<h2><SPAN name="X" id="X" />X</h2>
<p>Dunham slept very little that night. His
soul was hovering between joy and anxiety.
Almost he was inclined to find some way to
send her word about the man he had seen
lingering about the place, and yet perhaps
it was foolish. He had doubtless been to call
on the cook, and there might be no connection
whatever between what Dunham had heard
and seen and the lonely girl.</p>
<p>Next day, with careful hands, the girl made
herself neat and trim with the few materials
she had at hand. Her own fine garments that
had lain carefully wrapped and hidden ever
since she had gone into service were brought
forth, and the coarse ones with which she had
provided herself against suspicion were laid
aside. If any one came into her room while
she was gone, he would find no fine French
embroidery to tell tales. Also, she wished to
feel as much like herself as possible, and she
never could feel quite that in her cheap outfit.
True, she had no finer outer garments than
a cheap black flannel skirt and coat which
she had bought with the first money she could
spare, but they were warm, and answered for
what she had needed. She had not bought a
hat, and had nothing now to wear upon her
head but the black felt that belonged to the
man she was going to meet. She looked at
herself pityingly in the tiny mirror, and
wondered if the young man would understand
and forgive? It was all she had, any way,
and there would be no time to go to the store
and buy another before the appointed hour,
for the family had brought unexpected company
to a late lunch and kept her far beyond
her hour for going out.</p>
<p>She looked down dubiously at her shabby
shoes, their delicate kid now cracked and worn.
Her hands were covered by a pair of cheap
black silk gloves. It was the first time that
she had noticed these things so keenly, but
now it seemed to her most embarrassing to
go thus to meet the man who had helped
her.</p>
<p>She gathered her little hoard of money
to take with her, and cast one look back
over the cheerless room, with a great longing
to bid it farewell forever, and go back to the
world where she belonged; yet she realized
that it was a quiet refuge for her from the
world that she must hereafter face. Then
she closed her door, went down the stairs
and out into the street, like any other servant
on her afternoon out, walking away to
meet whatever crisis might arise. She had not
dared to speculate much about the subject
of the coming interview. It was likely he
wanted to inquire about her comfort, and
perhaps offer material aid. She would not
accept it, of course, but it would be a comfort
to know that some one cared. She longed
inexpressibly for this interview, just because
he had been kind, and because he belonged
to that world from which she had come. He
would keep her secret. He had true eyes.
She did not notice soft, padded feet that
came wobbling down the street after her, and
she only drew a little further out toward the
curbing when a blear-eyed, red face peered
into hers as she stood waiting for the car.
She did not notice the shabby man who
boarded the car after she was seated.</p>
<p>Tryon Dunham stood in the great stone
doorway, watching keenly the passing throng.
He saw the girl at once as she got out of
the car, but he did not notice the man in
the baggy coat, who lumbered after her and
watched with wondering scrutiny as Dunham
came forward, lifted his hat, and took her
hand respectfully. Here was an element he
did not understand. He stood staring,
puzzled, as they disappeared into the great
building; then planted himself in a convenient
place to watch until his charge should come
out again. This was perhaps a gentleman
who had come to engage her to work for
him. She might be thinking of changing
her place. He must be on the alert.</p>
<p>Dunham placed two chairs in the far corner
of the inner parlor, where they were practically
alone, save for an occasional passer
through the hall. He put the girl into the
most comfortable one, and then went to draw
down the shade, to shut a sharp ray of afternoon
sunlight from her eyes. She sat there
and looked down upon her shabby shoes, her
cheap gloves, her coarse garments, and honored
him for the honor he was giving her in
this attire. She had learned by sharp experience
that such respect to one in her station
was not common. As he came back, he stood
a moment looking down upon her. She saw
his eye rest with recognition upon the hat
she wore, and her pale cheeks turned pink.</p>
<p>"I don't know what you will think of my
keeping this," she said shyly, putting her hand
to the hat, "but it seemed really necessary
