Silently Kate and Darrell watched them; as their eyes met, his face had

grown white, but Kate smiled, though the tears trembled on the golden

lashes.

"A fit emblem of our loves, Kathie!" Darrell said, sadly.

"Yes," she replied, but her clear voice had a ring of triumph; "a fit

emblem, dear, for though parted now, they will meet in the commingling

of the oceans, just as by and by our loves will mingle in the great

ocean of love. I can imagine how those two little streams will go on

their way, as we must go, each joining in the labor and song of the

rivers as they meet them, but each preserving its own individuality

until they find one another in the ocean currents, as we shall find one

another some day!"

"Kathie," said Darrell, earnestly, drawing nearer to her, "have you such

a hope as that?"

"It is more than hope," she answered, "it is assurance; an assurance

that came to me, I know not whence or how, out of the darkness of

despair."

They had reached the trail, and here Kate paused for a moment. It was a

picture for an artist, the pair standing on that solitary height! The

young girl, fair and slender as the wild flowers clinging to the rocks

at their feet, yet with a poise of conscious strength; the man at her

side, broad-shouldered, deep-chested, strong-limbed; his face dark with

despair, hers lighted with hope.

Suddenly a small white hand swept the horizon with a swift, undulatory

motion that reminded Darrell of the flight of some white-winged bird,

and Kate cried,-"Did we think of the roughness and steepness of the path below when we

stood here two hours ago and looked on the glory of this scene? Did we

stop to think of the bruises and scratches of the ascent, of how many

times we had stumbled, or of the weariness of the way? No, it was all

forgotten. And so, when we come to stand together, by and by, upon the

heights of love,--such love as we have not even dreamed of yet,--will we

then look back upon the tears, the pain, the heartache of to-day? Will

we stop to recount the sorrows through which we climbed to the shining

heights? No, they will be forgotten in the excess of joy!"

Darrell gazed at Kate in astonishment; her head was uncovered and the

rays of the sinking sun touched with gleams of gold the curling locks

which the breeze had blown about her face, till they seemed like a

golden halo; she had the look of one who sees within the veil which

covers mortal faces; she seemed at that moment something apart from

earth.

Taking her hand in his, he asked, brokenly, "Sweetheart, will that day

ever come, and when?"




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