Stewart Edward White

The Rose Dawn


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or as if it were muffled. Then I come to with an awful start!"

      "That is very interesting. What does he say?"

      "I never can remember. It's just a waking dream."

      "You never saw Dolman, you say?"

      "No; I never did. But after I had sat quite still for some time staring out through the leaves I used to see queer things. The leaves would disappear and I would see a sort of revolving disk of gold and black. It was very bright and beautiful and went around very fast. My heart used to beat so with excitement, and I would try to keep on seeing it, but I never could hold it longer than a moment or so. When I saw it my eyes seemed sort of unfocussed; and they always would come back focussed again. It was lovely, and I used to think Dolman showed it to me."

      "How long since you have seen that?"

      "Oh, years! But I can shut my eyes and see it sometimes yet. Memory, I suppose. It is not so bright and it moves more slowly than it used to. I can sometimes almost make out the pattern on it." She hesitated, and crept closer to him: "Godfather, you mustn't laugh. I told you I couldn't remember anything Dolman told me. That isn't so. There is only one thing but I remember that very clearly. He said that when the disk stopped and I could make out the design on it, I would die."

      The Colonel laughed. "What quaint ideas little children have, don't they, Puss?" he said in a matter-of-fact voice.

      ​"No, but listen, godpapa: here is something I never told a soul. Promise you won't tell?"

      "I promise."

      "Not even Aunt Allie?"

      "Not even Aunt Allie."

      "Well, you remember that Miss Mathews, who visited you last spring, and how I found the watch she lost?"

      "Perfectly."

      "We all looked everywhere for it, and she felt so badly about it because it belonged to her mother. I was very sorry for her. While I was looking I came out here to Dolman's House. And I heard him just as plainly as when I was a child. He said: 'She dropped it when she was picking flowers'; and I found out that she had been picking flowers away up the cañon near the falls; and I went up there and found it almost first crack. How do you 'splain that?"

      She was staring up at him, her face showing pale through the dusk, her eyes wide with excitement.

      "I declare you do believe in Dolman!" accused the Colonel, in a light tone designed to relieve the tension, "and I'm almost inclined to myself. I would if he would tell me where I left my second-best hat."

      At this moment Brainerd's voice was heard hailing them. They answered.

      "Oh, there you are," he observed, slouching forward with Mrs. Peyton. "Wonder you wouldn't hide. Come, Daffy, it's very late."

      Daphne made her required little speeches of thanks.

      "I am going to make some marmalade to-morrow afternoon," Mrs. Peyton told her. "Better come over and make some, too. I'll show you my new recipe."

      "I will, Aunt Allie. Good-night," replied Daphne. She moved away sedately for ten yards, then came flying back all swirl and legs, seized the Colonel and Mrs. Peyton, hugged and kissed them tempestuously, and was off again.

      "She's a dear child," said Mrs. Peyton, rearranging her somewhat rumpled plumage. "I wish she had more young folks to play with."

      ​"She has me," contended the Colonel.

      "Oh, you! I didn't say an infant to care for!"

      The Colonel put his arm around her and they sauntered back toward the twinkling lights of the ranch house.

      "Happy day, sweetheart?" he asked.

      "Do you know, Richard," she said soberly, "that we are very lucky people? We have each other, and dear friends, and live in this wonderful country, and have all the wealth we need——"

      A white figure loomed before them and the Colonel withdrew his arm rather hastily.

      "You catch cold," commanded Sing Toy. "You come in house light away!"

      1  A buckskin, but with silver mane and tail.

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