"Nat! Could I forget? ... Why?"
"Because ... it"s broken off, Betty."
"Broken off! ... How? Why?"
"Because it had to be, sweetheart: because I love you."
She was very close to him then. Her uplifted face shone like marble in the fading light. "Nat, I ... I don"t understand."
"Then, listen--I must tell you. It was all a plan, a scheme, my coming here, Betty. Everything I did, said, thought, was part of a contemptible trick.... I meant to marry Josie Lockwood, whom I"d never seen, for her money. ... Now you know what I was, dear.... But it"s different, now. I"m not the same man who came to Radville ten months ago. I"ve learned a little to understand the right, I hope: I"ve learned to love and reverence goodness and purity and unselfishness and ... And I want to be a man, the kind of a man you thought me: a man worthy of you and your love, Betty.... Because I love you. I want you to be my wife. ... And, O Betty, Betty, I need you to help me!"
His voice broke. He waited, every nerve and fibre of him tense for her answer. While he had been speaking, the onrush of the storm had blotted out the moon. There was only darkness there in the garden--deep, dense darkness, so thick he could not even see the shimmer of her dress....
Then suddenly she was in his arms, shaking and sobbing, straining him to her.
"Oh, Nat, my Nat! I"ve loved you from the first day I ever saw you! You know I have."
"Betty! ... sweetheart..."
There came an abrupt, furious patter of heavy drops of water, beating upon the foliage, splashing and rebounding from the house.
"Forever and ever, Nat?"
"Forever and ever and a day, my dear ... my dear!"