Part 39 (1/2)

Meg and the children, returning from their tea-party at the vicarage, were stopped continually in their journey through the main street by friendly folk who wanted to greet the children. It was quite a triumphal progress, and Meg was feeling particularly proud that afternoon, for her charges, including William, had all behaved beautifully. Little Fay had refrained from s.n.a.t.c.hing other children's belongings with the cool remark, ”Plitty little Fay would like 'at”; Tony had been quite merry and approachable; and William had offered paws and submitted to continual pullings, pus.h.i.+ngs and draggings with exemplary patience.

Once through the friendly, dignified old street, they reached the main road, which was bordered by rough gra.s.s sloping to a ditch surmounted by a thick thorn hedge. They were rather late, and Meg was wheeling little Fay as fast as she could, Tony trotting beside her to keep up, when a motor horn was sounded behind them and a large car came along at a good speed. They were all well to the side of the road, but William--with the perverse stupidity of the young dog--above all, of the young bull-terrier--chose that precise moment to gambol aimlessly right into the path of the swiftly-coming motor, just as it seemed right upon him; and this, regardless of terrified shouts from Meg and the children, frantic sounding of the horn and violent language from the driver of the car.

It seemed that destruction must inevitably overtake William when the car swerved violently as the man ran it down the sloping bank, where it stuck, leaving William, unscathed and rather alarmed by all the clamour, to run back to his family.

Meg promptly whacked him as hard as she could, whereupon, much surprised, he turned over on his back, waving four paws feebly in the air.

”Why don't you keep your dog at the side?” the man shouted with very natural irritation as he descended from his seat.

”He's a naughty--stupid--puppy,” Meg e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed between the whacks. ”It wasn't your fault in the least, and it was awfully good of you to avoid him.”--Whack--whack.

The man started a little as she spoke and came across the road towards them.

Meg raised a flushed face from her castigation of William, but the pretty colour faded quickly when she saw who the stranger was.

”Meg!” he exclaimed. ”_You!_”

For a tense moment they stared at one another, while the children stared at the stranger. He was certainly a handsome man; melancholy, ”interesting.” Pale, with regular features and sleepy, smallish eyes set very near together.

”If you knew how I have searched for you,” he said.

His voice was his great charm, and would have made his fortune on the stage. It could convey so much, could be so tender and beseeching, so charged with deepest sadness, so musical always.

”Your search cannot have been very arduous,” Meg answered drily. ”There has never been any mystery about my movements.” And she looked him straight in the face.

”At first, I was afraid ... I did not try to find you.”

”You were well-advised.”

”Who is 'at sahib?” little Fay interrupted impatiently. ”Let us go home.” She had no use for any sahib who ignored her presence.

”Yes, we'd better be getting on,” Meg said hurriedly, and seized the handle of the pram.

But he stood right in their path.

”You were very cruel,” the musical voice went on. ”You never seemed to give a thought to all _I_ was suffering.”

Meg met the sleepy eyes, that used to thrill her very soul, with a look of scornful amus.e.m.e.nt in hers that was certainly the very last expression he had ever expected to see in them.

She had always dreaded this moment.

Realising the power this man had exercised over her, she always feared that should she meet him again the old glamour would surround him; the old domination be rea.s.serted. She forgot that in five years one's standards change.

Now that she did meet him she discovered that he held no bonds with which to bind her. That what she had dreaded was a chimera. The real Walter Brooke, the moment he appeared in the flesh, destroyed the image memory had set up; and Meg straightened her slender shoulders as though a heavy burden had dropped from them.

The whole thing pa.s.sed like a flash.

”You were very cruel,” he repeated.

”There is no use going into all that,” Meg answered in a cheerful, matter-of-fact tone. ”Good-bye, Mr. Brooke. We are most grateful to you for not running over William, who is,” here she raised her voice for the benefit of the culprit, ”a naughty--tiresome dog.”