Part 14 (1/2)

The waitress went away and returned with a face as gloomy as Winifred's. ”It's been such a hot day,” she said deprecatingly. ”There is only one ice in the place and that's Neapolitan.”

”Well, bring two Neapolitans,” John ventured.

”I mean there is only one Neapolitan ice left.”

”Well, bring that. I don't really want one.”

He watched Mrs. Glamorys daintily devouring the solitary ice, and felt a certain pathos about the parti-coloured oblong, a something of the haunting sadness of ”The Last Rose of Summer.” It would make a graceful, serio-comic triolet, he was thinking. But at the last spoonful, his beautiful companion dislocated his rhymes by her sudden upspringing.

”Goodness gracious,” she cried, ”how late it is!”

”Oh, you're not leaving me yet!” he said. A world of things sprang to his brain, things that he was going to say--to arrange. They had said nothing--not a word of their love even; nothing but cakes and ices.

”Poet!” she laughed. ”Have you forgotten I live at Hampstead?” She picked up her parasol. ”Put me into a hansom, or my husband will be raving at his lonely dinner-table.”

He was so dazed as to be surprised when the waitress blocked his departure with a bill. When Winifred was spirited away, he remembered she might, without much risk, have given him a lift to Paddington. He hailed another hansom and caught the next train to Oxford. But he was too late for his own dinner in Hall.

III

He was kept very busy for the next few days, and could only exchange a pa.s.sionate letter or two with her. For some time the examination fever had been raging, and in every college poor patients sat with wet towels round their heads. Some, who had neglected their tutor all the term, now strove to absorb his omniscience in a sitting.

On the Monday, John Lefolle was good-naturedly giving a special audience to a muscular dunce, trying to explain to him the political effects of the Crusades, when there was a knock at the sitting-room door, and the scout ushered in Mrs. Glamorys. She was bewitchingly dressed in white, and stood in the open doorway, smiling--an embodiment of the summer he was neglecting. He rose, but his tongue was paralysed. The dunce became suddenly important--a symbol of the decorum he had been outraging. His soul, torn so abruptly from history to romance, could not get up the right emotion. Why this imprudence of Winifred's? She had been so careful heretofore.

”What a lot of boots there are on your staircase!” she said gaily.

He laughed. The spell was broken. ”Yes, the heap to be cleaned is rather obtrusive,” he said, ”but I suppose it is a sort of tradition.”

”I think I've got hold of the thing pretty well now, sir.” The dunce rose and smiled, and his tutor realised how little the dunce had to learn in some things. He felt quite grateful to him.

”Oh, well, you'll come and see me again after lunch, won't you, if one or two points occur to you for elucidation,” he said, feeling vaguely a liar, and generally guilty. But when, on the departure of the dunce, Winifred held out her arms, everything fell from him but the sense of the exquisite moment. Their lips met for the first time, but only for an instant. He had scarcely time to realise that this wonderful thing had happened before the mobile creature had darted to his book-shelves and was examining a Thucydides upside down.

”How clever to know Greek!” she exclaimed. ”And do you really talk it with the other dons?”

”No, we never talk shop,” he laughed. ”But, Winifred, what made you come here?”

”I had never seen Oxford. Isn't it beautiful?”

”There's nothing beautiful _here_,” he said, looking round his sober study.

”No,” she admitted; ”there's nothing I care for here,” and had left another celestial kiss on his lips before he knew it. ”And now you must take me to lunch and on the river.”

He stammered, ”I have--work.”

She pouted. ”But I can't stay beyond to-morrow morning, and I want so much to see all your celebrated oarsmen practising.”

”You are not staying over the night?” he gasped.