The simplicity of immediate flight she had, of course, long ago

abandoned; it would only postpone the struggle with William King. That

inflexible face of duty would hunt her down wherever she was, and take

the child from her. No; there was but one thing to do: parry his

threat of confessing to Dr. Lavendar that he had "made a mistake" in

advising that David should be given to her, by a confession of her

own, a confession which should admit the doctor's change of mind

without mentioning its cause, and at the same time hold such promises

for the future that the old minister would say that she might have

David. Then she could turn upon her enemy with the triumphant

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declaration that she had forestalled him; that she had said exactly

what he had threatened to say,--no more, no less. And yet the child

was hers! But as she tried to plan how she should put it, the idea

eluded her. She would tell Dr. Lavendar thus and so: but even as she

marshalled her words, that scene in the waiting-room of the railroad

station ached in her imagination. Alice's ignorance of her existence

became an insult; what she was going to say to Dr. Lavendar turned

into a denunciation of Lloyd Pryor; he was vile, and cruel, and

contemptible! But these words stumbled, too. Back in her mind, common

sense agreed to Lloyd's silence to his daughter; and, suddenly, to her

amazement, she knew that she agreed, not only to the silence, but to

his objection to marrying her. It would be an offence for her to live

with Alice! Marriage, which would have quitted this new tormenting

sense of responsibility and made her like other people, would not have

lessened that offence. It came over her with still more acute

surprise, that she had never felt this before. It was as if that fire

of shame which had consumed her vanity the night she had confessed to

William King, had brought illumination as well as burning. By its

glare she saw that such a secret as she and Lloyd held between them

would be intolerable in the presence of that young girl. Lloyd had

felt it--here she tingled all over:--Lloyd was more sensitive than

she! Ah, well; Alice was his own daughter, and he knew how almost

fanatical she was about truth; so he was especially sensitive. But Dr.

King? He had felt it about David: "whether you married this man or not

would make no difference about David." She thought about this for

awhile in heavy perplexity.

Then with a start she came back again to what she must say to Dr.

Lavendar: "I will promise to bring David up just as he wishes; and I

will tell him about my money; he doesn't know how rich I am; he will

feel that he has no right to rob David of such a chance. And I will

say that nobody could love him as I can." Love him! Had she not given

up everything for him, sacrificed everything to keep him? For his sake

she had not married! In this rush of self-approval she sat up, and

looked blindly off over the orchard below her at the distant hills,

blue and slumberous in the sunshine. Then she leaned her head in her

hands and stared fixedly at a clump of clover, green still in the

yellowing stubble.... She had chosen her child instead of a convention

which, less than a month ago, she had so passionately desired; a month

ago it seemed to her that, once married, she could do no more harm,

have no more shame. Yet she had given all this up for David! ...

Suddenly she spurred her mind back to that talk with Dr. Lavendar: she

would promise--anything! And planning her promises, she sat there,

gazing with intent, unseeing eyes at the clover, until the chilly

twilight drove her into the house.




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