<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER X. LOVE </h2>
<p>During all these waiting days Venters, with the exception of the afternoon
when he had built the gate in the gorge, had scarcely gone out of sight of
camp and never out of hearing. His desire to explore Surprise Valley was
keen, and on the morning after his long talk with the girl he took his
rifle and, calling Ring, made a move to start. The girl lay back in a rude
chair of boughs he had put together for her. She had been watching him,
and when he picked up the gun and called the dog Venters thought she gave
a nervous start.</p>
<p>"I'm only going to look over the valley," he said.</p>
<p>"Will you be gone long?"</p>
<p>"No," he replied, and started off. The incident set him thinking of his
former impression that, after her recovery from fever, she did not seem at
ease unless he was close at hand. It was fear of being alone, due, he
concluded, most likely to her weakened condition. He must not leave her
much alone.</p>
<p>As he strode down the sloping terrace, rabbits scampered before him, and
the beautiful valley quail, as purple in color as the sage on the uplands,
ran fleetly along the ground into the forest. It was pleasant under the
trees, in the gold-flecked shade, with the whistle of quail and twittering
of birds everywhere. Soon he had passed the limit of his former excursions
and entered new territory. Here the woods began to show open glades and
brooks running down from the slope, and presently he emerged from shade
into the sunshine of a meadow. The shaking of the high grass told him of
the running of animals, what species he could not tell, but from Ring's
manifest desire to have a chase they were evidently some kind wilder than
rabbits. Venters approached the willow and cottonwood belt that he had
observed from the height of slope. He penetrated it to find a considerable
stream of water and great half-submerged mounds of brush and sticks, and
all about him were old and new gnawed circles at the base of the
cottonwoods.</p>
<p>"Beaver!" he exclaimed. "By all that's lucky! The meadow's full of beaver!
How did they ever get here?"</p>
<p>Beaver had not found a way into the valley by the trail of the
cliff-dwellers, of that he was certain; and he began to have more than
curiosity as to the outlet or inlet of the stream. When he passed some
dead water, which he noted was held by a beaver dam, there was a current
in the stream, and it flowed west. Following its course, he soon entered
the oak forest again, and passed through to find himself before massed and
jumbled ruins of cliff wall. There were tangled thickets of wild
plum-trees and other thorny growths that made passage extremely laborsome.
He found innumerable tracks of wildcats and foxes. Rustlings in the thick
undergrowth told him of stealthy movements of these animals. At length his
further advance appeared futile, for the reason that the stream
disappeared in a split at the base of immense rocks over which he could
not climb. To his relief he concluded that though beaver might work their
way up the narrow chasm where the water rushed, it would be impossible for
men to enter the valley there.</p>
<p>This western curve was the only part of the valley where the walls had
been split asunder, and it was a wildly rough and inaccessible corner.
Going back a little way, he leaped the stream and headed toward the
southern wall. Once out of the oaks he found again the low terrace of
aspens, and above that the wide, open terrace fringed by silver spruces.
This side of the valley contained the wind or water worn caves. As he
pressed on, keeping to the upper terrace, cave after cave opened out of
the cliff; now a large one, now a small one. Then yawned, quite suddenly
and wonderfully above him, the great cavern of the cliff-dwellers.</p>
<p>It was still a goodly distance, and he tried to imagine, if it appeared so
huge from where he stood, what it would be when he got there. He climbed
the terrace and then faced a long, gradual ascent of weathered rock and
dust, which made climbing too difficult for attention to anything else. At
length he entered a zone of shade, and looked up. He stood just within the
hollow of a cavern so immense that he had no conception of its real
dimensions. The curved roof, stained by ages of leakage, with buff and
black and rust-colored streaks, swept up and loomed higher and seemed to
soar to the rim of the cliff. Here again was a magnificent arch, such as
formed the grand gateway to the valley, only in this instance it formed
the dome of a cave instead of the span of a bridge.</p>
<p>Venters passed onward and upward. The stones he dislodged rolled down with
strange, hollow crack and roar. He had climbed a hundred rods inward, and
yet he had not reached the base of the shelf where the cliff-dwellings
