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"I thought maybe I'd find her here," he said. "I ain't seen her since breakfast."
"There's other places she could have gone besides here. Maybe she's gone shopping in Romney and forgot to tell you."
"It's queer her starting off like that without a word--and she's took her liddle bag and a few bits of things with her too."
"What things?--Arthur! Why couldn't you tell me that before?"
"I was going to.... I'm feeling a bit anxious, Jo.... I've a feeling she's gone after that Old Squire."
"You dare say such a thing! Arthur, I'm ashamed of you, believing such a thing of your wife and my sister."
"Well, she was unaccountable set on him."
"Nonsense! He just amused her. It's you whose wife she is."
"She's scarce given me a word more'n in the way of business, as you might say, this last three month. And she won't let me touch her."
"Why didn't you tell me this before?"
"I didn't want to trouble you, and I thought maybe it was a private matter."
"You should have told me the drackly minute Ellen started not to treat you proper. I'd have spoken to her.... Now we're in for a valiant terrification."
"I'm unaccountable sorry, Jo."
"How long has she been gone?"
"Since around nine. I went out to see the tegs, counting them up to go inland, and when I came in for dinner the gal told me as Ellen had gone out soon after breakfast, and had told her to see as I got my dinner, as she wouldn't be back."
"Why didn't you start after her at once?"
"Well, I made sure as she'd gone to you. Then I began to think over things and put 'em together, and I found she'd taken her liddle bag, and I got scared. I never liked her seeing such a lot of that man."
"Then why didn't you stop it?"
"How could I?"
"I could have--and the way people talked.... I'd have locked her up sooner than ... well, it's too late now ... the boat went at twelve. Oh, Arthur, why didn't you watch her properly? Why did you let her go like that? Think of it! What's to become of her--away in foreign parts with a man who ain't her husband ... my liddle Ellen ... oh, it's turble--turble--"
Her speech suddenly roughened into the Doric of the Marsh, and she sat down heavily, dropping her head to her knees.
"Joanna--don't, don't ... don't take on, Jo."
He had not seen her cry before, and now she frightened him. Her shoulders heaved, and great panting sobs shook her broad back.
"My liddle Ellen ... my treasure, my duckie ... oh, why have you left us?... You could have come back to me if you didn't like it.... Oh, Ellen, where are you?... Come back ..."
Arthur stood motionless beside her, his frame rigid, his protuberant blue eyes staring through the window at the horizon. He longed to take Joanna in his arms, caress and comfort her, but he knew that he must not.
"Cheer up," he said at last in a husky voice, "maybe it ain't so bad as you think. Maybe I'll find her at home when I get back to Donkey Street."
"Not if she took her bag. Oh, whatsumever shall we do?--whatsumever shall we do?"
"We can but wait. If she don't come back, maybe she'll send me a letter."
"It queers me how you can speak so light of it."
"I speak light?"
"Yes, you don't seem to tumble to it."
"Reckon I do tumble to it, but what can we do?"
"You shouldn't have left her alone all that time from breakfast till dinner--if you'd gone after her at the start you could have brought her back. You should ought to have kicked Sir Harry out of Donkey Street before the start. I'd have done it surely. Reckon I love Ellen more'n you."
"Reckon you do, Jo. I tell you, I ought never to have married her--since it was you I cared for all along."
"Hold your tongue, Arthur. I'm ashamed of you to choose this time to say such an immoral thing."
"It ain't immoral--it's the truth."
"Well, it shouldn't ought to be the truth. When you married Ellen you'd no business to go on caring for me. I guess all this is a judgment on you, caring for a woman when you'd married her sister."
"You ain't yourself, Jo," said Arthur sadly, "and there's no sense arguing with you. I'll go away till you've got over it. Maybe I'll have some news for you to-morrow morning."
--27
To-morrow morning he had a letter from Ellen herself. He brought it at once to a strangely drooping and weary-eyed Joanna, and read it again over her shoulder.
"DEAR ARTHUR," it ran--
"I'm afraid this will hurt you and Joanna terribly, but I expect you have already guessed what has happened. I am on my way to San Remo, to join Sir Harry Trevor, and I am never coming back, because I know now that I ought not to have married you. I do not ask you to forgive me, and I'm sure Joanna won't, but I had to think of my own happiness, and I never was a good wife to you. Believe me, I have done my best--I said 'Good-bye for ever' to Harry a month ago, but ever since then my life has been one long misery; I cannot live without him.
"ELLEN."
"Well, it's only told us what we knew already," said Joanna with a gulp, "but now we're sure we can do better than just talk about it."
"What can we do?"
"We can get the Old Squire's address from somebody--Mrs. Williams or the people at North Farthing House--and then send a telegram after her, telling her to come back."
"That won't be much use."
"It'll be something, anyway. Maybe when she gets out there in foreign parts she won't be so pleased--or maybe he never asked her to come, and he'll have changed his mind about her. We must try and get her back.
Where have you told your folk she's gone to?"