The Daughter of a Magnate - Page 87/119

He kicked open the door of the hotel with one blow of his foot and set

her down inside.

In the warm dark office, breathing unsteadily, they faced each other.

"Can you, Gertrude, marry that man and break my heart?" He caught up

her two hands with his words.

"No," she answered, brokenly. "Are you sure you are not frozen--ears

or cheeks or hands?"

"You won't marry him, Gertrude, and break my heart? Tell me you won't

marry him."

"No, I won't."

"Tell me again."

"Shall I tell you everything?"

"If you have mercy for me as I have love for you."

"I ran away from him to-night. He came out with the directors and

telegraphed he would be at the Springs in the afternoon for his answer,

and--I ran away. He has his answer long ago and I would not see him."

"Brave girl!"

"Oh, I wasn't brave, I was a dreadful coward. But I thought----"

"What?"

"--I could be brave, if I found as brave a man--as you."

"Gertrude, if I kiss you I never can give you up. Do you understand

what that means? I never in life or death can give you up, Gertrude,

do you understand me?"

She was crying on his shoulder. "Oh, yes, I understand," and he heard

from her lips the maddening sweetness of his boy name. "I understand,"

she sobbed. "I don't care, Ab--if only--, you will be kind to me."

It was only a moment later--her head had not yet escaped from his arm,

for Glover found for the first time that it is one thing to get leave

to kiss a lovely woman and wholly another to get the necessary action

on the conscience-stricken creature--she had not yet, I say, escaped,

when a locomotive whistle was borne from the storm faintly in on their

ears. To her it meant nothing, but she felt him start. "What is it?"

she whispered.

"The ploughs!"

"The ploughs?"

"The snow-ploughs that followed us. Twenty minutes behind--twenty

minutes between us and death, Gertrude, in that blizzard, think of it.

That must mean we are to live."

The solemn thought naturally suggested, to Glover at least, a

resumption of the status quo, but as he was locating, in the dark,

there came from behind the stove a mild cough. The effect on the

construction engineer of the whole blizzard was to that cough as

nothing. Inly raging he seated Gertrude--indeed, she sunk quite

faintly into a chair, and starting for the stove Glover dragged from

behind it Solomon Battershawl. "What are you doing here?" demanded

Glover, savagely.

"I'm night clerk, Mr. Glover--ow----"

"Night clerk? Very well, Solomon," muttered Glover, grimly, "take this

young lady to the warmest room in the house at once."