rested, a long half-circle of connected stone house, with little dark
holes that he had fancied were eyes. At length he gained the base of the
shelf, and here found steps cut in the rock. These facilitated climbing,
and as he went up he thought how easily this vanished race of men might
once have held that stronghold against an army. There was only one
possible place to ascend, and this was narrow and steep.</p>
<p>Venters had visited cliff-dwellings before, and they had been in ruins,
and of no great character or size but this place was of proportions that
stunned him, and it had not been desecrated by the hand of man, nor had it
been crumbled by the hand of time. It was a stupendous tomb. It had been a
city. It was just as it had been left by its builders. The little houses
were there, the smoke-blackened stains of fires, the pieces of pottery
scattered about cold hearths, the stone hatchets; and stone pestles and
mealing-stones lay beside round holes polished by years of grinding maize—lay
there as if they had been carelessly dropped yesterday. But the
cliff-dwellers were gone!</p>
<p>Dust! They were dust on the floor or at the foot of the shelf, and their
habitations and utensils endured. Venters felt the sublimity of that
marvelous vaulted arch, and it seemed to gleam with a glory of something
that was gone. How many years had passed since the cliff-dwellers gazed
out across the beautiful valley as he was gazing now? How long had it been
since women ground grain in those polished holes? What time had rolled by
since men of an unknown race lived, loved, fought, and died there? Had an
enemy destroyed them? Had disease destroyed them, or only that greatest
destroyer—time? Venters saw a long line of blood-red hands painted
low down upon the yellow roof of stone. Here was strange portent, if not
an answer to his queries. The place oppressed him. It was light, but full
of a transparent gloom. It smelled of dust and musty stone, of age and
disuse. It was sad. It was solemn. It had the look of a place where
silence had become master and was now irrevocable and terrible and could
not be broken. Yet, at the moment, from high up in the carved crevices of
the arch, floated down the low, strange wail of wind—a knell indeed
for all that had gone.</p>
<p>Venters, sighing, gathered up an armful of pottery, such pieces as he
thought strong enough and suitable for his own use, and bent his steps
toward camp. He mounted the terrace at an opposite point to which he had
left. He saw the girl looking in the direction he had gone. His footsteps
made no sound in the deep grass, and he approached close without her being
aware of his presence. Whitie lay on the ground near where she sat, and he
manifested the usual actions of welcome, but the girl did not notice them.
She seemed to be oblivious to everything near at hand. She made a pathetic
figure drooping there, with her sunny hair contrasting so markedly with
her white, wasted cheeks and her hands listlessly clasped and her little
bare feet propped in the framework of the rude seat. Venters could have
sworn and laughed in one breath at the idea of the connection between this
girl and Oldring's Masked Rider. She was the victim of more than accident
of fate—a victim to some deep plot the mystery of which burned him.
As he stepped forward with a half-formed thought that she was absorbed in
watching for his return, she turned her head and saw him. A swift start, a
change rather than rush of blood under her white cheeks, a flashing of big
eyes that fixed their glance upon him, transformed her face in that single
instant of turning, and he knew she had been watching for him, that his
return was the one thing in her mind. She did not smile; she did not
flush; she did not look glad. All these would have meant little compared
to her indefinite expression. Venters grasped the peculiar, vivid, vital
something that leaped from her face. It was as if she had been in a dead,
hopeless clamp of inaction and feeling, and had been suddenly shot through
and through with quivering animation. Almost it was as if she had returned
to life.</p>
<p>And Venters thought with lightning swiftness, "I've saved her—I've
unlinked her from that old life—she was watching as if I were all
she had left on earth—she belongs to me!" The thought was
startlingly new. Like a blow it was in an unprepared moment. The cheery
salutation he had ready for her died unborn and he tumbled the pieces of
pottery awkwardly on the grass while some unfamiliar, deep-seated emotion,
mixed with pity and glad assurance of his power to succor her, held him
dumb.</p>
<p>"What a load you had!" she said. "Why, they're pots and crocks! Where did
you get them?"</p>
<p>Venters laid down his rifle, and, filling one of the pots from his
canteen, he placed it on the smoldering campfire.</p>
