Part 10 (2/2)
The light in his smiling eyes was surely a mocking light. ”Thinks you're up to something! Thinks you've got designs on us!”
The mare was wheedled round again to her former position; against her will, but somehow as the natural result of her dancing. Marvellous how he directed her caprices into his own intentions and against her own.
But Lord Tybar was now looking away behind him to where the adjoining meadow sloped far away and steeply to a copse. In the hollow only the tops of the trees could be seen. His eyes were screwed up in distant vision. He said, ”Dash it, there's that old blighter Sooper. He's been avoiding me. Now I've got him. Nona, you won't mind getting back alone?
I must speak to Sooper. I'm going to have his blood over that fodder business. Blood! My word! Good!”
He twisted the mare in a wonderfully quick and dexterous movement.
”Good-by, Sabre. You don't mind, Nona?” And he flashed back a glance. He lifted the mare over the low bank with a superbly easy motion. He turned to wave his hand as she landed nimbly in the meadow, and he cantered away, image of grace, poetry of movement. Fortune's favourite!
The two left watched him. At the brow of the meadow he turned again in his saddle and waved again jauntily. They waved reply. He was over the brow. Out of sight.
VII
The features of the level valley beyond the brow where only he could have seen the individual he sought, were, at that distance, of Noah's Ark dimensions. ”How he could have recognised any one!” said Nona, her gaze towards the valley. ”I can't even see any one. He's got eyes like about four hawks!”
Sabre said, ”And rides like a--what do they call those things?--like a centaur.”
She turned her head towards him. ”He does everything better than any one else,” she said. ”That's Tony's characteristic. Everything. He's perfectly wonderful.”
These were enthusiastic words; but she spoke them without enthusiasm; she merely p.r.o.nounced them. ”Well, I'm off too,” she said. ”And what about you, Marko? You're going to work, aren't you? I don't think you ought to be able to stop and gossip like this. You're not getting an idler, are you? You used to be such a devoted hard-worker. My word!” and she laughed as though at some amused memory of his devotion to work.
He laughed too. They certainly had many recollections in common, though not all laughable. ”I don't think I'm quite so--so earnest as I used to be,” he smiled.
”Ah, but I like you earnest, Marko.”
There was the tiniest silence between them. Yet it seemed to Sabre a very long silence.
She was again the one to speak, and her tone was rather abrupt and high-pitched as if she, too, were conscious of a long silence and broke it deliberately, as one breaks, with an effort, constraint.
”And how's Mabel?”
”She's all right. She's ever so keen on this Garden Home business.”
”She would be,” said Nona.
”And so am I!” said Sabre. Something in her tone made him say it defiantly.
She laughed. ”I'm sure you are, Marko. Well, good-by”; and as Derry and Toms began to turn with his customary sedateness of motion she made the remark, ”I'm so glad you don't wear trouser clips, Marko. I do loathe trouser clips.”
He told her that he rode ”one of those chainless bikes.”
He said it rather mumblingly. Exactly in that tone she used to say things like, ”I do like you in that brown suit, Marko.”
VIII
He resumed his ride. A mile farther on he overtook, on a slight rise, an immense tree trunk slung between three pairs of wheels and dragged by two tremendous horses, harnessed tandemwise. As he pa.s.sed them came the smell of warm horseflesh and his thought was ”Pretty!”
He shot ahead and a line came into his mind:
<script>