips say you love me. I am going now, my sweetheart, but if I live, I shall come again. I know nothing of what you mean about a dead man being between us, but I shall know when I come back, for, dead or alive, no man shall remain between me and the girl I love.”

”This--this is different,” she sobbed, ”different; it is beyond your power.”

”I shall never believe so until I have faced it for myself, nor will I even say good-bye, for, under G.o.d, I am coming back to you.”

He turned slowly, and walked away. As his hand touched the latch of the door he paused and looked longingly back.

”Naida.”

She glanced up at him.

”You kissed me once; will you again?”

She rose silently and crossed over to him, her hands held out, her eyes uplifted to his own. Neither spoke as he drew her gently to him, and their lips met.

”Say it once more, sweetheart?”

”Donald, I love you.”

A moment they stood thus face to face, reading the great lesson of eternity within the depths of each other's eyes. Then slowly, gently, she released herself from the clasp of his strong arms.

”You believe in me now? You do not go away blaming me?” she questioned, with quivering lips.

”There is no blame, for you are doing what you think right. But I am coming back, Naida, little woman; coming back to love and you.”

An hour later N Troop trotted across the rude bridge, and circled the bluff, on its way toward the wide plains. Brant, riding ahead of his men, caught a glimpse of something white fluttering from an open window of the yellow house fronting the road. Instantly he whipped off his campaign hat, and bowing to the saddle pommel, rode bareheaded out of sight. And from behind the curtain Naida watched the last horseman round the bluff angle, riding cheerfully away to hards.h.i.+p, danger, and death, her eyes dry and despairing, her heart scarcely beating. Then she crept across the narrow room, and buried her face in the coverlet of the bed.

_PART III_