<h2>CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
<div class='chaptertitle'>A CHANGE OF FORTUNE</div>
<p><span class="smcap">It</span> was nearly two o'clock next day when the
thirtieth programme was finished and placed in
the last row of dainty cards, laid out for the family's
farewell inspection. While Lloyd cut the squares
of tissue-paper which were to lie between them,
Joyce brought the box in which they were to be
packed and the white ribbons to tie them.</p>
<p>Jack, having saddled Washington, was blacking
his shoes and making other preparations for his
ride to town. A special trip had to be made, in
order to get the package to the Phœnix post-office
in time.</p>
<p>"They might wait until morning, I suppose,"
said Joyce, as she began placing them carefully in
piles of ten. "But it is best to allow all the time
possible for delays. Then the programmes have to
be written on them after they get to Plainsville.
Oh, I <i>hope</i> Mrs. Link will like them!"</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_232" id="Page_232"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I don't see how she can help it!" exclaimed
Lloyd. "They're lovely, and I think you'd be so
proud of them you wouldn't know what to do."</p>
<p>"I am pleased with them," admitted Joyce, stopping
to take one last peep at the pretty rose-garlanded
Cupids ringing the bride-bells, which Phil
had suggested. It was the best design in the lot,
she thought.</p>
<p>"Oh, I forgot!" she exclaimed, suddenly, looking
up in dismay. "What shall I do? I promised
Mr. Armond that I'd let him see these cards before
I sent them away."</p>
<p>"You won't have time now," suggested Lloyd.</p>
<p>"I suppose Jack could wait a few minutes, but
I thought we'd start over to Shaw's ranch just as
soon as the cards were off. I didn't want to lose
a minute in getting my hive of bees, after I'd earned
them. It's such a long walk over there and back,
that I don't feel like going to the ranch first."</p>
<p>"Let Jack stop and show them to Mr. Armond,"
suggested her mother. "He's always so careful
that he can be trusted to tie the box up safely afterward."</p>
<p>"Oh, he's <i>safe</i> enough," answered Joyce, "but
he'd make such a mess of it, tying and untying the
white ribbons on the inside of the package. He<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_233" id="Page_233"></SPAN></span>
can't make a decent bow to save his life. He'd
have them all in knots and strings, and after all the
care I've taken I want Mrs. Link to find them just
as they leave me."</p>
<p>For a moment Joyce stood undecided, regretting
her promise to Mr. Armond, and sorely tempted
to break it.</p>
<p>"He won't really care," she thought, but his own
words came back to her plaintively: "There is so
little to interest one here,—if you don't mind
humouring an invalid's whims."</p>
<p>She couldn't forget the hopeless melancholy of
his face, and what Mr. Ellestad had said to her
about him: "He's just where Shapur was when
the caravan went on without him." And she remembered
that in the story Shapur had cursed the
day he was born, and laid his head in the dust.</p>
<p>"I'll go," she exclaimed. "Jack can follow as
soon as he is ready, and I'll hand the package to
him as he passes. I'll be back as soon as I can,
Lloyd, and then we'll start right over to Mr. Shaw's.
You explain to Jack, please, mamma, and give him
the money to pay the postage."</p>
<p>Stopping only long enough to write the address
on the wrapper, she hurried down the road, bareheaded,
toward the ranch. Lloyd sat down on<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_234" id="Page_234"></SPAN></span>
the front door-step to wait for her return. Opening
a book, in which she had become interested, she
was soon so deep in the story that she scarcely
noticed when Jack rode away, a quarter of an hour
later, glancing up for just an instant as she waved
her hand mechanically in answer to his call.</p>
<p>The kitchen clock struck half-past two, then three.
With the last stroke came a vague consciousness
that it was growing late, and that Joyce was long
in coming, but the absorbing interest of the story
made her immediately forgetful again of her surroundings.</p>
<p>It was nearly four when Mrs. Ware, coming out
beside her on the step, stood shading her eyes with
her hand to peer down the road.</p>
<p>"I can't imagine what keeps Joyce so long," she
said, anxiously. "It will soon be too late for you
to go to the Shaws."</p>
<p>But even as she spoke, Joyce came in sight, running
as Lloyd had never seen her run before. She
had left the dusty road, and was bobbing along on
the edge of the desert, where the hard, dry sand,
baked into a crust, made travelling easier.</p>
<p>"Oh, you'll never, never guess what kept me!"
she called, as she hurried up to the door, eager and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_235" id="Page_235"></SPAN></span>
breathless. Seizing her mother around the waist,
she gave her a great squeeze.</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm so happy! So happy and excited that
I don't know whether I'm on my head or my heels.
