Part 8 (1/2)

”I always do let you have it,” she replied uncompromisingly. ”You think such a deal of yourselves that it does you all the good in the world. But I don't wait till I go away.”

”I was rather sorry that Joan got let into that gang of people at all,”

said John Spence. ”They're no good to anybody. It hasn't altered her at all, has it? She and Nancy were the jolliest pair. Lord, how they made me laugh when they were kids, and I first came down here!”

He laughed now at the remembrance, a jolly, robust laugh which wrinkled his firm, weathered skin, and showed his white teeth. ”I shouldn't like to see either of them spoiled by going about to houses like Brummels,” he said, with a return to seriousness. ”I don't believe Nancy would have cared about it.”

”She would have gone just the same as Joan,” said Miss Dexter, ”if she had happened to be in the way of it, and she would have behaved just the same; that is, just as she ought to have behaved. You seem to think that Joan is smirched because she has been let in, through no fault of hers, for this horrid thing. You're as bad as Mrs. Amberley.”

John Spence received this charge with an ”Oh, I say!” But he added, ”All the same, I wish it hadn't happened.”

The guns met the next morning at the corner by the Dower House. The Squire brought with him Sir Herbert Birkett, the judge, and Sir George Senhouse, who had married the judge's daughter. Neither of them would be expected to do much execution amongst the young birds, but the Squire was strong on family ties, and liked to have his relatives to shoot with him, more especially when he was going to shoot partridges.

The twins and Lady Senhouse were of the party, and Virginia and Miss Dexter. It was a family occasion, and John Spence, knowing that it was to be so, had felt glad, when he had looked out of his window in the morning, that he had put off the inauguration of his campaign amongst his own young birds in order to take part in it.

Joan and Nancy, in workmanlike tweeds, gave him smiling welcome.

Previously, when he had shot at Kencote, and they had gone out with the guns, they had disputed amicably as to which of them should walk and stand with him, and the one who had won the dispute had taken bold possession of him. Neither did so this morning, and it was left to him to give an invitation.

”Well, Joan,” he said, when they were ready to move off, ”are you going to keep me company?”

”Yes,” said Nancy instantly. ”I am going with Uncle Herbert.”

”But you will come with me after lunch,” said John Spence, with a trifle of anxiety.

”All right,” she threw over her shoulder.

They walked over a field of roots. A single bird got up some little distance away and flew parallel to the line. Spence snapped it off neatly. ”I'm going to shoot well to-day,” he said with satisfaction.

”I like a gallery, you know, Joan. I say, Nancy's not annoyed about anything, is she?”

”Not that I know of. Why?”

”Oh, I don't know. I thought she seemed as if she didn't much want to come with me.”

”You see we're grown up now,” said Joan. ”We can't seize you by the arm, as we used to do, and see which can pull hardest. We have to wait till you ask us.”

They had come to a high, rather blind fence, and the line had spread out, and was waiting. Joan and John Spence were practically alone, except for Spence's wise and calm retriever.

He looked down at her with the kind elder brotherly smile which, with his frank and simple appreciation of their humours, had so endeared him to the twins. ”I say, that's awful rot, you know,” he said.

Joan was conscious of pleasure and some relief as she met his eyes.

She wanted nothing more than that things should be between the three of them as they had always been. She had come to think that perhaps, after all, Nancy wanted nothing more, either; but she did not know, because they had not talked about John Spence together lately. If this visit should show him to be what he had always been, they would talk about him together again, and perhaps that was what she wanted at the moment more than anything; for it was a source of discomfort to her that there was a subject taboo between Nancy and herself.

”It may be sad,” she said. ”But it isn't rot. We are grown up, and there is no getting over it.”

A shadow came over his face. ”They've been teaching you things,” he said. ”When I came down here last, and you were away in London--and at Brummels--Nancy was just the same as she had always been. I don't see any reason why you should alter.”

”Dear old Jonathan! We'll never alter--to you,” said Joan affectionately. But she was conscious of a little pang.