"Am I not to lose you after ail? Are you mine again?"
Palo'mine seemed to think lie was and he rubbed his nose against his master's arm and nuzzled in his pocket for sugar.
Halsey could not wait another minute to know what it meant. He returned to the house running as though he had been a small boy instead of a tall young man.
"Uncle Hillery," he cried, almost before the door was open, "what does this mean? I sold Palo'mine. You have twenty thousand dollars in the Lexington bank which I received for him."
"It means," said Uncle Hillery, "that your brave deed touched the warm heart of a great horse lover. A man who could not let you make such a great sacrifice for a few thousand dollars. It means that your own good to others has returned upon your own head."
"Why, that is what the woman told me in the woods that it would do," said Halsey in wonderment.
"Exactly," said his uncle. "I am glad