Bucky O'Connor: A Tale of the Unfenced Border by William MacLeod Raine (iphone ebook reader .TXT) ๐
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- Author: William MacLeod Raine
Read book online ยซBucky O'Connor: A Tale of the Unfenced Border by William MacLeod Raine (iphone ebook reader .TXT) ๐ยป. Author - William MacLeod Raine
โDo I look as if I thought that?โ he asked her.
โIt is perfectly ridiculousโyour absurd attitude of taking everything for granted. Well, it may be the Tucson custom, but where I come from it is not in vogue.โ
โNo, I reckon not. Back there a boy persuades girl he loves her by ruining her digestion with candy and all sorts of ice arrangements from soda-fountain. But I'm uncivilized enough to assume you're a woman of sense and not a spoiled schoolgirl.โ
The velvet night was attuned to the rhythm of her love. She felt herself, in this sea of moon romance, being swept from her moorings. Star-eyed, she gazed at him while she still fought again his dominance.
โYou ARE uncivilized. Would you beat me when I didn't obey?โ she asked tremulously.
He laughed in slow contentment. โPerhaps; but I'd love you while I did it.โ
โOh, you would love me.โ She looked across under her long lashes, not as boldly as she would have liked, and her gaze fell before his. โI haven t heard before that that was in the compact you proposed. I don't think you have remembered to mention it.โ
He swung from the saddle and put a hand to her bridle rein.
โGet down,โ he ordered.
โWhy?โ
โBecause I say so. Get down.โ
She looked down at him, a man out of a thousand and for her one out of a hundred million. Before she was conscious of willing it she stood beside him. He trailed the reins of the ponies, and in two strides came back to her.
โWhatโdo youโwant?โ
โI want you, girl.โ His arm swept round her, and he held her while he looked down into her shining eyes. โSo I haven't told you that I love you. Did you need to be told?โ
โWe must go on,โ she murmured weakly. โFrances and Lieutenant O'Connorโโ
โโHave their own love-affairs to attend to.
โWe'll manage ours and not intrude.โ
โThey might thinkโโ
He laughed in deep delight, โโthat we love each other. They're welcome to the thought. I haven't told you that I love you, eh? I tell you now. It's my last trump, and right here I table it. I'm no desert poet, but I love you from that dark crown of yours to those little feet that tap the floor so impatient sometimes. I love you all the time, no matter what mood you're inโwhen you flash dark angry eyes at me and when you laugh in that slow, understanding way nobody else in God's world has the trick of. Makes no difference to me whether you're glad or mad, I want you just the same. That's the reason why I'm going to make you love me.โ
โYou can't do it.โ Her voice was very low and not quite steady.
โWhy notโI'll show you.โ
โBut you can'tโfor a good reason.โ
โPut a name to it.โ
โBecause. Oh, you big blind manโbecause I love you already.โ She burlesqued his drawl with a little joyous laugh: โI reckon if you're right set on it I'll have to marry you, Val Collins.โ
His arm tightened about her as if he would hold her against the whole world. His ardent eyes possessed hers. She felt herself grow faint with a poignant delight. Her lips met his slowly in their first kiss.
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