She looked him full in the eyes, and no word could have answered plainer than the disdain which swept across her lovely face.
“What do you think of me, Phil?” she asked, in hurt tones, and he answered with his eyes because he could not trust his voice.
The longing to throw her arms about the man whose burning eyes had set her heart afire was almost uncontrollable; the hope that he would throw off restraint and cry out his love, drove her timidly into silent expectancy. His whole soul surged to his lips and eyes, but he fought back the words that would have made them both so happy. He knew she loved him; the faintest whisper from him would cause her lips to breathe the passion her eyes revealed. And yet he was strong enough to bide his time.
How long this exquisite communion of thoughts lasted neither knew nor cared. Through the leafy wood they drove, in utter silence, both understanding, both revealing, both waiting. He dared not look at the glorious, love-lit face, he dared not speak to her, he dared not tempt the heart that might betray his head. It was he who at last broke that joyous calm, and his voice was husky with suppressed emotion.
“You will not forget that some day I am coming to you as Phil Quentin and not in the mask of a bandit.”
“I shall expect you, robber, to appear before a certain tribunal and there explain, if you can, what led you to commit the crime that has shocked the world,” she said, brightly.
“I implore the leniency of the high court,” he said, tenderly.
“The court can only put you on probation and exact the promise that you will never steal another girl.”
“And the length of probation?”
“For all your natural life,” demurely.