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n't grown bloodthirsty, Hetty," he said. "Where did you get it?" "It was Chris Allonby's. Flo and I fooled him and took it away. It was so delightfully easy. But you will keep it?" He shook his head. "Just try to think, Hetty." Hetty's cheeks flushed. "You are horribly unkind. Can't you take anything from me? Still--you--have got to think now. If I let you go, you will promise not to make any more trouble for my father and Allonby, or anybody?" Grant only looked at her with an odd little smile, but the crimson grew deeper in Hetty's cheek. "Oh, of course you couldn't. I was sorry the last time I asked you," she said. "Larry, you make me feel horribly mean; but you would not do anything that would hurt them, unless it was quite necessary?" "No," said the man drily, "I don't think I'm going to have an opportunity." "You are. I came to let you go. It will be quite easy. Chris is quite foolish about Flo." Grant shook his head. "Doesn't it strike you that it would be very rough on Chris?" Hetty would not look at him, and her voice was very low. "If anyone must be hurt, I would sooner it was Chris than you." He did not answer for a moment, and the girl, watching him in sidelong fashion, saw the grim restraint in his face, which grew almost grey in patches. "It is no use, Hetty," he said very quietly. "Chris would tell them nothing. There is no meanness in his father or him; but that wouldn't stop him thinking. Now, you will know I was right to-morrow. Take him back his pistol." "Larry," said the girl, with a little quiver in her voice, "you are right again--I don't quite know why you were friends with me." Grant smiled at her. "I haven't yet seen the man who was fit to brush the dust off your little shoes; but you don't look at these things quite as we do. Now Chris will be getting impatient. You must go." Hetty turned away from him, and while the man felt his heart throbbing painfully and wondered whether his resolution would support him much longer, stood very still with one hand clenched. Then she moved back towards him swiftly, with a little smile. "There is a window above the beams, where they pitch the grain-bags through," she said. "Chris will go away in an hour or so, and the other man will only watch the door. There are horses in the corral behind the barn, and I've seen you ride the wickedest broncho without a saddle." She whisked away before the man, who felt a little, almost cares
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