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(but perhaps I should not tell this) unless she is his wife a man is shot with a thrill of exultation every time a pretty woman allows him to upbraid her.

      “I do not understand you,” Gavin repeated weakly, and the gypsy bent her head under this terrible charge.

      “Only a few hours ago,” he continued, “you were a gypsy girl in a fantastic dress, barefooted – ”

      The Egyptian’s bare foot at once peeped out mischievously from beneath the cloak, then again retired into hiding.

      “You spoke as broadly,” complained the minister, somewhat taken aback by this apparition, “as any woman in Thrums, and now you fling a cloak over your shoulders, and immediately become a fine lady. Who are you?”

      “Perhaps,” answered the Egyptian, “it is the cloak that has bewitched me.” She slipped out of it. “Ay, ay, ou losh!” she said, as if surprised, “it was just the cloak that did it, for now I’m a puir ignorant bit lassie again. My, certie, but claithes does make a differ to a woman!”

      This was sheer levity, and Gavin walked scornfully away from it.

      “Yet, if you will not tell me who you are,” he said, looking over his shoulder, “tell me where you got the cloak.”

      “Na faags,” replied the gypsy out of the cloak. “Really, Mr. Dishart, you had better not ask,” she added, replacing it over her.

      She followed him, meaning to gain the open by the fields to the north of the manse.

      “Good-bye,” she said, holding out her hand, “if you are not to give me up.”

      “I am not a policeman,” replied Gavin, but he would not take her hand.

      “Surely, we part friends, then?” said the Egyptian, sweetly.

      “No,” Gavin answered. “I hope never to see your face again.”

      “I cannot help,” the Egyptian said, with dignity, “your not liking my face.” Then, with less dignity, she added, “There is a splotch of mud on your own, little minister; it came off the divit you flung at the captain.”

      With this parting shot she tripped past him, and Gavin would not let his eyes follow her. It was not the mud on his face that distressed him, nor even the hand that had flung the divit. It was the word “little.” Though even Margaret was not aware of it, Gavin’s shortness had grieved him all his life. There had been times when he tried to keep the secret from himself. In his boyhood he had sought a remedy by getting his larger comrades to stretch him. In the company of tall men he was always self-conscious. In the pulpit he looked darkly at his congregation when he asked them who, by taking thought, could add a cubit to his stature. When standing on a hearthrug his heels were frequently on the fender. In his bedroom he has stood on a footstool and surveyed himself in the mirror. Once he fastened high heels to his boots, being ashamed to ask Hendry Munn to do it for him; but this dishonesty shamed him, and he tore them off. So the Egyptian had put a needle into his pride, and he walked to the manse gloomily.

      Margaret was at her window, looking for him, and he saw her though she did not see him. He was stepping 77 into the middle of the road to wave his hand to her, when some sudden weakness made him look towards the fields instead. The Egyptian saw him and nodded thanks for his interest in her, but he scowled and pretended to be studying the sky. Next moment he saw her running back to him.

      “There are soldiers at the top of the field,” she cried. “I cannot escape that way.”

      “There is no other way,” Gavin answered.

      “Will you not help me again?” she entreated.

      She should not have said “again.” Gavin shook his head, but pulled her closer to the manse dyke, for his mother was still in sight.

      “Why do you do that?” the girl asked, quickly, looking round to see if she were pursued. “Oh, I see,” she said, as her eyes fell on the figure at the window.

      “It is my mother,” Gavin said, though he need not have explained, unless he wanted the gypsy to know that he was a bachelor.

      “Only your mother?”

      “Only! Let me tell you she may suffer more than you for your behaviour to-night!”

      “How can she?”

      “If you are caught, will it not be discovered that I helped you to escape?”

      “But you said you did not.”

      “Yes, I helped you,” Gavin admitted. “My God! what would my congregation say if they knew I had let you pass yourself off as – as my wife?”

      He struck his brow, and the Egyptian had the propriety to blush.

      “It is not the punishment from men I am afraid of,” Gavin said, bitterly, “but from my conscience. No, that is not true. I do fear exposure, but for my mother’s sake. Look at her; she is happy, because she thinks me good and true; she has had such trials as you cannot know of, and now, when at last I seemed 78 able to do something for her, you destroy her happiness. You have her life in your hands.”

      The Egyptian turned her back upon him, and one of her feet tapped angrily on the dry ground. Then, child of impulse as she always was, she flashed an indignant glance at him, and walked quickly down the road.

      “Where are you going?” he cried.

      “To give myself up. You need not be alarmed; I will clear you.”

      There was not a shake in her voice, and she spoke without looking back.

      “Stop!” Gavin called, but she would not, until his hand touched her shoulder.

      “What do you want?” she asked.

      “Why – ” whispered Gavin, giddily, “why – why do you not hide in the manse garden? – No one will look for you there.”

      There were genuine tears in the gypsy’s eyes now.

      “You are a good man,” she said; “I like you.”

      “Don’t say that,” Gavin cried in horror. “There is a summer-seat in the garden.”

      Then he hurried from her, and without looking to see if she took his advice, hastened to the manse. Once inside, he snibbed the door.

      Chapter Nine.

      THE WOMAN CONSIDERED IN ABSENCE – ADVENTURES OF A MILITARY CLOAK

      About six o’clock Margaret sat up suddenly in bed, with the conviction that she had slept in. To her this was to ravel the day: a dire thing. The last time it happened Gavin, softened by her distress, had condensed morning worship into a sentence that she might make up on the clock.

      Her part on waking was merely to ring her bell, and so rouse Jean, for Margaret had given Gavin a promise to breakfast in bed, and remain there till her fire was lit. Accustomed all her life, however, to early rising, her feet were usually on the floor before she remembered her vow, and then it was but a step to the window to survey the morning. To Margaret, who seldom went out, the weather was not of great moment, while it mattered much to Gavin, yet she always thought of it the first thing, and he not at all until he had to decide whether his companion should be an umbrella or a staff.

      On this morning Margaret only noticed that there had been rain since Gavin came in. Forgetting that the water obscuring the outlook was on the other side of the panes, she tried to brush it away with her fist. It was of the soldiers she was thinking. They might have been awaiting her appearance at the window as their signal to depart, for hardly had she raised the blind when they began their march out of Thrums. From the manse she could not see them, but she heard them, and she saw some people at the Tenements run 80 to their houses at sound of the drum. Other persons, less timid, followed the enemy with execrations halfway to Tilliedrum. Margaret, the only person, as it happened, then awake in the manse, stood listening for some time. In the summer-seat of the garden, however, there was another listener protected from her sight by thin spars.

      Despite the lateness of the hour Margaret

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