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202 = LaucHING Boy he was thinking, but feeling the reality of =e i peril. At that dance, she paid no attention t= continued as ever, and treated Red Man w= cool friendliness. At home, she managed to biz; him into the talk, told Laughing Boy how he ==- sought to marry her once, and described Epon entire truth an ugly scene with him at Tsé Lez Her husband listened, and was gladly convincs- Her past was her past, he thought; he kr=v enough of her to know that it had been more thex unhappy, and that she had put it resolutely ze hind her. There was much suffering, many tz: things, of which she never spoke. Some day, pe-- haps, she could tell him. In any case, he believ=- what she did say, and even had the case bez otherwise, that was all dead. The next time they met, he contemplated == man, and guessed at the dimensions of his sc Taking an opportunity when they both were tz:- ing horses to water, he rode up beside him, sittizz sideways on his barebacked pony, one hand cz § the mane, one hand on the rump — a casual pes: for a careless chat. Red Man greeted hi non-committally., ‘Grandfather, let us not run around things, I=: us not pretend,’ he said. ‘You have not said ant- thing, but you have said too much. Do not prz- tend not to know what I mean. If yourlike wh: |