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"You are not to come with me, Oscar."
"A captain does not go alone; it should be the sergeant who is sent--yes?"
"It is not an affair of war, Oscar, but quite another matter. There is a saddled horse hitched to the other side of our abandoned bridge. Get it and ride it to Judge Claiborne's stables; and ask and answer no questions."
A moment later he was riding toward the gate, the led-horse following.
He flung himself down, adjusting the stirrups and gave her a hand into the saddle. They turned silently into the mountain road.
"The bridge would have been simpler and quicker," said Shirley; "as it is, I shall be late to the ball."
"I am contrite enough; but you don't make explanations."
"No; I don't explain; and you are to come back as soon as we strike the valley. I always send gentlemen back at that point," she laughed, and went ahead of him into the narrow road. She guided the strange horse with the ease of long practice, skilfully testing his paces, and when they came to a stretch of smooth road sent him flying at a gallop over the trail. He had given her his own horse, a hunter of famous strain, and she at once defined and maintained a distance between them that made talk impossible.
Her short covert riding-coat, b.u.t.toned close, marked clearly in the starlight her erect figure; light wisps of loosened hair broke free under her soft felt hat, and when she turned her head the wind caught the brim and pressed it back from her face, giving a new charm to her profile.
He called after her once or twice at the start, but she did not pause or reply; and he could not know what mood possessed her; or that once in flight, in the security the horse gave her, she was for the first time afraid of him. He had declared his love for her, and had offered to break down the veil of mystery that made him a strange and perplexing figure.
His affairs, whatever their nature, were now at a crisis, he had said; quite possibly she should never see him again after this ride. As she waited at the gate she had known a moment of contrition and doubt as to what she had done. It was not fair to her brother thus to give away his secret to the enemy; but as the horse flew down the rough road her blood leaped with the sense of adventure, and her pulse sang with the joy of flight. Her thoughts were free, wild things; and she exulted in the great starry vault and the cool heights over which she rode. Who was John Armitage? She did not know or care, now that she had performed for him her last service. Quite likely he would fade away on the morrow like a mountain shadow before the sun; and the song in her heart to-night was not love or anything akin to it, but only the joy of living.
Where the road grew difficult as it dipped sharply down into the valley she suffered him perforce to ride beside her.
"You ride wonderfully," he said.
"The horse is a joy. He's a Pendragon--I know them in the dark. He must have come from this valley somewhere. We own some of his cousins, I'm sure."
"You are quite right. He's a Virginia horse. You are incomparable--no other woman alive could have kept that pace. It's a brave woman who isn't a slave to her hair-pins--I don't believe you spilled one."
She drew rein at the cross-roads.
"We part here. How shall I return Bucephalus?"
"Let me go to your own gate, please!"
"Not at all!" she said with decision.
"Then Oscar will pick him up. If you don't see him, turn the horse loose.
But my thanks--for oh, so many things!" he pleaded.
"To-morrow--or the day after--or never!"
She laughed and put out her hand; and when he tried to detain her she spoke to the horse and flashed away toward home. He listened, marking her flight until the shadows of the valley stole sound and sight from him; then he turned back into the hills.
Near her father's estate Shirley came upon a man who saluted in the manner of a soldier.
It was Oscar, who had crossed the bridge and ridden down by the nearer road.
"It is my captain's horse--yes?" he said, as the slim, graceful animal whinnied and pawed the ground. "I found a horse at the broken bridge and took it to your stable--yes?"
A moment later Shirley walked rapidly through the garden to the veranda of her father's house, where her brother d.i.c.k paced back and forth impatiently.
"Where have you been, Shirley?"
"Walking."
"But you went for a ride--the stable-men told me."
"I believe that is true, Captain."
"And your horse was brought home half an hour ago by a strange fellow who saluted like a soldier when I spoke to him, but refused to understand my English."
"Well, they do say English isn't very well taught at West Point, Captain," she replied, pulling off her gloves. "You oughtn't to blame the polite stranger for his courtesy."
"I believe you have been up to some mischief, Shirley. If you are seeing that man Armitage--"
"Captain!"
"Bah! What are you going to do now?"
"I'm going to the ball with you as soon as I can change my gown. I suppose father and mother have gone."
"They have--for which you should be grateful!"
Captain Claiborne lighted a cigar and waited.
CHAPTER XXI
THE COMEDY OF A SHEEPFOLD
A glance, a word--and joy or pain Befalls; what was no more shall be.
How slight the links are in the chain That binds us to our destiny!
--T.B. Aldrich.
Oscar's eye, roaming the landscape as he left Shirley Claiborne and started for the bungalow, swept the upland Claiborne acres and rested upon a moving shadow. He drew rein under a clump of wild cherry-trees at the roadside and waited. Several hundred yards away lay the Claiborne sheepfold, with a broad pasture rising beyond. A shadow is not a thing to be ignored by a man trained in the niceties of scouting. Oscar, satisfying himself that substance lay behind the shadow, dismounted and tied his horse. Then he bent low over the stone wall and watched.
"It is the big fellow--yes? He is a stealer of sheep, as I might have known."
Zmai was only a dim figure against the dark meadow, which he was slowly crossing from the side farthest from the Claiborne house. He stopped several times as though uncertain of his whereabouts, and then clambered over a stone wall that formed one side of the sheepfold, pa.s.sed it and strode on toward Oscar and the road.
"It is mischief that brings him from the hills--yes?" Oscar reflected, glancing up and down the highway. Faintly--very softly through the night he heard the orchestra at the hotel, playing for the dance. The little soldier unb.u.t.toned his coat, drew the revolver from his belt, and thrust it into his coat pocket. Zmai was drawing nearer, advancing rapidly, now that he had gained his bearings. At the wall Oscar rose suddenly and greeted him in mockingly-courteous tones:
"Good evening, my friend; it's a fine evening for a walk."