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The Girl at the Halfway House - A Story of the Plains by Emerson Hough
page 8 of 298 (02%)
day--a fatal day--fraught with the tidings of what seemed a double
death. The wife of Colonel Henry Fairfax was grande dame that day,
when she buried her husband and sent away her son. There were yet
traditions to support.

Henry Fairfax said good-bye to Mary Ellen upon the gallery of the old
home, beneath a solemn, white-faced moon, amid the odours of the
drooping honeysuckle. Had Mary Ellen's eyes not been hid beneath the
lids they might have seen a face pale and sad as her own. They sat
silent, for it was no time for human speech. The hour came for
parting, and he rose. His lips just lightly touched her cheek. It
seemed to him he heard a faint "good-bye." He stepped slowly down the
long walk in the moonlight, and his hand was at his face. Turning at
the gate for the last wrench of separation, he gazed back at a drooping
form upon the gallery. Then Mrs. Beauchamp came and took Ellen's head
upon her bosom, seeing that now she was a woman, and that her
sufferings had begun.




CHAPTER II

THE PLAYERS OF THE GAME

When the band major was twenty miles away in front of Louisburg his
trumpets sounded always the advance. The general played the game
calmly. The line of the march was to be along the main road leading
into the town. With this course determined, the general massed his
reserves, sent on the column of assault, halted at the edge of the
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