The Girl from Montana - Page 38/133

He lay there resting and thinking. How strange was the experience through

which he was passing! Came ever a wealthy, college-bred, society man into

the like before? What did it all mean? His being lost, his wandering for a

day, the sight of this girl and his pursuit, the prayer under the open

sky, and that night of splendor under the moonlight riding side by side.

It was like some marvellous tale.

And this girl! Where was she going? What was to become of her? Out in the

world where he came from, were they ever to reach it, she would be

nothing. Her station in life was beneath his so far that the only

recognition she could have would be one which would degrade her. This

solitary journey they were taking, how the world would lift up its hands

in horror at it! A girl without a chaperon! She was impossible! And yet it

all seemed right and good, and the girl was evidently recognized by the

angels; else how had she escaped from degradation thus far?

Ah! How did he know she had? But he smiled at that. No one could look into

that pure, sweet face, and doubt that she was as good as she was

beautiful. If it was not so, he hoped he would never find it out. She

seemed to him a woman yet unspoiled, and he shrank from the thought of

what the world might do for her--the world and its cultivation, which

would not be for her, because she was friendless and without money or

home. The world would have nothing but toil to give her, with a meagre

living.

Where was she going, and what was she proposing to do? Must he not try to

help her in some way? Did not the fact that she had saved his life demand

so much from him? If he had not found her, he must surely have starved

before he got out of this wild place. Even yet starvation was not an

impossibility; for they had not reached any signs of habitation yet, and

there was but one more portion of corn-meal and a little coffee left. They

had but two matches now, and there had been no more flights of birds, nor

brooks with fishes.

In fact, the man found a great deal to worry about as he lay there, too

weary with the unaccustomed exercise and experiences to sleep.

He reflected that the girl had told him very little, after all, about her

plans. He must ask her. He wished he knew more of her family. If he were

only older and she younger, or if he had the right kind of a woman friend

to whom he might take her, or send her! How horrible that that scoundrel

was after her! Such men were not men, but beasts, and should be shot down.