<SPAN name="chap30"></SPAN>
<h3> XXX </h3>
<h3> AN UNUSUAL HONOR </h3>
<p>To Rena's high-strung and sensitive nature, already under very great
tension from her past experience, the ordeal of the next few days was a
severe one. On the one hand, Jeff Wain's infatuation had rapidly
increased, in view of her speedy departure. From Mrs. Tryon's remark
about Wain's wife Amanda, and from things Rena had since learned, she
had every reason to believe that this wife was living, and that Wain
must be aware of the fact. In the light of this knowledge, Wain's
former conduct took on a blacker significance than, upon reflection,
she had charitably clothed it with after the first flush of
indignation. That he had not given up his design to make love to her
was quite apparent, and, with Amanda alive, his attentions, always
offensive since she had gathered their import, became in her eyes the
expression of a villainous purpose, of which she could not speak to
others, and from which she felt safe only so long as she took proper
precautions against it. In a week her school would be over, and then
she would get Elder Johnson, or some one else than Wain, to take her
back to Patesville. True, she might abandon her school and go at once;
but her work would be incomplete, she would have violated her contract,
she would lose her salary for the month, explanations would be
necessary, and would not be forthcoming. She might feign
sickness,—indeed, it would scarcely be feigning, for she felt far from
well; she had never, since her illness, quite recovered her former
vigor—but the inconvenience to others would be the same, and her
self-sacrifice would have had, at its very first trial, a lame and
impotent conclusion. She had as yet no fear of personal violence from
Wain; but, under the circumstances, his attentions were an insult. He
was evidently bent upon conquest, and vain enough to think he might
achieve it by virtue of his personal attractions. If he could have
understood how she loathed the sight of his narrow eyes, with their
puffy lids, his thick, tobacco-stained lips, his doubtful teeth, and
his unwieldy person, Wain, a monument of conceit that he was, might
have shrunk, even in his own estimation, to something like his real
proportions. Rena believed that, to defend herself from persecution at
his hands, it was only necessary that she never let him find her alone.
This, however, required constant watchfulness. Relying upon his own
powers, and upon a woman's weakness and aversion to scandal, from which
not even the purest may always escape unscathed, and convinced by her
former silence that he had nothing serious to fear, Wain made it a
point to be present at every public place where she might be. He
assumed, in conversation with her which she could not avoid, and stated
to others, that she had left his house because of a previous promise to
divide the time of her stay between Elder Johnson's house and his own.
He volunteered to teach a class in the Sunday-school which Rena
conducted at the colored Methodist church, and when she remained to
service, occupied a seat conspicuously near her own. In addition to
these public demonstrations, which it was impossible to escape, or, it
seemed, with so thick-skinned an individual as Wain, even to
discourage, she was secretly and uncomfortably conscious that she could
scarcely stir abroad without the risk of encountering one of two men,
each of whom was on the lookout for an opportunity to find her alone.</p>
<p>The knowledge of Tryon's presence in the vicinity had been almost as
much as Rena could bear. To it must be added the consciousness that
he, too, was pursuing her, to what end she could not tell. After his
letter to her brother, and the feeling therein displayed, she found it
necessary to crush once or twice a wild hope that, her secret being
still unknown save to a friendly few, he might return and claim her.
Now, such an outcome would be impossible. He had become engaged to
another woman,—this in itself would be enough to keep him from her, if
it were not an index of a vastly more serious barrier, a proof that he
had never loved her. If he had loved her truly, he would never have
forgotten her in three short months,—three long months they had
heretofore seemed to her, for in them she had lived a lifetime of
experience. Another impassable barrier lay in the fact that his mother
had met her, and that she was known in the neighborhood. Thus cut off
from any hope that she might be anything to him, she had no wish to
meet her former lover; no possible good could come of such a meeting;
and yet her fluttering heart told her that if he should come, as his
letter foreshadowed that he might,—if he should come, the loving
George of old, with soft words and tender smiles and specious talk of
friendship—ah! then, her heart would break! She must not meet him—at
any cost she must avoid him.</p>
<p>But this heaping up of cares strained her endurance to the
breaking-point. Toward the middle of the last week, she knew that she
had almost reached the limit, and was haunted by a fear that she might
break down before the week was over. Now her really fine nature rose
to the emergency, though she mustered her forces with a great effort.