<p>"Hope it'll hold water," he said, presently. "Why, there's an enormous
cliff-dwelling just across here. I got the pottery there. Don't you think
we needed something? That tin cup of mine has served to make tea, broth,
soup—everything."</p>
<p>"I noticed we hadn't a great deal to cook in."</p>
<p>She laughed. It was the first time. He liked that laugh, and though he was
tempted to look at her, he did not want to show his surprise or his
pleasure.</p>
<p>"Will you take me over there, and all around in the valley—pretty
soon, when I'm well?" she added.</p>
<p>"Indeed I shall. It's a wonderful place. Rabbits so thick you can't step
without kicking one out. And quail, beaver, foxes, wildcats. We're in a
regular den. But—haven't you ever seen a cliff-dwelling?"</p>
<p>"No. I've heard about them, though. The—the men say the Pass is full
of old houses and ruins."</p>
<p>"Why, I should think you'd have run across one in all your riding around,"
said Venters. He spoke slowly, choosing his words carefully, and he
essayed a perfectly casual manner, and pretended to be busy assorting
pieces of pottery. She must have no cause again to suffer shame for
curiosity of his. Yet never in all his days had he been so eager to hear
the details of anyone's life.</p>
<p>"When I rode—I rode like the wind," she replied, "and never had time
to stop for anything."</p>
<p>"I remember that day I—I met you in the Pass—how dusty you
were, how tired your horse looked. Were you always riding?"</p>
<p>"Oh, no. Sometimes not for months, when I was shut up in the cabin."</p>
<p>Venters tried to subdue a hot tingling.</p>
<p>"You were shut up, then?" he asked, carelessly.</p>
<p>"When Oldring went away on his long trips—he was gone for months
sometimes—he shut me up in the cabin."</p>
<p>"What for?"</p>
<p>"Perhaps to keep me from running away. I always threatened that. Mostly,
though, because the men got drunk at the villages. But they were always
good to me. I wasn't afraid."</p>
<p>"A prisoner! That must have been hard on you?"</p>
<p>"I liked that. As long as I can remember I've been locked up there at
times, and those times were the only happy ones I ever had. It's a big
cabin, high up on a cliff, and I could look out. Then I had dogs and pets
I had tamed, and books. There was a spring inside, and food stored, and
the men brought me fresh meat. Once I was there one whole winter."</p>
<p>It now required deliberation on Venters's part to persist in his unconcern
and to keep at work. He wanted to look at her, to volley questions at her.</p>
<p>"As long as you can remember—you've lived in Deception Pass?" he
went on.</p>
<p>"I've a dim memory of some other place, and women and children; but I
can't make anything of it. Sometimes I think till I'm weary."</p>
<p>"Then you can read—you have books?"</p>
<p>"Oh yes, I can read, and write, too, pretty well. Oldring is educated. He
taught me, and years ago an old rustler lived with us, and he had been
something different once. He was always teaching me."</p>
<p>"So Oldring takes long trips," mused Venters. "Do you know where he goes?"</p>
<p>"No. Every year he drives cattle north of Sterling—then does not
return for months. I heard him accused once of living two lives—and
he killed the man. That was at Stone Bridge."</p>
<p>Venters dropped his apparent task and looked up with an eagerness he no
longer strove to hide.</p>
<p>"Bess," he said, using her name for the first time, "I suspected Oldring
was something besides a rustler. Tell me, what's his purpose here in the
Pass? I believe much that he has done was to hide his real work here."</p>
<p>"You're right. He's more than a rustler. In fact, as the men say, his
rustling cattle is now only a bluff. There's gold in the canyons!"</p>
<p>"Ah!"</p>
<p>"Yes, there's gold, not in great quantities, but gold enough for him and
his men. They wash for gold week in and week out. Then they drive a few
cattle and go into the villages to drink and shoot and kill—to bluff
the riders."</p>
<p>"Drive a few cattle! But, Bess, the Withersteen herd, the red herd—twenty-five
hundred head! That's not a few. And I tracked them into a valley near
here."</p>
<p>"Oldring never stole the red herd. He made a deal with Mormons. The riders
were to be called in, and Oldring was to drive the herd and keep it till a
certain time—I won't know when—then drive it back to the
range. What his share was I didn't hear."</p>
<p>"Did you hear why that deal was made?" queried Venters.</p>
<p>"No. But it was a trick of Mormons. They're full of tricks. I've heard
Oldring's men tell about Mormons. Maybe the Withersteen woman wasn't
minding her halter! I saw the man who made the deal. He was a little,
queer-shaped man, all humped up. He sat his horse well. I heard one of our
men say afterward there was no better rider on the sage than this fellow.
