A young stranger also came, handsome,
brave, and brilliant. He was such a man as any girl could like and any
man admire. The girl liked him, and she admired him. The two young men
quarreled; they fought; and the girl parted them. Again they would have
fought, but this time the girl's 'life was in danger. The stranger was
wounded in saving her. She owed him a debt--such a debt as only a woman
can feel; because a woman loves a noble deed more than she loves her
life--a good woman."
She paused, and for an instant something shook in her throat. Her
husband looked at her with a deep wonder. And although Iberville's eyes
played with his glass of wine, they were fascinated by her face, and his
ear was strangely charmed by her voice.
"Will you go on?" he said.
"The three parted. The girl never forgot the stranger. What might have
happened if he had always been near her, who can tell--who can tell?
Again in later years the two men met, the stranger the aggressor--without
due cause."
"Pardon me, madame, the deepest cause," said Iberville meaningly.
She pretended not to understand, and continued: "The girl, believing that
what she was expected to do would be best for her, promised her hand in
marriage.
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