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How he could resist that appeal I could not understand. His face was cold and hard, and his voice was almost harsh as he replied--
'If it is right, you will go--you must go.'
Then she burst forth--
'I cannot go. I shall stay here. My work is here; my heart is here. How can I go? You thought it worth your while to stay here and work, why should not I?'
The momentary gleam in his eyes died out, and again he said coldly--
'This work was clearly mine. I am needed here.'
'Yes, yes!' she cried, her voice full of pain; 'you are needed, but there is no need of me.'
'Stop, stop!' he said sharply; 'you must not say so.'
'I will say it, I must say it,' she cried, her voice vibrating with the intensity of her feeling. 'I know you do not need me; you have your work, your miners, your plans; you need no one; you are strong. But,'
and her voice rose to a cry, 'I am not strong by myself; you have made me strong. I came here a foolish girl, foolish and selfish and narrow.
G.o.d sent me grief. Three years ago my heart died. Now I am living again.
I am a woman now, no longer a girl. You have done this for me. Your life, your words, yourself--you have showed me a better, a higher life, than I had ever known before, and now you send me away.'
She paused abruptly.
'Blind, stupid fool!' I said to myself.
He held himself resolutely in hand, answering carefully, but his voice had lost its coldness and was sweet and kind.
'Have I done this for you? Then surely G.o.d has been good to me. And you have helped me more than any words could tell you.'
'Helped!' she repeated scornfully.
'Yes, helped,' he answered, wondering at her scorn.
'You can do without my help,' she went on. 'You make people help you.
You will get many to help you; but I need help, too.' She was standing before him with her hands tightly clasped; her face was pale, and her eyes deeper than ever. He sat looking up at her in a kind of maze as she poured out her words hot and fast.
'I am not thinking of you.' His coldness had hurt her deeply. 'I am selfish; I am thinking of myself. How shall I do? I have grown to depend on you, to look to you. It is nothing to you that I go, but to me--' She did not dare to finish.
By this time Craig was standing before her, his face deadly pale. When she came to the end of her words, he said, in a voice low, sweet, and thrilling with emotion--
'Ah, if you only knew! Do not make me forget myself. You do not guess what you are doing.'
'What am I doing? What is there to know, but that you tell me easily to go? She was struggling with the tears she was too proud to let him see.
He put his hands resolutely behind him, looking at her as if studying her face for the first time. Under his searching look she dropped her eyes, and the warm colour came slowly up into her neck and face; then, as if with a sudden resolve, she lifted her eyes to his, and looked back at him unflinchingly.
He started, surprised, drew slowly near, put his hands upon her shoulders, surprise giving place to wild joy. She never moved her eyes; they drew him towards her. He took her face between his hands, smiled into her eyes, kissed her lips. She did not move; he stood back from her, threw up his head, and laughed aloud. She came to him, put her head upon his breast, and lifting up her face said, 'Kiss me.' He put his arms about her, bent down and kissed her lips again, and then reverently her brow. Then putting her back from him, but still holding both her hands, he cried--
'Not you shall not go. I shall never let you go.'
She gave a little sigh of content, and, smiling up at him, said--
'I can go now'; but even as she spoke the flush died from her face, and she shuddered.
'Never!' he almost shouted; 'nothing shall take you away. We shall work here together.'
'Ah, if we could, if we only could,' she said piteously.
'Why not?' he demanded fiercely.
'You will send me away. You will say it is right for me to go,' she replied sadly.
'Do we not love each other?' was his impatient answer.
'Ah! yes, love,' she said; 'but love is not all.'
'No!' cried Craig; 'but love is the best'
'Yes!' she said sadly; 'love is the best, and it is for love's sake we will do the best.'
'There is no better work than here. Surely this is best,' and he pictured his plans before her. She listened eagerly.
'Oh! if it should be right,' she cried, 'I will do what you say. You are good, you are wise, you shall tell me.'
She could not have recalled him better. He stood silent some moments, then burst out pa.s.sionately--
'Why then has love come to us? We did not seek it. Surely love is of G.o.d. Does G.o.d mock us?'
He threw himself into his chair, pouring out his words of pa.s.sionate protestation. She listened, smiling, then came to him and, touching his hair as a mother might her child's, said--
'Oh, I am very happy! I was afraid you would not care, and I could not bear to go that way.'
'You shall not go,' he cried aloud, as if in pain. 'Nothing can make that right.'
But she only said, 'You shall tell me to-morrow. You cannot see to-night, but you will see, and you will tell me.'
He stood up and, holding both her hands, looked long into her eyes, then turned abruptly away and went out.
She stood where he left her for some moments, her face radiant, and her hands pressed upon her heart. Then she came toward my room. She found me busy with my painting, but as I looked up and met her eyes she flushed slightly, and said--
'I quite forgot you.'
'So it appeared to me.'
'You heard?'
'And saw,' I replied boldly. 'It would have been rude to interrupt, you see.'
'Oh, I am so glad and thankful.'