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A Strayed Allegiance
by
“Mrs. Barrett’s little Bessie is very ill with fever,” answered Marian. Then, catching his anxious look, she hastened to add, “It is nothing infectious–some kind of a slow, sapping variety. There is no danger, Esterbrook.”
“I was not afraid for myself,” he replied quietly. “My alarm was for you. You are too precious to me, Marian, for me to permit you to risk health and life, if it were dangerous. What a Lady Bountiful you are to those people at the Cove. When we are married you must take me in hand and teach me your creed of charity. I’m afraid I’ve lived a rather selfish life. You will change all that, dear. You will make a good man of me.”
“You are that now, Esterbrook,” she said softly. “If you were not, I could not love you.”
“It is a negative sort of goodness, I fear. I have never been tried or tempted severely. Perhaps I should fail under the test.”
“I am sure you would not,” answered Marian proudly.
Esterbrook laughed; her faith in him was pleasant. He had no thought but that he would prove worthy of it.
The Cove, so-called, was a little fishing hamlet situated on the low, sandy shore of a small bay. The houses, clustered in one spot, seemed like nothing so much as larger shells washed up by the sea, so grey and bleached were they from long exposure to sea winds and spray.
Dozens of ragged children were playing about them, mingled with several disreputable yellow curs that yapped noisily at the strangers.
Down on the sandy strip of beach below the houses groups of men were lounging about. The mackerel, season had not yet set in; the spring herring netting was past. It was holiday time among the sea folks. They were enjoying it to the full, a happy, ragged colony, careless of what the morrows might bring forth.
Out beyond, the boats were at anchor, floating as gracefully on the twinkling water as sea birds, their tall masts bowing landward on the swell. A lazy, dreamful calm had fallen over the distant seas; the horizon blues were pale and dim; faint purple hazes blurred the outlines of far-off headlands and cliffs; the yellow sands sparkled in the sunshine as if powdered with jewels.
A murmurous babble of life buzzed about the hamlet, pierced through by the shrill undertones of the wrangling children, most of whom had paused in their play to scan the visitors with covert curiosity.
Marian led the way to a house apart from the others at the very edge of the shelving rock. The dooryard was scrupulously clean and unlittered; the little footpath through it was neatly bordered by white clam shells; several thrifty geraniums in bloom looked out from the muslin-curtained windows.
A weary-faced woman came forward to meet them.
“Bessie’s much the same, Miss Lesley,” she said, in answer to Marian’s inquiry. “The doctor you sent was here today and did all he could for her. He seemed quite hopeful. She don’t complain or nothing–just lies there and moans. Sometimes she gets restless. It’s very kind of you to come so often, Miss Lesley. Here, Magdalen, will you put this basket the lady’s brought up there on the shelf?”
A girl, who had been sitting unnoticed with her back to the visitors, at the head of the child’s cot in one corner of the room, stood up and slowly turned around. Marian and Esterbrook Elliott both started with involuntary surprise. Esterbrook caught his breath like a man suddenly awakened from sleep. In the name of all that was wonderful, who or what could this girl be, so little in harmony with her surroundings?
Standing in the crepuscular light of the corner, her marvellous beauty shone out with the vivid richness of some rare painting. She was tall, and the magnificent proportions of her figure were enhanced rather than marred by the severely plain dress of dark print that she wore. The heavy masses of her hair, a shining auburn dashed with golden foam, were coiled in a rich, glossy knot at the back of the classically modelled head and rippled back from a low brow whose waxen fairness even the breezes of the ocean had spared.