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"Give me free board for a time."
"Not send you to prison?"
"Yes."
"Oh!" she cried, "that mustn't be. You must not make such a sacrifice for us."
"I'd do more than that for _you_," I said, and I couldn't help putting a little emphasis on the last word, though I knew I had no right to do it.
She understood me, and blushed rosily, even while she protested, "It is too much--"
"There's really no likelihood," I interrupted, "of my being able to a.s.sume a martyr's crown, Miss Cullen; so don't begin to pity me till I'm behind the bars."
"But I can't bear to think--"
"Don't," I interrupted again, rejoicing all the time at her evident anxiety, and blessing my stars for the luck they had brought me. "Why, Miss Cullen," I went on, "I've become so interested in your success and the licking of those fellows that I really think I'd stand about anything rather than that they should win. Yesterday, when Mr. Camp threatened to--" Then I stopped, as it suddenly occurred to me that it was best not to tell Madge that I might lose my position, for it would look like a kind of bid for her favor, and, besides, would only add to her worries.
"Threatened what?" asked Miss Cullen.
"Threatened to lose his temper," I answered.
"You know that wasn't what you were going to say," Madge said reproachfully.
"No, it wasn't," I laughed.
"Then what was it?"
"Nothing worth speaking about."
"But I want to know what he threatened."
"Really, Miss Cullen," I began; but she interrupted me by saying anxiously--
"He can't hurt papa, can he?"
"No," I replied.
"Or my brothers?"
"He can't touch any of them without my help. And he'll have work to get that, I suspect."
"Then why can't you tell me?" demanded Miss Cullen. "Your refusal makes me think you are keeping back some danger to them."
"Why, Miss Cullen," I said, "I didn't like to tell his threat, because it seemed--well, I may be wrong, but I thought it might look like an attempt--an appeal--Oh, pshaw!" I faltered, like a donkey--"I can't say it as I want to put it."
"Then tell me right out what he threatened," begged Madge.
"He threatened to get me discharged."
That made Madge look very sober, and for a moment there was silence.
Then she said--
"I never thought of what you were risking to help us, Mr. Gordon. And I'm afraid it's too late to--"
"Don't worry about me," I hastened to interject. "I'm a long way from being discharged, and, even if I should be, Miss Cullen, I know my business, and it won't be long before I have another place."
"But it's terrible to think of the injury we may have caused you,"
sighed Madge, sadly. "It makes me hate the thought of money."
"That's a very poor thing to hate," I said, "except the lack of it."
"Are you so anxious to get rich?" asked Madge, looking up at me quickly, as we walked--for we had been pacing up and down the platform during our chat.
"I haven't been till lately."
"And what made you change?" she questioned.
"Well," I said, fis.h.i.+ng round for some reason other than the true one, "perhaps I want to take a rest."
"You are the worst man for fibs I ever knew," she laughed.
I felt myself getting red, while I exclaimed, "Why, Miss Cullen, I never set up for a George Was.h.i.+ngton, but I don't think I'm a bit worse liar than nine men in--"
"Oh," she cried, interrupting me, "I didn't mean that way. I meant that when you try to fib you always do it so badly that one sees right through you. Now, acknowledge that you wouldn't stop work if you could?"
"Well, no, I wouldn't," I owned up. "The truth is, Miss Cullen, that I'd like to be rich, because--well, hang it, I don't care if I do say it--because I'm in love."
Madge laughed at my confusion, and asked, "With money?"
"No," I said. "With just the nicest, sweetest, prettiest girl in the world."
Madge took a look at me out of the corner of her eye, and remarked, "It must be breakfast time."
Considering that it was about six-thirty, I wanted to ask who was telling a taradiddle now; but I resisted the temptation, and replied--
"No. And I promise not to bother you about my private affairs any more."
Madge laughed again merrily, saying, "You are the most obvious man I ever met. Now why did you say that?"
"I thought you were making breakfast an excuse," I said, "because you didn't like the subject."
"Yes, I was," said Madge, frankly. "Tell me about the girl you are engaged to."
I was so taken back that I stopped in my walk, and merely looked at her.
"For instance," she asked coolly, when she saw that I was speechless, "what does she look like?"
"Like, like--" I stammered, still embarra.s.sed by this bold carrying of the war into my own camp--"like an angel."