"Do you
believe me now?"
"Yes."
"Then go back into the South. I have come to tell you that again
to-night--to _make_ you believe me. You should have turned back at Le
Pas. If you don't go--to-morrow--"
Her voice seemed to choke her, and she stood without finishing, leaving
him to understand what she had meant to say. In an instant Howland was
at her side. Once more his old, resolute fighting blood was up. Firmly
he took her hands again, his eyes compelling her to look up at him.
"If I don't go to-morrow--they will kill me," he completed, repeating
the words of her note to him. "Now, if you are going to be honest with
me, tell me this--_who_ is going to kill me, and _why_?"
He felt a convulsive shudder pass through her as she answered,
"I said that I would not lie to you again. If I can not tell you the
truth I will tell you nothing. It is impossible for me to say why your
life is in danger."
"But you know?"
"Yes."
He seated her again in the chair beside the table and sat down opposite
her.
"Will you tell me who you are?"
She hesitated, twisting her fingers nervously in a silken strand of her
hair. "Will you?" he persisted.
"If I tell you who I am," she said at last, "you will know who is
threatening your life.
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