<h2><SPAN name="V" id="V" />V</h2>
<p>Beginning with the awful moment when
she first realized her danger and the necessity
for immediate flight, she lived over every
perilous instant, her nerves straining, her
breath bated as if she were experiencing it
all once more. The horror of it! Her own
hopeless, helpless condition! But finally, because
her trouble was new and her body and
mind, though worn with excitement, were
healthy and young, she sank into a deep sleep,
without having decided at all what she should
do.</p>
<p>At last she woke from a terrible dream,
in which the hand of her pursuer was upon
her, and her preserver was in the dark distance.
With that strange insistence which
torments the victim of such dreams, she was
obliged to lie still and imagine it out, again
and again, until the face and voice of the
young man grew very real in the darkness,
and she longed inexpressibly for the comfort
of his presence once more.</p>
<p>At length she shook off these pursuing
thoughts and deliberately roused herself to
plan her future.</p>
<p>The first necessity, she decided, was to
change her appearance so far as possible, so
that if news of her escape, with full description,
had been telegraphed, she might evade
notice. To that end, she arose in the early
dawning of a gray and misty morning, and
arranged her hair as she had never worn it
before, in two braids and wound closely about
her head. It was neat, and appropriate to the
vocation which she had decided upon, and it
made more difference in her appearance than
any other thing she could have done. All
the soft, fluffy fulness of rippling hair that
had framed her face was drawn close to her
head, and the smooth bands gave her the
simplicity and severity of a saint in some old
picture. She pinned up her gown until it
did not show below the long black coat, and
folded a white linen handkerchief about her
throat over the delicate lace and garniture
of the modish waist. Then she looked
dubiously at the hat.</p>
<p>With a girl's instinct, her first thought
was for her borrowed plumage. A fine mist
was slanting down and had fretted the window-pane
until there was nothing visible but dull
gray shadows of a world that flew monotonously
by. With sudden remembrance, she
opened the suit-case and took out the folded
black hat, shook it into shape, and put it
on. It was mannish, of course, but girls often
wore such hats.</p>
<p>As she surveyed herself in the long mirror
of her door, the slow color stole into her
cheeks. Yet the costume was not unbecoming,
nor unusual. She looked like a simple schoolgirl,
or a young business woman going to her
day's work.</p>
<p>But she looked at the fashionable proportions
of the other hat with something like
alarm. How could she protect it? She did
not for a moment think of abandoning it, for
it was her earnest desire to return it at once,
unharmed, to its kind purloiner.</p>
<p>She summoned the newsboy and purchased
three thick newspapers. From these, with the
aid of a few pins, she made a large package
of the hat. To be sure, it did not look like
a hat when it was done, but that was all the
better. The feathers were upheld and packed
softly about with bits of paper crushed together
to make a springy cushion, and the
whole built out and then covered over with
paper. She reflected that girls who wore
their hair wound about their heads and covered
by plain felt hats would not be unlikely
to carry large newspaper-wrapped packages
through the city streets.</p>
<p>She decided to go barehanded, and put the
white kid gloves in the suit-case, but she took
off her beautiful rings, and hid them safely
inside her dress.</p>
<p>When the porter came to announce that
her breakfast was waiting in the dining-car,
he looked at her almost with a start, but she
answered his look with a pleasant, "Good
morning. You see I'm fixed for a damp day."</p>
<p>"Yes, miss," said the man deferentially.
"It's a nasty day outside. I 'spect Chicago'll
be mighty wet. De wind's off de lake, and
de rain's comin' from all way 'twoncet."</p>
<p>She sacrificed one of her precious quarters
to get rid of the attentive porter, and started
off with a brisk step down the long platform
to the station. It was part of her plan to
get out of the neighborhood as quickly as
possible, so she followed the stream of people
who instead of going into the waiting-room
veered off to the street door and out into
the great, wet, noisy world. With the same
reasoning, she followed a group of people
into a car, which presently brought her into
the neighborhood of the large stores, as she
had hoped it would. It was with relief that
she recognized the name on one of the stores
as being of world-wide reputation.</p>
<p>Well for her that she was an experienced
shopper. She went straight to the millinery
department and arranged to have the hat
boxed and sent to the address Dunham had
given her. Her gentle voice and handsome rain-coat
proclaimed her a lady and commanded
deference and respectful attention. As she
walked away, she had an odd feeling of having
communicated with her one friend and preserver.</p>
<p>It had cost less to express the hat than she
had feared, yet her stock of money was woefully
small. Some kind of a dress she must
have, and a wrap, that she might be disguised,
but what could she buy and yet have
something left for food? There was no telling
how long it would be before she could
replenish her purse. Life must be reduced
to its lowest terms. True, she had jewelry
which might be sold, but that would scarcely
be safe, for if she were watched, she might
easily be identified by it. What did the very
poor do, who were yet respectable?</p>
<p>The ready-made coats and skirts were entirely
beyond her means, even those that had
been marked down. With a hopeless feeling,
she walked aimlessly down between the tables
of goods. The suit-case weighed like lead,
and she put it on the floor to rest her aching
arms. Lifting her eyes, she saw a sign over
a table—"Linene Skirts, 75 cts. and $1.00."</p>
<p>Here was a ray of hope. She turned
eagerly to examine them. Piles of sombre
skirts, blue and black and tan. They were
stout and coarse and scant, and not of the
latest cut, but what mattered it? She decided
on a seventy-five cent black one. It
seemed pitiful to have to economize in a matter
of twenty-five cents, when she had been
used to counting her money by dollars, yet
there was a feeling of exultation at having
gotten for that price any skirt at all that
would do. A dim memory of what she had
read about ten-cent lodging-houses, where
human beings were herded like cattle, hovered
over her.</p>
<p>Growing wise with experience, she discovered
that she could get a black sateen shirt-waist
for fifty cents. Rubbers and a cotton umbrella
took another dollar and a half. She
must save at least a dollar to send back the
suit-case by express.</p>
<p>A bargain-table of odds and ends of woollen
jackets, golf vests, and old fashioned blouse
sweaters, selling off at a dollar apiece, solved
the problem of a wrap. She selected a dark
blouse, of an ugly, purply blue, but thick and
warm. Then with her precious packages she
asked a pleasant-faced saleswoman if there
were any place near where she could slip on
a walking skirt she had just bought to save
her other skirt from the muddy streets. She
was ushered into a little fitting-room near by.
