"Roy, let me go, I say!"
But it was not a command now. It was a supplication—perhaps not even that.
She did not love him; in her heart she knew she did not love him. He loved her—years afterwards; only years afterwards. The thought of her left him—but it returned to him, never to leave him again. The moon made the crest of the hill like day, but the shadows of the gorse-bushes lay dark on the short grass and stunted bents and the patches of wild thyme. The moon southed, then rode less high. In the short night a lamb called; and then the birds, reaching the shallows of their sleep, gave a drowsy twittering and went to sleep again. It was the false dawn. The stars grew a little brighter as a deeper darkness possessed the earth; then in the darkness a cock crowed.
They met again on the next night. On the night after that they met once more.
Only after that did she sit down, alone in the box-room, in the twilight, to think.
Her boxes were packed and strapped, and the cart was coming for them from Rainham Magna in the morning.
She wished Burnett Minor had been there. She would have liked to say good-bye to the child. There was nobody else it would break her heart to leave.
Yet Roy was still down there under the hill. The centre-board had gone wrong again. She was to see him at the stile, in the morning, before leaving. It seemed, somehow, superfluous.
But she did meet him. His face was set, and he had forgotten to shave.
"Don't look like that; it wasn't your fault," she said composedly.