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Larry put forth a pitiful defence.
"You've been hard and selfish, Mary-Clare. Another sort might have helped me--I got to caring, at first. You've taken everything and given mighty little. And now, when you see a chance of cutting loose, you wipe me off the map and betray me into the hands of a man who has lied to me, made sport of me, and thinks he's going to get away with it. Now listen. I want that letter. When I have used up the hush money I have now, I'm coming back for more--more--and you and he are going to pay."
By this time Larry had worked himself again into a blind fury. He felt this but could not control it. He had lost nearly everything--he must clutch what was left.
"Give that to me!" he commanded, and reached for the clenched hand on the table.
"No, Larry. If you could understand, I would let you have it, but you couldn't! Nothing matters now between you and me. I am free, free!"
The radiant face, the clenched hand, blinded Larry. Sitting again on the edge of the table, looking down at the woman who had eluded him, was defying him, he struck out! He had no thought at all for the moment--something was in his way; before he could escape he must fling it aside.
Mary-Clare drooped; dropped from her chair and lay quiet upon the floor. Her hand, holding the paper, was spread wide, the note was unprotected.
For a moment Larry gazed at his work with horrified eyes. Never before had he meted physical brutality to man or woman. He was a coward at heart, and he was thoroughly cowed as he stood above the girl at his feet. He saw that she was breathing; there was almost at once a fluttering of the lids. There were two things for a coward to do--seize the note and make his escape.
Larry did both and Mary-Clare took no heed.
A little red squirrel came into the sunny room and darted about; the sunlight grew dim, for there was a storm rising, and the clouds were heavy on its wings.
And while the deathly silence reigned in the cabin, Northrup and Kathryn were riding rapidly from the inn. As the car pa.s.sed the yellow house, Kathryn pathetically drew down the shades--her eyes were tear-filled.
"Brace, dear," she whispered, "I'm so afraid. The storm; everything frightens me. Take me in your arms."
And at that moment Kathryn believed that she loved Northrup, had saved him from a great peril, and she was prepared to act the part, in the future, of a faithful wife.
CHAPTER XVIII
Noreen and Jan-an late that afternoon returned to the yellow house.
They were both rather depressed and forlorn, for they knew that Northrup was gone and had taken away with him much that had stimulated and cheered.
Finding the yellow house empty, the two went up the opposite hill and leisurely made their way to the brook that marked the limit of free choice. Here they sat down, and Noreen suggested that they sing Northrup's old songs and play some of his diverting games. Jan-an solemnly agreed, shaking her head and sighing as one does who recalls the dead.
So Noreen piped out the well-beloved words of "Green Jacket" and, rather heavily, acted the jovial part. But Jan-an refused to be comforted. She cried distractedly, and always when Jan-an wept she made such abnormal "faces" that she disturbed any onlookers.
"All right!" Noreen said at last. "We'll both do something."
This clever psychological ruse brought Jan-an to her normal state.
"Let's play Eve's Other Children," Noreen ran on. "I'll be Eve and hide my children, the ones I don't like specially. You be G.o.d, Jan-an."
This was a great concession on Noreen's part, for she revelled in the leading role, as it gave full play to her dramatic sense of justice.
However, the play began with Noreen hiding some twisted and dry sticks under stones and in holes in trees and then proceeding to dress, in gay autumn leaves, more favoured twigs. She crooned over them; expatiated upon their loveliness, and, at a given signal, poor Jan-an clumsily appeared and in most unflattering terms accused Noreen of depravity and unfaithfulness, demanding finally, in most picturesque and primitive language, the hidden children. At this point Noreen rose to great heights. Fear, remorse, and shame overcame her. She pleaded and denied; she confessed and at last began, with the help of her accuser, to search out the neglected offspring. So wholly did the two enjoy this part of the game that they forgot their animosity, and when the crooked twigs were discovered Jan-an became emphatically allegorical with Noreen and ruthlessly destroyed the "other children"
on the score that they weren't worth keeping.
But the interest flagged at length, and both Jan-an and Noreen became silent and depressed.
"I've got feelin's!" Jan-an remarked, "in the pit of my stomach.
Besides, it's getting cold and a storm's brewing. Did yer hear thunder?"
Noreen was replacing her favoured children in the crannies of the rocks, but she turned now to Jan-an and said wistfully:
"I want Motherly."
"She's biding terrible long up yonder."
"P'raps, oh! Jan-an, p'raps that lady you were telling about has taken Motherly!"
Noreen became agitated, but Jan-an with blind intuition scoffed.
"No; whatever she took, she wouldn't take her! But she took Mr.
Northrup, all right. Her kind takes just fierce! I sense her."
Noreen looked blank.
"Tell me about the heathen, Jan-an," she said. "What _did_ he eat when Uncle Peter wouldn't let him have Ginger?"
"I don't know, but I did miss two rabbits."
"Live ones, Jan-an?" Noreen's eyes widened.
"Sure, live ones. Everything's live till it's killed. I ain't saying he et 'em 'live."
"Maybe the rabbits got away," Noreen suggested hopefully.
"The Lord knows! Maybe they did." Then Jan-an added further information: "I guess your father has gone for good!"
"Took?" Noreen was not now overcome by grief.
"No, just gone. He gave me a dollar."
"A dollar, Jan-an? A whole dollar?" This was almost unbelievable.
Jan-an produced the evidence from her loose and soiled blouse.
"He left his place terribly tidy, too," she ran on, "and when a man does that Peneluna says it's awful suspicious."
"Jan-an, you wait here--I'm going up to the cabin!"
Noreen stood up defiantly. She was possessed by one of her sudden flashes of inspiration.
"Yer ain't been called," warned Jan-an.
"I know, but I _must_ go. I'll only peep in. Maybe Motherly took a back way to the inn."
To this Jan-an had nothing to say and she sat down upon a wet rock to wait, while Noreen darted up the trail like a small, distracted animal of the woods.