Part 38 (1/2)
Her expression altogether changed.
”What's the matter?” she exclaimed.
His mind calmed down. Composing his countenance, he shook his head sadly.
”I don't think he'll get over it.”
She laid her hand upon his arm with a quick, involuntary gesture.
”But what has happened? Tell me!”
The wisdom of age and the shrewdness of youth twinkled together in Mr.
Walkingshaw's eye, but he managed to retain a decorously solemn air.
”You are really concerned this time?”
”Of course! I--I mean, naturally.”
He drew her hand through his arm and led her along the fringe of the pine woods.
”Come and see,” he said gently. ”Poor boy he's had a bad fall.”
”What! Is he here--with you?”
”Yes--yes,” he answered, with an absent and melancholy air.
He led her a few paces into the trees, and there, seated on a fallen trunk, they saw the victim of fate smoking a cigarette with a meditative air. He sprang to his feet with a light in his eye that might have been the result of some acute disaster, but scarcely looked like it.
”Frank, my boy,” said his father, ”I have just been explaining to Ellen that you have fallen”--he turned to the girl with a merry air--”in love!” he chuckled, and the next moment they were listening to his flying footsteps and looking at one another.
CHAPTER II
High overhead the pines murmured gently, and Mr. Walkingshaw, strolling through the quiet colonnades below in solitude and shade, heard the strangest messages whispered down by those riotous tree-tops. He was no longer even middle-aged! Or at least his heart certainly was not. It seemed to keep a decade or so younger than his body, and Heaven knew that was growing younger fast enough! At this rate how much longer could he play the beneficent parent? Good Lord, he had jolly nearly fallen head over ears in love with sweet Ellen Berstoun in the course of five minutes' conversation! She wasn't a day too old for Heriot W. That's to say, he could do with a la.s.sie of that age fine, and, by Gad, he shouldn't wonder but Ellen mightn't have rather cottoned to him if her heart had been free. She looked deuced coy when she thought he was proposing. Yes, a girl like Ellen was the ticket for him. But in that case, what about Madge?
For several minutes Mr. Walkingshaw stood very solemnly studying the bark on an entirely ordinary pine, concluding his scrutiny by hitting it a sharp smack with his walking-stick and turning away from the sight of it with apparent distaste. However, a minute or two later he seemed to find one he liked better, for he placed his back against it, removed his hat, and gazed upwards at the softly murmuring branches. Once more their whispers made him smile. Sufficient for the day were the difficulties thereof! That was the way to look at it. Meanwhile, the spring was young, and the little flowers in the wood were young, and the blue sky that showed in peeps through the swinging tree-tops looked as young as any of them, and certainly it was a young and l.u.s.ty breeze that swayed them. By Jingo, what excellent company they all were for him!
And then he heard another murmuring sound, coming this time from behind him. He held his breath and caught the words--
”Ellen! I love you--I love you!”
He peeped round the tree, and for an instant saw them. A most gratifying tribute to his diplomacy--but devilish disturbing to a young fellow without a girl! Hurriedly he snapped a twig; he snapped another; he broke a branch; he whistled, he coughed, he shouted. And then they looked up, vaguely surprised to find there was another person in the world.
”Well, Frank,” said his father, as they walked back together towards their inn, ”are you not feeling happy now, my boy, eh?”
”Happy!” exclaimed Frank. ”I'm stupefied with happiness!”
As Heriot Walkingshaw strode between the spring breeze and the murmuring pines, his son's arm through his, listening to his grat.i.tude and Ellen's praises, he too felt happier than ever before in his life. What a lot of pleasure he had learned how to give. And the way to give it was so simple once you found it out. Apparently you had merely to get in sympathy with people, and then do the things which naturally, under those circ.u.mstances, you would both like to be done. There was really nothing in it at all; still, it was jolly well worth doing.