Tea—or, rather, the modern substitute for tea, which consistes of most things except tea, from caviare sandwiches to strawberry ice, and whisky-and-soda to iced coffee—had just been brought out when the two returned to the lawn, and Mildred Brereton's guests had fallen upon it with the most refreshingly healthy appetites, and were fluttering about the tables like a school of gulls fishing. Every one, according to the sensible modern plan, foraged privately and privateerly for himself, and there were no rows of patient women agonizing for things to eat and drink, until some man languidly brought them something they did not want, instead of that which they desired. Nor, on the other hand, were there rows of men parading slowly up the female line, like sightseers at an exhibition, with teacups slipping and gliding over the saucers, and buns being jerked from their plates by neighbouring elbows. Instead, every one flocked to the tables, seized what "Yes, dear Mr. Anthony," Mildred had said. "You received my note, did you not? And I am delighted you could come here to-day! Of course, it is a dreadful thing to me to think that my little girl will be taken away so soon. But that is what every mother has to go through. Dear me! it seems only yesterday that she came into my room, a little toddling mite, to announce that when she was grown up she was going to marry the groom, because then she could always live among horses." "Oh, that'll be all right," said Anthony. "She can have plenty of them." "How generous of you to say that! You have not—ah—spoken to her yet?" "No. I've been trying to all the afternoon, but I couldn't get an opportunity." "Dear Maud! She is—how shall I say "She seemed to want to avoid me," said Anthony with a bluntness that rather distressed Mrs. Brereton. "Yes, it would seem like it," said she; "but indeed— What I wanted to say to you was this: You must be patient with her, and I expect you will need a little perseverance. It is a rare thing, you know, to come and see and conquer, like Julius CÆsar, or whoever it was. Dear Maud perhaps scarcely knows her own mind. I am sure I do not know it. You see, she is young, very young, and I do not think that hers is a nature that expands very early." The young man's rather heavy, commonplace face flushed; for the moment it was lit up, as it were, by a flame from within. "Oh, I'm not going to be impatient," he said. "And as for perseverance, why, there's nothing I would not do, nor any number of years I would not wait, to get her." Mrs. Brereton looked at him critically for a half-moment. "Why, he's in love!" she said to herself. Then aloud, "Dear Mr. Anthony! I am convinced of it," she said. "And bear that in mind when you speak to Maud. His interview with Lady Ardingly had been briefer, but, he felt, more to the point. "She will probably refuse you," said that lady. "In that case you had better wait a month and ask her again. You have everything on your side and everybody—except, perhaps, the girl. But eventually she will do what is good for her. Here is a fourth. Let us play Bridge immediately." This particular game of Bridge had rather taken it out of Anthony, for he had been Lady Ardingly's partner, and had had the misfortune to revoke in playing a sans-À-tout hand. Her remarks to him were direct. "You might just as well pick my pocket of twenty pounds," she said to him, "as do that. Do you not see it so? By your gross carelessness you have lost us the rubber, a mistake which one intelligent glance at your hand would have avoided. Come, there are other pursuits, are there not, in which you wish to be engaged? You will, perhaps, follow them with better attention." Then, seeing the young man's discomfiture, Maud, it is true, had spent the hours since lunch in flying before her admirer, but her reasons, it must be confessed, were not those which one would be disposed to think natural on the part of a young girl. There was not, in fact, one atom of shyness or shirking about her; she had not the least objection to hear impassioned speeches or blunt declarations, whichever mode Anthony should choose to adopt, nor did the thought of him in any way fill her with horror. She had listened very attentively to her mother's advice when they drove down to Windsor earlier in the week; she had also listened with the same consideration to Lady Ardingly's far more convincing and sensible remarks when she had lunched with her on Friday, and her only reason for refusing Anthony an opportunity all the afternoon was that she really had not the slightest idea whether she should say yes or no. She did not, as she had told her mother, love him; she did not, either, dislike him. He was merely quite indifferent to her, as, indeed, all men were. Men, in fact, as far as she thought There were other things as well. A great friend of hers, with whom she had "Darling, I am so pleased to see you!" she said, "and we'll have a nice long talk. Where's Arthur! Arthur is really too tiresome; he asked Tom Liscombe to come down "Oh, come for a stroll, Kitty," said the other; "I want to talk." "Very well; I must say good-bye to Arthur." Maud laughed. "Oh, you ridiculous person," she said; "you will be away ten minutes. Would you like to make your will, too?" "Well, if it's only ten minutes—oh, he's looking. There!" and she waved a tiny morsel of a handkerchief to him. Maud looked at her with grave attention. "Now, I cannot understand that," she said. "No, dear, of course not. You're not married. I should have thought it as ridiculous as you before. By the way, Maud—oh, that's why you look