<h2>CHAPTER XXII</h2></div>
<p>The two young men had shoved the old canoe up
on the bank, turned it over, emptied it, and
put it back in the water. Fred Hicks was
holding it at arm’s length now in the water; and the
would-be bridegroom had crawled out to the extreme
end, and with rolled-up sleeves was pawing about in
the water, which did not appear to be very deep. At
the cry they turned; and Fred Hicks, forgetting the
other man’s plight, let go the boat, and dashed back
to the road. Young Laws, arising too hastily, rolled
into the water completely, and came splashing up
the bank in a frothy state of mind. But suddenly, as
they came, while Myrtle’s best efforts were put forth
to hinder Leslie’s movements, something cold and
gleaming flashed in her face that sent her crouching
back in the corner of her seat and screaming. Leslie
had slipped her hand into the little secret pocket of
the car door and brought out her revolver, hoping fervently
that it was still loaded, and that Allison had not
chosen to shoot at a mark or anything with it the last
time he was out.</p>
<p>“You’d better sit down and keep quiet,” she said
coolly. “I’m a good shot.”</p>
<p>Then she put her foot on the clutch, and the car
started just as Fred Hicks lit on the running-board.</p>
<p>Leslie’s little revolver came promptly around to
meet him, and he dropped away with a gasp of surprise
as suddenly as he had lit. Suddenly Leslie became
aware of the other young man dripping and breathless,
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_252' name='page_252'></SPAN>252</span>
but with a dangerous look in his eye, bearing down
upon her from the lake side of the road; and she flashed
around and sent a shot ringing out into the road, the
bullet ploughing into the dust at his very feet. The
car leaped forward to obey her touch, and in a
second more they had left the two young men safely
behind them.</p>
<p>Myrtle was crouched in the back seat, weeping; and
Leslie, cool and brave in the front seat, was trembling
from head to foot. This was a new road to her; at
least, she had never been more than two or three miles
on it, and she did not know where she would bring up.
She began to wonder how long her gasoline would hold
out, for she had been in such a hurry to get away with
Myrtle before Allison should come home that she had
forgotten to look to see if everything was all right; and
she now remembered that Allison had had the car out
late the night before. Everything seemed to be falling
in chaos about her. The earth rose and fell in front
of her excited gaze; the sun was going down; and the
road ahead seemed endless, without a turning as far as
she could see.</p>
<p>A great burying-ground stretched for what seemed
like miles along one side of the road. The polished
marble gleamed red and bleak in the setting sun. The
sky had suddenly gone lead-color, and there was a chill
in the air. Leslie longed for nothing so much as to
hide her head in Julia Cloud’s lap and weep. Yet she
must go on and on and on till this awful road came
to an end. Would it <i>ever</i> come to an end? Oh, it <i>must</i>
somewhere! A great tower of bricks loomed ahead
with a wide paved driveway leading to it through an
arched gateway, and over the arch some words. Leslie
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_253' name='page_253'></SPAN>253</span>
got only one of them, “CREMATORY.” She shuddered,
and put on speed. It seemed that she had come
to the place of death and desolation. It was lonely
everywhere, and not a soul in sight. What horror if
her gasoline should give out in a place like this, and
they have to spend the night here, she and that poor,
weak creature sobbing behind! What contempt she
felt for her former friend! What contempt she felt
for herself! Oh, she was well punished for her wilfulness!
To think she should have presumed to hope
she could help her to better ways, she, a little innocent,
who never dreamed of such depths of duplicity as
had been shown her that afternoon! Oh, to think of
that loathsome Hicks person daring to touch her! To
try to take her car away from her! and to <i>smile</i> at her
in that disgusting way!</p>
<p>On and on went the car, and the road wound away
into the dusk up a high hill and down again, up another,
past an old farmhouse with one dim light in the
back window and a great dog howling like one in
some old classic tale she had read; on and on, till at
last a cross-road came, and she knew not which way
to take, to right or to left. There was a sign-board;
but it was too dark to read, and she dared not get out
and leave Myrtle. There was no telling but she might
try to run off with the car. It was at the crematory
that she began to pray, and, when she reached the
crossing, her heart put up a second plea for guidance.
