Frederick, ashy-pale, struggled for control; a consciousness of the ignorance of the girl--and his own godly profession broke upon him; and he sank upon the stool with a sob. His face in his hands filled Tessibel's soul with remorse. Delicately, with the touch of a lady born, she rested her hand upon the student's dark head. The small fingers, used to the drudgery of a fisherwoman's life, lifted the damp hair from the high forehead. Her woman's sense of the fitness of things rose keenly to quiet the boy's grief over his indiscretion.
"It were good of ye to remember that Daddy were gone," she whispered. "He gives me kisses on the bill."
All passion had left her tones. Of course, thought the student, she was but a child--but a forlorn beautiful child born without--without what? If he could have known-The next moment he did know. With abandon, complete and absolute, the hot blood coursing madly from her heart to her face, Tess threw herself upon the shanty floor. Frederick Graves drew her quickly to her feet.
"Tess ... Tessibel ... Tess ... Stand up, Tess!"
The last word came out in a shout. He had her in his arms, and she was clinging to him as ivy clings for life to an old church.
Tessibel made no effort to support herself. She was leaning limply against him with closed eyes.
"It air good to forget--sometimes," she stammered, "I air a forgettin' all but the--student."
As on that memorable day when "Daddy" had been taken to prison in Auburn, and she had planted herself in his arms not to be removed, so Tess hung to Frederick. Ben Letts was forgotten, the suffering child in the Longman shanty whom she loved was forgotten; even Daddy Skinner was forgotten. Tessibel had found her man, and all the experiences of her kind could not help her in her hour of temptation.
"Tessibel, Tess, we can't forget, stand up." The boy's words spread through the dazed brain. Frederick dragged her arms from his neck, forcing her to the stool.
"Tessibel, have you forgotten--the Christ, your father and me?"
Had she forgotten him? Only him she had remembered--only his voice rang through her like the sweetest music. But she was so quiet now that the boy seated himself beside her, drawing her hands into his.
"Tess," he began, intensely, bending to look into the flushed face, "Tess--look at me!"
Slowly the brown eyes dragged their gaze upward until the boy and girl were staring wide-lidded directly at each other.