I feel like a cyclone caught in a jubilee, or a jubilee
caught in a cyclone, I don't know which. There
never was such glorious good fortune in the world
for anybody!"</p>
<p>"Do stop yoah prancing and dancing and tell
us," demanded Lloyd, "or we'll think that you've
lost yoah mind."</p>
<p>Joyce sank down beside her on the door-step.
Her face was shining with a great gladness, and
she could hardly find breath to begin.</p>
<p>"Oh, there aren't words good enough to tell it
in!" she gasped.</p>
<p>"Mr. Armond is an artist, mother, a really great
one, who has had pictures hung in the Salon and
the Academy. Mr. Ellestad walked part of the way
home with me, and told me about him. He studied
for years in Paris, and lived in the Latin Quarter,
and had a studio there, just like Cousin Kate's
friend, Mr. Harvey. And <i>that's</i> the man Mr. Armond
looks like," she added, triumphantly. "I've
been trying to think ever since I first met him, who
I had seen before with a short Vandyke beard like<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_236" id="Page_236"></SPAN></span>
his, and long, alive-looking fingers, that seem to
have brains of their own."</p>
<p>"And that's what makes you so glad," laughed
Lloyd, "to think you've discovered the resemblance?
Do get to the point. I'm wild to know."</p>
<p>"Well, he liked my work, thought it showed
originality and promise, and, if mamma is willing,
he wants to give me lessons. Think of that, Lloyd
Sherman,—lessons from an artist, a really great
artist like that! Why, it would mean more for me
than years of class instruction in the Art League,
or anywhere else. He seemed pleased when I told
him that I wanted to do illustrating, because he
said that that was something practical, and work
that would find a ready market. He told me so
many interesting things about famous illustrators
that he has known, that I have come away all on
fire to begin. My fingers fairly tingle. Oh,
mamma!" she cried, two great happy tears welling
up into her eyes. "Isn't it splendid? The story
of Shapur is true! For me the desert holds a greater
opportunity than kings' houses could offer!"</p>
<p>"But the price, my dear little girl—"</p>
<p>"And that's the best of it," interrupted Joyce.
"He asked to be allowed to do it for nothing. Time
hangs so heavily on his hands that he said it would<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_237" id="Page_237"></SPAN></span>
be a charity to give him something to do, and Mr.
Ellestad told me afterward, as we walked home, that
I ought to let him, because it's the first thing that
he has taken any interest in for months; that with
something to occupy his mind and make him contented,
he would get better much faster.</p>
<p>"When I tried to thank him, and told him that
he had showed me a better way to the City of my
Desire than the one I had planned for myself, he
said, with the brightest kind of a smile, 'I expect
to get far more out of this arrangement than you,
my little girl. <i>You</i> are the alchemist whose courage
and hope shall help me distil some drop of Contentment
out of this dreary existence.'</p>
<p>"He is going to drive up here to-morrow, to ask
you about it, and to see the work I have already
done. I'm glad now that I saved all those charcoal
sketches of block hands and ears and things. And
I'm going to get out all those still life studies I did
with Miss Brown, and pin them up on the wall, so
he'll know just how far I've gone, and where to
start in with me."</p>
<p>"Get them out now," said Lloyd. "You never
did show them to me."</p>
<p>There was some very creditable work hidden away
in the old portfolio, and, while they talked and<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_238" id="Page_238"></SPAN></span>
looked and arranged the studies on the wall, time
slipped by unnoticed.</p>
<p>"Aren't you mighty proud, Aunt Emily?" asked
Lloyd, stepping back for a final view, when the
exhibit was duly arranged.</p>
<p>"Proud and glad," answered Mrs. Ware, with
a happy light in her eyes. "It was always my dream
to be an artist myself, and now to see my unfulfilled
ambitions realized in Joyce more than compensates
for all my disappointments."</p>
<p>"Phil's coming," called Norman, from the yard.</p>
<p>"And we haven't started for the bees!" exclaimed
Joyce. "It's so late, we'll have to put it off
until to-morrow."</p>
<p>But all plans for the morrow were laid aside when
Phil told his errand. He would not dismount, but
paused just a moment to invite them to the promised
picnic at Hole-in-the-rock.</p>
<p>"Everybody on the ranch is going," he explained.