“O God, if You will just help me home, I will try, <i>try</i>,
<span class='smcap'>try</span> to be what You want me to be! Please, please,
<i>please</i>!” It was the old vow of a heart bowed down
and brought to the limit. It was the first time Leslie
had ever realized that there could be a situation in
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_254' name='page_254'></SPAN>254</span>
which Leslie Cloud would not find some way out. It
was the first time, too, perhaps, when she realized herself
as being a sinner in the sense of having a will
against God and having exercised it for her own pleasure
rather than for His glory.</p>
<p>Down the road to the left the car sped, and after
a mile and a half of growing darkness, with woods and
scattered farmhouses, the lights of a village began to
appear. But it was no village that Leslie knew, and
nothing anywhere gave her a clew. A trolley line
appeared, however; and after a little a car came along
with a name that showed it was going cityward. Leslie
decided to follow the trolley track.</p>
<p>In the meantime the girl in the back seat roused up,
and began to look about her, evidently recognizing
something familiar in the streets or town.</p>
<p>“You can put me out here, Leslie; I’m done with
you,” she said haughtily. “I don’t care to go any
farther with you. I’ll go back on the train.”</p>
<p>“No!” said Leslie sharply. “You’ll go home
with me. I took you away without knowing what you
intended, but I mean to put you back where you were
before I’m done. Then my responsibility for you will
be over. I was a fool to let you deceive me that way,
but I’m not a fool any longer.”</p>
<p>“Well, I <i>won’t</i> go home with you, so! and that’s
flat, Leslie Cloud. You needn’t think you can frighten
me into going, either. We’re in a village now, and
my aunt lives here. If you get out that revolver again,
I’ll scream and have you arrested, and tell them you’re
trying to murder me; so there!”</p>
<p>For answer Leslie turned sharply into a cross-road
that led away from the settled portion of the town, and
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_255' name='page_255'></SPAN>255</span>
put on all speed, tearing away into the dusk like a wild
creature. Myrtle screamed and stormed behind her, all
to no purpose. Leslie Cloud had her mettle up, and
meant to take her prisoner home. Out of the town she
turned into another road that ran parallel to the trolley
track, from which she could see the lights of the trolleys
passing now and again, as it grew darker; and by and
by when they came to another cross-road, Leslie got
back to the trolley track, and followed it; but whenever
they came into a town she kept to its outskirts.</p>
<p>Leslie had a pretty good general sense of direction,
and she knew just where the sun went down. If it had
not been for a river and some hills that turned up and
bewildered her, she would have made a pretty direct
course home; but, as it was, she went far out of her
way, and was long delayed and much distressed besides,
being continually harassed by the angry girl in the
back seat. The gasoline was holding out. It was evident
that Allison had looked after it. Blessed
Allison, who always did everything when he
ought to do it, and never put off things until the next
day! How cross she had been with him for the last
six weeks, and how good and kind he always was to her!
How she had deceived dear Cloudy and troubled her
by going off this afternoon! Oh, what would they
think? Would they ever forgive her, and take her
back into their hearts, and trust her again? The tears
were blurring her eyes now as she stared ahead at the
road. It seemed as if she had been tearing on through
the night for hours like this. Her arms ached with the
nervous strain; her back ached; her head ached. Perhaps
they were going around the world, and would
only stop when the gasoline gave out!</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_256' name='page_256'></SPAN>256</span></div>
<p>They swept around a curve. Could it be that those
were the lights of the college ahead on the hill? Oh,
joy at last! They were! Up this hill, over across two
blocks, and the little pink-and-white house would be
nestled among the hemlocks; and rest and home at last!
But there was something to be done first. She turned
toward the back seat, where sat her victim silent
and angry.</p>
<p>“Well, you can let me out now, Leslie Cloud,”
said Myrtle scornfully. “I suppose you won’t dare
lord it over me any longer, and I’ll take good care that
the rest of the town understands what a dangerous little
spitfire <i>you</i> are. You ought to be arrested for this
night’s work! That’s all <i>I’ve</i> got to say.”</p>
<p>“Well, I have one more thing to say,” said Leslie
slowly, as she swerved into her own street and her
eyes hungrily sought for the lights of Cloudy Villa.
