"I'm pretty strong," she said quietly.

She had no hope of escape from the net of evidence in which he had

entangled her. It was characteristic of her that she would not stoop to

tricks to stir his pity. Deep in her heart she knew now that she had

wronged him when she had suspected him of being a rustler. He could not

be. It was not in the man's character. But she would ask no mercy of him.

All her pride rose to meet his. She would show him how game she could be.

What she had sown she would reap. Nor would it have been any use to

beseech him to spare her. He was a hard man, she told herself. Not even a

fool could have read any weakness in the quiet gray eyes that looked so

steadily into hers. In his voice and movements there was a certain

deliberation, but this had nothing to do with indecision of character. He

would do his duty as he saw it, regardless of whom it might affect.

Melissy stood before him in the unconscious attitude of distinction she

often fell into when she was moved, head thrown back so as to bare the

rounded throat column, brown little hands folded in front of her, erectly

graceful in all her slender lines.

"What are you going to do with me?" she asked.

His stone-cold eyes met hers steadily. "It ain't my say-so. I'm going to

put it up to Bellamy. I don't know what he'll do."

But, cold as his manner was, the heart of the man leaped to her courage.

He saw her worn out, pathetically fearful, but she could face him with

that still little smile of hers. He longed to take her in his arms, to

tell her it would be all right--all right.

"There's one thing that troubles me. I don't know how father will take

this. You know how quick-tempered he is. I'm afraid he'll shoot somebody

or do something rash when he finds out. You must let me be alone with him

when I tell him."

He nodded. "I been thinking of that myself. It ain't going to do him any

good to make a gun-play. I have a notion mebbe this thing will unravel

itself if we give it time. It will only make things worse for him to go

off half-cocked."

"How do you mean it may unravel itself?" she asked.

"Bellamy is a whole lot better man than folks give him credit for being.

I expect he won't be hard on you when he knows why you did it."




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