A Man Four-Square eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 272 pages of information about A Man Four-Square.

A Man Four-Square eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 272 pages of information about A Man Four-Square.

The girl drew back.

He sensed at once his mistake.  “Good to you!” he cried. “’Lindy, I’m a-goin’ to be the best ever.”

“I ain’t got any mother, Dave.”  Again she choked in her throat.  “You wouldn’t take advantage of me, would you?”

He protested hotly.  Desiring only to be convinced, ’Lindy took one last precaution.

“Swear you’ll do right by me always.”

He swore it.

She put her hand in his and he led her to the boat.

Ranse Roush was at the oars.  Before he had taken a dozen strokes a wave of terror swept over her.  She was leaving behind forever that quiet, sunny cove where she had been brought up.  The girl began to shiver against the arm of her lover.  She heard again the sound of his low, triumphant laughter.

It was too late to turn back now.  No hysterical request to be put back on her side of the river would move these men.  Instinctively she knew that.  From to-night she was to be a Roush.

They found horses tied to saplings in a small cove close to the river.  The party mounted and rode into the hills.  Except for the ring of the horses’ hoofs there was no sound for miles.  ’Lindy was the first to speak.

“Ain’t this Quicksand Creek?” she asked of her lover as they forded a stream.

He nodded.  “The sands are right below us—­not more’n seven or eight steps down here Cal Henson was sucked under.”

After another stretch ridden in silence they turned up a little cove to a light shining in a cabin window.  The brothers alighted and Dave helped the girl down.  He pushed open the door and led the way inside.

A man sat by the fireside with his feet on the table.  He was reading a newspaper.  A jug of whiskey and a glass were within reach of his hand.  Without troubling to remove his boots from the table, he looked up with a leer at the trembling girl.

Dave spoke at once.  “We’ll git it over with.  The sooner the quicker.”

’Lindy’s heart was drenched with dread.  She shrank from the three pairs of eyes focused upon her as if they had belonged to wolves.  She had hoped that the preacher might prove a benevolent old man, but this man with the heavy thatch of unkempt, red hair and furtive eyes set askew offered no comfort.  If there had been a single friend of her family present, if there had been any woman at all!  If she could even be sure of the man she was about to marry!

It seemed to her that the preacher was sneering when he put the questions to which she answered quaveringly.  Vaguely she felt the presence of some cruel, sinister jest of which she was the sport.

After the ceremony had been finished the three men drank together while she sat white-faced before the fire.  When at last Ranse Roush and the red-headed preacher left the cabin, both of them were under the influence of liquor.  Dave had drunk freely himself.

’Lindy would have given her hopes of heaven to be back safely in the little mud-daubed bedroom she had called her own.

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Project Gutenberg
A Man Four-Square from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.