The Mucker


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He had been standing with eyes upon the ground, his heavy hand still gripping  
the girl's arm. He looked into her face again. She was waiting there, her great  
eyes upon his filled with fear and questioning, like a prisoner before the bar  
awaiting the sentence of her judge.  
As the man looked at Barbara Harding standing there before him he saw her in a  
strange new light, and a sudden realization of the truth flashed upon him. He  
saw that he could not harm her now, or ever, for he loved her!  
And with the awakening there came to Billy Byrne the withering, numbing  
knowledge that his love must forever be a hopeless one--that this girl of the  
aristocracy could never be for such as he.  
Barbara Harding, still looking questioningly at him, saw the change that came  
across his countenance--she saw the swift pain that shot to the man's eyes, and  
she wondered. His fingers released their grasp upon her arm. His hands fell  
limply to his sides.  
"Don't be afraid," he said. "Please don't be afraid o' me. I couldn't hurt youse if I  
tried."  
A deep sigh of relief broke from the girl's lips--relief and joy; and she realized that  
its cause was as much that the man had proved true to the new estimate she had  
recently placed upon him as that the danger to herself had passed.  
"Come," said Billy Byrne, "we'd better move in a bit out o' sight o' de mainland,  
an' look fer a place to make camp. I reckon we'd orter rest here for a few days till  
we git in shape ag'in. I know youse must be dead beat, an' I sure am, all right, all  
right."  
Together they sought a favorable site for their new home, and it was as though  
the horrid specter of a few moments before had never risen to menace them, for  
the girl felt that a great burden of apprehension had been lifted forever from her  
shoulders, and though a dull ache gnawed at the mucker's heart, still he was  
happier than he had ever been before--happy to be near the woman he loved.  
With the long sword of Oda Yorimoto, Billy Byrne cut saplings and bamboo and  
the fronds of fan palms, and with long tough grasses bound them together into  
the semblance of a rude hut. Barbara gathered leaves and grasses with which she  
covered the floor.  
"Number One, Riverside Drive," said the mucker, with a grin, when the work was  
completed; "an' now I'll go down on de river front an' build de Bowery."  
"
Oh, are you from New York?" asked the girl.  
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