What was the name? I forget."</p>
<p>"Jerry Card?" suggested Venters.</p>
<p>"That's it. I remember—it's a name easy to remember—and Jerry
Card appeared to be on fair terms with Oldring's men."</p>
<p>"I shouldn't wonder," replied Venters, thoughtfully. Verification of his
suspicions in regard to Tull's underhand work—for the deal with
Oldring made by Jerry Card assuredly had its inception in the Mormon
Elder's brain, and had been accomplished through his orders—revived
in Venters a memory of hatred that had been smothered by press of other
emotions. Only a few days had elapsed since the hour of his encounter with
Tull, yet they had been forgotten and now seemed far off, and the interval
one that now appeared large and profound with incalculable change in his
feelings. Hatred of Tull still existed in his heart, but it had lost its
white heat. His affection for Jane Withersteen had not changed in the
least; nevertheless, he seemed to view it from another angle and see it as
another thing—what, he could not exactly define. The recalling of
these two feelings was to Venters like getting glimpses into a self that
was gone; and the wonder of them—perhaps the change which was too
illusive for him—was the fact that a strange irritation accompanied
the memory and a desire to dismiss it from mind. And straightway he did
dismiss it, to return to thoughts of his significant present.</p>
<p>"Bess, tell me one more thing," he said. "Haven't you known any women—any
young people?"</p>
<p>"Sometimes there were women with the men; but Oldring never let me know
them. And all the young people I ever saw in my life was when I rode fast
through the villages."</p>
<p>Perhaps that was the most puzzling and thought-provoking thing she had yet
said to Venters. He pondered, more curious the more he learned, but he
curbed his inquisitive desires, for he saw her shrinking on the verge of
that shame, the causing of which had occasioned him such self-reproach. He
would ask no more. Still he had to think, and he found it difficult to
think clearly. This sad-eyed girl was so utterly different from what it
would have been reason to believe such a remarkable life would have made
her. On this day he had found her simple and frank, as natural as any girl
he had ever known. About her there was something sweet. Her voice was low
and well modulated. He could not look into her face, meet her steady,
unabashed, yet wistful eyes, and think of her as the woman she had
confessed herself. Oldring's Masked Rider sat before him, a girl dressed
as a man. She had been made to ride at the head of infamous forays and
drives. She had been imprisoned for many months of her life in an obscure
cabin. At times the most vicious of men had been her companions; and the
vilest of women, if they had not been permitted to approach her, had, at
least, cast their shadows over her. But—but in spite of all this—there
thundered at Venters some truth that lifted its voice higher than the
clamoring facts of dishonor, some truth that was the very life of her
beautiful eyes; and it was innocence.</p>
<p>In the days that followed, Venters balanced perpetually in mind this
haunting conception of innocence over against the cold and sickening fact
of an unintentional yet actual gift. How could it be possible for the two
things to be true? He believed the latter to be true, and he would not
relinquish his conviction of the former; and these conflicting thoughts
augmented the mystery that appeared to be a part of Bess. In those ensuing
days, however, it became clear as clearest light that Bess was rapidly
regaining strength; that, unless reminded of her long association with
Oldring, she seemed to have forgotten it; that, like an Indian who lives
solely from moment to moment, she was utterly absorbed in the present.</p>
<p>Day by day Venters watched the white of her face slowly change to brown,
and the wasted cheeks fill out by imperceptible degrees. There came a time
when he could just trace the line of demarcation between the part of her
face once hidden by a mask and that left exposed to wind and sun. When
that line disappeared in clear bronze tan it was as if she had been washed
clean of the stigma of Oldring's Masked Rider. The suggestion of the mask
always made Venters remember; now that it was gone he seldom thought of
her past. Occasionally he tried to piece together the several stages of
strange experience and to make a whole. He had shot a masked outlaw the
very sight of whom had been ill omen to riders; he had carried off a
wounded woman whose bloody lips quivered in prayer; he had nursed what
seemed a frail, shrunken boy; and now he watched a girl whose face had
become strangely sweet, whose dark-blue eyes were ever upon him without
boldness, without shyness, but with a steady, grave, and growing light.
