[The Alaskan by James Oliver Curwood]@TWC D-Link bookThe Alaskan CHAPTER XIII 20/21
Nawadlook was pulling a coffee-pot from the tiny fire.
Stampede began to fill a pipe.
He realized that because they had expected him, if not today then tomorrow or the next day or a day soon after that, no one had experienced shock but himself, and with a mighty effort he reached back and dragged the old Alan Holt into existence again.
It was like bringing an intelligence out of darkness into light. It was difficult for him--afterward--to remember just what happened during the next half-hour.
The amazing thing was that Mary Standish sat opposite him, with the cloth on which Nawadlook had spread the supper things between them, and that she was the same clear-eyed, beautiful Mary Standish who had sat across the table from him in the dining-salon of the _Nome_. Not until later, when he stood alone with Stampede Smith in the edge of the cottonwoods, and the three girls were riding deer back over the tundra in the direction of the Range, did the sea of questions which had been gathering begin to sweep upon him.
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