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up at him with piteous, quivering lips. "You should look where you are going," he said, with scant sympathy. "Perhaps you will another time." She found the rail, leaned upon it, then turned her back upon him suddenly and burst into tears which she was too shaken to restrain. She thought he would go away, hoped that he would; but he remained, standing in stolid silence till she managed in a measure to regain her self-control. "Where did you hurt yourself?" he asked then. She struggled with herself, and answered him. "I--I am not hurt." "Then what are you crying for?" The words sounded more like a rude retort than a question. She found them unanswerable, and suddenly, while she still stood battling with her tears, something in the utterance touched her sense of humour. She gulped down a sob, and gave a little strangled laugh. "I don't quite know," she said, drying her eyes. "Thank you for picking me up." "I should have tumbled over you if I hadn't," he responded. Again her sense of humour quivered, finally dispelling all desire to cry. She turned a little. "I'm glad you didn't!" she said with fervour. "So am I." The curt rejoinder cut clean through her depression. She broke into a gay, spontaneous laugh. But the next instant she checked herself and apologized. "Forgive me! I'm very rude." "What's the joke?" he asked. She answered him in a voice that still quivered a little with suppressed merriment. "There isn't a joke. I--I often laugh at nothing. It's a silly habit of mine." His moody silence seemed to endorse this remark. She became silent also, and after a moment made a shy movement to depart. He turned then and looked at her, looked full and straight into her small, sallow face, with its shadowy eyes and pointed features, as if he would register her likeness upon his memory. She gave him a faint, friendly smile. "I'm going below now," she said. "Good-bye!" He raised his hat abruptly. His head was massive as a bull's. "Mind how you go!" he said briefly. And Sybil went, feeling like a child that has been rebuked. II "Do you always walk along with your eyes shut?" asked Brett Mercer. Sybil gave a great start, and saw him lounging immediately in her path. The days that had elapsed since their first meeting had placed them upon a more or less intimate footing. He had assumed the right to speak to her from the outset--this giant who had picked her u
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