[The Seventh Man by Max Brand]@TWC D-Link bookThe Seventh Man CHAPTER XXIV 3/11
The loneliness of the little figure made Kate's heart ache, made her pause on her way, and while she hesitated, Joan's head rested back against the rock, her eyes half closed, her lips pursed, she began to whistle that same keen, eerie music. It brought Kate to her in a rush. "Oh Joan!" she cried.
"My baby!" And she would have swept the child into her arms, but Joan slipped out from under her very fingers and stood a little distance off with her hands pressed against the wall on either side of her, ready to dart one way or the other.
It was not sudden terror, but rather a resolute determination to struggle against capture to the end, and her blue eyes were blazing with excitement.
Kate was on her knees with her arms held out. "Joan, dear, have you forgotten munner ?" The wildness flickered away from the eyes of the child little by little. "Munner ?" she repeated dubiously. No shout of welcome, no sudden rush, no arms to fling about her mother. But if her throat was dry and closed Kate allowed no sign of it to creep into her voice. "Where's Daddy Dan ?" "He's gone away." "Where ?" "Oh--over there!" The mother rose slowly to her feet, and looked out across the mountains as if in search of aid.
For her mind had harked back to that story her father used to tell of the coming of Dan Barry; how he had ridden across the hills one evening and saw, walking against the sunset, a tattered boy who whistled strangely as he went, and when old Joe Cumberland asked where he was going he had only waved a vague hand toward the north and answered, "Oh--over there.
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