From Sand Hill to Pine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 237 pages of information about From Sand Hill to Pine.

From Sand Hill to Pine eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 237 pages of information about From Sand Hill to Pine.

“You see,” he said gayly, “the Mammon of unrighteousness is not for me—­at least, so near your father’s tabernacle.”

“That makes no difference now,” said the girl quickly, “for dad is goin’ to move, anyway, farther up the mountains.  He says it’s gettin’ too crowded for him here—­when the last settler took up a section three miles off.”

“And are you going too?” asked the young man earnestly.

Tinka nodded her brown head.  Fleming heaved a genuine sigh.  “Well, I’ll try my hand here a little longer.  I’ll put up a notice of claim; I don’t suppose your father would object.  You know he couldn’t legally.”

“I reckon ye might do it ef ye wanted—­ef ye was that keen on gettin’ gold!” said Tinka, looking away.  There was something in the girl’s tone which this budding lover resented.  He had become sensitive.

“Oh, well,” he said, “I see that it might make unpleasantness with your father.  I only thought,” he went on, with tenderer tentativeness, “that it would be pleasant to work here near you.”

“Ye’d be only wastin’ yer time,” she said darkly.

Fleming rose gravely.  “Perhaps you’re right,” he answered sadly and a little bitterly, “and I’ll go at once.”

He walked to the spring, and gathered up his tools.  “Thank you again for your kindness, and good-by.”

He held out his hand, which she took passively, and he moved away.

But he had not gone far before she called him.  He turned to find her still standing where he had left her, her little hands clinched at her side, and her widely opened eyes staring at him.  Suddenly she ran at him, and, catching the lapels of his coat in both hands, held him rigidly fast.

“No! no! ye sha’n’t go—­ye mustn’t go!” she said, with hysterical intensity.  “I want to tell ye something!  Listen!—­you—­you—­Mr. Fleming!  I’ve been a wicked, wicked girl!  I’ve told lies to dad—­to mammy—­to you!  I’ve borne false witness—­I’m worse than Sapphira—­I’ve acted a big lie.  Oh, Mr. Fleming, I’ve made you come back here for nothing!  Ye didn’t find no gold the other day.  There wasn’t any.  It was all me!  I—­I—­salted that pan!”

“Salted it!” echoed Fleming, in amazement.

“Yes, ‘salted it,’” she faltered; “that’s what dad says they call it—­what those wicked sons of Mammon do to their claims to sell them.  I—­put gold in the pan myself; it wasn’t there before.”

“But why?” gasped Fleming.

She stopped.  Then suddenly the fountains in the deep of her blue eyes were broken up; she burst into a sob, and buried her head in her hands, and her hands on his shoulder.  “Because—­because”—­she sobbed against him—­“I wanted you to come back!”

He folded her in his arms.  He kissed her lovingly, forgivingly, gratefully, tearfully, smilingly—­and paused; then he kissed her sympathetically, understandingly, apologetically, explanatorily, in lieu of other conversation.  Then, becoming coherent, he asked,—­

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From Sand Hill to Pine from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.