"What it is I don't know, but you say you're in trouble and I believe
you." Suddenly a sharp look came to his face. "Is it a woman?"
"It's not a man."
"Well, you ought to know how to handle a woman. You're popular with
women. My wife'll never hear a word against you. I don't know how you
do it. We're so little alike, it makes me feel sometimes we're not
brothers. I don't know where you get your temperament from."
"It doesn't matter where I got it, it's mine. I want to earn my own
living, and I'm doing it." Admiration came into Fabian's face. "Yes,"
he said, "and you don't borrow--"
"And don't beg or steal. Mother has given me money, and I'm spending my
own little legacy, all but five thousand dollars of it."
Fabian came up to his brother slowly. "If you know what's good for you,
you'll stay where you are. You're not the only man that ought to be
married. Tarboe's a strong man, and he'll be father's partner. He's
handsome in his rough way too, is Tarboe. He knows what he wants, and
means to have it, and this is a free country. Our girls, they have their
own way. Why don't you settle it now? Why don't you marry Junia, and
take her away with you--if she'll have you?"
"I can't--even if she'll have me."
"Why can't you?"
"I'm afraid of the law.
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