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Four Winds
by
On his way home that evening he again met Isabel King. She turned and walked back with him but she made no reference to Four Winds or its inhabitants. If Alan had troubled himself to look, he would have seen a malicious glow in her baleful brown eyes. But the only eyes which had any meaning for him just then were the grey ones of Lynde Oliver.
* * * * *
During Alan’s next three visits to Four Winds he saw nothing of Lynde, either in the house or out of it. This surprised and worried him. There was no apparent difference in Captain Anthony, who continued to be suave and friendly. Alan always enjoyed his conversations with the Captain, who was witty, incisive, and pungent; yet he disliked the man himself more at every visit. If he had been compelled to define his impression, he would have said the Captain was a charming scoundrel.
But it occurred to him that Emily was disturbed about something. Sometimes he caught her glance, full of perplexity and–it almost seemed–distrust. She looked as if she felt hostile towards him. But Alan dismissed the idea as absurd. She had been friendly from the first and he had done nothing to excite her disapproval. Lynde’s mysterious absence was a far more perplexing problem. She had not gone away, for when Alan asked the Captain concerning her, he responded indifferently that she was out walking. Alan caught a glint of amusement in the older man’s eyes as he spoke. He could have sworn it was malicious amusement.
One evening he went to Four Winds around the shore. As he turned the headland of the cove, he saw Lynde and her dogs not a hundred feet away. The moment she saw him she darted up the bank and disappeared among the firs.
Alan was thunderstruck. There was no room for doubt that she meant to avoid him. He walked up to the house in a tumult of mingled feelings which he did not even then understand. He only realized that he felt bitterly hurt and grieved–puzzled as well. What did it all mean?
He met Emily in the yard of Four Winds on her way to the spring and stopped her resolutely.
“Miss Oliver,” he said bluntly, “is Miss Lynde angry with me? And why?”
Emily looked at him piercingly.
“Have you no idea why?” she asked shortly.
“None in the world.”
She looked at him through and through a moment longer. Then, seeming satisfied with her scrutiny, she picked up her pail.
“Come down to the spring with me,” she said.
As soon as they were out of sight of the house, Emily began abruptly.
“If you don’t know why Lynde is acting so, I can’t tell you, for I don’t know either. I don’t even know if she is angry. I only thought perhaps she was–that you had done or said something to vex her–plaguing her to go to church maybe. But if you didn’t, it may not be anger at all. I don’t understand that girl. She’s been different ever since her mother died. She used to tell me everything before that. You must go and ask her right out yourself what is wrong. But maybe I can tell you something. Did you write her a letter a fortnight ago?”
“A letter? No.”
“Well, she got one then. I thought it came from you–I didn’t know who else would be writing to her. A boy brought it and gave it to her at the door. She’s been acting strange ever since. She cries at night–something Lynde never did before except when her mother died. And in daytime she roams the shore and woods like one possessed. You must find out what was in that letter, Mr. Douglas.”
“Have you any idea who the boy was?” Alan asked, feeling somewhat relieved. The mystery was clearing up, he thought. No doubt it was the old story of some cowardly anonymous letter. His thoughts flew involuntarily to Isabel King.