Mr. Anson’s reader reported
favourably on Owen’s book, and in a very short
time satisfactory terms were agreed upon between author
and publisher, and the work of proof-reading and revision
began.
Unfortunately at the same time Owen
felt his arm to be more than usually painful; and
a visit to town proved the necessity for further treatment,
of which perfect rest was a feature: with the
result that once again Owen was forced to accept the
help of a secretary in his work.
Miss Loder, naturally, filled the
post; and once more she came to Greenriver, and took
her place in the stately old library, where she and
Owen passed strenuous hours daily.
To Toni Miss Loder’s presence
was growing ever more and more distasteful. Although
Toni was not an intellectual woman, she had sharp
wits; and possibly she understood Millicent Loder’s
personality a good deal better than Owen was able
to do. And what Toni saw and Toni’s
intuition was rarely at fault led her to
distrust the other girl with all her heart and soul.
Miss Loder belonged to a rather uncommon
variant of the type of emancipated womanhood.
Although intensely modern in many ways she had never
been able to lose her inborn sense of the superiority
of man in mental as well as in physical matters.
She had none of the loudly-expressed
scorn of the other sex by which many women seek to
hide their disappointment at the indifference of members
of that sex towards them.
Although she was by force of circumstance
a Suffragist, she did not for one moment imagine that
with the coming of votes for women the whole industrial
and social problem of the country would be solved.
Unlike many women, she was quite content to work under
a man, and although she was well able to think for
herself on all vital questions, she liked to hear
and assimilate the opinions of the men with whom she
came in contact.
She preferred men, indeed, to women;
and her attitude towards them, though never in the
least familiar, held a good comradeship, a kind of
large tolerance which annoyed and irritated those of
her girl acquaintances who looked upon men as their
natural enemies and the enemies of all feminine progress.
Shrewd, competent, fully assured of
her own ability to face the world alone, Miss Loder
had never thought seriously of marriage. She delighted
in her independence, was proud of the fact that she
was able to command a good salary, and her habit of
mind was too genuinely practical to allow of any weak
leanings towards romance. She did not wish to
marry. She had none of the fabled longing for
domesticity, as exemplified in a well-kept house and
a well-filled nursery, with which the average man
endows the normal woman. She looked on children,
indeed, mainly as the materials on whom this or that
system of education might be tested; and she was really
of too cold, too self-sufficing a nature to feel the
need of any love other than that of relation or friend.
But since she had worked for Owen
Rose, Millicent had begun to change her views.
At first she had merely been attracted by his brilliance,
as any clever girl might have been, had found it stimulating
to work with him, and had been pleased and proud when
he selected her to be his coadjutor in the task of
writing his first book. She had been, in truth,
so keenly interested in the author that she had overlooked
the man; and it is a fact that until she came down,
at his request, to his house to work there, away from
the busy office, his personality had been so vague
to her that she could not even have described his appearance
with any accuracy.
But the sight of his home, the stately
old house set in its spacious gardens and surrounded
by magnificent trees, had shaken Millicent out of
her intellectual reverie into a very shrewd and wide-awake
realization of the man himself.
In his own home he shook off the conventions
of the office, became more human, more approachable;
and no woman, least of all one as mentally alert,
as open-eyed as Miss Loder, could have passed with
him through those strenuous hours in which his book
was born without gaining a pretty complete insight
into his character.
And with knowledge came a new and
less comprehensible emotion. At first Miss Loder
had accepted the fact of her employer’s marriage
as one accepts any fixed tradition; and the subject
rarely entered her thoughts during working hours.
Gradually she began to feel a faint
curiosity as to what manner of woman Owen Rose’s
wife might be; and she welcomed her summons to Greenriver
on the ground that now she would be able to solve
the problem for herself. When she finally saw
Toni, her first emotion was one of surprise that this
dark-eyed girl should be the mistress of Greenriver;
and very slowly that surprise died and was succeeded
by a feeling of envy which grew day by day. At
first Miss Loder grudged the unconscious Toni her
established position as chatelaine of this eminently
desirable home; and Toni’s very simplicity,
the youthful insouciance with which she filled
that position, was an added annoyance. Later,
Miss Loder began to grudge Toni more than that.
As she spent more and more time in Owen’s company,
as she grew more and more intimate with the workings
of his mind, of his rich and poetic imagination, Miss
Loder began to fall under the spell of the man himself.
