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"Won't you come to me when you get this? My heart aches to have you once more in my arms. I shall expect you very soon. With all my love,
"THEODORE."
It was not strange that she crushed the paper between her fingers.
"You needn't destroy my letter," Molly said mockingly, thrusting forth her hand. "Give it to me."
She took it from Jinnie's shaking hand and, smoothing it out, replaced it in her pocket book.
"I wouldn't have come but for your own good," she said, looking up.
"Mr. Morse told me you had an idea that Mr. King loved you, and I want you to write him a letter----"
"Write who a letter?" asked Jinnie dully.
"Theodore."
"Why?"
"Because I tell you to," snapped Molly.
Then taking another letter from her bag, she held it out.
"You're to copy this and give it to Mr. Morse to-morrow."
Jinnie took the letter and read it slowly. She struggled to her feet.
"I'll not write it," she said hoa.r.s.ely.
"I think you will," said Morse, rising.
Jinnie stared at him until he reached the closed door behind which Bobbie slept.
"Don't! Don't!" she shuddered. "I'll write, I'll do anything if you won't hurt Bobbie." Raising her eyes to Morse, she said in subdued tones, "I'll try to give it to you to-morrow."
Never had her heart ached as it did then. The perils she was pa.s.sing through and had pa.s.sed through were naught to the present misery. She realized then her hope had been in Theodore's rescuing her.
A certain new dignity, however, grew upon her at that moment. She stood up, looking very tall, very slight, to the man and woman watching her.
"I wish you'd both go," she said wearily. "I'd rather be alone with Bobbie."
Molly smiled and went out with Jordan Morse.
"She gave in all right," remarked Molly, when they were riding down the hill. "I knew she would."
Morse shrugged his shoulders.
"Of course. She wors.h.i.+ps Grandoken's youngster.... I was wondering there once how you felt when you knew she was reading her own letter."
Molly's face grew dark with pa.s.sionate rebellion.
"He'll write me one of my own before the year is out," said she.
"I'm not so sure!" responded Morse thoughtfully.
For a long time after the closing of the door, Jinnie sat huddled in the chair. Nothing else in all the world could have hurt her as she had been hurt that night, and it wasn't until very late that she crept in beside the blind boy, and after four or five hours, dropped asleep.
CHAPTER XLV
WRITING A LETTER TO THEODORE
The first thing Jinnie saw the next morning was the rough draft of the letter Molly had ordered her to copy. To send it to Theodore was asking more of her than she could bear. She turned and looked at Bobbie. He was still sleeping his troubled, short-breathed sleep. She had s.h.i.+elded him with her life, with her liberty. Now he demanded, in that helpless, babyish, blind way of his, that she repudiate her love.
In the loneliness of the gorge house she had become used to the idea of never again seeing Theodore, but to allow him to think the false thing in that letter was dreadful. She picked it up and glanced it over once more, then dropped it as if the paper had scorched her fingers. She'd die rather than send it, and she would tell her uncle so when he came that morning.
She was very quiet, more than usually so, when she gave the blind boy his breakfast.
"Bobbie," she said, "you know I'd do anything for you in this whole world, don't you? I mean--I mean anything I could?"
Mystified, the boy bobbed his curly head.
"Sure I do, Jinnie, and I'd do anything for you too, honey."
She kissed him pa.s.sionately, as her eyes sought the letter once more.
It lay on the floor, the words gleaming up at her in sinister mockery. She tore her eyes from it, shaking in dread. Would she have the courage to stand against Jordan Morse in this one thing? She had given in to him at every point, but this time she intended to stand firmly upon the rock of her love. Once more she picked up the letter and put it away.
Two hours later, with loathing and disgust depicted in her white face, she saw Mr. Morse enter, and her blazing blue eyes stabbed the man's anger to the point of desiring to do her harm. For a moment he contemplated her in silence. He was going to have trouble with her that day. What a fool Molly was! It was she who insisted upon that bally letter. What did he care about Theodore King? Still his wife had him completely within her power, and he was really afraid of her now and then when she flew into rages about his niece and Theodore. He mopped his brow nervously.
A few days more and it would be ended. Inside of one week he would be free from every element which threatened him, free to commence the search for his child. He strode across the room to Jinnie.
"Come on with me," he ordered under his breath.
Jinnie obediently followed him into the inner room. Morse slammed the door with his foot.
"Where's the letter?" he growled between his teeth.
Jinnie went to the table, got the original draft and handed it over.
"Here it is," she said slowly.
He glanced over the paper.
"Why, this is the one we left here yesterday, isn't it?"