Many times Venters found the clear gaze embarrassing to him, yet, like
wine, it had an exhilarating effect. What did she think when she looked at
him so? Almost he believed she had no thought at all. All about her and
the present there in Surprise Valley, and the dim yet subtly impending
future, fascinated Venters and made him thoughtful as all his lonely
vigils in the sage had not.</p>
<p>Chiefly it was the present that he wished to dwell upon; but it was the
call of the future which stirred him to action. No idea had he of what
that future had in store for Bess and him. He began to think of improving
Surprise Valley as a place to live in, for there was no telling how long
they would be compelled to stay there. Venters stubbornly resisted the
entering into his mind of an insistent thought that, clearly realized,
might have made it plain to him that he did not want to leave Surprise
Valley at all. But it was imperative that he consider practical matters;
and whether or not he was destined to stay long there, he felt the
immediate need of a change of diet. It would be necessary for him to go
farther afield for a variety of meat, and also that he soon visit
Cottonwoods for a supply of food.</p>
<p>It occurred again to Venters that he could go to the canyon where Oldring
kept his cattle, and at little risk he could pack out some beef. He wished
to do this, however, without letting Bess know of it till after he had
made the trip. Presently he hit upon the plan of going while she was
asleep.</p>
<p>That very night he stole out of camp, climbed up under the stone bridge,
and entered the outlet to the Pass. The gorge was full of luminous gloom.
Balancing Rock loomed dark and leaned over the pale descent. Transformed
in the shadowy light, it took shape and dimensions of a spectral god
waiting—waiting for the moment to hurl himself down upon the
tottering walls and close forever the outlet to Deception Pass. At night
more than by day Venters felt something fearful and fateful in that rock,
and that it had leaned and waited through a thousand years to have somehow
to deal with his destiny.</p>
<p>"Old man, if you must roll, wait till I get back to the girl, and then
roll!" he said, aloud, as if the stones were indeed a god.</p>
<p>And those spoken words, in their grim note to his ear, as well as contents
to his mind, told Venters that he was all but drifting on a current which
he had not power nor wish to stem.</p>
<p>Venters exercised his usual care in the matter of hiding tracks from the
outlet, yet it took him scarcely an hour to reach Oldring's cattle. Here
sight of many calves changed his original intention, and instead of
packing out meat he decided to take a calf out alive. He roped one,
securely tied its feet, and swung it over his shoulder. Here was an
exceedingly heavy burden, but Venters was powerful—he could take up
a sack of grain and with ease pitch it over a pack-saddle—and he
made long distance without resting. The hardest work came in the climb up
to the outlet and on through to the valley. When he had accomplished it,
he became fired with another idea that again changed his intention. He
would not kill the calf, but keep it alive. He would go back to Oldring's
herd and pack out more calves. Thereupon he secured the calf in the best
available spot for the moment and turned to make a second trip.</p>
<p>When Venters got back to the valley with another calf, it was close upon
daybreak. He crawled into his cave and slept late. Bess had no inkling
that he had been absent from camp nearly all night, and only remarked
solicitously that he appeared to be more tired than usual, and more in the
need of sleep. In the afternoon Venters built a gate across a small ravine
near camp, and here corralled the calves; and he succeeded in completing
his task without Bess being any the wiser.</p>
<p>That night he made two more trips to Oldring's range, and again on the
following night, and yet another on the next. With eight calves in his
corral, he concluded that he had enough; but it dawned upon him then that
he did not want to kill one. "I've rustled Oldring's cattle," he said, and
laughed. He noted then that all the calves were red. "Red!" he exclaimed.
