has been nothing. I am a
policeman in search of him, and am the natural enemy of a murderer.
Of course in the ordinary way I would not have spared him; but the
ordinary way would have sufficed. Had he escaped me I could have
laughed at all that. But he took that poor lad's life!" Here he
looked sadly into her face, and she could see that there was a tear
within his eye. "That was much, but that was not all. That lad was
your brother, him whom you so dearly loved. He shot down the poor
child before his father's face, simply because he had said that he
would tell the truth. When you wept, when you tore your hair, when
you flung yourself in sorrow upon the body, I told myself that either
he or I must die. And now you bid me be merciful." Then the big tears
dropped down his cheeks, and he began to wail himself,--hardly like a
man.
And what did Edith do? She stood and looked at him for a few moments;
then extricated herself from the hold he still had of her, and flung
herself into his arms. He put down his face and kissed her forehead
and her cheeks; but she put up her mouth and kissed his lips. Not
once or twice was that kiss given; but there they stood closely
pressed to each other in a long embrace. "My hero," she said; "my
hero." It had all come at last,--the double triumph; and there was,
he felt, no happier man in all Ireland than he. He thought, at least,
that the double battle had been now won. But even yet it was not so.
"Captain Clayton," she began.
"Why Captain? Why Clayton?"
"My brother Yorke," and she pressed both his hands in hers. "You can
understand that I have been carried away by my feelings, to thank you
as a sister may thank a brother."
"I will not have it," he exclaimed fiercely. "You are no sister, nor
can I ever be your brother. You are my very own now, and for ever."
And he rushed at her again as though to envelop her in his arms, and
to crush her against his bosom.
"No!" she exclaimed, avoiding him with the activity of a young fawn;
"not again. I had to beg your pardon, and it was so I did it."
"Twenty times you have offended me, and twenty times you must repeat
your forgiveness."
"No, no, it must not be so. I was wrong to say that you were
bloody-minded. I cannot tell why I said so. I would not for worlds
have you altered in anything;--except," she said, "in your love for
me."
"But have you told me nothing?"
"I have called you my hero,--and so you are."
"Nay, Edith, it is m
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