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did and sincere. He departed on a trot to telegraph, hailing Philip warmly by the way. Here upon the following morning Diane and Keela parted--for the Indian girl was pledged to return to the lodge of Mic-co. "Six moons, now," she explained with shining eyes, "I stay at the lodge of Mic-co, my foster father. When the Falling Leaf Moon of November comes, I shall still be there, living the ways of white men." She held out her hand. "Aw-lip-ka-shaw!" she said shyly, her black eyes very soft and sorrowful. "It is a prettier parting than the white man's. By and by, Diane, you will write to the lodge of Mic-co? The Indian lads ride in each moon to the village for Mic-co's books and papers." Her great eyes searched Diane's face a little wistfully. "Sometime," she added shyly, "when you wish, I will come again. You will not ride away soon to the far cities of the North?" "No!" said Diane. "No indeed! Not for ever so long. I'm tired. Likely I'll hunt a quiet spot where there's a lake and trees and lilies, and camp and rest. You won't forget me, Keela?" Keela had a wordless gift of eloquence. Her eyes promised. Diane smiled and tightened her hold of the slim, brown Indian hand. "Aw-lip-ka-shaw, Keela!" she said. "Some day I'm coming back and take you home with me." The Indian girl drove reluctantly away; presently her canvas wagon was but a dim gray silhouette upon the horizon. CHAPTER XLIII THE RIVAL CAMPERS Northward by lazy canal and shadowy hummock, northward by a river freckled with sand bars, Diane came in time to a quiet lake where purple martins winged ceaselessly over a tangled float of lilies--where now and then an otter swam and dipped with a noiseless ripple of water--where ground doves fluttered fearlessly about the camp as Johnny pitched the tents at noonday. But for all the whir and flash of brilliant birdlife above the placid water--for all the screams of the fish hawks and the noise of crows and grackle in the cypress--for all the presence of another camper among the trees to the west, the days were quiet and undisturbed. And at night when the birds were winging to the woods now black against the yellow west, and the lonely lake began to purple, the fires of the rival camps were the single spots of color in the heavy darkness along the shore. Diane wrote of it, with disastrous results, to Aunt Agatha. At sunset, one day, a carriage produced an aggrieved rustle of
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