"From the red herd. I've stolen Jane Withersteen's cattle!... That's about
the strangest thing yet."</p>
<p>One more trip he undertook to Oldring's valley, and this time he roped a
yearling steer and killed it and cut out a small quarter of beef. The
howling of coyotes told him he need have no apprehension that the work of
his knife would be discovered. He packed the beef back to camp and hung it
upon a spruce-tree. Then he sought his bed.</p>
<p>On the morrow he was up bright and early, glad that he had a surprise for
Bess. He could hardly wait for her to come out. Presently she appeared and
walked under the spruce. Then she approached the camp-fire. There was a
tinge of healthy red in the bronze of her cheeks, and her slender form had
begun to round out in graceful lines.</p>
<p>"Bess, didn't you say you were tired of rabbit?" inquired Venters. "And
quail and beaver?"</p>
<p>"Indeed I did."</p>
<p>"What would you like?"</p>
<p>"I'm tired of meat, but if we have to live on it I'd like some beef."</p>
<p>"Well, how does that strike you?" Venters pointed to the quarter hanging
from the spruce-tree. "We'll have fresh beef for a few days, then we'll
cut the rest into strips and dry it."</p>
<p>"Where did you get that?" asked Bess, slowly.</p>
<p>"I stole that from Oldring."</p>
<p>"You went back to the canyon—you risked—" While she hesitated
the tinge of bloom faded out of her cheeks.</p>
<p>"It wasn't any risk, but it was hard work."</p>
<p>"I'm sorry I said I was tired of rabbit. Why! How—When did you get
that beef?"</p>
<p>"Last night."</p>
<p>"While I was asleep?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"I woke last night sometime—but I didn't know."</p>
<p>Her eyes were widening, darkening with thought, and whenever they did so
the steady, watchful, seeing gaze gave place to the wistful light. In the
former she saw as the primitive woman without thought; in the latter she
looked inward, and her gaze was the reflection of a troubled mind. For
long Venters had not seen that dark change, that deepening of blue, which
he thought was beautiful and sad. But now he wanted to make her think.</p>
<p>"I've done more than pack in that beef," he said. "For five nights I've
been working while you slept. I've got eight calves corralled near a
ravine. Eight calves, all alive and doing fine!"</p>
<p>"You went five nights!"</p>
<p>All that Venters could make of the dilation of her eyes, her slow pallor,
and her exclamation, was fear—fear for herself or for him.</p>
<p>"Yes. I didn't tell you, because I knew you were afraid to be left alone."</p>
<p>"Alone?" She echoed his word, but the meaning of it was nothing to her.
She had not even thought of being left alone. It was not, then, fear for
herself, but for him. This girl, always slow of speech and action, now
seemed almost stupid. She put forth a hand that might have indicated the
groping of her mind. Suddenly she stepped swiftly to him, with a look and
touch that drove from him any doubt of her quick intelligence or feeling.</p>
<p>"Oldring has men watch the herds—they would kill you. You must never
go again!"</p>
<p>When she had spoken, the strength and the blaze of her died, and she
swayed toward Venters.</p>
<p>"Bess, I'll not go again," he said, catching her.</p>
<p>She leaned against him, and her body was limp and vibrated to a long,
wavering tremble. Her face was upturned to his. Woman's face, woman's
eyes, woman's lips—all acutely and blindly and sweetly and terribly
truthful in their betrayal! But as her fear was instinctive, so was her
clinging to this one and only friend.</p>
<p>Venters gently put her from him and steadied her upon her feet; and all
the while his blood raced wild, and a thrilling tingle unsteadied his
nerve, and something—that he had seen and felt in her—that he
could not understand—seemed very close to him, warm and rich as a
fragrant breath, sweet as nothing had ever before been sweet to him.</p>
<p>With all his will Venters strove for calmness and thought and judgment
unbiased by pity, and reality unswayed by sentiment. Bess's eyes were
still fixed upon him with all her soul bright in that wistful light.
Swiftly, resolutely he put out of mind all of her life except what had
been spent with him. He scorned himself for the intelligence that made him
still doubt. He meant to judge her as she had judged him. He was face to
face with the inevitableness of life itself. He saw destiny in the dark,
straight path of her wonderful eyes. Here was the simplicity, the
sweetness of a girl contending with new and strange and enthralling
emotions here the living truth of innocence; here the blind terror of a
woman confronted with the thought of death to her savior and protector.
All this Venters saw, but, besides, there was in Bess's eyes a
slow-dawning consciousness that seemed about to break out in glorious
radiance.</p>
<p>"Bess, are you thinking?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Yes—oh yes!"</p>
<p>"Do you realize we are here alone—man and woman?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Have you thought that we may make our way out to civilization, or we may
have to stay here—alone—hidden from the world all our lives?"</p>
<p>"I never thought—till now."</p>
<p>"Well, what's your choice—to go—or to stay here—alone
with me?"</p>
<p>"Stay!" New-born thought of self, ringing vibrantly in her voice, gave her
answer singular power.</p>
<p>Venters trembled, and then swiftly turned his gaze from her face—from
her eyes. He knew what she had only half divined—that she loved him.</p>
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