The color flashed into her cheeks.
"I thought I could do that much without interfering in any other way with either of our lives."
"Well?"
"There were two or three things I didn"t reckon with," she answered.
"What were they?" he demanded.
"Blake is one of them."
"Blake?" His face brightened with sudden understanding. "Then the trouble is all about that box of candy?"
"You shouldn"t have sent it. You should have known better than to send it. You--had no right."
"But that was nothing. You were so darned good to me about the typewriting and it was all I could think of."
"So, you see," she concluded, "it won"t do. It won"t do at all."
"I don"t see," he returned.
"Then it"s because you didn"t see the way Blake looked at me," she said.
"Yes, I saw," he answered. "I could have hit him for it. But I fixed that."
"You--fixed that?" she gasped.
"I certainly did. I told him I sent the box, and told him why."
"Oh!" she exclaimed. "Then they"ll all know, and--what am I going to do? Oh, what am I going to do?"
It was a pitiful cry. He did not understand why it was so intense, because he did not see what she saw--the gossip increasing in maliciousness; the constant watching and nods and winks, until in the end it became intolerable either to her or to Farnsworth. Nor was that the possible end. To leave an office under these conditions was a serious matter--a matter so serious as to affect her whole future.
"Now, see here," he pleaded. "Don"t take it so hard. You"re making too much of it. Blake isn"t going to talk any more. If he does--"
She raised her head.
"If he does, there isn"t anything you can do about it."
"I"ll bet there is."
"No--no--_no_. There isn"t. I know! But you mustn"t come here any more. And you mustn"t talk to me any more. Then perhaps they"ll forget."
He grew serious.
"It seems too bad if it"s got to be that way," he answered.
"I ought to have known," she said.
"And I ought to have known, too. I was a fool to send that box into the office, but I wanted you to get it before you went home."
She raised her eyes to his a moment. Then a queer, tender expression softened her mouth.
"This is the end of it," she answered. "And now I"m glad you did not know any better."
She rose to go, and then she noticed that he had not lunched.
"I"ll wait here until you come back with your sandwich," she said.
"I don"t want a sandwich," he protested.
"Please hurry."
So she waited there until he came back with his lunch, and then she held out her hand to him.
"To-morrow you go to the old place," she said, "and I"ll come here."
CHAPTER X
DICTATION
As far as Don was concerned, Miss Winthrop, instead of merely changing her lunch-place, might just as well have taken a steamer and sailed for Europe. He saw her at her desk every morning when he came in, and she always looked up and nodded--as she did, for that matter, to every one, including Blake. Then she turned to her work, and that was the end of her until the next morning. As far as he was able to judge, Miss Winthrop had completely and utterly forgotten the preceding weeks and even the incident that led to this disastrous climax.
But the situation that left her so unaffected got on Don"s nerves. He was by nature too much of a social being to endure being left to himself very long. This lunching alone day after day was a dreary affair. The egg sandwiches began to pall upon his taste, and he felt that he could not have eaten an eclair had he been starving.
Sometimes he had only a cup of coffee, and then hurried out and wandered about the streets for the remainder of his hour. It was a long hour--a tedious hour. Most of the time he spent in the hope that, by some lucky chance, he might meet her. He did not hunt for her. He avoided her usual course. If he met her, it must be honestly by chance. But he never met her. He pa.s.sed thousands of other young women, but he never met her. He used to return to the office sometimes doubting that she existed. But at one o"clock she was always there back of her machine.
He spent a good deal of time that week with Powers; and seemed to make some progress. He had now a definite knowledge of bonds and notes, and had even mastered, in a general way, the important details of some of the issues the house was handling. Twice he had taken home his papers and actually spent several hours upon them. Some of them he knew almost by heart. It was encouraging, but it would have been much more encouraging if he had been able to tell Miss Winthrop about it.
Somehow, he did not feel that he really knew those things until he had told her he knew them. This was a curious frame of mind to be in, but it was a fact.
As far as he was concerned, he would have broken through this embargo long ago. But she had made him see, and see clearly, that he was _not_ alone concerned. That was the whole trouble. If Blake talked only about him, and let it go at that, no harm would be done.
One Friday morning, toward eleven o"clock, Blake was out of the office, and Don had just finished a long talk with Powers, when he noticed that Miss Winthrop was not for the moment busy.
Don had an inspiration. He caught Powers just as he was about to leave.
"Look here, old man," he said in an undertone. "Is there any objection to my dictating a letter to Miss Winthrop?"
"Why, no," answered Powers. "She"s there for the use of the staff."
"Thought I"d like to have her take down some of the things we"ve been talking about," he explained.
"Good idea," nodded Powers.