“Jack must have gone out,” she thought, “and Mark is waiting for him. I wish he would come back, for I do want to see Mrs. Kane.”
However, another quarter passed and Mark did not appear. Hetty was very cold, for it was damp wintry weather with a sharp wind, and one gets chilly standing perfectly still so long in the open air. She felt tempted to put down the string and go to look for Mark, but on reflection thought it would be disloyal to do so. He should not be disappointed in her again. Something extraordinary had happened to keep him away, but he should find her at her post when he came back. Then he would be sure to forgive her, and she would be happy again.
Another half-hour passed and her toes were half-frozen, and her fingers and her little nose pinched and red. She wished she had put on her gloves before she took the cord in her hands. Now she could not drop it to put them on. The jacket she wore was not a very warm one. Oh, why did not Mark come back? It occurred to her that perhaps he might be playing a trick to punish her; but she could not believe he would be so cruel. Should she drop the string at last, and tell him afterwards that she had held it as long as she could endure the cold? No, she would go on holding it. He should see that she could bear something for his sake.
Hetty had been about an hour shivering at her post when Mark, riding gaily along the road many miles from home, suddenly remembered Hetty and the cord. He felt greatly startled and shocked at his carelessness. “I ought to have sent Jack with the pegs to finish the work, and to tell her I was going to ride,” he reflected; “but it can’t be helped now. She will never be such a goose as to stay there long.” And he felt more sorry thinking of how the string would be lying slack until his return than for treating Hetty so inconsiderately. Trying to put the whole thing out of his head he began to chatter to his father about something that had happened at school, and thought no more about the matter till he had returned home an hour later.
Then he sprang from his pony and ran off to his garden to see if he could tighten up the string before it became quite dark night. Could he believe his eyes? There was Hetty holding the string as he had left her.
“Do you mean to say you have been there ever since?” he said in utter amazement.
“Yes,” said Hetty, trying to keep her teeth from chattering. “You told me not to mind if you were kept a while. And I did not mind.”
“But do you know that I have been two hours away, and have had a long ride with father?” said Mark.
“It seemed a long time,” said Hetty; “but I did not know what you were doing. I promised to stay and I stayed.”
“Well, you were a precious goose,” he said, taking the string out of her hand. “Nobody but a stupid of a girl would do such a thing.”
Hetty said nothing, but slapped her hands together, and tried to keep the tears of disappointment from coming into her eyes.