Quite unconsciously she was becoming
ever more attracted by his manner, his voice, his
ways; and once or twice she found herself wondering,
with a kind of sick envy, in what light he appeared
to the woman who was his wife.
Through it all, however, Miss Loder’s
paramount emotion was one of envy for the mistress
of Greenriver. She used to think, as she came
into the house each morning, that it would have suited
her much better, as a background, than it would ever
suit the quaint, childish-looking Toni; and it grew
almost unendurable to her to have to sit at the luncheon
table as a guest not even that and
watch Toni’s ridiculous assumption of dignity
as she sat in her high-backed chair opposite her husband.
There was no doubt about it that Greenriver
would have suited Miss Loder very well as a home;
and she grew to dislike Toni more and more as the
full realization of the girl’s good fortune penetrated
her mind.
Toni had been quite right in detecting
the malice beneath Millicent’s pretended friendliness.
It seemed to Miss Loder that the only way to pierce
this upstart girl’s armour of complacency was
to launch shafts of cleverly-veiled contempt; and
although to Owen these darts were either imperceptible
or merely accidental, Toni knew very well that they
were intended to wound.
Owen, wrapped up in his book, and
only anxious to further the work as rapidly as possible,
had no time to spare for these feminine amenities.
He realized, of course, that Toni did not care for
Miss Loder; but he thought he understood that her
dislike came, rather pathetically, from her consciousness
of her own shortcomings: and had no idea that
Miss Loder herself was largely responsible for the
lack of harmony between them.
On what might be called the literary
side of him, he thought Millicent Loder an excellent
secretary, the one woman with whom he found it possible
to work; but on what might be called the personal side,
his interest was nil. True, he liked her
trim appearance, though he would never have dreamed
of comparing it with Toni’s more unconventional
attraction. He admired her quiet independence,
and recognized her at once as belonging to his own
world; but he never thought of her in any relation
save that of secretary and general assistant; and even
Toni was sufficiently wise to recognize the fact.
All the same Toni mistrusted the other
woman; and it was with a feeling of intensest apprehension
that she received Owen’s announcement that Barry
had arranged for a substitute at the office thus
setting Miss Loder free to resume her work at Greenriver.
It chanced on a beautiful October
day that Owen found it necessary to go to town on
business connected with the Bridge; and for
once he went up by train, bidding Toni use the car
if she felt so inclined.
She did feel inclined; and after a
very early lunch, jumped into the waiting motor, and
directed Fletcher to drive over to Cherry Orchard,
in the hope of inducing the doctor’s daughters
to share her excursion.
Disappointment awaited her, however.
Both the Tobies were away from home on a short visit,
and Toni was obliged to proceed alone.
She had enjoyed a couple of hours’
spin in the frosty air, when she found herself being
carried swiftly past the railway station, and a thought
struck her which she communicated to Fletcher without
delay.
Yes, Fletcher opined, it was just
time the London train was due, and since it was quite
possible Mr. Rose had travelled by it, he obligingly
brought the car to a standstill outside the station
entrance.
Toni jumped lightly out, an alluring
little figure in her beautiful sable coat and cap,
and made her way swiftly on to the platform, glancing
at the big station clock as she did so.
The train was not due for five minutes;
and to pass the interval of waiting, Toni strolled
over to the bookstall in search of a paper. As
she stood turning over a few magazines, a familiar
voice accosted her, and she moved quickly to face
the speaker.
“Mrs. Rose I hope you have not quite
forgotten me?”
“Mr. Dowson! Of course
I’ve not forgotten you.” She put out
a friendly little hand, which the young man seized
in a fervent grasp. “My cousin Fanny told
me you were coming down to Sutton.”
“Yes. I had to change here.
It’s an awkward little journey.” He
was gazing at her fixedly, but withal so respectfully
that Toni could not take offence. “You
are, I believe, a resident of this little riverside
colony of Willowhurst?”
“Well, we live by the river,”
said Toni cheerfully, amused, as of yore, by his somewhat
pedantic diction. “But do tell me, Mr. Dowson,
how do you expect to make a fortune here?”
“I do not expect to do so,”
he informed her promptly. “I assure you
this move on my part was not actuated by any mercenary
motive, Mrs. Rose.”
“Wasn’t it?” She
felt vaguely uncomfortable. “Well, I hope
you will succeed. After all, I suppose people
do have toothache in the country.”
