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could not change the past; and, even if he had not loved Bess

with all his soul, he had grown into a man who would not change
the future he had planned for her. Only, and once for all, he

must know the truth, know the worst, stifle all these insistent
doubts and subtle hopes and jealous fancies, and kill the past by

knowing truly what Bess had been to Oldring. For that matter he
knew--he had always known, but he must hear it spoken. Then, when

they had safelygotten out of that wild country to take up a new
and an absorbing life, she would forget, she would be happy, and

through that, in the years to come, he could not but find life
worth living.

All day he rode slowly and cautiously up the Pass, taking time to
peer around corners, to pick out hard ground and grassy patches,

and to make sure there was no one in pursuit. In the night
sometime he came to the smooth, scrawled rocks dividing the

valley, and here set the burro at liberty. He walked beyond,
climbed the slope and the dim, starlit gorge. Then, weary to the

point of exhaustion, he crept into a shallow cave and fell
asleep.

In the morning, when he descended the trail, he found the sun was
pouring a golden stream of light through the arch of the great

stone bridge. Surprise Valley, like a valley of dreams, lay
mystically soft and beautiful, awakening to the golden flood

which was rolling away its slumberous bands of mist, brightening
its walled faces.

While yet far off he discerned Bess moving under the silver
spruces, and soon the barking of the dogs told him that they had

seen him. He heard the mocking-birds singing in the trees, and
then the twittering of the quail. Ring and Whitie came bounding

toward him, and behind them ran Bess, her hands
outstretched.

"Bern! You're back! You're back!" she cried, in joy that rang of
her loneliness.

"Yes, I'm back," he said, as she rushed to meet him.
She had reached out for him when suddenly, as she saw him

closely, something checked her, and as quickly all her joy fled,
and with it her color, leaving her pale and trembling.

"Oh! What's happened?"
"A good deal has happened, Bess. I don't need to tell you what.

And I'm played out. Worn out in mind more than body."
"Dear--you look strange to me!" faltered Bess.

"Never mind that. I'm all right. There's nothing for you to be
scared about. Things are going to turn out just as we have

planned. As soon as I'm rested we'll make a break to get out of
the country. Only now, right now, I must know the truth about

you."
"Truth about me?" echoed Bess, shrinkingly. She seemed to be

casting back into her mind for a forgotten key. Venters himself,
as he saw her, received a pang.

"Yes--the truth. Bess, don't misunderstand. I haven't changed
that way. I love you still. I'll love you more afterward. Life

will be just as sweet--sweeter to us. We'll be--be married as
soon as ever we can. We'll be happy--but there's a devil in me. A

perverse, jealous devil! Then I've queer fancies. I forgot for a
long time. Now all those fiendish little whispers of doubt and

faith and fear and hope come torturing me again. I've got to kill
them with the truth."

"I'll tell you anything you want to know," she replied, frankly.
"Then by Heaven! we'll have it over and done with!...Bess--did

Oldring love you?"
"Certainly he did."

"Did--did you love him?"
"Of course. I told you so."

"How can you tell it so lightly?" cried Venters, passionately.
"Haven't you any sense of--of--" He choked back speech. He felt

the rush of pain and passion. He seized her in rude, strong hands
and drew her close. He looked straight into her dark-blue eyes.

They were shadowing with the old wistful light, hut they were as
clear as the limpid water of the spring. They were earnest,

solemn in unutterable love and faith and abnegation. Venters
shivered. He knew he was looking into her soul. He knew she could

not lie in that moment; but that she might tell the truth,
looking at him with those eyes, almost killed his belief in

purity.
"What are--what were you to--to Oldring?" he panted, fiercely.

"I am his daughter," she replied, instantly.
Venters slowly let go of her. There was a violent break in the

force of his feeling--then creeping blankness.
"What--was it--you said?" he asked, in a kind of dull wonder.

"I am his daughter."
"Oldring's daughter?" queried Venters, with life gathering in his

voice.
"Yes."

With a passionately awakening start he grasped her hands and drew
her close.

"All the time--you've been Oldring's daughter?"
"Yes, of course all the time--always."

"But Bess, you told me--you let me think--I made out you
were--a--so--so ashamed."

"It is my shame," she said, with voice deep and full, and now the
scarlet fired her cheek. "I told you--I'm nothing--nameless--just

Bess, Oldring's girl!"
"I know--I remember. But I never thought--" he went on,

hurriedly, huskily. "That time--when you lay dying--you
prayed--you--somehow I got the idea you were bad."

"Bad?" she asked, with a little laugh.
She looked up with a faint smile of bewilderment and the absolute

unconsciousness of a child. Venters gasped in the gathering might
of the truth. She did not understand his meaning.

