As good fortune would have it, we swung in, opposite the screened

mouth of Henry's Bayou, at a time when the stream was free of all

craft that might have observed us, although far across the forest we

could see a black column of smoke, marking a river steamer coming up.

"Quick with that long boat, Lafitte," I ordered; and he drew our old

craft alongside as we slowed down. "Get over yonder and sound for a

bar. Take the boat hook. If you get four feet, we'll try it."

My hardy young ruffian was nothing if not prompt, nor was he less

efficient than the average deck-hand. It was he who did the sounding

while Willie, our factotum, pulled slowly in toward the mouth of the

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old river bed. I watched them through the glasses, noting that rarely

could Lafitte find any bottom at all with the long shaft of the boat

hook. "She's all right, Peterson," said I. "Follow on in, slowly--I

don't want that steamer yonder to catch us."

"Why don't you?" A voice I should know, to which all my body would

thrill, did I hear it in any corner of the world, spoke at my elbow.

I started for a half instant before I made reply, looking into her

dark eyes, sensible again of the perfume most delirium-producing for a

man: the scent of a woman's hair.

"Because, Helena," said I, "I wish our boat to lie unnoticed for a

time, till the hue and cry has lulled a bit."

"And then?" She bent on me her gaze, so difficult to resist, and

smiled at me with the corners of her lips, so subtly irresistible. I

felt a rush of fire sweep through all my being, and something she must

have noted, for she gave back a bit and stood more aloof along the

rail.

"And then," said I savagely, "this boat runs by all the towns, till we

reach the Gulf, and the open sea."

"And then?"

"And then, Helena, we sail the ocean blue, you and I."

"For how long?"

"Forever, Helena. Or, at least, until----"

"Until when?"

"Until you say you will marry me, Helena."

She made no answer now at all beyond a scornful shrug of her

shoulders. "Suppose I can not?" she said at last.

"If you can not, all the same you must and shall!" said I. "You shall

be prisoner until you do."

"Is there no law for such as you?"

"No. None on the high sea. None in my heart. Only one law I know any

more, Helena--I who have upheld the law, obeyed it, reverenced it."

"And that?"

"The law of the centuries, of the forest, of the sea. The law of love,

Helena."

"Ah, you go about it handsomely! If you wished me to despise you, to

hate you, this would be very fit, what you say."




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