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"He is certainly younger than one, sir--Lieutenant Muir." Mabel's laugh was joyous and light-hearted, as if just then she felt no care. "That he is--young enough to be his grandson; he is younger in years, too. God forbid, Mabel, that you should ever become an officer's lady, at least until you are an officer's daughter!" "There will be little fear of that, father, if I marry Pathfinder," returned the girl, looking up archly in the Sergeant's face again. "Not by the king's commission, perhaps, though the man is even now the friend and companion of generals. I think I could die happy, Mabel, if you were his wife." "Father!" "'Tis a sad thing to go into battle with the weight of an unprotected daughter laid upon the heart." "I would give the world to lighten yours of its load, my dear sir." "It might be done," said the Sergeant, looking fondly at his child; "though I could not wish to put a burthen on yours in order to do so." The voice was deep and tremulous, and never before had Mabel witnessed such a show of affection in her parent. The habitual sternness of the man lent an interest to his emotions which they might otherwise have wanted, and the daughter's heart yearned to relieve the father's mind. "Father, speak plainly!" she cried, almost convulsively. "Nay, Mabel, it might not be right; your wishes and mine may be very different." "I have no wishes--know nothing of what you mean. Would you speak of my future marriage?" "If I could see you promised to Pathfinder--know that you were pledged to become his wife, let my own fate be what it might, I think I could die happy. But I will ask no pledge of you, my child; I will not force you to do what you might repent. Kiss me, Mabel, and go to your bed." Had Sergeant Dunham exacted of Mabel the pledge that he really so much desired, he would have encountered a resistance that he might have found it difficult to overcome; but, by letting nature have its course, he enlisted a powerful ally on his side, and the warm-hearted, generous-minded Mabel was ready to concede to her affections much more than she would ever have yielded to menace. At that touching moment she thought only of her parent, who was about to quit her, perhaps for ever; and all of that ardent love for him, which had possibly been as much fed by the imagination as by anything else, but which had received a little check by the restrained intercourse of the last fortnight, now return
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