"She will buy herself no more watches," said Herman, with an air of

finality.

Rudolph hesitated. The organization wanted Herman; he had had great

influence with the millworkers. Through him many things would be

possible. The Spencers trusted him, too. At any time Rudolph knew they

would be glad to reinstate him, and once inside the plant, there was no

limit to the mischief he could do. But Herman was too valuable to risk.

Suppose he was told now about Graham Spencer and Anna, and beat the girl

and was jailed for it? Besides, ugly as Rudolph's suspicions were, they

were as yet only suspicions. He decided to wait until he could bring

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Herman proof of Graham Spencer's relations with Anna. When that time

came he knew Herman. He would be clay for the potter. He, Rudolph,

intended to be the potter.

Katie had an afternoon off that Sunday. When she came back that night,

Herman, weary from the late hours of Saturday, was already snoring in

his bed. Anna met Katie at her door and drew her in.

"I've found a nice room," Katie whispered. "Here's the address written

down. The street cars go past it. Three dollars a week. Are you ready?"

Anna was ready, even to her hat. Over it she placed a dark veil, for

she was badly disfigured. Then, with Katie crying quietly, she left the

house. In the flare from the Spencer furnaces Katie watched until the

girl reappeared on the twisting street below which still followed the

old path--that path where Herman, years ago, had climbed through the

first spring wild flowers to the cottage on the hill.

Graham was uncomfortable the next morning on his way to the mill. Anna's

face had haunted him. But out of all his confusion one thing stood out

with distinctness. If he was to be allowed to marry Marion, he must have

no other entanglement. He would go to her clean and clear.

So he went to the office, armed toward Anna with a hardness he was far

from feeling.

"Poor little kid!" he reflected on the way down. "Rotten luck, all

round."

He did not for a moment believe that it would be a lasting grief. He

knew that sort of girl, he reflected, out of his vast experience of

twenty-two. They were sentimental, but they loved and forgot easily.

He hoped she would forget him; but even with that, there was a vague

resentment that she should do so.

"She'll marry some mill-hand," he reflected, "and wear a boudoir cap,

and have a lot of children who need their noses wiped."




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