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PAGE 30

From "The Point" To The Plains
by [?]

The moonlight throws a brilliant sheen on all surrounding objects, yet she stands in the shade, bowered in a little archway of vines that overhangs the gate. He has been strangely silent during the brief walk homeward, and now, so far from following into the shadows as she half hoped he might do, he stands without, the flood of moonlight falling full upon his stalwart figure. Two months ago he would not thus have held aloof, yet now he is half extending his hand as though in adieu. She cannot fathom this strange silence on the part of him who so long has been devoted as a lover. She knows well it cannot be because of her injustice to him at the Point that he is unrelenting now. Her eyes have told him how earnestly she repents: and does he not always read her eyes? Only in faltering words, in the presence of others all too interested, has she been able to speak her thanks for Philip’s rescue. She cannot see now that what he fears from her change of mood is that gratitude for her brother’s safety, not a woman’s response to the passionate love in his deep heart, is the impulse of this sweet, half-shy, half-entreating manner. He cannot sue for love from a girl weighted with a sense of obligation. He knows that lingering here is dangerous, yet he cannot go. When friends are silent ’tis time for chats to close: but there is a silence that at such a time as this only bids a man to speak, and speak boldly. Yet Lee is dumb.

Once–over a year ago–he had come to the colonel’s quarters to seek permission to visit the neighboring town on some sudden errand. She had met him at the door with the tidings that her father had been feeling far from well during the morning, and was now taking a nap.

“Won’t I do for commanding officer this time?” she had laughingly inquired.

“I would ask no better fate–for all time,” was his prompt reply, and he spoke too soon. Though neither ever forgot the circumstance, she would never again permit allusion to it. But to-night it is uppermost in her mind. She must know if it be true that he is going.

“Tell me,” she suddenly asks, “have you applied for leave of absence?”

“Yes,” he answers, simply.

“And you are going–soon?”

“I am going to-morrow,” is the utterly unlooked-for reply.

“To-morrow! Why–Mr. Lee!”

There can be no mistaking the shock it gives her, and still he stands and makes no sign. It is cruel of him! What has she said or done to deserve penance like this? He is still holding out his hand as though in adieu, and she lays hers, fluttering, in the broad palm.

“I–I thought all applications had to be made to–your commanding officer,” she says at last, falteringly, yet archly.

“Major Wilton forwarded mine on Monday. I asked him to say nothing about it. The answer came by wire to-day.”

“Major Wilton is post commander; but–did you not–a year—-?”

“Did I not?” he speaks in eager joy. “Do you mean you have not forgotten that? Do you mean that now–for all time–my first allegiance shall be to you, Miriam?”

No answer for a minute; but her hand is still firmly clasped in his. At last,–

“Don’t you think you ought to have asked me, before applying for leave to go?”

Mr. Lee is suddenly swallowed up in the gloom of that shaded bower under the trellis-work, though a radiance as of mid-day is shining through his heart.

But soon he has to go. Mrs. Wilton is on the veranda, urging them to come in out of the chill night air. Those papers on his desk must be completed and filed this very night. He told her this.

“To-morrow, early, I will be here,” he murmurs. “And now, good-night, my own.”

But she does not seek to draw her hand away. Slowly he moves back into the bright moonbeams and she follows part way. One quick glance she gives as her hand is released and he raises his forage cap. It is such a disadvantage to have but one arm at such a time! She sees that Mrs. Wilton is at the other end of the veranda.