“There is no reason why you should not—if you choose,” he said, “unless Mr. Barholm should object. I need not tell you how grateful I should be.”
“Papa will not object,” she said, quietly.
The next time the pupils met, she presented herself in the school-room.
Ten minutes after Grace had given her work to her she was as much at home with it as if she had been there from the first.
“Hoo's a little un,” said one of the boys, “but hoo does na seem to be easy feart. Hoo does not look a bit tuk back.”
She had never been so near to Paul Grace during their friendship as when she walked home with him. A stronger respect for him was growing in her,—a new reverence for his faithfulness. She had always liked and trusted him, but of late she had learned to do more. She recognized more fully the purity and singleness of his life. She accused herself of having underrated him.
“Please let me help you when I can, Mr. Grace,” she said; “I am not blaming anybody—there is no real blame, even if I had the right to attach it to any one; but there are mistakes now and then, and you must promise me that I may use my influence to prevent them.”
She had stopped at the gate to say this, and she held out her hand. It was a strange thing that she could be so utterly oblivious of the pain she inflicted. But even Derrick would have taken her hand with less self-control. He was so fearful of wounding or disturbing her, that he was continually on his guard in her presence, and especially when she was thus warm and unguarded herself.
He had fancied before, sometimes, that she had seen his difficulties, and sympathized with him, but he had never hoped that she would be thus unreserved. His thanks came from the depths of his heart; he felt that she had lightened his burden.
After this, Miss Barholm was rarely absent from her place at the school. The two evenings always found her at work among her young women, and she made very steady progress among them.