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me I ought to be ashamed if I am in love."

      "I'm not worried about your morals," she scoffed. "It's that poor child I'm thinking of."

      "I think of her a good deal, too."

      "Ah! and does she think of you a good deal That's what we must guard against."

      "Is it?"

      "Yes. You see I'm her confidante." She told it him with sparkling eyes, for the piquancy of it amused her. Not every engaged young woman can hear her lover's praises sung by the woman whose life he has saved with the proper amount of romance.

      "Really?"

      She nodded, laughing at him. "I didn't get a chance to tell her about me."

      "I suppose not."

      "I think I'll tell her about you, though—just what a ruthless barbarian you are."

      His eyes gleamed "I wish you would. I'd like to find out whether she would believe you. I have tried to tell her myself, but the honest truth is, I funk it."

      "You haven't any right to let her know you are interested in her." She interrupted him before he could speak. "Don't trifle with her, Waring. She's not like other girls."

      He met her look gravely. "I wouldn't trifle with her for any reason."

      Her quick rejoinder overlapped his sentence. "Then you love her!"

      "Is that an alternative?"

      "With you—yes."

      "Faith, my lady, you're frank!"

      "I'm not mealy-mouthed. You don't think yourself scrupulous, do you?"

      "I'm afraid I am not."

      "I don't mind so much your being in love with HER, though it's not flattering to my vanity, but—" She stopped, letting him make the inference.

      "Do you think that likely?" he asked, the color flushing his face.

      He wondered how much Aline had told this confidante. Certain specific things he knew she had not revealed, but had she let her guess the situation between them?

      She compromised with her conscience. "I don't know. She is romantic—and Simon Harley isn't a very fertile field for romance, I suppose."

      "You would imply?"

      "Oh, you have points, and nobody knows them better than Waring Ridgway," she told him jauntily. "But you needn't play that role to the address of Aline Harley. Try ME. I'm immune to romance. Besides, I'm engaged to you," she added, laughing at the inconsequence the fact seemed to have for both of them.

      "I'm afraid I can't help the situation, for if I've been playing a part, it has been an unconscious one."

      "That's the worst of it. When you star as Waring Ridgway you are most dangerous. What I want is total abstinence."

      "You'd rather I didn't see her at all?"

      Virginia dimpled, a gleam of reminiscent laughter in her eyes. "When I was in Denver last month a Mrs. Smythe—it was Smith before her husband struck it rich last year—sent out cards for a bridge afternoon. A Mrs. Mahoney had just come to the metropolis from the wilds of Cripple Creek. Her husband had struck a gold-mine, too, and Mr. Smythe was under obligations to him. Anyhow, she was a stranger, and Mrs. Smythe took her in. It was Mrs. Mahoney's introduction to bridge, and she did not know she was playing for keeps. When the afternoon was over, Mrs. Smythe hovered about her with the sweetest sympathy. 'So sorry you had such a horrid run of cards, dear. Better luck next time.' It took Mrs. Mahoney some time to understand that her social afternoon had cost one hundred and twenty dollars, but next day her husband sent a check for one hundred and twenty-two dollars to Mrs. Smythe. The extra two dollars were for the refreshments, he naively explained, adding that since his wife was so poor a gambler as hardly to be able to keep professionals interested, he would not feel offended if Mrs. Smythe omitted her in future from her social functions."

      Ridgway took it with a smile. "Simon Harley brought his one hundred and twenty-two dollars in person."

      "He didn't! When?"

      "This morning. He proposed benevolent assimilation as a solution of our troubles."

      "Just how?"

      "He offered to consolidate all the copper interests of the country and put me at the head of the resulting combine."

      "If you wouldn't play bridge with Mrs. Harley?"

      "Exactly."

      "And you?"

      "Declined to pledge myself."

      She clapped her hands softly. "Well done, Waring Ridgway! There are times when you are magnificent, when I could put you on a pedestal, you great big, unafraid man. But you mustn't play with her, just the same."

      "Why mustn't I?"

      "For her sake."

      He frowned past her into space, his tight-shut jaw standing out saliently. "You're right, Virginia. I've been thinking so myself. I'll keep off the grass," he said, at last.

      "You're a good fellow," slipped out impulsively.

      "Well, I know where there's another," he said. "I ought to think myself a lucky dog."

      Virginia lifted quizzical eyebrows. "Ought to! That tastes of duty. Don't let it come to that. We'll take it off if you like." She touched the solitaire he had given her.

      "Ah, but I don't like"—he smiled.

      Chapter 12.

       Aline Makes a Discovery

       Table of Contents

      Aline pulled her horse to a walk. "You know Mr. Ridgway pretty well, don't you?"

      Miss Balfour gently flicked her divided skirt with a riding-whip, considering whether she might be said to know him well. "Yes, I think I do," she ventured.

      "Mrs. Mott says you and he are great friends, that you seem very fond of each other."

      "Goodness me! I hope I don't seem fond of him. I don't think 'fond' is exactly the word, anyway, though we are good friends." Quickly, keenly, her covert glance swept Aline; then, withdrawing her eyes, she flung her little bomb. "I suppose we may be said to appreciate each other. At any rate, we are engaged."

      Mrs. Harley's pony came to an abrupt halt. "I thought I had dropped my whip," she explained, in a low voice not quite true.

      Virginia, though she executed an elaborate survey of the scenery, could not help noticing that the color had washed from her friend's face. "I love this Western country—its big sweep of plains, of low, rolling hills, with a background of mountains. One can see how it gets into a man's blood so that the East seems insipid ever afterward," discoursed Miss Balfour.

      A question trembled on Aline's blanched lips.

      "Say it," permitted Virginia.

      "Do you mean that you are engaged to him—that you are going to marry Mr. Ridgway—without caring for him?"

      "I don't mean that at all. I like him immensely."

      "But—do you love him?" It was almost a cry—these low words wrung from the tortured heart.

      "No fair," warned her friend smilingly.

      Aline rode in silence, her stricken face full of trouble. How could she, from her glass house, throw stones at a loveless marriage? But this was different from her own case! Nobody was worthy to marry her hero without giving the best a woman had to give. If she were a girl—a sudden tide of color swept her face; a wild, delirious tingle of joy flooded her veins—oh, if she were a girl, what a wealth of love could she give him! Clarity of vision had come to her in a blinding flash. Untutored of life, the knowledge of its meaning had struck home of the suddenest. She knew her heart now


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