“You’re coming into the house with me first, before
you go anywhere else, and you’re going to tell this
whole story to my Aunt Jewel. After that––<i>I
should worry</i>!”</p>
<p>“Well, I rather guess I am not going into your
old house and tell your old aunt anything! I’m going
to get right out here this minute; and you’re good and
going to <i>let</i> me out, too, or I’ll scream bloody murder,
and tell it all over this town how you went out there to
meet those boys. You haven’t got any witnesses, and
<i>I have</i>, remember!” said Myrtle, suddenly feeling
courageous now that she was back among familiar
streets.</p>
<p>But Leslie turned sharply into the little drive, and
brought up the car in a flood of light at the end of
the terrace.</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_257' name='page_257'></SPAN>257</span></div>
<p>“Now, get out!” she ordered, swinging the door
open and flashing her little revolver about again at
the angry girl.</p>
<p>“O Leslie!” pleaded the victim, quickly quelled
by the sight of the cold steel, and thrilled with the
memory of that shot whistling by her into the road a
few hours before.</p>
<p>“Get out!” said Leslie coolly as the front door
was flung open and Julia Cloud peered through the
brightness of the porch light into the darkness.</p>
<p>“Get out!” Leslie held the cold steel nearer to
Myrtle’s face, and the girl shuddered, and got out.</p>
<p>“Now go into the house!” she ordered; and shuddering,
shivering, with a frightened glance behind her
and a fearful glance ahead, she walked straight into
the wondering, shocked presence of Julia Cloud, who
threw the door open wide and stepped aside to let
them in. Leslie, with the revolver still raised, and
pointed toward the other girl, came close behind Myrtle,
who sidled hastily around to get behind Miss Cloud.</p>
<p>“Why, Leslie! What is the matter?” gasped
Julia Cloud.</p>
<p>“Tell her!” ordered Leslie, the revolver still
pointed straight at Myrtle.</p>
<p>“What shall I tell?” gasped the other girl, turning
a white, miserable face toward Miss Cloud as if to
appeal to her leniency. But there was a severity in
Julia Cloud’s face now after her long hours of anxiety
that boded no good for the cause of all her alarm.</p>
<p>“Tell her the whole story!” ordered the fierce
young voice of Leslie.</p>
<p>“Why, we went out to take a ride,” began Myrtle,
looking up with her old braggadocio. There had seldom
<span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_258' name='page_258'></SPAN>258</span>
been a time when Myrtle had not been able to get
out of a situation by use of her wily tongue.</p>
<p>“Tell it all,” said Leslie, looking across the barrel
of her weapon. “Tell who wanted to go on that ride.”</p>
<p>“Why, yes, I asked Leslie to take me. I––we––well,
that is––I wanted to meet a friend.”</p>
<p>“Tell it straight!” ordered Leslie.</p>
<p>“Why, of course I didn’t tell Leslie I expected to
meet them––him. I wasn’t just sure he could make the
arrangements. I meant to tell her when we got out.
And when we met him––and my cousin––it was my
cousin I was to meet––you see I’m––we––he–––”</p>
<p>Myrtle was getting all tangled up with her glib
tongue under the clear gaze of Julia Cloud’s truth-compelling
eyes. She looked up and down, and twisted
the fringe on her sash, and turned red and white by
turns, and seemed for the first time a very young, very
silly child. But Leslie had suffered, and just now
Leslie had no mercy. This girl had been a kind of
idol to whom she had sacrificed much, and now that
her idol had fallen she wanted to make the idol pay.
Or no, was that it? Leslie afterwards searched her
heart, and felt that she could truly say that her strongest
motive in compelling this confession had been to get
the burden of the knowledge of it off her own shrinking
soul.</p>
<p>“Tell the rest!” came the relentless voice of
Leslie, and Myrtle struggled on.</p>
<p>“Well, I’m engaged to Mr. Bartram Laws; and
my guardian won’t let us get married till I’m through
college, and we fixed it up to get married to-day quietly.
I knew it would be all right after he found out he
couldn’t help himself, and so–––”</p>
<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><SPAN name='page_259' name='page_259'></SPAN>259</span></div>
<p>“Tell how you asked the boys to get in the car!”
ordered the fierce voice again; and Myrtle, recalled
from another attempt to pass it all off pleasantly, went
step by step through the whole shameful story until it
was complete.</p>
<p>Then Leslie with a sudden motion of finality flung
the little weapon down upon the mahogany table, and
dashed into Julia Cloud’s arms in a storm of tears.
“O Cloudy, I’ll never, never do any such thing again!
And I hate her! I <i>hate</i> her! I’ll never forgive her!
Can you ever forgive <i>me</i>?”</p>
<p>No one had heard a sudden, startled exclamation
from the porch room as Leslie and Myrtle came into
the house; but now Myrtle suddenly looked up, thinking
the time had come for her to steal away unseen;
and there in the two doorways that opened on either
side of the fireplace stood, on one side Allison Cloud
and the dean of the college, and on the other side two
members of the student executive body, all looking
straight at her! Moreover, she read it in their eyes
that they had heard every word of her confession.
Without a word she dropped white and stricken into
a chair, and covered her face with her hands. For
once her brazen wiles were gone.</p>
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<SPAN name='CHAPTER_XXIII' id='CHAPTER_XXIII'></SPAN>
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