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Polly watched his tottering steps a moment, and then she sprang after him.
'Oh, Rex, do not be so cross with me; do not refuse my help,' she said, winding her arm round him, and compelling him to lean on her. 'There, you have done yourself mischief,' as he paused, overcome by a paroxysm of coughing. 'How can you--how can you be so unkind to me, Rex?'
He did not answer; perhaps, absorbed in his own trouble, he hardly knew how he tried her; but as he sank back feebly on the cus.h.i.+ons, he whispered--
'You will sing it, Polly, will you not?'
'Yes, yes; anything, if you will only not be angry with me,' returned the poor girl, as she hurried away.
The air was a mournful one, just suited to the words:--
'Ask me no more: what answer should I give?
I love not hollow cheek or faded eye: Yet, O my friend, I will not have thee die!
Ask me no more, lest I should bid thee live; Ask me no more.'
'Polly, come here! come to me, Polly!' for, overcome by a sudden revulsion of feeling, Polly had broken down, and hidden her face in her hands; and now a stifled sob reached Roy's ear.
'Polly, I dare not move, and I only want to ask you to forgive me,' in a remorseful voice; and the girl obeyed him reluctantly.
'What makes you so cruel to me?' she panted, looking at him with sad eyes, that seemed to pierce his selfishness. 'It is not my fault if you are so unhappy--if you will not get well.'
'Ask me no more; thy fate and mine are sealed.' The plaintive rhythm still haunted her. Was she, after all, so much to blame? Was she not suffering too? Why should he lay this terrible burden on her? It was selfish of him to die and leave her to her misery.
Roy fairly quailed beneath the girl's indignation and pa.s.sionate sorrow.
'Have I been so hard to you, Polly?' he said, humbly. 'Are men ever hard to the women they love? There, the murder is out. You must leave me, Polly; you must go back to Heriot. I am too weak to hide the truth any longer. You must not stay and listen to me,' pus.h.i.+ng her away with weak force.
It was his turn to be agitated now.
'Leave me!' he repeated, 'it is not loyal to Heriot to listen to a fool's maundering, which he has not the wit or the strength to hide. I should only frighten you with my vehemence, and do no good. Aunt Milly will be here directly. Leave me, I say.'
But she only clung to him, and called him brother. Alas! how could she leave him!
By and by he grew calmer.
'Forgive me, Polly; I am not myself; I ought not to have made you sing that song.'
'No, Rex,' in a voice scarcely audible.
'When you go back to Heriot you must tell him all. Ask him not to be hard on me. I never meant to injure him. The man you love is sacred in my eyes. It was only for a little while I hated him.'
'I will not tell him that.'
'Listen to me, dear! I ask his pardon, and yours too, for having betrayed myself. I have acted like a weak fool to-night. You were wiser than I, Polly.'
'There is nothing to forgive,' she returned, softly. 'Heriot will not be angry with you; he knows you are ill, and I--I will try to forget it.
But you must get well, Rex; you will promise to get well for my sake.'
'Shall you grieve very much if I do not? Heriot would comfort you, if I did not, Polly.'
She made an involuntary movement towards him, and then checked herself.
'Cruel! cruel!' she said, in a voice that sounded dead and cold, and her arms fell to her side.
He melted at that.
'There, I have hurt you again. What a selfish wretch I am. I shall make a poor thing of life; but I will promise not to die if I can help it.
You shall not call me cruel again, Polly.'
Then she smiled, and stretched out her hand to him.
'I would not requite your goodness so badly as that. You could always do as you liked with me in the old days, Polly--turn me round your little finger. If you tell me to get well I suppose I must try; but the best part of me is gone.'
She could not answer him. Every word went through her tender heart like a stab. What avail were her love and pity? Never should she be able to comfort him again; never would her sweet sisterly ministrations suffice for him. She must not linger by his side; her eyes were open now.
'Good-bye, Roy,' she faltered. She hardly knew what she meant by that farewell. Was she going to leave him? Was she only saying good-bye to the past, to girlhood, to all manner of fond foolish dreams? She rose with dry eyes when she had uttered that little speech, while he lay watching her.
'Do you mean to leave me?' he asked, sorrowfully, but not disputing her decision.
'Perhaps--yes--what does it matter?' she answered, moving drearily away.
What did it matter indeed? Her fate and his were sealed. Between them stretched a gulf, long as life, impa.s.sable as death; and even her innocent love might not span it.
'I shall not go to him, and he will not return to me,' she said, paraphrasing the words of the royal mourner to harmonise with her measure of pain. 'Never while I live shall I have my brother Roy again.'
Poor little aching, childish heart, dealing for the first time with life's mysteries, comprehending now the relative distinction between love and grat.i.tude, and standing with reluctant feet on the edge of an unalterable resolve. What sorrow in after years ever equalled this blank?
When Mildred returned she found a very desolate scene awaiting her; the fire had burnt low, a waste of dull red embers filled the grate, the moon shone through the one uncurtained window; a ma.s.s of drapery stirred at her entrance, a yawning figure stretched itself under the oriental quilt.
'Roy, were you asleep? The fire is nearly out. Where is Polly?
'I do not know. She left the room just now,' he returned, with a sleepy inflection; but to Mildred's delicate perception it did not ring true.
She said nothing, however, raked the embers together, threw on some wood, and lighted the lamps.
Had he really slept? There was no need to ask the question; his burning hand, the feverish light of his eyes, the compressed lips, the baffled and tortured lines of the brow, told her another story; she leant over him, pressing them out with soft fingers.
'Rex, my poor boy!'
'Aunt Milly, she has bidden me good-bye,' broke out the lad suddenly; 'she knows, and she is going back to Heriot; and I--I am the most miserable wretch alive.'
CHAPTER x.x.xI
'WHICH SHALL IT BE?'
'She looked again, as one that half afraid Would fain be certain of a doubtful thing; Or one beseeching, "Do not me upbraid!"
And then she trembled like the fluttering Of timid little birds, and silent stood.'