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"G.o.d in heaven!" struggled from the stiffening lips of Sara Wrandall.
Her fingers tightened on the wheel.
She knew. This was the woman!
The long brown ulster; the limp, fluttering veil! "A woman about your size and figure," the sheriff had said.
The figure swayed and then moved a few steps forward. Blinded by the lights, she bent her head and shielded her eyes with her hand the better to glimpse the occupant of the car.
"Are you looking for me?" she cried out shrilly, at the same time spreading her arms as if in surrender. It was almost a wail.
Mrs. Wrandall caught her breath. Her heart began to beat once more.
"Who are you? What do you want?" she cried out, without knowing what she said.
The girl started. She had not expected to hear the voice of a woman.
She staggered to the side of the road, out of the line of light.
"I--I beg your pardon," she cried,--it was like a wail of disappointment,--"I am sorry to have stopped you."
"Come here," commanded the other, still staring.
The unsteady figure advanced. Halting beside the car, she leaned across the spare tires and gazed into the eyes of the driver. Their faces were not more than a foot apart, their eyes were narrowed in tense scrutiny.
"What do you want?" repeated Mrs. Wrandall, her voice hoa.r.s.e and tremulous.
"I am looking for an inn. It must be near by. I do--"
"An inn?" with a start.
"I do not recall the name. It is not far from a village, in the hills."
"Do you mean Burton's?"
"Yes. That's it. Can you direct me?" The voice of the girl was faint; she seemed about to fall.
"It is six or eight miles from here," said Mrs. Wrandall, still looking in wonder at the miserable nightfarer.
The girl's head sank; a moan of despair came through her lips, ending in a sob.
"So far as that?" she murmured. Then she drew herself up with a fine show of resolution. "But I must not stop here. Thank you."
"Wait!" cried the other. The girl turned to her once more. "Is--is it a matter of life or death?"
There was a long silence. "Yes. I must find my way there. It is--death."
Sara Wrandall laid her heavily gloved hand on the slim fingers that touched the tire.
"Listen to me," she said, a shrill note of resolve ringing in her voice. "I am going to New York. Won't you let me take you with me?"
The girl drew back, wonder and apprehension struggling for the mastery of her eyes.
"But I am bound the other way. To the inn. I must go on."
"Come with me," said Sara Wrandall firmly. "You must not go back there. I know what has happened there. Come! I will take care of you. You must not go to the inn."
"You know?" faltered the girl.
"Yes. You poor thing!" There was infinite pity in her voice.
The girl laid her head on her arms.
Mrs. Wrandall sat above her, looking down, held mute by warring emotions. The impossible had come to pa.s.s. The girl for whom the whole world would be searching in a day or two, had stepped out of the unknown and, by the most whimsical jest of fate, into the custody of the one person most interested of all in that self-same world. It was unbelievable. She wondered if it were not a dream, or the hallucination of an overwrought mind. Spurred by the sudden doubt as to the reality of the object before her, she stretched out her hand and touched the girl's shoulder.
Instantly she looked up. Her fingers sought the friendly hand and clasped it tightly.
"Oh, if you will only take me to the city with you! If you only give me the chance," she cried hoa.r.s.ely. "I don't know what impulse was driving me back there. I only know I could not help myself.
You really mean it? You WILL take me with you?"
"Yes. Don't be afraid. Come! Get in," said the woman in the car rapidly. "You--you are real?"
The girl did not hear the strange question. She was hurrying around to the opposite side of the car. As she crossed before the lamps, Mrs. Wrandall noticed with dulled interest that her garments were covered with mud; her small, comely hat was in sad disorder; loose wisps of hair fluttered with the unsightly veil. Her hands, she recalled, were clad in thin suede gloves. She would be half-frozen.
She had been out in all this terrible weather,--perhaps since the hour of her flight from the inn.
The odd feeling of pity grew stronger within her. She made no effort to a.n.a.lyse it, nor to account for it. Why should she pity the slayer of her husband? It was a question unasked, unconsidered.
Afterwards she was to recall this hour and its strange impulses, and to realise that it was not pity, but mercy that moved her to do the extraordinary thing that followed.
Trembling all over, her teeth chattering, her breath coming in short little moans, the girl struggled up beside her and fell back in the seat. Without a word, Sara Wrandall drew the great buffalo robe over her and tucked it in about her feet and legs and far up about her body, which had slumped down in the seat.
"You are very, very good," chattered the girl, almost inaudibly.
"I shall never forget--" She did not complete the sentence, but sat upright and fixed her gaze on her companion's face. "You--you are not doing this just to turn me over to--to the police? They must be searching for me. You are not going to give me up to them, are you? There will be a reward I--"
"There is no reward," said Sara Wrandall sharply. "I do not mean to give you up. I am simply giving you a chance to get away. I have always felt sorry for the fox when the time for the kill drew near.
That's the way I feel."
"Oh, thank you! Thank you! But what am I saying? Why should I permit you to do this for me? I meant to go back there and have it over with. I know I can't escape. It will have to come, it is bound to come. Why put it off? Let them take me, let them do what they will with me. I--"
"Hush! We'll see. First of all, understand me: I shall not turn you over to the police. I will give you the chance. I will help you.
I can do no more than that."
"But why should you help me? I--I--Oh, I can't let you do it! You do not understand. I--have--committed--a--terrible--" she broke off with a groan.
"I understand," said the other, something like grimness in her level tones. "I have been tempted more than once myself." The enigmatic remark made no impression on the listener.
"I wonder how long ago it was that it all happened," muttered the girl, as if to herself. "It seems ages,--oh, such ages."
"Where have you been hiding since last night?" asked Mrs. Wrandall, throwing in the clutch. The car started forward with a jerk, kicking up the snow behind it.
"Was it only last night? Oh, I've been--" The thought of her sufferings from exposure and dread was too much for the wretched creature. She broke out in a soft wail.