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At Five O’Clock in The Morning
by
“I am coming over to see you this afternoon,” said Murray coolly. “But you needn’t be afraid. I will not tell tales out of Eden. I will be a hypocrite and pretend to Mrs. Palmer that we have never met before. But you and I will know and remember. Now, you may go. I reserve to myself the privilege of standing here and watching you out of sight.”
* * * * *
That afternoon Murray strolled over to Orchard Knob, going into the kitchen without knocking as was the habit in that free and easy world. Mrs. Palmer was lying on the lounge with a pungent handkerchief bound about her head, but keeping a vigilant eye on a very pretty, very plump brown-eyed girl who was stirring a kettleful of cherry preserve on the range.
“Good afternoon, Mrs. Palmer,” said Murray, wondering where Mollie was. “I’m sorry to see that you look something like an invalid.”
“I’ve a raging, ramping headache,” said Mrs. Palmer solemnly. “I had it all night and I’m good for nothing. Mollie, you’d better take them cherries off. Mr. Murray, this is my niece, Mollie Booth.”
“What?” said Murray explosively.
“Miss Mollie Booth,” repeated Mrs. Palmer in a louder tone.
Murray regained outward self-control and bowed to the blushing Mollie.
“And what about Eve?” he thought helplessly. “Who–what was she? Did I dream her? Was she a phantom of delight? No, no, phantoms don’t milk cows. She was flesh and blood. No chilly nymph exhaling from the mists of the marsh could have given a kiss like that.”
“Mollie has come to stay the rest of the summer with me,” said Mrs. Palmer. “I hope to goodness my tribulations with hired girls is over at last. They have made a wreck of me.”
Murray rapidly reflected. This development, he decided, released him from his promise to tell no tales. “I met a young lady down in the pond pasture this morning,” he said deliberately. “I talked with her for a few minutes. I supposed her to be your niece. Who was she?”
“Oh, that was Miss Mannering,” said Mrs. Palmer.
“What?” said Murray again.
“Mannering–Dora Mannering,” said Mrs. Palmer loudly, wondering if Mr. Murray were losing his hearing. “She came here last night just to see me. I haven’t seen her since she was a child of twelve. I used to be her nurse before I was married. I was that proud to think she thought it worth her while to look me up. And, mind you, this morning, when she found me crippled with headache and not able to do a hand’s turn, that girl, Mr. Murray, went and milked seven cows”–“only four,” murmured Murray, but Mrs. Palmer did not hear him–“for me. Couldn’t prevent her. She said she had learned to milk for fun one summer when she was in the country, and she did it. And then she got breakfast for the men–Mollie didn’t come till the ten o’clock train. Miss Mannering is as capable as if she had been riz on a farm.”
“Where is she now?” demanded Murray.
“Oh, she’s gone.”
“What?”
“Gone,” shouted Mrs. Palmer, “gone. She left on the train Mollie come on. Gracious me, has the man gone crazy? He hasn’t seemed like himself at all this afternoon.”
Murray had bolted madly out of the house and was striding down the lane.
Blind fool–unspeakable idiot that he had been! To take her for Mrs. Palmer’s niece–that peerless creature with the calm acceptance of any situation, which marked the woman of the world, with the fine appreciation and quickness of repartee that spoke of generations of culture–to imagine that she could be Mollie Booth! He had been blind, besottedly blind. And now he had lost her! She would never forgive him; she had gone without a word or sign.
As he reached the last curve of the lane where it looped about the apple trees, a plump figure came flying down the orchard slope.
“Mr. Murray, Mr. Murray,” Mollie Booth called breathlessly. “Will you please come here just a minute?”