The Odds - And Other Stories by Ethel M. (Ethel May) Dell
page 48 of 395 (12%)
page 48 of 395 (12%)
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She started and stood still. There was quick fear in the look she threw
him. "You mean Jack told you--" "No, I don't," said Hill. "Jack has never yet told me anything I couldn't have told him ages before. I knew from the beginning. It was the fellow they called Buckskin Bill, wasn't it?" She quivered from head to foot and was silent. Hill went on ruthlessly. "First, by a stroke of luck, he saved you from death by snake-bite. He always had the luck on his side, that chap. I should have caught him but for that. I'd got him--I'd got him in the hollow of my hand. But you"--for the first time there was a streak of tenderness in his speech--"you were a new chum then--you held me up. Remember how you covered his retreat when we came up? Did you really think I didn't know?" She uttered a sobbing laugh. "I was very frightened, too. I always was scared at the law." Hill nodded. He also was grimly smiling. "But you dared it. You'd have dared anything for him that day. He always got the women on his side." She winced a little. "It's true," he asserted. "I know what happened--as well as if I'd seen it. He made love to you in a very gallant, courteous fashion. I never saw Buckskin Bill, but I believe he was always courteous when he had |
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