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CHAPTER V

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“Aren’t you going to shake hands?” he asked. He was leaning on the gate, smoking a cigarette.

It was not so dark that the girl, who had halted a couple of yards away, could fail to see the smile accompanying the words. Symington’s was by no means an ill-looking countenance, though forty years, half of them strenuous after a fashion, had blurred the fineness of the well-shaped features; it would have been attractive, admirable even, but for something in the eyes, something about the mouth, under the nicely trimmed tawny moustache, that is not to be fully described by the word covetous. His was a face that no wise man would regard without doubts, that no wise woman would trust. Symington was tall and broad-shouldered, but in the light of day he had a softish look, and one imagined him as a “fat man” in the years soon to come. He was no hard-working farmer. White Farm had come to him for lack of a worthier and fitter heir, his two brothers having died not long before his father, and there were honest people in the neighbourhood who would tell you that the good old property was already on the road to ruin. Symington’s record was that of a man who had seen a good deal of life in different parts of the world, and learned little worth knowing, who had frequently touched the skirts of Fortune but never captured her, and who had gambled away more hours than he had toiled. And now, at forty, he was probably nearer to Fortune than he had ever been, and certainly nearer to love, as he understood it. For in Kitty Carstairs he had nothing to gain but youthful sweetness and fresh beauty; indeed, in a material sense, the possession of her was going to cost him dear—if he kept his bond with the contemptible John Corrie.

“Aren’t you going to shake hands?” he asked again.

“Please open the gate,” said Kitty, “or I must go home another way.”

“It’s a lovely night, and your aunt knows I’m looking after you. I want to have a talk with you, Kitty.”

She sighed. “I’m very tired—too tired to listen to any one. Please let me go.”

“I won’t keep you long, and we can find a nice dry seat in the wood, since you’re so tired. Come, you needn’t be shy with me, Kitty—”

“Are you going to open the gate?” she coldly asked.

“Immediately, if you’ll promise—”

He turned sharply. Some one had come out of the little wood, and was crossing the road.

“Is that you, Miss?”

“Oh, Sam!” cried the girl in a gasp of relief.

“Can ye no’ get the gate open?” the postman inquired, as though no Symington had been there. He came forward and laid a hand on the bolt.

“What the blazes do you want?” blurted Symington, suddenly erect.

“I’m thinking Miss Carstairs is due home by now,” Sam said coolly. “What do ye say, Miss?”

“Miss Carstairs is in my charge, you interfering fool!”

“No, no, Sam; I’m not!—and I want to get home at once.”

“Kindly stand aside, Mr. Symington,” said the postman.

“Stand aside—for you!” exclaimed Symington in a fury. With an ugly laugh and a curse he drove his fist at the little man’s face, sending him down in a heap. “That’s to go on with,” he said, and strolled off.

“Oh, you coward!” cried Kitty, wrenching open the gate. “Are you badly hurt, Sam?”

Sam was already rising, holding his aching jaw. Inwardly he was raging, but all he said then was, “All right, Miss. My turn’ll maybe come. And now I’ll be seeing ye home.”

She caught his arm, for he seemed in need of support.

“Ye’re trembling, Miss,” he remarked, “and no wonder. Never mind; it’s all over now. But I’d just like to hear ye say ye didna think me too interfering-like.”

“Oh,” she said earnestly, “I don’t know what I’d have done if you hadn’t come. I’ll be grateful to you as long as—”

“There, there! It’s a reward to hear that ye didna want his company, for he’s a rotten bad one.”

They walked a little way in silence, and then a sob escaped the girl. She was at the end of her wits and her courage. Few of us can struggle alone all the time, and she knew that Sam had saved her only for a matter of so many hours.

“Come, cheer up, Miss,” he said kindly. “Ye wasna in the office to-night, and your aunt told me ye wasna so well, so it’s no wonder ye’re upset. Still—”

“Sam,” she interrupted, “I’m going to tell you everything—nearly everything. You’re the only soul I can trust.” And in whispered, spasmodic sentences she poured forth her tale.

Sam was more than shocked; he was overwhelmed.

“To think of it, to think of it!” he repeated feebly a dozen times before wrath and pity took command of his honest soul. Then he was for taking John Corrie by the throat, and shaking all but the last breath out of his body, for telling Miss Corrie exactly what he thought of her, and for presenting Kitty with his savings, yea, and his own little abode, to enable her to stand independent of her unnatural relatives.

She was half-laughing, half-crying, by the time he paused for breath.

“Oh, Sam, you know I’d never allow you to do any of those things for my sake, but I’ll never forget your goodness. You mustn’t do anything, or I’ll wish I hadn’t told you. But I do want you to advise me what to do.”

“I never liked John Corrie,” he cried, “nor did any soul in Dunford; but I never doubted he was a straight man. But dinna ye be afraid for the five-pun’ note business—dinna ye be afraid for that!”

“But that’s what I am afraid of! I might escape from Mr. Symington by simply going away, but not from—”

“Your uncle would never dare to—”

“Dare? After what he’s done, what would he not dare? And he’s clever in his way. How did he get that five-pound note into my drawer?”

Sam’s hand went to his mouth. A sound not unlike a chuckle became the beginning of a fit of coughing. When it had passed he said—

“We’ll maybe find that out yet, so dinna let it bother ye too much, Miss. But if he tries to frighten ye, let me know, and I’ll deal wi’ him—by gravy, I’ll deal wi’ him!”

“Sam, you must be careful. What if he got you into trouble, and you lost your—”

“I can take care o’ myself,” said Sam, “except, maybe at the boxing—and I didna get fair play from that scoundrel.” He laughed ruefully.

“The beast!”

“Well, well, as I said, my turn’ll maybe come—and yours’ll come to a certainty, Miss. Keep up your heart. Are ye feeling a bit better now?”

“Oh, yes,” she answered warmly. “It’s not so awful when one isn’t all alone.”

“Poor, pretty thing!” he said gently, “ye’ll win through yet. … And now we’re nearly there, and I’d best no be seen wi’ ye. We’ll get a talk at sorting-time in the morning.”

“Unless I’m forbidden the office.”

“If your uncle does that, we’ll just ha’ to find another way.”

With a hurried pat on her shoulder, he turned and went.

* * * * *

Kitty Carstairs

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