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hat may seem real! Nothing else does!" By her matter-of-fact acceptance of him and his appearance and his mood she calmed him as they walked along. "And even Rowley," he added, after his blunt confession of failure, "he has just turned me down. He won't follow his five thousand with another cent. The old rascal deserves to be cheated if we fail. He is telling me that he always believed we would never make good in the job. Is he crazy, or am I?" "Make all allowances for Deacon Rowley," she pleaded. "Keep away from him. He is not a consoling man. But there must be some way for you, Boyd. Let us think! You have been keeping too close to the thing--to your work--and there are other places besides Limeport." "There's New York--and there's a way," he growled. "You must try every chance; it means so much to you!" "Is that your advice?" "Certainly, Boyd!" He stopped and pulled the sealed packet from his coat. In the stress of his despair and resentment he was brutal rather than considerate. "There are papers in there with which I can club Julius Marston until he squeals. I haven't seen them, but I know well enough what they are. I can scare him into giving back all he has taken away from me. I can make him give back a lot to other folks. And from those other folks I can get money to finish our work on the _Conomo_. Look at the monogram on that seal, Polly!" He pointed grimy finger and held the packet close. "From--Miss Marston?" she asked, tremulously. "Yes, Polly." "And she is helping you?" "I suppose she is trying to." "Well, it's what a girl should do when she loves a man," she returned. But she did not look at him and her lips were white. "And you think I ought to use her help?" "Yes." She evidently realized that her tone was a mere quaver of assent, for she repeated the word more firmly. "But these papers are not hers, Polly. She stole them--or somebody stole them for her--from her own father," he went on, relentlessly. "She must love you very much, Boyd." They turned away from each other and gazed in opposite directions. He was wondering, as he had through many agonized hours, just what motive was influencing Alma Marston in those later days. With all his soul he wanted to question Polly Candage--to get the light of her woman's instinct on his troubled affairs; but the nature of the secret he was hiding put effective stopper on his tongue. "Under those circumstances, no matter
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