Part 4 (1/2)
The walls were very thick, and there were seats in the deep window recesses. Opening one of the cas.e.m.e.nts, Whitney stopped a minute and looked out. He could see a stretch of wet sands that were now growing dim, and the faint line of surf, and then, by turning sharply, black hills running back into gathering cloud. The air was unusually keen, and although darkness was fast coming on, the distance was clean-cut and sharp. The landscape somehow harmonized with the house; it was perhaps a trifle harsh, but it had a peculiarly distinctive character.
Andrew came in while Whitney was dressing, and finding him not ready, he went down first.
There was no one in the hall when Andrew reached it, and he was satisfied to be alone as he stood by the hearth, looking about. A lamp had been lighted, but the illumination did not carry far, and the high roof and the corners were shadowy. The hall occupied the lower story of the old central tower, which had served as a fort in bygone years but had since been partly rebuilt and incorporated in the house.
Andrew knew its history, for he loved Appleyard. He was, in some respects, truer to the type of the men who had built and fought for it than d.i.c.k. He was not jealous of his cousin, but it was hard to feel himself a mere pa.s.sing guest in the old house, and a vague discontent tempered his satisfaction at coming home. Besides, he was poor, and was condemned by an accident to a life of obscurity. He wondered why Elsie had not been there to welcome him, as she had always done on previous visits. He remembered her frank regret when he last went away. Indeed, he had often pictured her as she stood by the lodge gate, a slender, fresh-faced girl, with ruffled hair and a hint of tears in her blue eyes. She was as graceful as a fawn; but her beauty as yet was immature.
Andrew heard a sound behind him, and turning from the fire he saw a girl coming down the stairs. She stood out against the dark-paneled walls, for her pale green dress caught the light and s.h.i.+mmered. It went well with her auburn hair, emphasizing the pure white and pink of her skin; and it matched her eyes, which had the changing color of the sea. The immature grace Andrew had known had gone; there was something of distinction in her carriage.
While he gazed at her, she came toward him with a frank smile of pleasure.
”It's very nice to have you back,” she said. ”I couldn't get home until a few minutes after you arrived. Roy lost a shoe as I was driving up the Lockerbie road.”
Andrew took her hand and held it for a moment, but the only remark he could think of was:
”You have Roy yet?”
Elsie laughed as if she understood, and rather liked, his embarra.s.sment.
”Oh, yes. He's still going strong, and when Kevan re-shod him he brought me home in record time. But you're very brown and looking well.”
”It's good to be back at Appleyard,” he said quietly.
”You're still very fond of it? So am I, though that may seem curious, because I'm really an outsider.”
”That applies to me more than to you, because the old place would never be the same without you.”
Elsie looked at him as he stood, gravely quiet, studying her.
”Well,” she said, ”Appleyard is d.i.c.k's. His father was a true Johnstone, his mother a Jardine, but you make one feel that you're more at home here than he is. I can't account for it. Can you?”
”I might blame your imagination,” he answered, smiling.
Elsie gave him a roguish look, which made her seem more like the little Elsie he had known two years before.
”You haven't told me how I'm looking,” she said. ”Perhaps you don't realize that this gown was made in Paris and was put on in your especial honor.”
”You're rather wonderful,” Andrew replied gravely. ”But then you always were. For all that, I had a pleasant surprise when you came downstairs.”
Elsie's eyes twinkled, and he thought they looked like the sea when the sun touched it in a breeze.
”A surface change,” she laughed. ”Munich and London account for it.
I'd run wild, you know, when you saw me last. But there's no difference underneath. You're the same too, and that's what I like. I want to keep my old friend. You must promise you won't alter.”
”I'll try not to,” he answered. ”Perhaps I'm incapable of it; I'm not progressive. Still, there are times when I feel rather old.”
”Oh, I know,” she said with understanding sympathy. ”But after the cheerful letters you wrote from Canada, I hoped the lameness didn't trouble you very much.”
”One mustn't grumble, though it's rather hard to feel useless--just now.”
Elsie's face grew thoughtful.