at the time, and I haven't dared spend the
money for a new one yet. I thought perhaps
you would forgive me, and let me pay you
for it some time later."</p>
<p>"Don't speak of it," he broke in, in a
low voice. "I am so glad you could use it
at all. It would have been a comfort to
me if I had known where it was. I had not
even missed it, because at this time of year
I have very little use for it. It is my travelling
hat."</p>
<p>He looked at her again as though the
sight of her was good to him, and his gaze
made her quite forget the words she had
planned to say.</p>
<p>"I am so glad I have found you!" he
went on. "You have not been out of my
thoughts since I left you that night on the
train. I have blamed myself over and over
again for having gone then. I should have
found some way to stand by you. I have
not had one easy moment since I saw you
last."</p>
<p>His tone was so intense that she could not
interrupt him; she could only sit and listen
in wonder, half trembling, to the low-spoken
torrent of feeling that he expressed. She
tried to protest, but the look in his face
stopped her. He went on with an earnestness
that would not be turned aside from its purpose.</p>
<p>"I came to Chicago that I might search
for you. I could not stand the suspense any
longer. I have been looking for you in every
way I could think of, without openly searching,
for that I dared not do lest I might
jeopardize your safety. I was almost in despair
when I went to dine with Mr. Phillips
last evening. I felt I could not go home
without knowing at least that you were safe,
and now that I have found you, I cannot
leave you until I know at least that you have
no further need for help."</p>
<p>She summoned her courage now, and spoke
in a voice full of feeling:</p>
<p>"Oh, you must not feel that way. You
helped me just when I did not know what
to do, and put me in the way of helping
myself. I shall never cease to thank you for
your kindness to an utter stranger. And now
I am doing very well." She tried to smile,
but the tears came unbidden instead.</p>
<p>"You poor child!" His tone was full of
something deeper than compassion, and his
eyes spoke volumes. "Do you suppose I think
you are doing well when I see you wearing
the garb of a menial and working for people
to whom you are far superior—people who
by all the rights of education and refinement
ought to be in the kitchen serving you?"</p>
<p>"It was the safest thing I could do, and
really the only thing I could get to do at
once," she tried to explain. "I'm doing it
better every day."</p>
<p>"I have no doubt. You can be an artist
at serving as well as anything else, if you
try. But now that is all over. I am going
to take care of you. There is no use in protesting.
If I may not do it in one way, I
will in another. There is one question I must
ask first, and I hope you will trust me enough
to answer it. Is there any other—any other
man who has the right to care for you, and
is unable or unwilling to do it?"</p>
<p>She looked up at him, her large eyes still
shining with tears, and shuddered slightly.</p>
<p>"Oh, no!" she said. "Oh, no, I thank God
there is not! My dear uncle has been dead
for four years, and there has never been any
one else who cared since Father died."</p>
<p>He looked at her, a great light beginning
to come into his face; but she did not understand
and turned her head to hide the tears.</p>
<p>"Then I am going to tell you something,"
he said, his tone growing lower, yet clear
enough for her to hear every word distinctly.</p>
<p>A tall, oldish girl with a discontented upper
lip stalked through the hall, glanced in at
the door, and sniffed significantly, but they
did not see her. A short, baggy-coated man
outside hovered anxiously around the building
and passed the very window of that room,
but the shade opposite them was down, and
they did not know. The low, pleasant voice
went on:</p>
<p>"I have come to care a great deal for you
since I first saw you, and I want you to give
me the right to care for you always and
protect you against the whole world."</p>
<p>She looked up, wondering.</p>
<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
<p>"I mean that I love you, and I want to
make you my wife. Then I can defy the
whole world if need be, and put you where
you ought to be."</p>
<p>"Oh!" she breathed softly.</p>
<p>"Wait, please," he pleaded, laying his
hand gently on her little, trembling one.
"Don't say anything until I have finished. I
know of course that this will be startling to
you. You have been brought up to feel
that such things must be more carefully and
deliberately done. I do not want you to feel
that this is the only way I can help you, either.