"Even Jo, to make the coffee and unpack the lunch.
There'll be a carriage here for you, Aunt Emily, at
three o'clock, and you must let Mary and Holland
stay home from school to go. No, don't bother to
take any picnic baskets," he interrupted, hastily, as
Mrs. Ware started to say something about lunch.
"This is my affair. Jo is equal to anything, even<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_239" id="Page_239"></SPAN></span>
cherry tarts and custard pies, and I must make the
atonement I promised to Lloyd, for spilling hers."</p>
<p>Waiting only long enough to hear their pleased
acceptance, he dashed off down the road again.
Ever since her arrival in Arizona Lloyd had wanted
to see the famous hole in the rock. It lay several
miles across the desert, in a great red butte. There
was a picture of it in the ranch parlour, and nearly
every tourist who passed through Phœnix made a
pilgrimage to the spot, and took snap shots of this
curious freak of nature.</p>
<p>Climbing up the butte toward it, one seemed to
be going into a mighty cave, but when he had passed
up into the opening, and down over a ledge of rock,
he saw that the cave led straight through the butte,
like an enormous tunnel, and at the farther end
opened out on the other side of the mountain, giving
a wide outlook over the surrounding desert.
It was a favourite spot for picnic parties, but of all
ever gathered there, none had had so many preparations
made for the comfort of the guests. Phil rode
over several times; once to be sure that the wood
he had ordered for the camp-fire had been delivered,
and again to take a load of canvas chairs, rubber
blankets, rugs, and cushions, so that even the invalids
on the ranch could enjoy the outing.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_240" id="Page_240"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>It was the first of March. Where the irrigating
ditches ran, almond and peach orchards were pink
with bloom. California poppies, golden as the sunshine,
nodded on the edges of the waving green
wheat. Even the dry, hard desert was sweet in
its miracle of blossoming. A carpet of bloom covered
it. Stems so short that they could scarcely
raise the buds they bore above the sand bravely
pierced the hard-baked crust. Great masses of
yellow and blue, white, lavender, and scarlet transformed
the bleak solitary places for a little while
into a glory of colour and perfume. An odour,
sweet as if blown across acres of narcissus, made
Mrs. Ware turn her head with a little cry of pleasure
as they drove along toward the butte the afternoon
of the picnic.</p>
<p>"It's the desert mistletoe," explained Phil, who
was following on horseback with Lloyd and Joyce
the surrey which Jack was driving.</p>
<p>"It is in blossom now, hanging in bunches from
all those high bushes over yonder. Mrs. Lee says
it isn't like ours. The berries, instead of being little
white wax ones like pearls, shade from a deep red
to the palest rose-pink."</p>
<p>"How lovely!" exclaimed Lloyd. "I hope I'll
see some of the berries befoah I go home. Oh,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_241" id="Page_241"></SPAN></span>
deah! the days are slipping by so fast. The month
will be gone befoah I know it."</p>
<p>Phil, seeing the wistful expression in the eyes
raised to his for a moment, laid a detaining hand
on her bridle-rein. "Let's walk the horses, then,"
he said, laughingly, "and make the minutes last
just as long as possible. We'll have to fill the few
days left to us so full of pleasant things that you'll
never forget them. I don't want you to forget this
day anyhow, because it's in your especial honour
that this picnic is given—because you're such an
accomplished Queen of Hearts."</p>
<p>"Tahts you mean," she answered, correcting him.</p>
<p>"Maybe I mean both," he replied, with an admiring
glance that sent a quick blush to her face, and
made her spur her pony on ahead.</p>
<p>There were more things than that fragrant, breezy
ride across the desert to make her remember the
day. There was the delicious supper that Jo spread
out under the sheltering ledge of rock at the entrance
to the great hole. There were the jokes and
conundrums that passed around as they ate, the
witty repartee of the boy from Belfast that kept
them all laughing, and the stories gathered, like
the guests, from all parts of the world.</p>
<p>"This is the first picnic I have been to since the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_242" id="Page_242"></SPAN></span>
one at the old mill, when you had your house-party,"
said Joyce, snuggling up beside Lloyd against a
pile of cushions, after supper, as the blazing camp-fire
dispelled the gathering shadows of the twilight.</p>
<p>"There is as much difference between the two
picnics as there is between a cat and a tigah," said
Lloyd, tingling with the horror of an Indian story
that the cowboy had just told. "Mine was so tame
and this is so exciting. I'm glad that I didn't live
out West in the times they are telling about. Just
listen!"</p>
<p>Phil had asked for an Indian story from each one,
and Mrs. Lee had begun to tell her experiences during
her first years on the ranch. No actual harm
had come to her, but several terrible frights during
a dreadful Apache uprising. She had been alone
on the ranch, with only George, who was a baby
then, and a neighbour's daughter for company.