“Fortunately, they do,”
was Mr. Dowson’s reply, and Toni was happily
able to acquit him of any unkind meaning. “But
may I say that I have never seen you looking so well,
Mrs. Rose? Evidently the river life suits you
admirably.”
Toni did look particularly well at
that moment. The keen frosty air had brought
a tinge of wild-rose to her cheeks, and a sparkle to
her eyes; and the animation of her expression hid
the very slight traces of mental distress which at
a less favourable moment might have been evident to
a searching scrutiny.
“I’m very well, thanks,”
she replied carelessly. “I’ve been
motoring, and now I’m waiting for my husband.
He has been in town to-day.”
Although she did not wish to dismiss
the young man summarily, he imagined she desired him
to go; and since to the true lover his mistress’
unspoken wish has the force of a command, Mr. Dowson
hastened to obey what he deemed her bidding.
“I must hurry to the other side
to take my train,” he said immediately.
“May I express my pleasure at meeting you, Mrs.
Rose and also to see you look so well,”
he added heartily, if ungrammatically.
She shook hands with him, debating
with herself as to the advisability of inviting him
to Greenriver; but fortunately the arrival of the London
train cut short their farewells at an opportune moment,
and Mr. Dowson left her before she had time to decide
the point.
Owen was not among the few passengers
who got out of the train; and after waiting a moment
or two to make sure, Toni turned away to find herself
confronted with Mr. Herrick, who with a worried look
on his face was interrogating one of the sleepy porters.
“No, sir, there isn’t
no cabs. There wasn’t but three, and the
gentlemen was very quick about taking ’em.”
“Well, I must get one somehow.”
Herrick, quite overlooking Toni in his disturbance,
spoke sharply, and Toni wondered vaguely why he was
so annoyed. “You can ring one up from the
livery stables, can’t you?”
“What’s the matter, Jim?
No cab, I suppose. Well, they can just fetch
one and quick, too.”
The words, spoken behind her in an
unmistakably Irish voice made Toni start. She
understood, all at once, that this was Mrs. Herrick’s
home-coming; and she felt a sudden curiosity to see
the woman who had lately gone through so bitter an
experience.
She half turned away; then a thought
struck her, and she turned quickly back again and
rushed into speech.
“Mr. Herrick, I couldn’t
help hearing you say you wanted a cab just now.
Will you let me drive you and your wife home
in the car? Do it would save you having
to wait so long.”
Herrick, whose usual philosophic calm
appeared to have deserted him, hesitated.
“Why, Mrs. Rose, it’s awfully good of
you but ”
“Oh, do!” Toni spoke eagerly,
and the woman who stood by turned to her impulsively.
“Are you offering to take us
home in your car?” Her voice was full of Irish
melody. “It is very kind of you and
for myself, I’m so tired I’d accept with
pleasure. But” there was something
malignant in the glance she gave her husband “perhaps
we’d better wait for a cab.”
“Oh, do come, please,”
Toni begged, her bright eyes pleading to be allowed
to do this little service. “It’s a
big car, and I’m all alone in it.”
“Very well.” Mrs.
Herrick turned to her husband. “Come along,
Jim; the luggage can come on later.”
And in less than five minutes the
matter was arranged. Herrick elected to sit beside
the chauffeur, so that Toni and her new acquaintance
sat together in the body of the car. Mrs. Herrick’s
large and rather new-looking dressing-bag on the floor
at their feet.
Toni gave the direction to the openly
interested Fletcher, and the car glided away through
the group of loafers hanging round the station entrance,
and settled down into a steady hum on the road leading
to the Hope House.
Toni seized a moment while Mrs. Herrick
was busy with the fastening of her bag to steal a
look at her companion; and in that brief glance she
received two distinct impressions one that
Eva Herrick was a bitterly unhappy woman, the other
that she had no intention of allowing other people
to escape from her own aura of bitterness.
In person Mrs. Herrick was short and
slight, with a look of finish about her probably handed
down through generations of her Irish ancestors.
Her small features were cut as clearly as a cameo,
and her short upper lip, while giving her an air of
pride which was unpleasing, was in itself beautiful.
Her eyes, the big Irish eyes which had first enslaved
Herrick, were lovely in shape and colour, but they
were encircled by disfiguring blue shadows, and the
fine skin had a tell-tale pallor which spoke of long
indoor confinement.