If you are not willing to be my wife, I will
find some other plan. But this is the best
way, if it isn't too hard on you, for I love
you as I never dreamed that I could love a
woman. The only question is, whether you
can put up with me until I can teach you to
love me a little."</p>
<p>She lifted eloquent eyes to his face.</p>
<p>"Oh, it is not that," she stammered, a rosy
light flooding cheek and brow. "It is not
that at all. But you know nothing about
me. If you knew, you would very likely
think as others do, and——"</p>
<p>"Then do not tell me anything about yourself,
if it will trouble you. I do not care
what others think. If you have poisoned a
husband, I should know that he needed poisoning,
and any way I should love you and stand
by you."</p>
<p>"I have not done anything wrong," she
said gravely.</p>
<p>"Then if you have done nothing wrong,
we will prove it to the world, or, if we cannot
prove it, we will fly to some desert island and
live there in peace and love. That is the
way I feel about you. I know that you are
good and true and lovely! Any one might
as well try to prove to me that you were
crazy as that you had done wrong in any
way."</p>
<p>Her face grew strangely white.</p>
<p>"Well, suppose I was crazy?"</p>
<p>"Then I would take you and cherish you
and try to cure you, and if that could not
be done, I should help you to bear it."</p>
<p>"Oh, you are wonderful!" she breathed,
the light of a great love growing in her eyes.</p>
<p>The bare, prosaic walls stood stolidly
about them, indifferent to romance or tragedy
that was being wrought out within its walls.
The whirl and hum of the city without, the
grime and soil of the city within, were alike
forgotten by these two as their hearts
throbbed in the harmony of a great passion.</p>
<p>"Do you think you could learn to love
me?" said the man's voice, with the sweetness
of the love song of the ages in its tone.</p>
<p>"I love you now," said the girl's low voice.
"I think I have loved you from the beginning,
though I never dared to think of it in that
way. But it would not be right for me to
become your wife when you know practically
nothing about me."</p>
<p>"Have you forgotten that you know nothing
of me?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I do know something about you," she
said shyly. "Remember that I have dined
with your friends. I could not help seeing
that they were good people, especially that
delightful old man, the Judge. He looked
startlingly like my dear father. I saw how
they all honored and loved you. And then
what you have done for me, and the way
that you treated an utterly defenceless
stranger, were equal to years of mere acquaintance.
I feel that I know a great deal
about you."</p>
<p>He smiled. "Thank you," he said, "but
I have not forgotten that something more is
due you than that slight knowledge of me,
and before I came out here I went to the
pastor of the church of which my mother is
a member, and which I have always attended
and asked him to write me a letter. He is
so widely known that I felt it would be an
introduction for me."</p>
<p>He laid an open letter in her lap, and,
glancing down, she saw that it was signed
by the name of one of the best known pulpit
orators in the land, and that it spoke in
highest terms of the young man whom it
named as "my well-loved friend."</p>
<p>"It is also your right to know that I
have always tried to live a pure and honorable
life. I have never told any woman but
you that I loved her—except an elderly cousin
with whom I thought I was in love when I
was nineteen. She cured me of it by laughing
at me, and I have been heart-whole ever
since."</p>
<p>She raised her eyes from reading the letter.</p>
<p>"You have all these, and I have nothing."
She spread out her hands helplessly. "It
must seem strange to you that I am in this
situation. It does to me. It is awful."</p>
<p>She put her hands over her eyes and shuddered.</p>
<p>"It is to save you from it all that I have
come." He leaned over and spoke tenderly,
"Darling!"</p>
<p>"Oh, wait!" She caught her breath as if
it hurt her, and put out her hand to stop him,
"Wait! You must not say any more until
I have told you all about it. Perhaps when
I have told you, you will think about me as
others do, and I shall have to run from you."</p>
<p>"Can you not trust me?" he reproached
her.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, I can trust you, but you may
no longer trust me, and that I cannot bear."</p>
<p>"I promise you solemnly that I will believe
every word you say."</p>
<p>"Ah, but you will think I do not know,
and that it is your duty to give me into the
hands of my enemies."</p>
<p>"That I most solemnly vow I will never
do," he said earnestly. "You need not fear
to tell me anything. But listen, tell me this
one thing: in the eyes of God, is there any
reason, physical, mental, or spiritual, why you
should not become my wife?"</p>
<p>She looked him clearly in the eyes.</p>
<p>"None at all."</p>
<p>"Then I am satisfied to take you without
hearing your story until afterwards."</p>
<p>"But I am not satisfied. If I am to see
distrust come into your eyes, it must be now,
not afterwards."</p>
<p>"Then tell it quickly."</p>
<p>He put out his hand and took hers firmly
into his own, as if to help her in her story.</p>
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