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    Chapter 13

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    On going out into the garden next morning, with a strange sense of
    being another person than herself, she beheld Jim leaning mutely over
    the gate.

    He nodded. 'Good morning, Margery,' he said civilly.

    'Good morning,' said Margery in the same tone.

    'I beg your pardon,' he continued. 'But which way was you going this
    morning?'

    'I am not going anywhere just now, thank you. But I shall go to my
    father's by-and-by with Edy.' She went on with a sigh, 'I have done
    what he has all along wished, that is, married you; and there's no
    longer reason for enmity atween him and me.'

    'Trew--trew. Well, as I am going the same way, I can give you a lift
    in the trap, for the distance is long.'

    'No thank you--I am used to walking,' she said.

    They remained in silence, the gate between them, till Jim's
    convictions would apparently allow him to hold his peace no longer.
    'This is a bad job!' he murmured.

    'It is,' she said, as one whose thoughts have only too readily been
    identified. 'How I came to agree to it is more than I can tell!'
    And tears began rolling down her cheeks.

    'The blame is more mine than yours, I suppose,' he returned. 'I
    ought to have said No, and not backed up the gentleman in carrying
    out this scheme. 'Twas his own notion entirely, as perhaps you know.
    I should never have thought of such a plan; but he said you'd be
    willing, and that it would be all right; and I was too ready to
    believe him.'

    'The thing is, how to remedy it,' said she bitterly. 'I believe, of
    course, in your promise to keep this private, and not to trouble me
    by calling.'

    'Certainly,' said Jim. 'I don't want to trouble you. As for that,
    why, my dear Mrs. Hayward--'

    'Don't Mrs. Hayward me!' said Margery sharply. 'I won't be Mrs.
    Hayward!'

    Jim paused. 'Well, you are she by law, and that was all I meant,' he
    said mildly.

    'I said I would acknowledge no such thing, and I won't. A thing
    can't be legal when it's against the wishes of the persons the laws
    are made to protect. So I beg you not to call me that anymore.'

    'Very well, Miss Tucker,' said Jim deferentially. 'We can live on
    exactly as before. We can't marry anybody else, that's true; but
    beyond that there's no difference, and no harm done. Your father
    ought to be told, I suppose, even if nobody else is? It will partly
    reconcile him to you, and make your life smoother.'

    Instead of directly replying, Margery exclaimed in a low voice:

    'O, it is a mistake--I didn't see it all, owing to not having time to
    reflect! I agreed, thinking that at least I should get reconciled to
    father by the step. But perhaps he would as soon have me not married
    at all as married and parted. I must
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