Part 3 (2/2)
”Of course.”
”But perhaps you will be vexed; for I can see very plainly that you are quite infatuated with your friend.”
”Then you do not like him?”
”Well then--if you insist on knowing: the first day, when I made his acquaintance, I thought him insufferable. With you we got on famously at once, as an amusing travelling companion, but with him--but perhaps he has not travelled much?”
”Oh yes, he has,” said Frank, who could not help smiling.
”Well, then, perhaps he was shy or awkward. However, I began to think differently of him after that; I don't think him insufferable now.”
It was strange, but Frank felt no particular satisfaction on hearing of the young lady's changed opinion; he made no reply.
”You say he has had much to trouble him. And, indeed, I can see it in his face. There is something so gentle in him, so tender, I might almost say; such soft, dark eyes, and such a sweet voice. At first, as I tell you, I found it intolerable, but now it strikes me as rather poetical.
He must certainly be a poet, and have been crossed in love: he can be no commonplace man.”
”No, that he certainly is not,” said Frank, vaguely, a little ill-at-ease over Eva's raptures; and a mingling of jealousy and regret--something like an aversion for the worldly polish, and a dull envy of the poetic graces which Eva attributed to his friend, ran through his veins like a chill. He glanced up, almost pathetically, at the pretty creature, who was sometimes so shrewd and sometimes so nave; so learned in all that bore on her favourite studies, so ignorant of real life. A dim compa.s.sion came over him, and on a sudden the grey rain-clouds weighed upon him with a pall of melancholy, as though they were ominous of some inevitable fatality which threatened to crush her.
His fingers involuntarily clasped her hand more tightly.
”Here is the path once more!” cried Sir Archibald, who was twenty steps ahead of them.
”Oh yes! There is the path! Thank you, Mr. Westhove!” said Eva, and she sprang from the last stepping-stone, pus.h.i.+ng her way through the snapping braken to the beaten track.
”And up there is the hut with the weatherc.o.c.k,” her father went on. ”I believe we have made a long round out of our way. Instead of chattering so much, you would do well to keep a sharp look-out for the path. My old eyes, you know--”
”But it was great fun jumping over the stones,” laughed Eva.
Far above them they could now see the hut with the tall pole of the weatherc.o.c.k, and they went on at an easier pace, their feet sinking in the violet and pink blossomed heath, crus.h.i.+ng the bilberries, dimly purple like tiny grapes. Eva stooped and picked some.
”Oh! so nice and sweet!” she exclaimed, with childish surprise, and she pulled some more, dyeing her lips and fingers blue with the juice of the berries. ”Taste them, Mr. Westhove.”
He took them from her soft, small hand, stained as it were with purple blood. It was true; they were deliciously sweet, and such fine ones!
And then they went on again, following Sir Archibald, often stopping, and triumphing like children when they came on a large patch where the whortleberries had spread unhindered like a miniature orchard.
”Papa, papa! Do try them!” Eva cried, heedless of the fact that papa was far ahead; but Sir Archibald was not out of sight, and they had to run to overtake him; Eva's laughter ringing like a bell, while she lamented that she must leave so many berries untouched--and such beauties!
”I daresay there will be plenty round the hut,” said Frank, consolingly.
”Do you think so?” she said, with a merry laugh. ”Oh, what a couple of babies we are!”
The path grew wider, and they found it easy walking up to the top, sometimes quitting the track and scrambling over the stones to shorten the way. Presently they heard a shout, and looking up, they saw Sir Archibald standing on the cairn in which the staff of the weatherc.o.c.k was fixed, and waving his travelling-cap. They hurried on, and soon were at his side. Eva knocked at the door of the hut.
”The hut is shut up,” said her father.
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