They had seen the smoke and flames shoot up from
a distant ranch, where the Indians fired all the
buildings and haystacks; and they had waited in
terror through the long hours, not knowing what
moment an arrow might come hurtling through the
window of the little adobe house, where they cowered
in darkness.</p>
<p>In frightened whispers they discussed what they<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_243" id="Page_243"></SPAN></span>
should do if the Apaches should come, and the only
means of escape left to them was to take the baby
and climb down the jagged rocks that lined the
walls of the well. The water was about shoulder
deep. Even that was a dangerous proceeding, for
there was the fear that the baby might cry and call
attention to their hiding-place, or that some thirsty
Indian, coming for water, might discover them.</p>
<p>Mrs. Lee told it in such a realistic way that Lloyd
almost held her breath, feeling in part the same
fear that had seized the helpless women as they
waited for the dreaded war-whoop, and watched
the flames of their neighbours' dwellings. She
shuddered when she heard of the scene that was discovered
at the desolated ranch next morning. An
entire family had been massacred and scalped, and
left beside the charred ruins of their home. Even
the little blue-eyed baby had not escaped.</p>
<p>As the twilight deepened, the stories passing
around the camp-fire seemed to grow more dreadful.
Mary was afraid to look behind her, and presently,
hiding her face in her mother's lap, stuck her fingers
in her ears. It was a relief to more than Mary
when Jo, who had been packing the dishes back
into the baskets behind the scenes, came rushing
into the circle around the fire so excited that, in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_244" id="Page_244"></SPAN></span>
his wild mixture of Japanese and broken English,
he could hardly make himself understood. He was
holding out both forefingers, from each of which
trickled a little stream of blood. Each bore the
gash of a carving-knife, which had slipped through
his fingers in his careless handling of it, as he kept
his ears strained to hear the Indian stories.</p>
<div class="figleft"> <ANTIMG src="images/i_267.jpg" width-obs="382" height-obs="450" alt="holding up hands" />
<span class="caption">"HE WAS HOLDING OUT BOTH FOREFINGERS"</span></div>
<p>He laughed and jabbered excitedly, with a broad
grin on his face. Finally he succeeded in making
Mrs. Lee understand that the cutting of both forefingers
at the same moment was the sign that there
was some extraordinary good fortune in store for
him. It was the luckiest thing that could have
befallen him, and he declared that he must go at
once to the Chinese lottery in Phœnix.</p>
<p>"If I toucha ticket with these," he cried, holding
up his bleeding fingers, "I geta heap much
money; fo', five double times so much as I puta
in. I be back fo' geta breakfus'," he called, suddenly
darting away. Before Mrs. Lee could protest,
he was on his wheel, tearing across the desert trail
toward Phœnix like some uncanny wild thing of
the night.</p>
<p>"The superstitious little heathen!" exclaimed
Mrs. Lee. "If he should win, I may never lay eyes
on him again. He's not the first good cook that
I've lost in that way. I have found that, if one once
gets the gambling fever, I may as well begin to
look immediately for a new one."</p>
<p>"Chris says that he has seen men lose ten thousand
dollars at a time," broke in Holland, his eyes
big with interest. "Prospectors used to come in
from the mines with their gold-dust and nuggets, and
they'd spread down a blanket right on the street
corner and play sometimes till they'd lose everything
they had."</p>
<p>"It's the curse of the West," sighed Mrs. Lee.
