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d the vivid gypsy color beneath the laughing dusk of Diane's eyes, devoutly thanked his lucky star that Fate had seen fit to curb the air of delicate hostility with which she had left him on the Westfall lake. Well, Emerson was right, decided Philip. There is an inevitable law of compensation. Even a knife in the dark has compensations. "Johnny," said Diane presently, briskly disinterring some baked potatoes and a baked fish from a cairn of hot stones covered with grass, "is off examining last night's trail of melodrama. He's greatly excited. Let me pour you some coffee. I sincerely hope you're not too fastidious for tin cups?" "A tin cup," said Philip with engaging candor, "has always been a secret ambition of mine. I once acquired one at somebody's spring hut--er--circumstances compelled me to relinquish it. It was really a very nice cup too and very new and shiny. Since then, until now, my life, alas! has been tin-cupless." Diane carved the smoking fish in ominous silence. "Do you know," she said at length, "I've felt once or twice that your anecdotes are too apt and--er--sparkling to be overburdened with truth. Your mechanician, for instance--" Philip laughed and reddened. The mechanician, as a desperate means of prolonging conversation, had served his purpose somewhat disastrously. "Hum!" said he lamely. "I shan't forget that mechanician!" said Diane decidedly. "This now," vowed Philip uncomfortably, "is a _real_ fish!" Diane laughed, a soft clear laugh that to Philip's prejudiced ears had more of music in it than the murmur of the river or the clear, sweet piping of the woodland birds. "It is," she agreed readily. "Johnny caught him in the river and I cooked him." "Great Scott!" exclaimed Philip, inspecting the morsel on his wooden plate with altered interest, "you don't--you can't mean it!" "Why not?" inquired Diane with lifted eyebrows. Philip didn't know and said so, but he glanced furtively at the girl by the fire and marveled. "Well," he said a little later with a sigh of utter content, "this is Arcadia, isn't it!" "It's a beautiful spot!" nodded Diane happily, glancing at the scarlet tendrils of a wild grapevine flaming vividly in the sunlight among the trees. There was yellow star grass along the forest path, she said absently, and yonder by the stump of a dead tree a patch of star moss woven of myriad emerald shoots; the delicate splashes of purple here and th
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