Part 13 (1/2)

”Shall we soon be home, Hugh?”

”Very soon, Wee Wifie.”

”Then please put down that great crackling paper behind which you have been asleep the last two hours, and talk to me a little. I want to know the names of the villages through which we are pa.s.sing, the big houses, and the people who live in them, that I may not enter my dear new home a perfect stranger to its surroundings;” and Lady Redmond shook out her furs, and settled herself anew with fresh dignity.

Sir Hugh yawned for the twentieth time behind his paper, rubbed his eyes, stretched himself, and then let down the window and looked absently down the long country road winding through stubble land; and then at the eddying heaps of dry crisp leaves now blown by a strong November wind under the horses' feet, and now whirling in crazy circles like witches on Walpurgis's night, until after a s.h.i.+vering remonstrance from his little wife he put up the window with a jerk, and threw himself back with a discontented air on the cus.h.i.+ons.

”There is nothing to be seen for a mile or two, Fay, and it is growing dusk now; it will soon be too dark to distinguish a single object;”

and so saying, he relapsed into silence, and took up the obnoxious paper again, though the words were scarcely legible in the twilight; while the young bride tried to restrain her weariness, and sat patiently in her corner. Poor Hugh, he was already secretly repenting of the hasty step he had taken; two months of Alpine scenery, of quaint old German cities, of rambling through galleries of art treasures with his child-bride, and Hugh had already wearied of his new bonds. All at once he had awakened from his brief delusion with an agony of remembrance, with a terrible heart longing and homesickness, with a sense of satiety and vacuum. Fay's gentleness and beauty palled on him; her artless questioning fatigued him. In his secret soul he cried out that she was a mere child and no mate for him, and that he wanted Margaret.

If he had only told his young wife, if he had confided to her pure soul the secret that burdened his, child as she was, she would have understood and pitied and forgiven him; the very suffering would have given her added womanliness and gained his respect, and through that bitter knowledge, honestly told and generously received, a new and better Fay would have risen to win her husband's love.

But he did not tell her--such a thought never entered his mind. So day by day her youth and innocent gayety only alienated him more, until he grew to look upon her as a mere child, who must be petted and humored, but who could never be his friend.

Yes, he was bringing home his bride to Redmond Hall, and that bride was not Margaret. In place of Margaret's grand face, framed in its dead-brown hair and deep, pathetic eyes, was a childish face, with a small rosebud mouth that was just now quivering and plaintive.

”Dear Hugh, I am so very tired, and you will not talk to me,” in a sad babyish voice.

”Will talking rest you, Birdie,” asked Hugh, dropping his paper and taking the listless little hand kindly.

Fay drooped her head, for she was ashamed of the bright drops that stole through her lashes from very weariness. Hugh would think her babyish and fretful. She must not forget she was Lady Redmond; so she answered without looking up,

”We have been traveling since day-break this morning, you know, Hugh, and it is all so fresh and strange to me, and I want to hear your voice to make it seem real somehow; perhaps I feel stupid because I am tired, but I had an odd fancy just now that it was all a dream, and that I should wake up in my little room at the cottage and find myself again Fay Mordaunt.”

”Is not the new name prettier, dear?” observed her husband, gently.

Fay colored and hesitated, and finally hid her face in shy fas.h.i.+on on Hugh's shoulder, while she glanced at the little gold ring that shone so brightly in the dusk.

”Fay Redmond,” she whispered. ”Oh yes, it is far prettier,” and a tender smile came to her face, an expression of wonderful beauty. ”Did ever name sound half so sweet as that?”

”What is my Wee Wifie thinking about?” asked Hugh at last, rousing himself with difficulty from another musing fit.

Fay raised her head with a little dignity.

”I wish you would not call me that, Hugh.”

”Not call you what?” in genuine astonishment. ”Why, are you not my Wee Wifie? I think it is the best possible name I could find for you; is it not pretty enough for your ladys.h.i.+p?”

”Yes, but it is so childish and will make people smile, and Aunt Griselda would be shocked, and--” but here she broke off, flushed and looking much distressed.

”Nay, give me all your reasons,” said Hugh, kindly. ”I can not know all that is in my little wife's heart yet.”

But Hugh, as he said this, sighed involuntarily, as he thought how little he cared to trace the workings of that innocent young mind.

The gentleness of his tone gave Fay courage.

”I don't know, of course--at least I forget--but I am really sure that--that--'The Polite Match-Maker' would not consider it right.”

”What?” exclaimed Hugh, opening his eyes wide and regarding Fay with amazement.

”'The Polite Match-Maker,' dear,” faltered Fay, ”the book that Aunt Griselda gave me to study when I was engaged, because she said that it contained all the necessary and fundamental rules for well-bred young couples. To be sure she smiled, and said it was a little old-fas.h.i.+oned; but I was so anxious to learn the rules perfectly that I read it over three or four times.”