"No other," answered Hilda sadly.

"Yes; Kenyon!" rejoined Miriam.

"He cannot be my friend," said Hilda, "because--because--I have fancied

that he sought to be something more."

"Fear nothing!" replied Miriam, shaking her head, with a strange smile.

"This story will frighten his new-born love out of its little life, if

that be what you wish. Tell him the secret, then, and take his wise and

honorable counsel as to what should next be done. I know not what else

to say."

"I never dreamed," said Hilda,--"how could you think it?--of betraying

you to justice. But I see how it is, Miriam. I must keep your secret,

and die of it, unless God sends me some relief by methods which are now

beyond my power to imagine. It is very dreadful. Ah! now I understand

how the sins of generations past have created an atmosphere of sin

for those that follow. While there is a single guilty person in the

universe, each innocent one must feel his innocence tortured by that

guilt. Your deed, Miriam, has darkened the whole sky!"

Poor Hilda turned from her unhappy friend, and, sinking on her knees in

a corner of the chamber, could not be prevailed upon to utter another

word. And Miriam, with a long regard from the threshold, bade farewell

to this doves' nest, this one little nook of pure thoughts and innocent

enthusiasms, into which she had brought such trouble. Every crime

destroys more Edens than our own!



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