"Not at all," I replied. "I could run like this for a long distance."

She looked up at me with a little smile. I think she must have

forgotten the pain in her foot.

"It must be nice to be strong like that," she said.

Now the rain came down faster, and my companion declared that I ought

to stop and put on my coat. I agreed to this, and when I came to a

suitable tree by the road-side, I carefully leaned her against it and

detached my coat from my bicycle. But just as I was about to put it on

I glanced at the young girl. She had on a thin shirt-waist, and I

could see that the shoulders of it were already wet. I advanced

towards her, holding out my coat. "I must lay this over you," I said.

"I am afraid now that I shall not get you to your home before it

begins to rain hard."

She turned to me so suddenly that I made ready to catch her if her

unguarded movement should overturn her machine. "You mustn't do that

at all!" she said. "It doesn't matter whether I am wet or not. I do

not have to travel in wet clothes, and you do. Please put on your coat

and let us hurry!"

I obeyed her, and away we went again, the rain now coming down hard

and fast. For some minutes she did not say anything; but I did not

wonder at this, for circumstances were not favorable to conversation.

But presently, in spite of the rain and our haste, she spoke: "It must seem dreadfully ungrateful and hard-hearted in me to say to

you, after all you have done for me, that you must go on in the rain.

Anybody would think that I ought to ask you to come into our house and

wait until the storm is over. But, really, I do not see how I can do

it."

I urged her not for a moment to think of me. I was hardy, and did not

mind rain, and when I was mounted upon my wheel the exercise would

keep me warm enough until I reached a place of shelter.

"I do not like it," she said. "It is cruel and inhuman, and nothing

you can say will make it any better. But the fact is that I find

myself in a very--Well, I do not know what to say about it. You are

the school-teacher at Walford, are you not?"




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