"You must never say that to anyone else, Kerensa."

"As if I should. This is between us two. You know that I would always be on your side, Mellyora. You are close to me ... we're as close as sisters ... no, closer because I shall never forget that you took me from the hiring stand and made me as your sister ... in a way you made me what I am, Mellyora. The bond between us is stronger than a blood tie, even."

She turned to me suddenly and threw herself against me; I held her tightly while her body heaved with silent sobs.

"You should tell me," I said. "You know that everything that happens to you is my concern. You love Justin ... Sir Justin. I have known it a long time."

"How could anyone help loving such a man, Kerensa?"

"Well, I manage very well, which is fortunate. It would not do for everyone to be in love with him. I have known for a long time what your feelings were ... but what of his?"

She withdrew herself and lifted her face to mine. "He loves me, Kerensa. He thinks he has always loved me. Only he did not know ... until it was too late."

"He has told you this?"

"He would not have done so. But it was when we were both sitting by his father's bedside. It was after midnight. The house was so quiet and there was a moment when it was impossible to hide the truth."

"If he always loved you, why did he marry Judith?" I demanded.

"You see, Kerensa, he looked upon me as a child. He seemed so much older, and because when he knew me first I was only a child, he went on thinking of me as one. And then there was Judith."

"Ah, Judith! He married her, you know."

"He didn't want to, Kerensa. It was against his will."

"And what sort of man is he to marry against his will?"

"You don't understand. It is because he is good and kind that he married her."

I shrugged my shoulders and I could see that she was battling with herself, wondering whether she should tell me. She could not bear my unspoken criticism of Justin, so she decided to.

"His father wanted the marriage before he was ill, but Justin refused because he did not want to marry until he was in love. His father was furious; there were many scenes, and it was during one of these that he had his first stroke. Justin was horrified, you see, because he felt responsible. And when his father was so ill he thought it would help him to recover if he did what he wanted. So he married Judith. He soon knew what a terrible mistake it was."

I was silent. I believed Justin had told her the truth. They were two of a kind, she and Justin. How admirably suited they were. I thought, if she had married Justin, I should have come here in a very different capacity. Oh why hadn't Mellyora married Justin!

I pictured them—one on either side of that dying man who had played such a part in their lives—their whispered confidences, their longings.

"Mellyora," I said, "what are you going to do?"

She opened her eyes incredulously. "Do"? What can we do? He is married to Judith, is he not?"

I did not speak. I knew that for a while it was enough for her to know he loved her; but how long would she—or he—be content with that?

The blinds were up at all the windows. I felt that everywhere there was a subtle change. Nothing could be quite the same again. Old Lady St. Larnston had talked halfheartedly of going to the Dower House, but when Justin had urged her to remain at the Abbas she had been delighted to do so.

A new Sir Justin. A new Lady St. Larnston. But those were merely names. I saw Justin's eyes follow Mellyora, and I knew that confession of theirs had changed their relationship, however much they believed it had not. How long, I wondered, did they think they could keep their secret from such as Mrs. Rolt, Haggety and Mrs. Salt.

There would soon be more gossip in the kitchens. Perhaps it had already started. And how long before Judith was aware—she, who watched her husband every second he was in her company! Already she suspected that his feelings towards Mellyora were dangerously strong.

This atmosphere was filled with danger ... tense and quiet, waiting for disaster.

But it was my own affairs which were absorbing me, because Johnny's passion for me was increasing, and the more aloof I became, the more determined he was. He never attempted to come to my bedroom again but whenever I went out I would find him walking by my side. Sometimes he cajoled, sometimes he blazed; but his conversation was all on one theme.

Again and again I told him that he was wasting his time; he retorted that I was wasting our time.

"If you are waiting for marriage, you will wait a long time," he said angrily.

"You happen to be right. I am waiting for marriage, but not with you. David Killigrew wants to marry me as soon as he gets a living."