"I could tell some pitiful tales of the young men
and boys I have known, who came out here for their
health, got infatuated with the different games of
chance, and lost everything. One man I knew was
such a nervous wreck from the shock of finding
himself a pauper as well as an invalid that he lost
his mind and committed suicide. Another had to
be taken care of in his last days and be buried by
a charitable society, and another had to write to
his sister that he was penniless. She sewed for a
living, and she sewed then to support him, till she
worked herself ill and died before he did. He spent
his last days in the almshouse."</p>
<p>"We should have showed Jo Alaka's eyes, and
told him the Indian legend," said Mr. Ellestad,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_245" id="Page_245"></SPAN><br/><SPAN name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[246]</SPAN></span>
pointing up to the stars. "Do you see those two
bright ones just over Camelback Mountain? Look
up in a straight line from the head, and you will
see two stars unusually brilliant and twinkling.
Those are the eyes of the god Alaka. He lost them
in gambling. An old settler told me the story.
He got it from an Indian, and, as I read something
like it in a Chicago paper this winter, I think we
may be justified in believing it. At least it is as
plausible as the old myths the ancients told of the
stars,—Cassiopeia's chair, for instance, and Leo's
sickle."</p>
<p>"Tell it," begged Lloyd. "I'd rathah heah them
than those blood and thundah Apache stories. I'll
not be able to close my eyes to-night."</p>
<p>Every voice in the circle joined in the chorus
of assents that went up, except Phil's, and no one
noticed his silence but Lloyd.</p>
<p>It seemed to her that he had looked uncomfortable
ever since Mrs. Lee had spoken so feelingly of the
curse of the West; but she told herself that it must
be just her imagination,—that it was the flickering
shadows of the camp-fire that gave his face its peculiar
expression. He moved back into the darkness
against the rock, with his hat over his eyes,
as Mr. Ellestad began the story:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_247" id="Page_247"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Once there was a young god named Alaka
sent by the Great Spirit to live awhile among the
cliff-dwellers of the Southwest. Now in that country
there is a fever that lays hold of the children
of the sun. It comes you know not how, and you
cannot stop it. And this fever that runs hot in
the veins of men began to course through the blood
of Alaka, a fierce fever to gamble.</p>
<p>"At first, when men challenged him to pit his
skill against theirs, he refused, knowing that the
Great Spirit had forbidden it; but they jeered him,
saying: 'Ah, ha! He is afraid that he will lose.
This can be no god, or he would not fear us.' So
when they had made a mock of him until he could
no longer endure it, he cried: 'Come! I will show
you that I am a god! that I fear nothing!'</p>
<p>"Forgetting all that the Great Spirit had enjoined
upon him, he plunged madly into the game.
Now the most precious thing known to that people
is the turquoise, for it is the stone that stole its
colour from the sky. Around the neck of the young
god hung a string of these turquoises, and one by
one he lost them, till the morning found him with
only an empty string in his hand.</p>
<p>"Still the fever was upon him, and he could not
assuage it, so he put up his shells from the Great<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_248" id="Page_248"></SPAN></span>
Water in the west. These people had heard of a
great water many days' journey toward the setting
sun, but to the dwellers in the Land of Thirst it
seemed incredible to them that there could be so
much water in the world as Alaka told them of.