"Bess! Bess!" He clasped her in his arms, hiding her eyes against
his breast. She must not see his face in that moment. And he held

her while he looked out across the valley. In his dim and blinded
sight, in the blur of golden light and moving mist, he saw

Oldring. She was the rustler's nameless daughter. Oldring had
loved her. He had so guarded her, so kept her from women and men

and knowledge of life that her mind was as a child's. That was
part of the secret--part of the mystery. That was the wonderful

truth. Not only was she not bad, but good, pure, innocent above
all innocence in the world--the innocence of lonely girlhood.

He saw Oldring's magnificent eyes, inquisitive, searching,
softening. He saw them flare in amaze, in gladness, with love,

then suddenly strain in terrible effort of will. He heard Oldring
whisper and saw him sway like a log and fall. Then a million

bellowing, thundering voices--gunshots of conscience,
thunderbolts of remorse--dinned horribly in his ears. He had

killed Bess's father. Then a rushing wind filled his ears like a
moan of wind in the cliffs, a knell indeed--Oldring's knell.

He dropped to his knees and hid his face against Bess, and
grasped her with the hands of a drowning man.

"My God!...My God!...Oh, Bess!...Forgive me! Never mind what I've
done--what I've thought. But forgive me. I'll give you my life.

I'll live for you. I'll love you. Oh, I do love you as no man
ever loved a woman. I want you to know--to remember that I fought

a fight for you--however blind I was. I thought--I thought--never
mind what I thought--but I loved you--I asked you to marry me.

Let that--let me have that to hug to my heart. Oh, Bess, I was
driven! And I might have known! I could not rest nor sleep till I

had this mystery solved. God! how things work out!"
"Bern, you're weak--trembling--you talk wildly," cried Bess.

"You've overdone your strength. There's nothing to forgive.
There's no mystery except your love for me. You have come back to

me!"
And she clasped his head tenderly in her arms and pressed it

closely to her throbbing breast.
CHAPTER XIX. FAY

At the home of Jane Withersteen Little Fay was climbing
Lassiter's knee.

"Does oo love me?" she asked.
Lassiter, who was as serious with Fay as he was gentle and

loving, assured her in earnest and elaborate speech that he was
her devoted subject. Fay looked thoughtful and appeared to be

debating the duplicity of men or searching for a supreme test to
prove this cavalier.

"Does oo love my new mower?" she asked, with bewildering
suddenness.

Jane Withersteen laughed, and for the first time in many a day
she felt a stir of her pulse and warmth in her cheek.

It was a still drowsy summer of afternoon, and the three were
sitting in the shade of the wooded knoll that faced the

sage-slope Little Fay's brief spell of unhappylonging for her
mother--the childish, mystic gloom--had passed, and now where Fay

was there were prattle and laughter and glee. She had emerged
Iron sorrow to be the incarnation of joy and loveliness. She had

growl supernaturally sweet and beautiful. For Jane Withersteen
the child was an answer to prayer, a blessing, a possession

infinitely more precious than all she had lost. For Lassiter,
Jane divined that little Fay had become a religion.

"Does oo love my new mower?" repeated Fay.
Lassiter's answer to this was a modest and sincere affirmative.

"Why don't oo marry my new mower an' be my favver?"
Of the thousands of questions put by little Fay to Lassiter the

was the first he had been unable to answer.
"Fay--Fay, don't ask questions like that," said Jane.

"Why?"
"Because," replied Jane. And she found it strangely embarrassing

to meet the child's gaze. It seemed to her that Fay's violet eyes
looked through her with piercing wisdom.

"Oo love him, don't oo?"
"Dear child--run and play," said Jane, "but don't go too far.

Don't go from this little hill."
Fay pranced off wildly, joyous over freedom that had not been

granted her for weeks.
"Jane, why are children more sincere than grown-up persons?"

asked Lassiter.
"Are they?"

"I reckon so. Little Fay there--she sees things as they appear on
the face. An Indian does that. So does a dog. An' an Indian an' a

dog are most of the time right in what they see. Mebbe a child is
always right."

"Well, what does Fay see?" asked Jane.
"I reckon you know. I wonder what goes on in Fay's mind when she

sees part of the truth with the wise eyes of a child, an' wantin'
to know more, meets with strange falseness from you? Wait! You

are false in a way, though you're the best woman I ever knew.
What I want to say is this. Fay has taken you're pretendin'

to--to care for me for the thing it looks on the face. An' her
little formin' mind asks questions. An' the answers she gets are

different from the looks of things. So she'll grow up gradually
takin' on that falseness, an' be like the rest of the women, an'

men, too. An' the truth of this falseness to life is proved by
your appearin' to love me when you don't. Things aren't what they

seem."
"Lassiter, you're right. A child should be told the absolute

truth. But--is that possible? I haven't been able to do it, and
all my life I've loved the truth, and I've prided myself upon

being truthful. Maybe that was only egotism. I'm learning much,
my friend. Some of those blinding scales have fallen from my

eyes. And--and as to caring for you, I think I care a great deal.
How much, how little, I couldn't say. My heart is almost broken.

Lassiter. So now is not a good time to judge of affection. I can
still play and be merry with Fay. I can still dream. But when I



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