Her hair, by nature crisp and golden,
looked dull and lifeless in the shadow of her hat;
and over the whole dainty face and figure there was
an indefinable blight, a sort of shadow which dimmed
and blurred their naturally clean and clear contours.
As she removed her gloves to fumble
with the lock of her bag. Toni noticed that the
small, well-shaped hands were rough and badly kept;
and Toni’s soft heart was wrung by these evidences
of a sordid, toilsome past.
Suddenly Mrs. Herrick sat upright
and gazed at Toni with a look which held something
of criticism.
“You live down here I suppose?”
“Yes. We live at Greenriver, about a mile
from your bungalow.”
“Ah. Been here long?”
“Only a few months.”
“I see. You haven’t known my husband
very long, then?”
“No. He pulled me out of
the river one day,” said Toni, “and we
have seen him pretty often during the summer.”
“Then I suppose you know where
I’ve been?” Her eyes shone maliciously.
“Oh, don’t pretend you didn’t know.
I’m sure my worthy husband must have told you
the whole story.”
Toni, scarlet with embarrassment,
and wishing from the bottom of her heart that she
had never offered the use of her car, said nothing;
and with a grating little laugh the other woman continued
her speech.
“I expect everyone knows I have
been in prison.” Luckily she did not raise
her voice; and Herrick, possibly foreseeing the necessity,
had taken care to engage the chauffeur in conversation.
“Eighteen months almost spent
in hell. Oh!” Her small, sharp teeth
bit her lip venomously. “It drives me mad
to think of it. And it could all have been avoided
if my husband had been a man.”
“Oh!” Toni revolted inwardly against her
callousness.
“Oh, I suppose he’s told
you some tale or other.” Mrs. Herrick spoke
fiercely, and all her childish beauty waned beneath
her passion; “Well, whatever he says, it is
I who have paid the bill. Prison! My God,
you don’t know what it is to be shut up in a
cell like a beast to be ordered about like
a dog, to be starved on coarse food, made to sleep
on a bed you wouldn’t dare to give your servant!”
Toni, very pale, tried to stem the torrent of her
words.
“Mrs. Herrick please really
I don’t think you ought to say this to me ”
“Ought? Why do you say
that?” Eva Herrick looked contemptuously at her
would-be mentor. “If you had been shut up
as I have been, you would talk as you liked.
Thank God I can talk if I can do nothing else.”
Quite suddenly her manner changed.
She gave a little laugh which was oddly fascinating,
and laid her hand on Toni’s arm.
“Come, now, Mrs. Rose, don’t
be getting angry with me.” Her brogue lent
a charm to her speech. “I’ll admit
I’ve no earthly right to talk so; it’s
bad form to begin with and a poor return for your kindness.
But remember, I’ve gone through an experience
that’s enough to kill a woman, and you can’t
expect me to forget it all at once. So you must
forgive me. Will you?”
“Oh, of course I will.”
Toni spoke quickly. “And I had no right
to speak as I did. But you must forget
all that is past. Won’t you try?”
“Sure, I’ll try.”
Eva’s lovely eyes filled with tears. “But
I know what will happen. Your husband won’t
let you know me, of course, and if Jim and I are left
alone, we’ll be murdering one another one fine
day.”
“Oh, please don’t talk
so. Of course my husband will let me know you,”
said Toni in distress; and she was glad to find from
the slackening of the car that their conversation
must be cut short.
Jim Herrick, more silent and worn-looking
than Toni had ever seen him, helped his wife to alight
and then shook hands gratefully with Toni.
“So many thanks, Mrs. Rose.”
His big, bright eyes looked into hers, almost as the
eyes of a nice dog might have done. “You
have saved us a long wait, and I’m only sorry
we have taken you out of your way.”
“Oh, that’s nothing,”
Toni said. “I like being out on these bright
days, and I’m ever so glad I happened to be
at the station.”
She shook hands with Mrs. Herrick,
who looked a pitifully fragile figure as she stood
beside the car; and then Toni gave the order for home,
and Fletcher obeyed that order too promptly to allow
of any further leave-takings.
Just for one moment Jim Herrick stood
looking after the car, and in his heart there was
a great sickness of apprehension.
With the best intention in the world
to be fair to his wife, he could not help comparing
the fresh, simple-hearted Toni with the world-weary
and disillusioned Eva; and at the thought of the future
his spirits sank to zero.
