His old pity was revived. He smoothed her hair.
“Poor child!”
At his touch the sobs came. Her head drooped upon his knee.
“Nancy wouldn’t have me in the house; her husband thinks he likes me, and I am afraid of him. I’d nowhere to sleep, so I walked out here, meaning to sleep in the woods. Don’t turn me out, oh, don’t! I’m all alone in the world, and I don’t want to be like the others. Let me stay. I’ll do everything for you. I won’t speak when you don’t want me to. You’ll never know I’m here, except when you want anything done. Oh, please, please be kind to me. If you don’t, I shall go and drown myself. I’ve been miserable so long.”
Her cry went to his heart, pierced even the dull lethargy of his own despair. The rain was dashing against the window. He glanced at the clock—it was nearly midnight.
“Poor little waif,” he murmured, “and there are so many like you.”
She crept, sobbing, into his arms; her hands were clasped around his neck. For her it was happiness immeasurable; for him, too, there was a certain solace in the thought that this lone creature loved him and was dependent upon him. He sat with wide-open eyes, gazing into the fire all the night long.
They were married the next day.
Through the weeks that followed things remained the same at Strone’s cottage yet different. Everything was spotlessly clean, but somehow the atmosphere was altered. The chairs were ranged in order against the wall. There were enormities in the shape of woolen antimacassars, a flimsy curtain hung before the small window.