"David Killigrew! So you plan to be a parson s wife! What a joke."

"Your feeling for humor is rather childish, of course. There is nothing funny in this, I assure you. It is a very serious matter."

"Poor Killigrew!" he snorted and left me.

But he was uneasy. I knew then that to possess me had become an obsession with him.

Whenever possible I went to see Granny. There was nothing I enjoyed more than stretching out on the talfat and talking to her as I used to when I was a child. I knew that my affairs were as important to her as they were to me and she was the only person in the world with whom I could be absolutely frank.

We discussed the possibility of a marriage with David Killigrew. Granny shook her head over it. "It would be good, lovey, for some, but I reckon you'd always be a-hankering."

"You're not going to say that Johnny St. Larnston's the man for me?"

"If you married him you'd be marrying a dream, Kerensa."

"And that would not be good?"

"Tis only you can make it good or bad, lovey."

"In that case I could make a marriage with David good or bad?"

She nodded.

Then I went on to tell her about my last encounter with Johnny and from that to talk of life at the Abbas. I never stopped talking of the Abbas. I liked to make her see it as I did—the odd winding staircases and stone cells where the nuns had lived; it was the old part of the Abbas which interested me most; but I loved it all; and when I thought of marriage with David Killigrew I thought of leaving the Abbas and that felt like parting with a lover.

"You're in love with a house," said Granny. "Well, tis safer perhaps to love a house than a man. If it be yours, then tis yours and you need have no fear of its betraying you."

Judith had gone to bed early on account of a headache and had dismissed me for the night. It was nine o'clock and because I had a yearning to see Granny I slipped out of the house and went down to the cottage.

She was sitting smoking her pipe and, as always, was glad to see me. We sat and talked; I told her that Johnny's attitude seemed to be changing and that I could not understand him. He had been a little cool lately and there were times when I thought he was abandoning the chase; yet at others he seemed more determined than ever.

Granny lighted two candles, for the twilight was on us and my conversation, as usual, had turned to the house itself, when I was suddenly startled by a movement at the window. I was just in time to see a dark shape move quickly away. Someone had been looking in at us!

"Granny," I cried. "Someone's outside."

Granny rose rather slowly, for she was no longer nimble, and went to the door.

She turned to me and shook her head. "There's no one there."

"But someone was looking in at us." I followed her to the door and peered into the dimness. "Who's there?" I called.

There was no answer.

"Who could it have been?" I asked. "Who could have stood out there peering in at us? And I wonder for how long?"

"It were likely someone as wanted to see me if I were alone," was Granny's comfortable explanation. "They'll come back ... that's if they want to see me bad enough."

The uneasy feeling of having been spied on stayed with me; I could not settle down to talk and as it was growing late I realized it was time I went back to the Abbas.

I said good night to Granny and left her. But I kept wondering who it was who had looked through the window and decided not to come in.

I had no opportunity of seeing Granny again until I had made my decision. In a way, I told myself, that was a good thing because it had to be my decision. I had to take it with my eyes wide open; I had to bear the entire responsibility myself.

Judith had been tiresome. I was discovering facets of her character which I had not known before. She had a violent temper which when it was manifested was the more fierce for having been kept in check. I guessed that the future in this house was going to be very stormy. Judith would not tolerate Mellyora's presence in the house much longer.

And when Mellyora went ... what of me?

However, that was not the concern of the immediate future. Judith had one of her headaches; I must brush her hair; I must massage her forehead. Sometimes I hated the smell of the eau de Cologne she used. It would always remind me of my servitude to this woman,

"How clumsy you are, Carlee." It was a sign of her irritation that she should use my surname. She was deliberately trying to hurt me because she was hurt. "You are pulling my hair. You are useless, useless. Sometimes I wonder why I employ you. When I come to think of it, I did not engage you. You were found for me. What am I in this house ... ?"

I tried to soothe her. "My lady, you are not feeling well. Perhaps you should rest."