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CHAPTER XV. THE RESCUE
AFTER Byrne had dropped the lifeless form of his enemy to the ground he turned
and retraced his steps toward the island, a broad grin upon his face as he
climbed to the girl's side.
"I guess I'd better overhaul this gat," he said, "and stick around home. It isn't safe
to leave you alone here--I can see that pretty plainly. Gee, supposin' I'd got out of
sight before he showed himself!" And the man shuddered visibly at the thought.
The girl had not spoken and the man looked up suddenly, attracted by her
silence. He saw a look of horror in her eyes, such as he had seen there once
before when he had kicked the unconscious Theriere that time upon the
Halfmoon.
"What's the matter?" he asked, alarmed. "What have I done now? I had to croak
the stiff--he'd have got me sure if I hadn't, and then he'd have got you, too. I had
to do it for your sake--I'm sorry you saw it."
"
It isn't that," she said slowly. "That was very brave, and very wonderful. It's Mr.
Mallory I'm thinking of. O Billy! How could you do it?"
The man hung his head.
"
Please don't," he begged. "I'd give my life to bring him back again, for your sake. I
know now that you loved him, and I've tried to do all I could to atone for what I
did to him; just as I tried to play white with Theriere when I found that he loved
you, and intended to be on the square with you. He was your kind, and I hoped
that by helping him to win you fairly it might help to wipe out what I had done to
Mallory. I see that nothing ever can wipe that out. I've got to go through life
regretting it because you have taught me what a brutal, cowardly thing I did. If it
hadn't been for you I'd always have been proud of it--but you and Theriere taught
me to look at things in a different way than I ever had learned to before. I'm not
sorry for that--I'm glad, for if remorse is a part of my punishment I'll take it gladly
and welcome the chance to get a little of what's coming to me. Only please don't
look at me that way any more--it's more than I can stand, from you."
It was the first time that the man ever had opened his heart in any such whole-
souled way to her, and it touched the girl more than she would have cared to
admit.
"
"
It would be silly to tell you that I ever can forget that terrible affair," she said;
but somehow I feel that the man who did that was an entirely different man from
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