ob was now a fine specimen of a stout young
sailor.
"What has come over you, Jacob?" exclaimed May, with a look of surprise,
yet laughing as she spoke. "I never heard you call me Miss May before.
I hope you are not offended at my saying that the ladies would pay you;
they would not think it fair to employ your time without some
recompense."
"But if it's for you, I want no pay, and cannot take it," said Jacob,
his voice softening as he spoke. "I will get the shells, that I will
gladly, as many basketfuls as you may want; only tell me when I bring
them if there are not enough, and I will get more."
"Thank you, Jacob, I am sure you will," said May, and without further
noticing his peculiar manner she tripped lightly away on her homeward
road.
Jacob stood gazing at her with his hand on the door till she was out of
sight. He then, instead of entering the cottage as he had previously
intended, made his way in the direction she had gone.
May continued her walk towards Downside. Having stopped at the cottage
of an old woman (one of the many the Miss Pembertons were in the habit
of visiting) to enquire whether she had got over her last attack of
rheumatics, May, as she turned round, caught sight of Jacob in the
distance. It was not the first time she had discovered him following
her, but she knew him too well not to believe that he had some good
motive for so doing.
"Mother has not got over her fear of that man Miles Gaffin, and sends
Jacob to watch that he does not run off with me, as she used to fancy he
would do when I was a little girl," she said to herself.
The old dame assured her that she was much better for the stuff Miss
Jane had sent, when May, as she wished her good-bye, looked back once
more, but Jacob had disappeared. She therefore continued her walk,
taking little further thought of him. Once, however, as she happened to
turn her head for a moment, she fancied that she saw him, but he again
disappeared round a corner.
She was still some way from Downside when, on a part of the road where
there were no cottages in sight, she observed a young man leaning
against a gate at some little distance in front. He was dressed in the
fashionable costume of the day--a green riding coat and top-boots, with
a huge frill to his shirt, while his hat was set rakishly on one side.
Though his features were not bad his countenance had a coarse unpleasant
expression, and notwithstanding the dress he wore his ap
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