"Do you think I ever could forget?" she asked.

"You predicted we would one day stand reunited on the heights of such

love as we had not dreamed of then. I asked you when that day would be;

do you remember your answer?"

"I do."

He continued, in impassioned tones: "Are not the conditions fulfilled,

sweetheart? My love for you then was as a dream, a myth, compared with

that I bring you to-day, and looking in your eyes I need no words to

tell me that your love has broadened and deepened with the years.

Kathie, is not this 'the time appointed'?"

"It must be," she replied; "there could be none other like this!"

Holding her head against his breast and raising her face to his, he

said, "You gave me your heart that day, Kathie, to hold in trust. I have

been faithful to that trust through all these years; do you give it me

now for my very own?"

"Yes," she answered, slowly, with sweet solemnity; "to have and to hold,

forever!"

He sealed the promise with a long, rapturous kiss; but what followed,

the broken, disjointed phrases, the mutual pledges, the tokens of love

given and received, are all among the secrets which the mountains never

told.

As they retraced their steps towards the hotel, Darrell said, "We have

waited long, sweetheart."

"Yes, but the waiting has brought us good of itself," she answered.

"Think of all you have accomplished,--I know better than you think, for

your father has kept me posted,--and better yet, what these years have

fitted you for accomplishing in the future! To me, that was the best

part of your work in your story. It was strong and cleverly told, but

what pleased me most was the evidence that it was but the beginning, the

promise of something better yet to come."

"If only I could persuade all critics to see it through your eyes!"

Darrell replied, with a smile.

"Do you wish to know," she asked, with sudden seriousness, "what will

always remain to me the noblest, most heroic act of your life?"

"Most assuredly I do," he answered, her own gravity checking the

laughing reply which rose to his lips.

"The fight you made and won alone in the mountains the day that you

renounced our love for honor's sake. I can see now that the stand you

took and maintained so nobly formed the turning-point in both our lives.

I did not look at it then as you did. I would have married you then and

there and gone with you to the ends of the earth rather than sacrifice

your love, but you upheld my honor with your own. You fought against

heavy odds, and won, and to me no other victory will compare with it,

since-'greater they who on life's battle-field

With unseen foes and fierce temptations fight.'"




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