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Leah Mordecai by Belle K. (Belle Kendrick) Abbott
page 141 of 235 (60%)
must soon bid you adieu."

"If I remember the bravery of my captain, the red devils won't get
my scalp, I'll wager. But I hope they are settled for a time. Come
back as soon as you can, captain, and in your absence think
occasionally of Franco, will you? There comes the coach. The horses
are fine and gay."

"Rest assured, Franco, I will think of you, and often too. How I
would like to take you with me! But take care of yourself. A month's
absence is not such a long time, after all. Good-by, my dear fellow,
good-by;" and seating himself in the waiting coach, Captain Marshall
waved an adieu to his sorrowful young companion, and at the same
moment the coach driver hallooed, "All ready!" and gave a sharp
crack of the whip; the horses dashed forward, and recruit and
captain were soon separated-separated forever. In less time than a
fortnight, Captain Marshall had accomplished his long and
troublesome journey, and was safe once more within his native State.

"I tell you, Fred," said the captain, one day when he was visiting a
friend in the Queen City, "the agitated, portentous state of affairs
in this section distresses and alarms me. I had no dream of the
warlike aspect of this quiet Queen City of the Sea. I fancied we had
all the trouble with us, in the north-west, among those wretched
savages. I came home for a month of recreation and pleasure, and--"
he uttered with slight hesitation--"for the fulfilment of my plighted
troth; for the realization of the bright dream of a love that has
brightened my heart for nearly two years. Yes, Fred, and if it were
not for the business that takes me to fair Melrose, I should regret
that my coming home had been just at this time. I tell you, my good
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