"He's real nice-lookin', ain't he?

"Yes."

"Have you got your eye on anybody else?"

"No."

"Then, Miss Thorne, I don't know's you could do better."

"Perhaps not." She was thinking, and spoke mechanically. From where she

stood she could still see him walking rapidly down the hill.

"Ain't you never seen him before?"

Miss Thorne turned. "Hepsey," she said, coldly, "please go into the

kitchen and attend to your work. And the next time I have company,

please stay in the kitchen--not in the dining-room."

"Yes'm," replied Hepsey, meekly, hastening to obey.

She was not subtle, but she understood that in some way she had offended

Miss Thorne, and racked her brain vainly. She had said nothing that

she would not have said to Miss Hathaway, and had intended nothing but

friendliness. As for her being in the dining-room--why, very often, when

Miss Hathaway had company, she was called in to give her version of

some bit of village gossip. Miss Hathaway scolded her when she was

displeased, but never before had any one spoken to Hepsey in a measured,

icy tone that was at once lady-like and commanding. Tears came into her

eyes, for she was sensitive, after all.

A step sounded overhead, and Hepsey regained her self-possession. She

had heard nearly all of the conversation and could have told Miss Thorne

a great deal about the young man. For instance, he had not said that he

was boarding at Joe's, across the road from Miss Ainslie's, and that

he intended to stay all Summer. She could have told her of an uncertain

temper, peculiar tastes, and of a silver shaving-cup which Joe had

promised her a glimpse of before the visitor went back to the city; but

she decided to let Miss Thorne go on in her blind ignorance.

Ruth, meanwhile, was meditating, with an aggravated restlessness. The

momentary glimpse of the outer world had stung her into a sense of

her isolation, which she realised even more keenly than before. It was

because of this, she told herself, that she hoped Winfield liked her,

for it was not her wont to care about such trifles. He thought of her,

idly, as a nice girl, who was rather pretty when she was interested in

anything; but, with a woman's insight, influenced insensibly by Hepsey's

comment, Ruth scented possibilities.

She wanted him to like her, to stay in that miserable village as long as

she did, and keep her mind from stagnation--her thought went no further

than that. In October, when they went back, she would thank Carlton,

prettily, for sending her a friend--provided they did not quarrel. She

could see long days of intimate companionship, of that exalted kind

which is, possible only when man and woman meet on a high plane. "We're

both too old for nonsense," she thought; and then a sudden fear struck

her, that Winfield might be several years younger than she was.




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