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ybil. You will have to dismount and remain concealed in here until I lead them back across the river, where I will turn them loose. There will be a great advantage gained by that move. Our horses being found on the other side, will mislead our pursuers on a false scent." While Lyon Berners spoke, he assisted his wife to alight from her saddle, and guided her to the entrance of the thicket. "This path has not been trodden for a score of years, I can well believe. Just go far enough to be out of sight of any chance spy, and there remain until I return. I shall not be absent over half an hour," said Mr. Berners, as he took leave of Sybil. She sank wearily down upon a fragment of a rock, and prepared to await his return. He mounted his own horse, and led hers, and so went his way down the stream to the fording place. He successfully accomplished the difficult task of taking both horses over the river to the opposite bank, where he turned them loose. Next with a strong pocket jack-knife he cut a leaping pole from a sapling near, and went still farther up the stream to the rapids, where, by a skilful use of his pole and dexterous leaping from rock to rock, he was enabled to recross the river almost dry-shod. He rejoined Sybil, whom he found just where he had left her. She was sitting on a piece of rock, with her head bowed upon her hands. "Have I been gone long? Were you anxious or lonely, dearest?" he inquired, as he gave her his hand to assist her in rising. "Oh, no! I take no note of time! But oh! Lyon, _when shall I wake?_" she exclaimed in wild despair. "What is it you say, dear Sybil?" he gently asked. "When shall I wake--wake from this ghastly nightmare, in which I seem to myself to be a fugitive from justice! an exile from my home! a houseless, hunted stranger in the land! It _is_ a nightmare! It can _not_ be real, you know! Oh, that I could wake!" "Dear Sybil, collect your faculties. Do not let despair drive you to distraction. Be mistress of yourself in this trying situation," said Lyon Berners, gravely. "But oh, Heaven! the crushing weight and stunning suddenness of this blow! It is like death! like perdition!" exclaimed Sybil, pressing her hands to her head. Lyon Berners could only gaze on her with infinite compassion, expressed in every lineament of his eloquent countenance. She observed this, and quickly, with a great effort, from a strong resolution, throwing her hands apart
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