The Odds | Page 9

Ethel May Dell
get to know him well. You've
always kept him at arm's length, haven't you? Well, let him come a bit
nearer! You'll soon like him well enough to marry him. He'd make you
happy, Dot. Take my word for it!"
She met his look bravely, though the distress still lingered in her eyes.
"But, dear old Jack," she said, "no woman can possibly love at will."
"It would come afterwards," Jack said, with conviction. "I know it
would. He's such a good chap. You've never done him justice. See, Dot
girl! You're not happy. I know that. You want to stretch your wings,
you say. Well, there's only one way of doing it, for you can't go out into
the world--this world--alone. At least, you'll break my heart if you do.
He's the only fellow anywhere near worthy of you. And he's been so
awfully patient. Do give him his chance!"
He put his arm round her shoulders again, holding her very tenderly.
She yielded herself to him with a suppressed sob. "I'm sure it would be
wrong, Jack," she said.
"Not a bit wrong!" Jack maintained, stoutly. "What have you been
waiting for all this time? A myth, an illusion, that can never come true!
You've no right to spoil your own life and someone else's as well for
such a reason as that. I call that wrong--if you like."
She hid her face against him with a piteous gesture. "He--said he would
come back, Jack."
Jack frowned over her bowed head even while he softly stroked it.
"And if he had--do you think I would ever have let you go to him? A
cattle thief, Dot! An outlaw!"

She clung to him trembling. "He saved my life--at the risk of his own,"
she whispered, almost inarticulately.
"Oh, I know--I know. He was that sort--brave enough, but a hopeless
rotter." Jack's voice held a curious mixture of tenderness and contempt.
"Women always fall in love with that sort of fellow," he said. "Heaven
knows why. But you'd no right to lose your heart to him, little 'un. You
knew--you always knew--he wasn't the man for you."
She clung to him in silence for a space, then lifted her face. "All right,
Jack," she said.
He looked at her closely for a moment. "Come! It's only silly
sentiment," he urged. "You can't feel bad about it after all this time.
Why, child, it's five years!"
She laughed rather shakily. "I am a big fool, aren't I, Jack?
Yet--somehow--do you know--I thought he meant to come back."
"Not he!" declared Jack. "Catch Buckskin Bill putting his head back
into the noose when once he had got away! He's not quite so simple as
that, my dear. He probably cleared out of Australia for good as soon as
he got the chance. And a good thing, too!" he added, with emphasis.
"He'd done mischief enough."
She raised her lips to his. "Thank you for not laughing at me, Jack," she
said. "Don't--ever--tell Adela, will you? I'm sure she would."
He smiled a little. "Yes, I think she would. She'd say you were old
enough to know better."
Dot nodded. "And very sensible, too. I am."
He patted her shoulder. "Good girl! Then that chapter is closed.
And--you're going to give poor Fletcher his chance?"
She drew a sharp breath. "Oh, I don't know. I can't promise that.
Don't--don't hustle me, Jack!"

He gave her a hard squeeze and let her go. "There, she shan't be teased
by her horrid bully of a brother! She's going to play the game off her
own bat, and I wish her luck with all my heart."
He turned to the job of feeding his horse, and Dot, after a few
inconsequent remarks, sauntered away in the direction of the barn, "to
be alone with herself," as she put it.
CHAPTER II
NUMBER THREE
Adela Burton was laying the cloth for supper, and looking somewhat
severe over the process. She was usually cheerful at that hour of the
day, for it brought her husband back from his work and, thanks to Dot's
ministrations, the evening was free from toil. It was seldom, indeed,
that Adela bestirred herself to lay the cloth for any meal, for she
maintained that it was better for a girl like Dot to have plenty to do at
all times, and she herself preferred her needlework, at which she was an
adept.
No one could have called her an idle woman, but she was eminently a
selfish one. She followed her own bent, quite regardless of the desires
and inclinations of anyone else. She was the hub of her world from her
own point of view, and she was wholly incapable of recognizing any
other. Most people realized this and, as is the way of
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