t that I don't know." She smiled
quaintly, then grew sober. "And what's worse, I haven't any one to tell
me--except Mr. Congdon, and he's such a josher I don't trust him. He did
give me a few points on the library, which ain't so bad, we think; but
all the rest of it I had to dig out myself, and it's slow work. But I
guess we better go down; my horse will be here in a few minutes." Then,
with lowered voice, she added: "I can't stay out but a little while. The
Captain dreads to have me leave him even to go down-town. I hadn't ought
to go at all."
Ben began to perceive a real slavery in her life, and reassured her.
"I'm glad you're coming. It will do you good, and it will be a pleasure
to us too. We'll only be away an hour."
As they returned to the porch, Bertha put her hand on Haney's shoulder,
in the manner of one man to another, saying: "I'm going for a little
ride with these people, Captain, if you don't mind."
"Not a whiff," he answered. "I'll be here when you come back." Again a
subtle cadence in his voice so belied his smile that Alice's heart
responded to it.
Bertha's horse proved to be a spirited animal, but she mounted him with
the ease and celerity of a boy--riding astride, in the mountain fashion.
"I haven't a long skirt," she carelessly remarked to Alice. That was all
the explanation she offered, and Ben thought he had never seen anything
more alert, more graceful, than her slim figure poised alertly in the
saddle, her face glowing, her hair blown across her face.
Alice, a timid rider, admired them both from her position, which was
always behind, though they tried to accommodate their pace to hers. A
pang of envy that was almost jealousy pierced her heart as she looked at
them--so young, so vigorous, and so blithe.
"I should be sitting with Captain Haney on the porch," she thought, with
bitterness. "I am out of place here."
The words which passed between Bertha and her cavalier meant little, but
their glances meant much. It was, indeed, a fateful ride. The liking,
the deep interest, born of their first meeting, swept irresistibly into
admiration. Their faces turned towards each other, youth to youth, as
naturally as flowers swing towards the light.
They fell into argument over saddles, over the difference between his
manner of riding and her own. Her speech, so direct, so full of quaint
slang, enchanted him, and Alice soon found herself the third party. And
when they were for pushing into a g
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