She sighed. "That is when I become a greater mystery--even to myself, I

fear," she added in a murmur too low for him to catch.

They rode on in silence for a little space more. The night shadows were

flowing down between the trees like vapour. The girl of her own accord

returned to the subject.

"You are greatly to be envied," she said a little sadly, "for you are

really young. I am old, oh, very, very old! You have trust and

confidence. I have not. I can sympathize; I can understand. But that

is all. There is something within me that binds all my emotions so fast

that I can not give way to them. I want to. I wish I could. But it is

getting harder and harder for me to think of absolutely trusting, in

the sense of giving out the self that is my own. Ah, but you are to be

envied! You have saved up and accumulated the beautiful in your nature.

I have wasted mine, and now I sit by the roadside and cry for it. My

only hope and prayer is that a higher and better something will be

given me in place of the wasted, and yet I have no right to expect it.

Silly, isn't it?" she concluded bitterly.

Bennington made no reply.

They drew near the gulch, and could hear the mellow sound of bells as

the town herd defiled slowly down it toward town.

"We part here," the young man broke the long silence. "When do I see

you again?"

"I do not know."

"To-morrow?"

"No."

"Day after?"

The girl shook herself from a reverie. "If you want me to believe you,

come every afternoon to the Rock, and wait. Some day I will meet you

there."

She was gone.




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