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Rh DA LLA S GALBRA ITH.

594 mountains and homestead.

“There is

not one man or woman there who would believe in you as I have done, with the story clinging to you.” Dallas did not answer. He could not take his eyes from the delicate woman leaning back in the phaeton which rap idly approached them.

“ N o !” pursued the Doctor, energeti cally, motioning toward the great west ern valley which opened before them. “There lies your true path. I don’t want to see the man in you spoiled by the inﬂuence of people whom you have

left here.

Take your work and go out

with it. Let there be no looking back to the ﬂesh-pots of Egypt.”

“It is not my work that keeps me from them,” cried Dallas, the fair, laugh ing face of his mother coming nearer and nearer.

“ It is the stain that is on me;

and it was no fault of mine.” “ But it will shut you out from them

for ever,” coolly.

“ What if you had

gone to any of them, as you did to me, and said *1 am a convict’ ?” Dallas did not speak, but he took off his cap, and, leaning forward, looked into the woman’s face that was now close upon them. The Doctor noticed that he drew his breath heavily: his face be came the poor vehicle of some great emotion. What could Mrs. Dufﬁeld know of the man? Colonel Pervis, who drove her, pulled up his horses with a jerk: “Off, Doc tor? WVestward the star of science takes its way,’ eh ?” with a furtive, in

quisitive glance at the workman beside him. Mrs. Duﬁield also saw Dallas, but without looking at him. It was a noble, singular head, she thought; and the rolling gray collar and bare throat were wonderfully artistic. She stretched out her pretty little hand to the Doctor. “ We will miss you so much !” she said, gently. “ But you will ﬁnd your way back to us some day, I am sure.” “Vill I ﬁnd you here, if I do ?” “ Yes. I am at home now. This

life suits me.”

Her hand lay on the red

cushion, close to Dallas. For years he never had slept without holding it close

UUNB.

to his breast. The brown hair—there was a little gray in it now—how he used to tug at it and tangle it while she sewed at the slop-shop work! How patient

she was, laughing when he brought the tears to her eyes ! He could see a faint scar across her forehead: it was there that Duﬂield struck her that night when she held him in her lap to keep off the savage blows. That night he went to the coal-pits. He knew that the only chance for life for her was to be rid

of him. If he could but touch her! She was not a dainty lady to him : she was only— mother—mother. His hand, holding his cap, was near to hers.

The strong,

brawny man grew weak and blind. He dared not touch it. The stain was between them. She looked beyond him, as though he had been vacant air, to his companion. The Doctor’s kind heart could not

bear that any one should be neglected. “ My young friend goes with me,” he said. “ You must wish him God-speed. He is one of your own people.” Colonel Pervis mumbled some com monplace, and Mrs. Dufﬁeld promptly held out her ever-ready hand. She looked up with a smile, and their eyes met.

A strange, confused trouble came

into her face; it grew pale: she drew back the outstretched hand. “ Shall I tell her that I am a convict?” said Dallas, in a quiet whisper, turning to the Doctor. But the boy’s look made Pritchard think that he had suddenly gone mad. “ Tut! tut! I will drive on, Colonel Pervis. Good-day, Mrs. Duﬁield. You are insane on this matter, Galbraith.”

“ Stay!” Dallas laid his hand on the Doctor’s wrist and brought the horse to a sudden halt. He looked at the phaeton which was driving rapidly away. “I may never come back,” he said, with a loud uncadenced laugh, “ and she—she is——-” “ What is she, Galbraith ?” “ This life suited her.” Should he bring his disgrace on her? “ She was a friend of mine once,” he said. loosing his hold on the reins. “ You had better sink all friendships.