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PAGE 3

The Maid’s Progress
by [?]

“Mr. Withers is a parson, ain’t he?” Kinney inquired, as he and Thane, each leading one of the team horses, and with an empty canteen swinging by its strap from his shoulder, filed down the little stony gulch that puckers the first rising ground to riverward of the hollow. “Thought he seemed to be makin’ a prayer or askin’ a blessin’ or somethin’, when he had holt of you there by the flipper; kind of embarrassin’, wa’n’t it?”

“That’s as one looks at it,” said Thane. “Mr. Withers is a clergyman; his manner may be partly professional, but he strikes one as always sincere. And he hasn’t a particle of self-consciousness where his grief for his son is concerned. I don’t know that he has about anything. He calls on his Maker just as naturally as you and I, perhaps, might take his name in vain.”

“No, sir! I’ve quit that,” Mr. Kinney objected. “I drawed the line there some years ago, on account of my wife, the way she felt about it, and the children growin’ up. I quit when I was workin’ round home, and now I don’t seem to miss it none. I git along jest as well. Course I have to cuss a little sometimes. But I liked the way you listened to the old man’s warblin’. Because talkin’ is a man’s trade, it ain’t to say he hasn’t got his feelin’s.”

As the hill cut off sounds of retreating voices and horseshoes clinking on the stones, a stillness that was a distinct sensation brooded upon the hollow. Daphne sighed as if she were in pain. She had taken off her veil, and now she was peeling the gloves from her white wrists and warm, unsteady hands. Her face, exposed, hardly sustained the promise of the veiled suggestion; but no man was ever known to find fault with it so long as he had hopes; afterwards–but even then it was a matter of temperament. There were those who remembered it all the more keenly for its daring deviations and provoking shortcomings.

It could not have been said of Daphne that her grief was without self-consciousness. Still, much of her constraint and unevenness of manner might have been set down to the circumstances of her present position. Why she should have placed herself, or have allowed her friends to place her, in an attitude of such unhappy publicity Thane had asked himself many times, and the question angered him as often as it came up. He could only refer it to the singularly unprogressive ideas of the Far West peculiar to Far Eastern people. Apparently they had thought that, barring a friend or two of Jack’s, they would be as much alone with their tragic memories in the capital city of Idaho as at this abandoned stage-station in the desert where their pilgrimage had ended. They had not found it quite the same. Daphne could, and probably did, read of herself in the “Silver Standard,” Sunday edition, which treats of social events, heralded among the prominent arrivals as “Jack Withers’s maiden widow.” This was a poetical flight of the city reporter. Thane had smiled at the phrase, but that was before he had seen Daphne; since then, whenever he thought of it, he pined for a suitable occasion for punching the reporter’s head. There had been more of his language; the paper had given liberally of its space to celebrate this interesting advent of the maiden widow with her uncle, “the Rev. Withers,” as the reporter styled him, “father of the lamented young man whose shocking murder, two years ago, at Pilgrim Station, on the eve of his return to home and happiness, cast such a gloom over our community, in which the victim of the barbarous deed had none but devoted friends and admirers. It is to be hoped that the reverend gentleman and the bereaved young lady, his companion on this sad journey, will meet with every mark of attention and respect which it is in the power of our citizens to bestow, during their stay among us.”