id. I shall not keep you. Come with me a moment.
There is something I must tell you at once. You have made a mistake. And
it is my fault. Come!"
Clementina stepped out into the moonlight with him, and they walked
across the grass that sloped between the hotel and the river. There
were still people about, late smokers singly, and in groups along the
piazzas, and young couples, like themselves, strolling in the dry air,
under the pure sky.
Gregory made several failures in trying to begin, before he said: "I
have to tell you that you are mistaken about Mr. Fane. I was there
behind the letter boxes when you came in, and I know that you left these
shoes because you thought he sent them to you. He didn't send them."
Clementina did not say anything, and Gregory was forced to ask: "Do you
wish to know who sent them? I won't tell you unless you do wish it."
"I think I ought to know," she said, and she asked, "Don't you?"
"Yes; for you must blame some one else now, for what you thought Fane
did. I sent them to you."
Clementina's heart gave a leap in her breast, and she could not say
anything. He went on.
"I saw that you wanted them that day, and when the peddler happened to
overtake me in the woods where I was walking, after I left you, I acted
on a sudden impulse, and I bought them for you. I meant to send them
to you anonymously, then. I had committed one error in acting upon
impulse-my rashness is my besetting sin--and I wished to add a species
of deceit to that. But I was kept from it until-to-day. I hoped you
would like to wear them to the dance to-night, and I put them in the
post-office for you myself. Mr. Fane didn't know anything about it. That
is all. I am to blame, and no one else."
He waited for her to speak, but Clementina could only say, "I don't know
what to say."
"You can't say anything that would be punishment enough for me. I have
acted foolishly, cruelly."
Clementina did not think so. She was not indignant, as she was when she
thought Fane had taken this liberty with her, but if Mr. Gregory thought
it was so very bad, it must be something much more serious than she had
imagined. She said, "I don't see why you wanted to do it," hoping that
he would be able to tell her something that would make his behavior seem
less dreadful than he appeared to think it was.
"There is only one thing that could justify it, and that is something
that I cannot justify." It was very mysterious, but youth loves
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