"You have heard all the talk to-night, Lieutenant Melville, have you not?" she asked.
"I suppose that you have in mind the new alliance with the French that the rebels have made?" I said.
"Yes," she said. "That has been the burden of our talk."
"I could not escape it," I replied. "It is a very promising matter for the rebels, and for that reason a very unpromising one for us."
"The French," she said, "would consider it a glorious revenge upon us for our many victories at their expense, if they could help the rebels to certain triumph over us. It would shear off the right arm of England."
I looked with wonder at this woman who could thus preserve her false part with me when she knew I knew so well that it was false. I thought she might never again refer to our night ride, our companionship in danger. It was not anything that I wished to forget. In truth, I did not wish to forget any part of it. Yet if I had reflected, I should have seen that she had reason to forget that night's ride, since she must distrust me. Evidently Wildfoot had not told her who I was, and while I must be a friend in some way or the ranger would not have let me go, she could not guess the whole truth.
"Do you think, Lieutenant Melville," she asked, turning a very thoughtful face towards me, "that this alliance will crush the English, or will the French intervention incite them to more strenuous efforts?"
"I think, Miss Desmond," I replied, piqued and suddenly determining to play my part as well as she, "that we will defeat Americans and French combined. You know we are accustomed to victory over the French."
"It is as you say," she said; "but when one reads French histories one finds French victories over the English also."