"Yes," she answered, and thought she spoke the truth.

"I love you,--love you greatly," he continued. "I will conquer,--conquer

and atone! But now, poor tired one, I let you go. Sleep, Audrey, sleep and

dream again." He held open the door for her, and stood aside with bent

head.

She passed him; then turned, and after a moment of silence spoke to him

with a strange and sorrowful stateliness. "You think, sir," she said,

"that I have something to forgive?"

"Much," he answered,--"very much, Audrey."

"And you wish my forgiveness?"

"Ay, Audrey, your forgiveness and your love."

"The first is mine to give," she said. "If you wish it, take it. I forgive

you, sir. Good-by."

"Good-night," he answered. "Audrey, good-night."

"Good-by," she repeated, and slowly mounting the broad staircase passed

from his sight.

It was dark in the upper hall, but there was a great glimmer of sky, an

opal space to mark a window that gave upon the sloping lawn and pallid

river. The pale light seemed to beckon. Audrey went not on to her attic

room, but to the window, and in doing so passed a small half-open door. As

she went by she glanced through the aperture, and saw that there was a

narrow stairway, built for the servants' use, winding down to a door in

the western face of the house.

Once at the open window, she leaned forth and looked to the east and the

west. The hush of the evening had fallen; the light was faint; above the

last rose flush a great star palely shone. All was quiet, deserted;

nothing stirring on the leaf-carpeted slope; no sound save the distant

singing of the slaves. The river lay bare from shore to shore, save where

the Westover landing stretched raggedly into the flood. To its piles small

boats were tied, but there seemed to be no boatmen; wharf and river

appeared as barren of movement and life as did the long expanse of dusky

lawn.

"I will not sleep in this house to-night," said Audrey to herself. "If I

can reach those boats unseen, I will go alone down the river. That will be

well. I am not wanted here."

When she arrived at the foot of the narrow stair, she slipped through the

door into a world all dusk and quiet, where was none to observe her, none

to stay her. Crouching by the wall she crept to the front of the house,

stole around the stone steps where, that morning, she had sat in the

sunshine, and came to the parlor windows. Close beneath one was a block of

stone. After a moment's hesitation she stood upon this, and, pressing her

face against the window pane, looked her last upon the room she had so

lately left. A low fire upon the hearth, darkly illumined it: he sat by

the table, with his arms outstretched and his head bowed upon them. Audrey

dropped from the stone into the ever growing shadows, crossed the lawn,

slipped below the bank, and took her way along the river edge to the long

landing. When she was half way down its length, she saw that there was a

canoe which she had not observed and that it held one man, who sat with

his back to the shore. With a quick breath of dismay she stood still, then

setting her lips went on; for the more she thought of having to see those

two again, Evelyn and the master of Fair View, the stronger grew her

determination to commence her backward journey alone and at once.




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