happen. The thought aroused her to action and she hurriedly rose to her
feet. If possible, she would prevent that final catastrophe which her
intuition told her was imminent--which she knew must overtake either one
or all three of them should Don Felipe and the Captain meet again that
night in Chiquita's presence.
There was not a moment to lose, and seizing a light wrap which lay on a
chair beside her, she flung it about her shoulders and hurriedly left
the room.
XXXIV
Before leaving the _patio_, Bessie promised to meet Dick in the garden
after the company dispersed for the night. After the Captain's
departure, Dick returned to the _patio_ and took his stand in the shadow
of the nearest trees, where he awaited her.
Never had her mood appeared so distracted and evasive as that evening.
She had avoided him as much as possible. He was quite at a loss to know
how to take her, and wondered what would be the outcome of their
interview which, he felt, might possibly be their last.
Notwithstanding this melancholy prospect, he still experienced the same
spirit of buoyancy which possessed him during the day. He had caught her
regarding him several times during the evening with what he thought to
be a look of tenderness in her eyes, and this, perhaps, accounted in a
measure for his present elation.
She, in turn, had wondered greatly at the change that had come over him.
How could he possibly be so gay when everybody else was so miserable,
and she thoroughly resented it.
During the interval that had elapsed after the breaking up of the
company, she had participated in a stormy interview with her father and
aunt; the latter endeavoring to point out to her the danger incurred by
holding intercourse with obscure, low-born persons, as had just been
demonstrated in the Captain's case.
She was surprised on returning to her room not to find Blanch there,
but, on second thought, felt it was only natural after what had occurred
that she should want to be alone, and thought she must be somewhere in
the garden. She had seen Dick leave the _patio_ and disappear in the
shadow beyond, whither she directed her steps, passing out and around
the front of the house, as she did not wish to incur the risk of being
seen by her father or aunt.
Dick, who had tossed aside his hat on the grass and stood leaning
against the trunk of a tree, was presently aroused from his meditations
by the object of his thoughts, who stood clos
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