"Well, Sarah Dobbs," said he, on entering the parlour, "I didn't think you would steal a march on me like this! I did believe you'd have trusted me sooner than a parcel of strangers, after all these years!"
He did not sit down in his usual place by the fireside, but remained standing opposite to his old friend, looking at her with a troubled countenance. Mrs. Dobbs gave him one quick, keen glance, and then said—
"So you've heard it, Jo? Well, I didn't mean that you should hear it from any one but me. But who shall stop chattering tongues? They rage like a fire in the stubble. And the poorer and lighter the fuel, the bigger blaze it makes. It was settled only this very morning, too."
"It is true, then, Sarah? I had a kind of a hankering hope that it might be only trash and chit-chat."
"You mean about my letting my house, don't you? Yes; that's true."
"And me never to know a word of it!—To hear it from strangers!"
"Now look here, Jo; let us talk sensibly. Sit down, can't you?"
But Jo would not sit down; and after a minute's pause, Mrs. Dobbs went on—
"I'll tell you the truth. I didn't say a word to you of my plan beforehand, because I was afraid to—there!"
"Afraid! You, Sarah Dobbs, afraid of me! That's a good one!" But his face relaxed a little from its pained, fixed look.