A mocking voice broke on his ear as
he watched the car gliding swiftly down the road.
“When you’ve finished
staring at that young woman, Jim, perhaps you’ll
open the gate.” Eva stood back to allow
him to reach the latch. “I must say this
is a nice place to bring me to. Is it a cottage
or what?”
“It’s quite a decent little
place, dear,” he said steadily, as he held open
the gate for her to pass through. “Of course,
I quite understand that it is only a temporary arrangement,
but you will try to put up with it, won’t you?”
“I suppose I shall have to,”
she replied ungraciously; and then she uttered an
impatient exclamation as the big white dog tore over
the lawn to meet her master, uttering deep-throated
bays of welcome the while. “You’ve
still got that beast, then go down, you
brute,” she added, as Olga approached, with
instinctive courtesy, to greet her former mistress.
“Don’t snap at her, dear,”
said Herrick kindly. “The poor creature
is only trying to say how do you do.”
“Then she can say it to someone
else,” said Eva curtly. “I hate big
dogs I wish you’d get rid of her.”
Herrick made no reply, but opened
the door, and they went into the house together.
Eva passed into the quaintly attractive
sitting-room with a frown on her face, which lightened,
however, at sight of the tea-table standing ready,
and pulling off her gloves and coat she flung herself
into a low chair with a sigh of fatigue.
“Heavens, how thirsty I am,”
she said. “Give me some tea, Jim quickly.”
And as he moved forward to obey her, her eyes followed
him with a curious expression in their grey depths.
“What’s for dinner?”
she asked, suddenly, and Herrick looked his memory
to recall the menu.
“Soup, roast chicken, plum tart,
and a savoury,” he said at last, smiling with
a rather pathetic attempt at cheerfulness. “Mrs.
Swastika, as I call her, is what is known as a ‘good
plain cook,’ but anything at all elaborate throws
her off her balance altogether.”
“Have you no other servants?” she demanded
shortly.
“Not yet. I didn’t
want them, you know, and I thought you would prefer
to choose them yourself.”
“I? If I can get any,”
she said darkly, drawing her delicate brows together
resentfully. “Of course they won’t
stay when they find out things; but we must be decently
waited on.”
Herrick made no reply; and his silence
exasperated the girl, whose nerves were all on edge.
“Oh, don’t stand there
saying nothing.” Her voice was shrill.
“Of course, you think I ought to wait on myself now.
And I suppose because I’ve been in prison you
expect me to be thankful to be here even
in a hole like this. Well, I’m not.
I hate the place. It’s common and shabby
and horrid, and I’m not going to live all anyhow,
to please you.”
Herrick, dismayed at the vehemence
of her manner, could find no words; and she went on
with increasing passion:
“I’m your wife if
I am a jail-bird!” She flung the taunt
at him, and her whole little figure was shaken with
the intensity of her emotion. “If you think
I’m going to pretend to be penitent and
grateful to you you are wrong! I hate
you, Jim, I loathe and despise you you
might have taken the blame on your shoulders and
instead you stood by and watched them torture me.
You’ve not been to prison, you’ve
not been bullied and despised you’ve
not spent weeks and months in a loathsome little cell
where the sun never shone and there was never a breath
of air you’ve not been called by a
number, and preached at by the chaplain oh,
no, you’ve been living here in the sunshine enjoying
yourself, eating good food your chicken
and your savouries and for all I know passing
as a single man, and keeping your disgraced wife in
the background!”
She struck the table sharply with
her hand, and her cup and saucer fell to the ground
and smashed, the tea trickling in a brown stream over
the dim blues and greens of the Persian carpet.
She ignored the catastrophe.
“Well, you’ve got me back
now, and I’m going to make your life what
mine has been for the last year and a half! I’ve
longed for this moment, Jim” she
set her teeth “longed for it during
the horrible days and the still more horrible nights.
It was only my hatred of you that kept me alive in
the first ghastly weeks. I could have died I
was very ill at first, and they thought I’d
die but I knew I wouldn’t. I
meant to live so that I could tell you again to your
face that I hate you, hate you hate
you! And I’m going to show you what hate
is, Jim I’m going to make you wish
you were dead or in prison, as I have been.
Oh, my God I wish I wish I were
dead!”
