Part 23 (1/2)

”It is two-thirds finished,” she returned with a trace of satisfaction in her voice which did not escape him.

”An' you've got all your characters doin' an' thinkin' things that you think they ought to do?” His eyes gleamed craftily. ”You got a man an' a girl in it?”

”Of course.”

”An' they're goin' to love one another?”

”No other outcome is popular with novel readers,” she returned.

He rocked back and forth, his eyes languidly surveying the rim of hills in the distance.

”I expect that outcome is popular in real life too,” he observed.

”n.o.body ever hears about it when it turns out some other way.”

”I expect love is always a popular subject,” she returned smiling.

His eyes were still languid, his gaze still on the rim of distant hills.

”You got any love talk in there--between the man an' the girl?” he questioned.

”Of course.”

”That's mighty interestin',” he returned. ”I expect they do a good bit of mus.h.i.+n'?”

”They do not talk extravagantly,” she defended.

”Then I expect it must be pretty good,” he returned. ”I don't like mushy love stories.” And now he turned and looked fairly at her. ”Of course,” he said slyly, ”I don't know whether it's necessary or not, but I've been thinkin' that to write a good love story the writer ought to be in love. Whoever was writin' would know more about how it feels to be in love.”

She admired the cleverness with which he had led her up to this point, but she was not to be trapped. She met his eyes fairly.

”I am sure it is not necessary for the writer to be in love,” she said quietly but positively. ”I flatter myself that my love scenes are rather real, and I have not found it necessary to love anyone.”

This reply crippled him instantly. ”Well, now,” he said, eyeing her, she thought, a bit reproachfully, ”that comes pretty near stumpin' me.

But,” he added, a subtle expression coming again into his eyes, ”you say you've got only two-thirds finished. Mebbe you'll be in love before you get it all done. An' then mebbe you'll find that you didn't get it right an' have to do it all over again. That would sure be too bad, when you could have got in love an' wrote it real in the first place.”

”I don't think that I shall fall in love,” she said laughing.

He looked quickly at her, suddenly grave. ”I wouldn't want to think you meant that,” he said.

”Why?” she questioned in a low voice, her laughter subdued by his earnestness.

”Why,” he said steadily, as though stating a perfectly plain fact, ”I've thought right along that you liked me. Of course I ain't been fool enough to think that you loved me”--and now he reddened a little--, ”but I don't deny that I've hoped that you would.”

”Oh, dear!” she laughed; ”and so you have planned it all out! And I was hoping that you would not prove so deep as that. You know,” she went on, ”you promised me a long while ago that you would not fall in love with me.”

”I don't reckon that I said that,” he returned. ”I told you that I wasn't goin' to get fresh. I reckon I ain't fresh now. But I expect I couldn't help lovin' you--I've done that since the first day.”

She could not stop the blushes--they would come. And so would that thrilling, breathless exultation. No man had ever talked to her like this; no man had ever made her feel quite as she felt at this moment.

She turned a crimson face to him.