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A Change Of Heart
by
“I–I–you’ve no right. I say nothing. If I choose, I shall–no one has a right to stop me. If I love her–if she doesn’t mind–I say nothing–nothing at all. I won’t hear a word. I shall do as I like.”
Joe had paused to hear him, and now stood looking at him in wonder. Then he stepped quickly up to the table, and, leaning across, asked in a harsh voice:
“You mean honest, do you, by her? You’d make her your wife, would you?”
Smugg, looking straight in front of him, answered:
“Yes.”
Joe drew back, touched his forelock again, and said:
“Then it’s fair fighting, sir, begging your pardon; and no offense. But the girl was mine first, sir.”
Then Gayford interposed.
“Mr. Smugg,” said he, “you tell Joe, here, that you’d marry this lady. May I ask how you can–when—-“
But for once Smugg was able to silence one of his pupils. He arose from his seat, and brought his hand heavily down on Gayford’s shoulder.
“Hold your tongue!” he cried. “I must answer to God, but I needn’t answer to you.”
Joe looked at him with round eyes, and, with a last salute, slowly went out. None of us spoke, and presently Smugg opened his Thucydides.
For my part, I took very considerable interest in Pyrrha’s side of the question. I amused myself by constructing a fancy-born love of Pyrrha’s for her social superior, and if he had been one of ourselves, I should have seen no absurdity. But Smugg refused altogether to fit into my frame. There was no glamour about Smugg; and, to tell the truth, I should have thought that any girl, be her station what it might, faced with the alternative of Smugg and Joe, would have chosen Joe. In my opinion, Pyrrha was merely amusing herself with Smugg, and I was rather comforted by this reversal of the ordinary roles. Still, I could not rest in conjecture, and my curiosity led me up to Dill’s little farm on the afternoon of the day of Joe’s sudden appearance. The others let me go alone. Directly after dinner Smugg went to his bedroom, and the other three had gone off to play lawn tennis at the vicar’s. I lit my pipe, and strolled along till I reached the gate that led to Dill’s meadow. Here I waited till Pyrrha should appear.
As I sat and smoked, a voice struck suddenly on my ear–the voice of Mrs. Dill, raised to shrillness by anger.
“Be off with you,” she said, “and mind your ways, or worse ‘ll happen to you. ‘Ere’s your switch.”
After a moment Pyrrha turned the corner, and came toward me. She was wiping her eyes with the corner of her apron, and carried in her hand a light hazel switch, which she used to guide errant cows. She was almost at the gate before she saw me. She started, and blushed very red.
“Lor! is it you, Mr. Robertson?” she said.
I nodded, but did not move.
“Let me pass, sir, please. I’ve no time to stop.”
“What, not to talk to me, Pyrrha–Betsy, I mean?”
“Mother don’t like me talking to gentlemen.”
“You’ve been crying,” said I.
“No, I haven’t,” said Pyrrha, quite violently.
“Mother been scolding you?”
“I wish you’d let me by, sir.”
“What for?”
“It’s all your fault,” burst out Pyrrha. “I didn’t want you; no, nor him, either. What do you come and get me into trouble for?”
“I haven’t done anything, Betsy. Come now!”
“You aint as bad as some,” she conceded, a dim smile breaking through the clouds.
“You mean Smugg,” I observed.
“Who told you?” she cried.
“Joe,” said I.
“Seems he’s got a lot to say to everybody,” she commented resentfully.
“Ah! he told your mother, did he? Well, you know you shouldn’t, Betsy.”
“I won’t never speak to him again–I meant I won’t ever [the grammarian is abroad], Mr. Robertson.”
“What! Not to Joe?”
“Joe! No; that Smugg.”
“But Joe told of you.”
“Well, and it was his right.”
If she thought so, I had no more to say. Notions differ among different sets. But I pressed the point a little.