Part 2 (1/2)
”Until your gowns arrive, I shall not see you again?” he asked.
She looked up quickly.
”Do you wish to?”
”Very much!” he blurted out, and then, aware of the undue fervor he had shown, repeated: ”Very much--if you don't mind,” in a subdued but anxious voice.
Again she raised her eyes to his, doubtfully, perhaps a little wistfully.
”It wouldn't be right, would it--until you are presented?”
He was silent.
”Still,” she said, looking up into the sky, ”I often come to the river below, usually after luncheon.”
”I wonder if there are any gudgeon there?” he said; ”I could bring a rod--”
”Oh, but are you coming? Is that right? I think there are fish there,” she added, innocently, ”and I usually come after luncheon.”
”And when your gowns arrive from Paris--”
”Then! Then you shall see! Oh! I shall be a very different person; I shall be timid and silent and stupid and awkward, and I shall answer, 'Oui, monsieur;' 'Non, monsieur,' and you will behold in me the jeune fille of the romances.”
”Don't!” he protested.
”I shall!” she cried, shaking out her scarlet skirts full breadth. ”Good-by!”
In a second she had gone, straight away through the forest, leaving in his ears the music of her voice, on his finger-tips the touch of her warm hand.
He stood, leaning on his gun--a minute, an hour?--he did not know.
Presently earthly sounds began to come back to drown the delicious voice in his ears; he heard the little river Lisse, flowing, flowing under green branches; he heard a throstle singing in the summer wind; he heard, far in the deeper forest, something pa.s.sing--patter, patter, patter--over the dead leaves.
II
TELEGRAMS FOR TWO
Jack Marche tucked his gun under his arm and turned away along the overgrown wood-road that stretched from the De Nesville forests to the more open woods of Morteyn.
He walked slowly, puffing his pipe, pondering over his encounter with the chatelaine of the Chateau de Nesville. He thought, too, of the old Vicomte de Morteyn and his gentle wife, of the little house-party of which he and his sister Dorothy made two, of Sir Thorald and Lady Hesketh, their youthful and totally irresponsible chaperons on the journey from Paris to Morteyn.
”They're lunching on the Lisse,” he thought. ”I'll not get a bite if Ricky is there.”
When Madame de Morteyn wrote to Sir Thorald and Lady Hesketh on the first of July, she asked them to chaperon her two nieces and some other pretty girls in the American colony whom they might wish to bring, for a month, to Morteyn.
”The devil!” said Sir Thorald when he read the letter; ”am I to pick out the girls, Molly?”
”Betty and I will select the men,” said Lady Hesketh, sweetly; ”you may do as you please.”