"No, no," she returned, her breath still laboring, "wait--wait

till they are past." And so, hand in hand, we stood there in the

shadow, screened very effectively from the lane by the thick

hedge, while the rush of our pursuers' feet drew nearer and

nearer; until we could hear a voice that panted out curses upon

the dark lane, ourselves, and everything concerned; at sound of

which my companion seemed to fall into a shivering fit, her clasp

tightened upon my hand, and she drew closer to me. Thus we

remained until voices and footsteps had grown faint with

distance, but, even then, I could feel that she was trembling

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still. Suddenly she drew her fingers from mine, and covered her

face with her hands.

"Oh, that man!" she exclaimed, in a whisper, "I didn't quite

realize till now--what I have escaped. Oh, that beast!"

"Sir Harry Mortimer?" said I.

"You know him?" she cried.

"Heaven forbid!" I answered, "but I have seen him once before at

'The Chequers' inn at Tonbridge, and I never forget names or

faces--especially such as his."

"How I hate him!" she whispered.

"An unpleasant animal, to be sure," said I. "But come, it were

wiser to get as far from here as possible, they will doubtless be

returning soon."

So we started off again, running in the shadow of the hedge. We

had thus doubled back upon our pursuers, and, leaving the tavern

upon our left, soon gained the kindly shadow of those woods

through which I had passed in the early evening.

Borne to us upon the gentle wind was the haunting perfume of

hidden flowers, and the sinking moon sent long shafts of silvery

light to pierce the leafy gloom, and make the shadows more

mysterious.

The path we followed was very narrow, so that sometimes my

companion's knee touched mine, or her long, silken hair brushed

my brow or cheek, as I stooped to lift some trailing branch that

barred her way, or open a path for her through the leaves.

So we journeyed on through the mysteries of the woods together.




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