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ust because he was poor, and dad's got money. Dad wanted me to marry a man I hate, and got a lot of dresses and things to bribe me." "And you're taking them in your trunk to the other feller?" said Bill, grimly. "Yes, he's poor," returned the girl, defiantly. "Then your father's name is Mullins?" asked Bill. "It's not Mullins. I--I--took that name," she hesitated, with her first exhibition of self-consciousness. "Wot _is_ his name?" "Eli Hemmings." A smile of relief and significance went round the circle. The fame of Eli or "Skinner" Hemmings, as a notorious miser and usurer, had passed even beyond Galloper's Ridge. "The step that you're taking, Miss Mullins, I need not tell you, is one of great gravity," said Judge Thompson, with a certain paternal seriousness of manner, in which, however, we were glad to detect a glaring affectation, "and I trust that you and your affianced have fully weighed it. Far be it from me to interfere with or question the natural affections of two young people, but may I ask you what you know of the--er--young gentleman for whom you are sacrificing so much, and, perhaps, imperilling your whole future? For instance, have you known him long?" The slightly troubled air of trying to understand--not unlike the vague wonderment of childhood--with which Miss Mullins had received the beginning of this exordium, changed to a relieved smile of comprehension as she said quickly, "Oh, yes, nearly a whole year." "And," said the Judge, smiling, "has he a vocation--is he in business?" "Oh, yes," she returned, "he's a collector." "A collector?" "Yes; he collects bills, you know, money," she went on, with childish eagerness, "not for himself--_he_ never has any money, poor Charley--but for his firm. It's dreadful hard work, too, keeps him out for days and nights, over bad roads and baddest weather. Sometimes, when he's stole over to the ranch just to see me, he's been so bad he could scarcely keep his seat in the saddle, much less stand. And he's got to take mighty big risks, too. Times the folks are cross with him and won't pay; once they shot him in the arm, and he came to me, and I helped do it up for him. But he don't mind. He's real brave, jest as brave as he's good." There was such a wholesome ring of truth in this pretty praise that we were touched in sympathy with the speaker. "What firm does he collect for?" asked the Judge, gently. "I don't know exactly--he won't t
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