Part 35 (1/2)

Miss Hamilton leaned back in a softly padded lounge that was obviously only made for two, and a pleasant-faced, brown-eyed young Englishman, who had no particular business in that country, but had gone there merely for amus.e.m.e.nt, sat at the other end of it, regarding her with a smile.

”After all,” he said reflectively, ”I really don't think I'm very sorry the snow drove us down from our shooting camp in the ranges.”

Violet laughed. She had met the man before he went into the mountains, and he had been at Bonavista for a week or two now.

”It was too cold for you up there?” she queried.

”It was,” answered the man, ”at least, it was certainly too cold for Jardine, who came out with me. He got one of his feet nipped sitting out one night with the rifle on a high ledge in the snow, and when I left him in Vancouver the doctor told him it would be a month before he could wear a boot again.”

He laughed. ”I have a shrewd suspicion that one has to get hardened to that kind of thing, and, surely, this is considerably nicer.”

”This,” repeated Violet, who fancied she understood what he meant, ”is very much the same thing as you are accustomed to in London, except that the houses are, no doubt, more luxuriously furnished, and the company is more brilliant and entertaining.”

”You would not expect me to make any admission of that kind?” and the man looked at her reproachfully. ”In any case, it wouldn't be warranted.”

”Then,” said Violet, ”I must have some very erroneous notions of your English mansions.”

The man smiled. ”Ah!” he said, ”I was referring to the company.”

He had expressed himself in a similar fas.h.i.+on once or twice before, but Violet did not resent it. She admitted that she rather liked him, and she did not know that, although he had been a week or two at Bonavista, he had only intended to stay there a few days. It had naturally occurred to Mrs. Acton that there might be a certain significance in this, but she was misled by the open manner in which another young woman had annexed him.

There were other guests in the room, and among them was a little bald-headed man, whom Violet had heard had philanthropic tendencies, and was connected with some emigration scheme. This man was talking to Acton. He spoke in a didactic manner, tapping one hand with his gold-rimmed spectacles, and appeared quite content that the rest should hear him.

”There is no doubt that this country offers us a great field,” he said. ”In fact, I have already made arrangements for settling a number of deserving families on the land. What I am particularly pleased with is the manner in which the man who makes his home here is brought into close contact with Nature. The effect of this cannot fail to be what one might term recuperative. There is a vitality to be drawn from the soil, and I have of late been urging the manifold advantages of the simple life upon those who are interesting themselves in these subjects with me.”

Violet glanced at her companion, and saw the amus.e.m.e.nt in his eyes.

”Do you all talk like that in England?” she inquired.

The man raised his hand reproachfully. ”I'm afraid some of us talk a good deal of rubbish now and then. Still, as a matter of fact, we don't round up our sentences in that precise fas.h.i.+on, as he does. Just now we're rather fragmentary. Of course, he's right to some extent.

I'm fond of the simple life--that is, for a month or so, when I know that a two days' ride will land me in a civilized hotel. The trouble is that most of the folks who recommend it would certainly go all to bits in a few weeks after they tried it personally. Can you fancy our friend yonder chopping tremendous trees, or walking up to his knees in snow twelve hours with a flour-bag on his back?”

Violet certainly could not. The man was full-fleshed, plethoric, and heavy of foot, and he spoke with a throaty gasp.

”The tilling of the soil,” he went on, apparently addressing anybody who cared to listen, ”is man's natural task, and I think Nature's beneficent influences are felt to their fullest extent in the primeval stillness of these wonderful Western woods.”

Violet's companion looked up at her with a smile.

”The primeval stillness sounds rather nice, only it isn't still except you go up into the snow upon the peaks,” he said. ”In most of the other places my trail led through you can hear the rivers, and they make noise enough for anything. Now, there's a man yonder I haven't seen before, who, I fancy, could tell us something about it if he liked. His face suggests that he knows. I mean the one talking to Mrs.

Acton.”

Violet followed his glance, and saw a man standing beside Mrs. Acton near the great English hearth; but his face was turned away from her, and it was a moment or two before he looked round. Then she started, and the blood crept into her cheeks as she met Nasmyth's gaze.

He had changed since she last saw him--changed, she felt, in an almost disconcerting fas.h.i.+on. He wore plain city clothes, and they hung about him with a suggestive slackness. His face was darkened and roughened by exposure to the winter winds; it had grown sharp and stern, and there was a disfiguring red scar down one side of it. His eyes were keen and intent, and there was a look in them that she did not remember having noticed before, while he seemed to have lost his careless gracefulness of manner. Even his step seemed different as he moved towards her. It was, though neither exactly understood why, a difficult moment for both of them when he stopped close by her side, and it was made no easier by the fact that they were not alone. Violet turned to her companion, who rose.

”Mr. Carshalton, from the Old Country,” she said. ”This is Mr.

Nasmyth.”

Carshalton nodded. ”Glad to meet you. Won't you sit down?” he said.

”As it happens, I had just pointed you out to Miss Hamilton. We were talking about the wilderness--or, to be more precise, the great primeval stillness. I ventured to suggest that you could tell us something about it.”