"No, you shall not kiss me, Neil,--never again. No right have you,

Neil."

"You are to be my wife, Katherine?"

"That I have not said."

She drew herself from his embrace, and stood leaning against an

elm-tree, watchful of Neil, full of wonder at the sudden warmth of his

love, and half fearful of his influence over her.

"But you have known it, Katherine, ay, for many a year. No words could

make the troth-plight truer. From this hour, mine and only mine."

"Such things you shall not say."

"I will say them before all the world. Katherine, is it true that an

English soldier is wearing a bow of your ribbon? You must tell me."

"What mean you?"

"I will make my meaning plain. Is Captain Hyde wearing a bow of your

orange ribbon?"

"Can I tell?"

"Yes. Do not lie to me."

"A lie I would not speak."

"Did you give him one? an orange one?"

"Yes. A bow of my St. Nicholas ribbon I gave him."

"Why?"

"Me he loves, and him I love."

"And he wears it at his breast?"

"On his breast I have seen it. Neil, do not quarrel with him. Do not

look so angry. I fear you. My fault it is; all my fault, Neil. Only to

please me he wears it."

"You have more St. Nicholas ribbons?"

"That is so."

"Go and get me one. Get a bow, Katherine, and give it to me. I will

wait here for it."

"No, that I will not do. How false, how wicked I would be, if two lovers

my colours wore!"

"Katherine, I am in great earnest. A bow of that ribbon I must have. Get

one for me."

"My hands I would cut off first."

"Well, then, I will cut my bow from Hyde's breast. I will, though I

cut his heart out with it."

He turned from her as he said the words, and, without speaking to Joris,

passed through the garden-gate to his own home. His mother and Mrs.

Gordon, and several young ladies and gentlemen were sitting on the

stoop, arranging for a turtle feast on the East River; and Neil's advent

was hailed with ejaculations of pleasure. He affected to listen for a

few minutes, and then excused himself upon the "assurance of having some

very important writing to attend to." But, as he passed the parlour

door, his father called him. The elder was casting up some kirk

accounts; but, as Neil answered the summons, he carefully put the

extinguisher on one candle, and turned his chair from the table in a way

which Neil understood as an invitation for his company.




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