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She remembered that occasion and the curious moment when she felt his eyes on her, and she was reminded that though he had not been running after her, he had certainly been running after somebody. She glanced at him and he looked very tall as he stood there, as tall as the tinker.
"Why don't you sit down?" she asked quickly, and as he did so she added, on a new thought, "But perhaps I'm keeping you. Perhaps--Don't wait for me."
"I've nothing else to do," he told her.
"I spoke to you," she said, "the day after your father died."
"I meant alone," he answered.
They sat in silence after that, and for Helen the smell of heather was the speech of those immaterial ones who lay about her. Some change had taken place among the stars: they were paler, nearer, as though they had grown tired of eminence and wanted commerce with the earth. The great quiet had failed before the encroachment of little sounds as of burrowing, nocturnal hunting, and the struggles of a breeze that was always foiled.
"Do you know what time it is?" Helen asked in a small voice.
He held his watch sideways, but he had to strike a match, and its light drew all the eyes of the moor.
"Quick!" Helen said.
He was not to be hurried. "Not far off midnight."
"And Rupert's waiting! Good-night, George."
"And you've forgiven me?" he asked as they parted at the gate.
"No." She laughed almost as Miriam might have done, and startled him.
"I'll forgive you," she said, "I'll forgive you when you really hurt me." She gave him her cool hand and, holding it, he half asked, half told her, "That's a promise."
"Yes. Good-night."
Slowly she walked through the dark hall, hesitated at the schoolroom door and opened it.
"I've come back," she said, and disappeared before Rupert could reply, for she was afraid he would make some allusion to the tinker.
It was characteristic of her that, as she undressed, carefully laying her clothes aside, her concern was for George's moral welfare rather than for the safety of the person for whom he had mistaken her, and this was because she happened to know George, had known him nearly all her life, while the ident.i.ty of the other was a blank to her, because she had no peculiar feeling for her s.e.x; men and women were separated or united only by their claim on her.
Mildred Caniper, whose claim was great, came down to breakfast the next morning with a return of energy that gladdened Helen and set Miriam thinking swiftly of all the things she had left undone. But Mildred Caniper was fair, and where she no longer ruled, she would not criticize. She condescended, however, to ask one question.
"Who was on the moor last night?"
"Daniel," Helen said.
"Zebedee," said Miriam.
"Zebedee?" she said, pretending not to know to whom that name belonged.
"Dr. Mackenzie."
"Oh."
"The father of James and John," Miriam murmured.
"So he has children?" Mrs. Caniper went on with her superb a.s.sumption that no one joked in conversation with her.
"Oh, I don't think so," Helen said earnestly. "He isn't married! Miriam meant the gentleman in the Bible."
"I see." Her glance pitied Miriam. "But this was early in the evening.
Some one came in very late. Rupert, perhaps."
"No, it was me," Helen said.
"I," Mildred Caniper corrected.
"Yes. I."
"Did I hear voices?"
"Did you?" Helen returned in another tone and with an innocence that surprised herself and revealed the deceit latent in the mouth of the most truthful. It was long since she had been so near a lie and lying was ugly: it made smudges on the world; but disloyalty was no better, and though she could not have explained the debt, she felt that she owed George silence. She had to choose. He had been like a child as he fumbled over his apologies and she could not but be tender with a child. Yet only a few seconds earlier she had thought he was the tinker.
Oh, why had Rupert ever told her of the tinker?
"I would rather you did not wander on the moor so late at night,"
Mildred Caniper said.
"But it's the best time of all."
"I would rather you did not."
"Very well. I'll try to remember."
A sign from Miriam drew Helen into the garden.
"Silly of you to come in by the front way. Of course she heard. If the garden door is locked, you can climb the wall and get on to the scullery roof. Then there's my window."
Helen measured the distance with her eye. "It's too high up."
"Throw up a shoe and I'll lower a chair for you."
"But--this is horrid," Helen said. "Why should I?"
Miriam's thin shoulders went up and down. "You never know, you never know," she chanted. "You never know what you may come to."
"Don't!" Helen begged. She leaned against a poplar and looked mournfully from the window to Miriam's face.
"No," Miriam said, "I've never done it. I only planned it in case of need. It would be a way of escape, too, if she ever locked me up. She's capable of that. Helen, I don't like this rejuvenation!"
"Don't," Helen said again.
"I haven't mended the sheets she gave me weeks ago."
"I'll help you with them."