“Oh ... oh, Gordon, but we couldn’t! I haven’t even a white dress here. I might go into Greenstream, be ready to-morrow—”

“No, no, no, I’m afraid it must be now or never; something would take you from me. I knew it, I was afraid of it, from the first ... I’ll shoot myself.”

She started toward him in an excess of tender pity. “Do you care as much as that?” She laid her palms upon his shoulders, lifting her face to his: “Then we will do what you say, we will go, yes, we will go immediately. You can hitch up the buggy, while I get a little thing or two. I have my beads, and the bracelets that were mother’s ... I wish my white organdie was here. You mustn’t think I’m silly! You see—marriage, for a girl ... I thought it would all be so different. But, Gordon dear, we won’t let you be unhappy.”

He wished silently to God that she would get the stuff in the house, that they would get started. At any minute now word would come of the old man’s death, there would be delay, Lettice would learn that he had lied again and again to her. With a gesture of impatience he dislodged her hands from his shoulders. “Where’s Sim?” he demanded.

“In the long field. I’ll show you the stable; it won’t take me a minute to get ready.”

He hitched, in an incredibly short space of time, a tall, ungainly roan horse into the buggy; his practised hands connected the straps, settled the headstall, the collar, as if by magic. He stood in a fever of uneasiness at the harnessed head. Lettice was longer than she had indicated.

When, at last, she appeared, she carried a neatly pinned paper bundle, and a fragrant mass of hastily pulled roses. Bright blue glass beads hung over the soft contours of her virginal breasts, the bracelets that had been her mother’s—enamelled in black on old, reddish gold—encircled her smooth wrists.

He would have hurried her at once into the buggy, but she stopped him, and stood facing him with level, solemn eyes:

“I give myself to you, Gordon,” she said, “gladly and gladly, and I will go wherever you go, and try all my life to be what you would like.” As she repeated her simple words, erect and brave, with her arms filled with roses, for a fleeting second he was again conscious of the vague menace that had towered darkly at her back on the night when she had laid in his grasp that other rose ... the rose that had faded.

“Let’s get along,” he urged. The whip swung out across the roan’s ears, and the horse started forward with a vicious rush. The dewy fragrance of the flowers trailed out behind the buggy, mingling with the swirling dust, then both settled into the empty road, under the burning brightness of the sun, the insensate beauty of the azure sky.