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man again raised a warning hand and spoke in a crisp whisper: "Hush!" he commanded, and bent, listening. In the distance a long whoop was dying away, and then after a moment of tense silence a cautious whistle sounded from the night outside. Boone took a step toward the door, and halted. "They're coming! It won't do for you to be found here with me alone." He cast a hurried glance toward the other room, then added; "No--_he's_ in there. They'll have to see him. Can you wait upstairs?" Anne Masters nodded, and as, with a lamp which he handed her, she put her foot upon the lowest step of the boxed-in stairway, he went on: "You've paid me one compliment tonight. You said that I could control men. As for myself, I doubt that, and if I fail--well, that comes later." From the stairhead she looked down. Boone had gone to the door and stood with his hand on the latch, yet for the moment he did not lift it. To her he seemed bracing himself against a fresh assault of heavy forces. CHAPTER XL With Joe Gregory entered three others, and to Anne, who was walled off from any sight of what went on, every word and intonation came up the enclosed stair well as if from a sounding board. She felt like a blind theatregoer whose ears strain to make amends for the want of eyes while a tense melodrama is building toward its climax. Her imagination filled in the intervals of silence with heart-straining anxiety, and she felt that she must see the movements, the gestures, the light and shadow in the sombre eyes, when the wrath of the voices broke off in ominous quiet. At the thought of the closed door which must soon be opened to them she shuddered, and she wanted to see Boone; to be able to assure herself that he was dominating the situation, which, as she listened, seemed blazing beyond control like a fire that outgrows the power of its fighters. It was difficult to gauge the flow and counterflow of influences in the scene below stairs. Boone's voice came infrequently as though he, too, were only a listener, and in the other voices was a unanimity of violence and hatred. It was a clamour for prompt vengeance unfolding an iliad of long-fostered animosities. To the girl it seemed an intolerable babel--a dissonance of profane fury and menace--and she could feel her heart pounding like a muffled drum. "We've passed out word to the boys and we won't hev need ter delay now ter git 'em gathered together," came a deep-
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