With a sudden collapse of all her
powers she dropped, face downwards, on the big divan,
and burst into a fit of wild and uncontrollable sobbing.
With an effort whose magnitude he
himself only half realized, Herrick went softly over
to the weeping, writhing figure, and laid his hand
very gently on her shoulder.
“Eva, for pity’s sake ”
She flung off his hand as though it
had been a venomous serpent which had touched her;
and again her wild sobbing filled the room.
“Eva, listen to me, dear.”
Herrick sat down beside her and spoke in a quiet tone,
which yet pierced through her sobs. “You
must not say anything like that to me again.
There isn’t any question of hatred between you
and me. We are together now, and we must build
up a new and happy life together which will help us
to forget the less happy past. Come, dear, look
up and tell me you will help me to make a fresh start.”
She did not speak, but her sobs lessened
as though she were listening.
“Now, Eva, sit up and dry your
eyes and we will drop the subject. Come upstairs
and have a rest before dinner. You are tired out
and want a good sleep.”
She rose without a word, but in her
face he read only fatigue, none of the softening which
he had hoped to see.
“Yes. I’m tired dead
tired.” She moved languidly towards the
door. “I think I shall never be anything
else now.”
Her fit of passion had indeed worn
her out. For the rest of the evening she was
quiet and listless; and she went upstairs very early
to bed, leaving Herrick to sit alone with his dog,
smoking his pipe, and facing the future with a sinking
heart.
He sat there until the hour was really
late; and then crept upstairs very softly to avoid
waking Eva, if indeed she slept.
Just as he reached her door he heard
a faint, strangled cry, and rushed into her room to
find her in the throes of one of the nightmares which
he found, later, were a dreadful legacy from her prison
life. On waking, her relief at finding she was
not, as usual, alone was so great that for the first
time she clung to Herrick as she might have done in
happier days; and as he soothed her and pushed the
damp golden curls from her brow she spoke naturally,
with none of the resentment she had hitherto displayed.
Her husband’s heart melted towards
her in this gentler mood; and long after she had fallen
asleep again, soothed by his presence, he sat watching
her uneasy slumber with a feeling of compassion which,
had she realized it, must surely have done something
to bridge the gulf which now yawned between them.
In the morning she was her hard, mocking
self again; and Herrick’s patience was sorely
tried in the days which followed.
It seemed, indeed, as though she had
stated her feelings for him correctly, as though she
did really hate him with a bitter and relentless hatred.
The prison life had changed her whole being, turned
her from a brilliant, reckless, worldly girl, warmhearted
and extravagant, but generous to a fault, into a cold,
malignant, callous woman, nursing a grudge until it
attained gigantic proportions, and fully resolved
to exact from her husband and the world a heavy payment
for the humiliating punishment she had been forced
to undergo.
Herrick could never discover that
she felt that punishment to be deserved. The
whole world was to blame, but never she herself.
It was the fault of her husband, who had kept her
short of money; of the tradespeople who had pressed
her, of the usurers who had got her into their clutches the
fault of everyone save Eva Herrick; and the fact that
they had all, as it were, combined against her, that
together they had been too much for her, embittered
her outlook on life to such a degree that she was
positively incapable of any reasonable analysis of
her own guilt.
It was her husband against whom her
resentment was chiefly directed. With all the
perversity of her ill-regulated, half-formed mind,
she refused to realize the fact that it had been absolutely
impossible for Herrick to take her crime on to his
own shoulders. She clung childishly to the notion
that if he had wished he could have borne the blame
and endured the consequences; and since there is no
reason to doubt that to a girl in her position her
life in prison was a horrible experience, her bitterness
is perhaps hardly to be wondered at, after all.
Her sentence had left on soul and
body traces which would never be effaced; and sometimes
Herrick could hardly believe that this cold, cynical,
bitter-tongued woman was indeed the gay Irish girl
he had married.
But in spite of everything she was
his wife. And Herrick was not the man to shirk
an obligation which was so plainly marked as this.
Although he shrank inwardly from her constant recriminations,
he never let her see how he was wounded by her biting
tongue; and to all her reproaches he presented so
serene and complacent a front that she sometimes desisted
from very weariness.
So the autumn days went on; and if
Herrick felt sometimes that in spite of the beautiful
world around him, life was no longer full of “sweet
things,” he never wavered in his resolve to do
all in his power to make up to Eva, for the misery
she had endured behind those heartless prison walls.