If she could keep Wain at his distance and avoid Tryon for three days
longer, her school labors would be ended and she might retire in peace
and honor.</p>
<p>"Miss Rena," said Plato to her on Tuesday, "ain't it 'bout time I wuz
gwine home wid you ag'in?"</p>
<p>"You may go with me to-morrow, Plato," answered the teacher.</p>
<p>After school Plato met an anxious eyed young man in the woods a short
distance from the schoolhouse.</p>
<p>"Well, Plato, what news?"</p>
<p>"I's gwine ter see her home ter-morrer, Mars Geo'ge."</p>
<p>"To-morrow!" replied Tryon; "how very fortunate! I wanted you to go to
town to-morrow to take an important message for me. I'm sorry,
Plato—you might have earned another dollar."</p>
<p>To lie is a disgraceful thing, and yet there are times when, to a
lover's mind, love dwarfs all ordinary laws. Plato scratched his head
disconsolately, but suddenly a bright thought struck him.</p>
<p>"Can't I go ter town fer you atter I've seed her home, Mars Geo'ge?"</p>
<p>"N-o, I'm afraid it would be too late," returned Tryon doubtfully.</p>
<p>"Den I'll haf ter ax 'er ter lemme go nex' day," said Plato, with
resignation. The honor might be postponed or, if necessary, foregone;
the opportunity to earn a dollar was the chance of a lifetime and must
not be allowed to slip.</p>
<p>"No, Plato," rejoined Tryon, shaking his head, "I shouldn't want to
deprive you of so great a pleasure." Tryon was entirely sincere in
this characterization of Plato's chance; he would have given many a
dollar to be sure of Plato's place and Plato's welcome. Rena's letter
had re-inflamed his smouldering passion; only opposition was needed to
fan it to a white heat. Wherein lay the great superiority of his
position, if he was denied the right to speak to the one person in the
world whom he most cared to address? He felt some dim realization of
the tyranny of caste, when he found it not merely pressing upon an
inferior people who had no right to expect anything better, but barring
his own way to something that he desired. He meant her no harm—but he
must see her. He could never marry her now—but he must see her. He
was conscious of a certain relief at the thought that he had not asked
Blanche Leary to be his wife. His hand was unpledged. He could not
marry the other girl, of course, but they must meet again. The rest he
would leave to Fate, which seemed reluctant to disentangle threads
which it had woven so closely.</p>
<p>"I think, Plato, that I see an easier way out of the difficulty. Your
teacher, I imagine, merely wants some one to see her safely home.
Don't you think, if you should go part of the way, that I might take
your place for the rest, while you did my errand?"</p>
<p>"Why, sho'ly, Mars Geo'ge, you could take keer er her better 'n I
could—better 'n anybody could—co'se you could!"</p>
<p>Mars Geo'ge was white and rich, and could do anything. Plato was proud
of the fact that he had once belonged to Mars Geo'ge. He could not
conceive of any one so powerful as Mars Geo'ge, unless it might be God,
of whom Plato had heard more or less, and even here the comparison
might not be quite fair to Mars Geo'ge, for Mars Geo'ge was the younger
of the two. It would undoubtedly be a great honor for the teacher to
be escorted home by Mars Geo'ge. The teacher was a great woman, no
doubt, and looked white; but Mars Geo'ge was the real article. Mars
Geo'ge had never been known to go with a black woman before, and the
teacher would doubtless thank Plato for arranging that so great an
honor should fall upon her. Mars Geo'ge had given him fifty cents
twice, and would now give him a dollar. Noble Mars Geo'ge! Fortunate
teacher! Happy Plato!</p>
<p>"Very well, Plato. I think we can arrange it so that you can kill the
two rabbits at one shot. Suppose that we go over the road that she will
take to go home."</p>
<p>They soon arrived at the schoolhouse. School had been out an hour, and
the clearing was deserted. Plato led the way by the road through the
woods to a point where, amid somewhat thick underbrush, another path
intersected the road they were following.</p>
<p>"Now, Plato," said Tryon, pausing here, "this would be a good spot for
you to leave the teacher and for me to take your place. This path
leads to the main road, and will take you to town very quickly. I
shouldn't say anything to the teacher about it at all; but when you and
she get here, drop behind and run along this path until you meet
me,—I'll be waiting a few yards down the road,—and then run to town
as fast as your legs will carry you. As soon as you are gone, I'll
come out and tell the teacher that I've sent you away on an errand, and
will myself take your place. You shall have a dollar, and I'll ask her
to let you go home with her the next day. But you mustn't say a word
about it, Plato, or you won't get the dollar, and I'll not ask the
teacher to let you go home with her again."</p>
<p>"All right, Mars Geo'ge, I ain't gwine ter say no mo' d'n ef de cat had
my tongue."</p>
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