ing thing of mystery and glamour, such mystery and glamour as had irradiated his long and wonderful night. He heard the door open and then her light footsteps on the stair outside. Hot-eyed and
A man on the train reported your initials from your baggage.""I'll feel ever so much better when I have that bag. Is there a hotel near here?""A sort of one at Manzanita. It isn't very clean. But there'll be a train through to-night and I'll get you space on that. I'd better get a doctor for you first, hadn't I?""No, indeed! All I need is some fresh things."Banneker set off at a brisk pace. He found the extravagant little traveling-case safely closed and locked, and delivered it outside his own door which was also closed and, he suspected, locked."I'm thinking," said the soft voice of the girl within. "Don't let me interrupt your work."Beneath, at his routine, Banneker also set himself to think; confused, bewildered, impossibly conjectural thoughts not unmingled with semi-official anxiety. Harboring a woman on company property, even though she were, in some sense, a charge of the company, might be open to misconceptions. He wished that the mysterious Io would declare herself.At noon she did. She declared herself ready for luncheon. There was about her a matter-of-fact acceptance of the situation as natural, even inevitable, which entranced Banneker when it did not appall him. After the meal was over, the girl seated herself on a low bench which Banneker had built with his own hands and the Right-and-Ready Tool Kit (9 T 603), her knee between her clasped hands and an elfish expression on her face."Don't you think," she suggested, "that we'd get on quicker if you washed the dishes and I sat here and talked to you?""Very likely.""It isn't so easy to begin, you know," she remarked, nursing her knee thoughtfully. "Am I--Do you find me very much in the way?'""No.""Don't suppress your wild enthusiasm on my account," she besought him. "I haven't interfered with your duties so far, have I?""No," answered Banneker wondering what was coming next."You see"--her tone became ruminative and confidential--"if I give you my name and you report it, there'll be all kinds of a mix-up. They'll come after me and take me away."Banneker dropped a tin on the floor and stood, staring."Isn't that what you want?""It's evident enough that it's what _you_ want," she returned, aggrieved."No. Not at all," he disclaimed. "Only--well, out here--alone--I don't understand.""Can't you understand that if one had happened to drop out of the world by chance, it might be desirable to stay out for a while?""For _you_? No; I can't understand that.""What about yourself?" she challenged with a swift, amused gleam. "You are certainly staying out of the world here.""This is my world."Her eyes and voice dropped. "Truly?" she murmured. Then, as he made no reply, "It isn't much of a world for a man."To this his response touched the heights of the unexpected. He stretched out his arm toward the near window through which could be seen the white splendor of Mount Carstairs, dim in the wreathing murk."Lo! For there, amidst the flowers and grasses, Only the mightier movement sounds and passes, Only winds and rivers, Life and death," he quoted.Her eyes glowed with sheer, incredulous astonishment. "How came you by that Stevenson?" she demanded. "Are you poet as well as recluse?""I met him once.""Tell me about it.""Some other time. We've other things to talk of now.""Some other time? Then I'm to stay!""In Manzanita?""Manzanita? No. Here.""In this station? Alone? But why--""Because I'm Io Welland and I want to, and I always get what I want," she retorted calmly and superbly."Welland," he repeated. "Miss I.O. Welland. And the address is New York, isn't it?"Her hands grew tense across her knee, and deep in her shadowed eyes there was a flash. But her voice suggested not only appeal, but almost a hint of caress as she said:"Are you going to betray a guest? I've always heard that Western hospitality--""You're not my guest. You're the company's.""And you won't take me for yours?""Be reasonable, Miss Welland.""I suppose it's a question of the conventionalities," she mocked."I don't know or care anything about the conventionalities--""Nor I," she interrupted. "Out here.""--but my guess would be that they apply only to people who live in the same world. We don't, you and I.""That's rather shrewd of you," she observed."It isn't an easy matter to talk about to a young girl, you know.""Oh, yes, it is," she returned with composure. "Just take it for granted that I know about all there is to be known and am not afraid of it. I'm not afraid of anything, I think, except of--of having to go back just now." She rose and went to him, looking down into his eyes. "A woman knows whom she can trust in--in certain things. That's her gift, a gift no man has or quite understands. Dazed as I was last night, I knew I could trust you. I still know it. So we may dismiss that.""That is true," said Banneker,