Part 30 (2/2)
”Yes.”
She watched while Melvina plodded across the gra.s.s and delivered her message. Instantly Lucy dropped the basket and hastened toward the house.
Another moment the girl stood before her.
”You're worse, Aunt Ellen?” she said, panting for breath.
But Ellen ignored the question.
”What's Martin Howe doin' in my garden?” she demanded fiercely.
Lucy paled.
”He came over to help me transplant the larkspur.”
”By what right does he come over here, I'd like to know?”
No reply came.
”Has he been over before?” interrogated Ellen ruthlessly.
”Yes.”
”When?”
”Oh, off an' on. He's been trying to help out since you've been ill.”
”Help out!” repeated Ellen scornfully. ”The coward! He wouldn't have dared set foot on the place if I'd been well.”
”He isn't a coward!”
Lucy had drawn herself to her full height and now confronted her aunt with blazing eyes. Ellen, however, was not to be deterred.
”He _is_ a coward!” she reiterated. ”A coward an' a blackguard! A curse on the Howes--the whole lot of 'em!”
”Stop!”
The intonation of the single word brought Ellen's harangue to an abrupt cessation.
”You shan't speak so of Martin Howe or of his family,” cried the girl. ”He is no coward. If he had been as small-minded and cruel as you, he would have left you to die on the floor the day you fell, instead of bringing you upstairs and going for a doctor--you, who have cursed him! You had better know the truth. Did you think it was I who placed you on this bed?
I couldn't have done it. I am not strong enough. It was Martin--Martin Howe!”
Ellen stared stupidly.
”I'd rather have died!” she muttered between clinched teeth.
”Yes, you would,” retorted Lucy. ”You would rather have gone down to your grave with bitterness in your soul and a curse upon your lips than to have accepted aid from Martin Howe. You would not have helped him had he been in trouble. You would have been glad to see him suffer--glad!”
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