But they looked upon the exquisite colour of the
shells he brought, which held the murmur of the
sea in their hearts, and counted them wonderful
treasures. And they gambled all day with Alaka
to gain possession of them.</p>
<p>"Still the fever waxed hotter than ever within
him, and, when he had lost his shells, he put up
his measure of sacred meal. When he lost that,
they made a mock of him again, saying not that he
was afraid to lose, but that he had no skill, that
he was not a god. He was less than a man,—he
was only a papoose, and that he should play no more
until he had learned wisdom.</p>
<p>"Then Alaka was beside himself with rage. 'I
will show you,' he cried. 'I will venture such
mighty stakes that I must win.' He plucked out
his right eye and laid it where the turquoises, the
shells, and the sacred meal had lain. But the eye
was lost also, and after that the left eye, so that,
when morning dawned, he staggered into the sunrise,
blind and ruined.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_249" id="Page_249"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Then he called upon the Great Spirit to give
him back his sight, but the Great Spirit was angry
with him, and drove him away into the Land of
Shadows. And He caught up the eyes and said:
'I will hang them up among the stars to be a
warning for ever to the children of men not to
gamble.'</p>
<p>"So they hang there to this day, and the wise
look up, and, seeing them, pray to the Great Spirit
to keep them from the fever; but the unheeding
go on, till, like Alaka, they lose their all, and are
lost themselves in the Land of Shadow."</p>
<p>That was the last story told that evening around
the camp-fire. The moon was coming up, and Phil
brought out Mrs. Ware's old guitar, which he had
restrung for the occasion. Striking a few rattling
chords, he started off on an old familiar song, calling
on all the company to join. His voice was a
surprise to every one, a full, sweet tenor, strong
and clear, that soared out above all the others, except
Mrs. Lee's full, high soprano. The Scotchman
rumbled along with a heavy bass. One by one
the others caught up the song, even little Norman
joining in the chorus. Lloyd was the only one who
sat silent.</p>
<p>"Sing," whispered Joyce, giving her a commanding<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_250" id="Page_250"></SPAN></span>
nudge. Lloyd shook her head. "It's so heavenly
sweet I want to listen," she replied, under cover
of the song. The music and the mountains and the
moonlight, with the wide, white desert stretching
away on every side, seemed to cast some sort of
witchery over her, and she sat with hands clasped
and lips parted, almost afraid to breathe, for fear
that what seemed to be a beautiful dream would
come to end.</p>
<p>A tremulous little sigh escaped her when it did
come to an end. "It's time to strike the trail
again," called Mrs. Lee. "That is the worst of
these outings. We can't stay singing on the mountains.
We have to get down to earth again. My
return to valley life will take me into the deepest
depths if Jo doesn't come back in the morning to
get breakfast."</p>
<p>"Oh, it was so beautiful!" sighed Lloyd, later,
when the party finally started homeward across the
moon-whitened desert. It had taken some time to
collect all the chairs, hampers, and cushions which
George and Holland took home in the ranch wagon.
The moon was directly overhead.</p>
<p>Lloyd was riding beside Phil a little in advance
of the others. "It was the very nicest picnic I
evah went to, Phil," she said, "and it's the loveliest<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_251" id="Page_251"></SPAN></span>
memory that I'll have to take home with me of this
visit to Arizona."</p>
<p>"I'm glad you enjoyed it," he answered, taking
off his hat, and riding along beside her bareheaded
in the moonlight. How big and handsome he
looked, she thought, sitting up so erect in his
saddle, with his eyes smiling down into hers.</p>
<p>"I don't want you ever to forget—" he hesitated
an instant, then added in a lower tone, "Arizona."</p>
<p>The sweet odours of the night came blowing up
from every direction, the ethereal fragrance of the
mistletoe bloom, the heavy perfume of the orange-blossoms
hanging white in distant orchards. Behind
them the picnickers began to sing again, "Roll
along, silver moon, guide the traveller on his
way."</p>
<p>Lloyd looked around for Joyce. She was riding
far in the rear of the caravan, beside the carriage
where Mrs. Lee led the chorus. Presently the old
tune changed, and some one started the Bedouin
love-song, "From the desert I come to thee."</p>
<p>Looking down at her again with smiling eyes,
Phil took up the words, sending them rolling out
on the night in a voice that thrilled her with its<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_252" id="Page_252"></SPAN></span>
sweetness, as they rode on side by side across
moonlighted desert:</p>
<div class='poem'>
"<i>Till the sun grows cold,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And the stars are old,</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 0.5em;">And the leaves of the Judgment</span><br/>
<span style="margin-left: 1.5em;">Book unfold!"</span></i><br/></div>
<hr class="chap" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_253" id="Page_253"></SPAN></span></p>
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