The woman’s face blanched, she stifled an exclamation of horror and stared at him.
“You! you here!”
It was Lennox Sanderson, and the sight of him, so suddenly, in this out-of-the-way place, made her reel, almost fainting against the well-curb.
He grabbed her arm and shook her roughly, and said, “What are you doing here, in this place?”
“I am trying to earn my living. Go, go,” she whispered.
“Do you think I came here after you?” he sneered. “I’ve come to see the Squire.” All the selfishness and cowardice latent in Sanderson’s character were reflected in his face, at that moment, destroying its natural symmetry, disfiguring it with tell-tale lines, and showing him at his par value—a weak, contemptible libertine, brought to bay.
This meeting with his victim after all these long months of silence, in this remote place, deprived him, momentarily, of his customary poise and equilibrium. Why was she here? Would she denounce him to these people? What effect would it have? were some of the questions that whirled through his brain as they stood together in the gathering twilight.
But the shrinking look in her eyes allayed his fears. He read terror in every line of her quivering figure, and in the frantic way she clung to the well-curb to increase the space between them. She, with the right to accuse, unconsciously took the attitude of supplication. The man knew he had nothing to fear, and laid his plans accordingly.
“I don’t believe you’ve come here to look for work,” he said, stooping over the crouching figure. “You’ve come here to make trouble—to hound the life out of me.”
“My hope in coming here was that I might never see you again. What could I want of you, Lennox Sanderson?”
The measured contempt of her tones was not without its effect. He winced perceptibly, but his coarse instincts rallied to his help and again he began to bully:
“Spare me the usual hard-luck story of the deceived young woman trying to make an honest living. If you insist on drudging, it’s your own fault. I offered to take care of you and provide for your future, but you received my offers of assistance with a ‘Villain-take-your-gold’ style, that I was not prepared to accept. If, as you say, you never wish to see me again, what is simpler than to go away?”
His cold-blooded indifference, his utter withdrawal from the calamity he had brought upon her, his airy suggestion that she should go because it suited his pleasure to remain, maddened Anna. The blood rushed to her pale cheeks and there came her old conquering beauty with it. She eyed him with equal defiance.
“I shall not go, because it does not suit me.” And then wavering a little at the thought of her wretched experience—“I had too much trouble finding a place where an honest home is offered for honest work, to leave this one for your whim. No, I shall not go.”