It was only about four feet square, with one
chair and a tiny table, but it looked like a
palace to the girl in her need, and as she
fastened the door and looked at the bare
painted walls that reached but a foot or so
above her head and had no ceiling, she wished
with all her heart that such a refuge as this
might be her own somewhere in the great,
wide, fearful world.</p>
<p>Rapidly she slipped off her fine, silk-lined
cloth garments, and put on the stiff sateen
waist and the coarse black skirt. Then she
surveyed herself, and was not ill pleased.
There was a striking lack of collar and belt.
She sought out a black necktie and pinned it
about her waist, and then, with a protesting
frown, she deliberately tore a strip from the
edge of one of the fine hem-stitched handkerchiefs,
and folded it in about her neck in
a turn-over collar. The result was quite
startling and unfamiliar. The gown, the hair,
the hat, and the neat collar gave her the look
of a young nurse-girl or upper servant. On
the whole, the disguise could not have been
better. She added the blue woollen blouse,
and felt certain that even her most intimate
friends would not recognize her. She folded
the rain-coat, and placed it smoothly in the
suit-case, then with dismay remembered that
she had nothing in which to put her own
cloth dress, save the few inadequate paper
wrappings that had come about her simple
purchases. Vainly she tried to reduce the
dress to a bundle that would be covered by
the papers. It was of no use. She looked
down at the suit-case. There was room for
the dress in there, but she wanted to send
Mr. Dunham's property back at once. She
might leave the dress in the store, but some
detective with an accurate description of that
dress might be watching, find it, and trace
her. Besides, she shrank from leaving her
garments about in public places. If there had
been any bridge near at hand where she might
unobserved throw the dress into a dark river,
or a consuming fire where she might dispose
of it, she would have done it. But whatever
she was to do with it must be done at once.
Her destiny must be settled before the darkness
came down. She folded the dress smoothly
and laid it in the suit-case, under the rain-coat.</p>
<p>She sat down at a writing-desk, in the
waiting-room, and wrote: "I am safe, and I
thank you." Then she paused an instant, and
with nervous haste wrote "Mary" underneath.
She opened the suit-case and pinned
the paper to the lapel of the evening coat.
Just three dollars and sixty-seven cents she
had left in her pocket-book after paying the
expressage on the suit-case.</p>
<p>She felt doubtful whether she might not
have done wrong about thus sending her dress
back, but what else could she have done? If
she had bought a box in which to put it, she
would have had to carry it with her, and perhaps
the dress might have been found during
her absence from her room, and she suspected
because of it. At any rate, it was too late
now, and she felt sure the young man would
understand. She hoped it would not inconvenience
him especially to get rid of it. Surely
he could give it to some charitable organization
without much trouble.</p>
<p>At her first waking, in the early gray hours
of the morning, she had looked her predicament
calmly in the face. It was entirely
likely that it would continue indefinitely; it
might be, throughout her whole life. She
could now see no way of help for herself.
Time might, perhaps, give her a friend who
would assist her, or a way might open back
into her old life in some unthought-of manner,
but for a time there must be hiding and
a way found to earn her living.</p>
<p>She had gone carefully over her own accomplishments.
Her musical attainments,
which would naturally have been the first
thought, were out of the question. Her skill
as a musician was so great, and so well known
by her enemy, that she would probably be
traced by it at once. As she looked back
at the hour spent at Mrs. Bowman's piano,
she shuddered at the realization that it might
have been her undoing, had it chanced that
her enemy passed the house, with a suspicion
that she was inside. She would never dare
to seek a position as accompanist, and she
knew how futile it would be for her to attempt
to teach music in an unknown city, among
strangers. She might starve to death before
a single pupil appeared. Besides, that too
would put her in a position where she would
be more easily found. The same arguments
were true if she were to attempt to take a
position as teacher or governess, although she
was thoroughly competent to do so. Rapidly
rejecting all the natural resources which under
ordinary circumstances she would have used
to maintain herself, she determined to change
her station entirely, at least for the present.
She would have chosen to do something in a
little, quiet hired room somewhere, sewing or
decorating or something of the sort, but that
too would be hopelessly out of her reach, without
friends to aid her. A servant's place in
some one's home was the only thing possible
that presented itself to her mind. She could
not cook, nor do general housework, but she
thought she could fill the place of waitress.</p>
<p>With a brave face, but a shrinking heart,
she stepped into a drug-store and looked up
in the directory the addresses of several employment
agencies.</p>
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