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'That's why I'm so ashamed. I knew he was a bad man, and yet he fascinated me. I was afraid of him, and yet he almost made me promise to marry him.'
'Go on,' I said when she hesitated, 'tell me the rest.'
'When--when--your friend came here for the first time, he--he----'
'Fell in love with you. Yes, it is no use mincing words. The moment he saw you, he gave his life to you. He told me so. He told you so.'
'I knew it before he told me.'
'How did you know?'
Her tell-tale blush, her quivering lips, told their own story, and I could not help laughing aloud.
'Don't be cruel!' she cried.
'I am not cruel, I am only very happy. I am happy because my friend is going to be happy.'
'But you don't know all.'
'I know that love overcomes all difficulties, and I know that you love each other.'
'Yes, but listen. He--that is, that man--told me that although you did not know who your friend was, he knew. He said that he had been guilty of deeds in India, which if made known would mean life-long disgrace.
That he, that is Colonel Springfield, had only to speak and--and oh, I can't tell you! I'm too ashamed!'
'I don't need telling,' I laughed. 'I know. He bound you to secrecy before telling you anything. He found out that you loved Jack, and he used your love as a lever. Like the mean scoundrel he was, he tried to make you promise to marry him, by threatening to expose Jack if you wouldn't. And you, because you were a silly girl, were afraid of him.
You were the victim of an Adelphi melodrama plot.'
'Oh, I am ashamed,' she cried; 'but--he showed me proofs, or what seemed to be proofs of his guilt. He said his loss of memory was real, but that he, Colonel Springfield, knew who he was, and--oh, I am mad when I think of it!'
'And that's all!' I laughed, 'Why, little girl, when Jack knows, he'll rejoice in what you've told me.'
'No, he won't,' she cried piteously. 'Don't you see, he made me believe it! That is why--why I'm so ashamed. What will he think when he knows I believed him guilty of the most horrible things?'
'I know what he'll think when he knows that in order to save him you were ready to----'
'Besides, don't you see?' she interrupted, 'I refused him when he was nameless, and--and all that sort of thing, while now as Lord Carbis's son----'
But she did not finish the sentence. At that moment Jack Carbis leapt over a stile into the lane where we were walking.
With that quick intuition which I had so often noticed, he seemed to divine in a moment what we were talking about. He looked at us both for a few seconds without speaking, while both of us were so startled by his sudden appearance, that I think we were both incapable of uttering a word.
'How did you get here?' I gasped presently.
'I motored over,' he said. 'After you had left this morning--I--I--thought I would. It was only a hundred and fifty miles.
They told me at the house which way you had gone, and----'
'You followed us,' I interjected. 'Jack, I think you have something to say to Lorna, and I fancy Sir Thomas and Lady Bolivick may be lonely.
I shall see you presently, shan't I?'
Lorna looked at me with frightened eyes, as if in protest, then she turned towards my friend.
'Will you come with me?' said Jack, and his voice was tremulous, 'I say, you will come, won't you?'
She hesitated a second, and then the two walked away together in the quiet Devonshire lane, while the shadows of evening gathered.
I did not go into the house on my return. Instead I sat on the lawn and awaited them. Darker and darker the night shadows fell, while the sky became star-spangled. Away, two hundred miles distant, the guns were booming, but here was peace.
The mystery, the wonder of it all came to me as I sat thinking. On the long battle line the armies of Empires were engaged in a deadly struggle, while close by a man was telling a girl that he loved her, while she would be foolishly trying to explain what required no explanation.
The moon was rising as they came back. The first beams were shining through the trees as I saw them approach.
'Well, Lorna?' I said as they came close to where I was.
She looked at me shyly, and then lifted her eyes to Jack's. In the pale moonlight I saw the look of infinite happiness on her face.
'May I, Jack?' I said. 'This morning you called me your brother, and as Lorna is to be my sister, may I claim a brother's privilege?'
For answer, she threw her arms around my neck and kissed me.
'I say,' cried Jack with a happy laugh, 'you are coming it a bit thick, aren't you? I didn't get one as easily as that.'
'Of course not--you didn't deserve to. But where are you off to?
'I'm going to beard the lion in his den. I'm going to have a serious talk with Sir Thomas. Will you look after Lorna till I return?'
_JOSEPH HOCKING'S GREAT WAR STORIES_
ALL FOR A Sc.r.a.p OF PAPER THE CURTAIN OF FIRE DEARER THAN LIFE THE PRICE OF A THRONE THE PATH OF GLORY 'THE POMP OF YESTERDAY'
TOMMY TOMMY AND THE MAID OF ATHENS
OTHER STORIES BY JOSEPH HOCKING
Facing Fearful Odds O'er Moor and Fen The Wilderness Rosaleen O'Hara The Soul of Dominic Wildthorne Follow the Gleam David Baring The Trampled Cross