careworn. Is it true you are going to marry Anthony Maxwell? Darling, how nice, and simply rolling!" "You think that is important?" asked Maud. "Why, of course. It's the only crumpled rose-leaf Arthur and I have. It makes us quite miserable; there's always that little ghost in the corner. Can we afford this? Can we spare the money for that? But you haven't answered me. Is it true?" "I haven't the slightest idea," said Maud. Kitty laughed. "You absurd creature!" she said; "you must know. Has he proposed to you?" "No, but he has told mother he wants to. And he has been stalking me all the afternoon." Kitty turned quickly back. "He shall stalk you no longer," she said. "Really, Maud, you are behaving very unfairly to him. If you are going to marry him, say so; if not—well, if not, you will be a very foolish person, but still say so. He has a mother, I know that, but really his mother matters very much less than the man himself. He's all right, isn't he? Behaves nicely—I mean, hasn't a vice about him—looks decent?" "Moderately," said Maud. "Oh, my dear, what do you want? Every "Why? I want to talk to you about it." "My dear girl, there is nothing to say. You will be a fool if you don't marry him, as I told you. There is simply nothing else to talk about. I was in a state of blank indifference about Arthur before I married him. My mother—and I bless her for it—absolutely obliged me to accept him. So will yours do if she has any sense, and I am certain she has heaps. Unless you are a visionary or a fanatic of some kind, you will be glad to be married. Glad? Good gracious! it is much more than that." She turned sharply on her heel, Maud following. "Then, why are there so many unhappy marriages?" asked the latter. "Ah, in books, only. They are there because Maud was silent a moment. "You have changed very much, Kitty," she said at length. "Thank goodness, I have! Oh, Maud, I don't mean to be nasty to you. Those old days were really dear days. But one can't always remain a girl, Maud. It is mercifully ordained that girls become women. And the door by which they enter is marriage." "It means all that?" "All. More——" Maud found herself struggling for utterance. The blush and the downcast eye which she had thought Anthony could never have produced in her were hers now. "You mean a man—the fact of a man?" she said stammeringly. Kitty laughed the laugh of a newly-married woman, which is as old as Eve. "Put it that way if you like," she said. "But there is another—the fact of a woman." "But I am content," she said almost piteously. "Why does everybody—you, mother—want me to marry?" "You have left out Anthony," remarked Kitty rigorously. "I and your mother, because we are women; he, because he is a man." They had come to the populated lawn again, and further intimate conversation would next moment be impossible. Kitty turned to her hurriedly. "Oh, my dear, it is like having a tooth out," she said. "No doubt it is a shock. But it no longer aches. There is Mr. Anthony; let him ask you, anyhow. That is bare justice; and remember what I have said." "I shall not forget it," said Maud. Under no circumstances would Kitty have bitten out her tongue, so it would be a mere figure of speech to say that she would have even been inclined to had she known precisely what effect her volubility would have had on her friend. But it is certain that she would sooner have bitten it very hard—so that it hurt, in fact—could she have foreseen in how opposite a direction to that intended her words had inclined her. As it was, she left the two together in a small solitude encompassed by company, and went to join her husband with a light heart and an approving conscience—a delicious and rare combination. Anthony, at any rate, was primed and ready. "Do take me to see the rose-garden," he said to Maud, with a banalitÉ that seemed to him unavoidable. He was quite aware of it, and regretted the necessity, for, to do him justice, he had tried many other lures that afternoon. "I hear it is quite beautiful," he went on; "and Mrs. Brereton promised me you should show it me after tea. And it is after tea," he added. Maud was slightly taller than he, and had the right to drop her eyelids a little as she looked at him. Of the adventitious advantage she took more than her justifiable measure, and beheld the back of his collar-stud. "By all means," she said. "A promise is a promise, whoever gave it." "You are rather hard on me," observed Anthony. "Hard? Surely not." "Well, on your mother, then." Maud thought a moment. "It is natural for you to think so," she said, "since she agrees with you." They had left the lawn behind them, and threaded a dusky lane set in rhododendrons. Anthony stopped. "She agrees with me," he said. "In one In spite of herself Maud gave him a round of internal applause. She was still so indifferent that she could easily judge him, as if he had been an actor on a stage. Outwardly, with the tongue she could say nothing, and stood, having walked on a pace or two, with her back to him. His voice made her turn round. "Maud, Maud!" he said. "Maud, they were crying and calling." "Ah!" she said, with a sudden interest, "you learned that." He shook his head. "I read it three months ago," he said. "It has stuck in my memory. Because everything cries 'Maud, Maud!' to me." The blush and the averted eye were hers. Quite unconsciously she began to know what Lady Ardingly had meant—what Kitty had meant. "I am sorry," she said. "I ought never to have come here with you. I thought I should laugh at you merely. I do not laugh; I would sooner cry." "Thank you for that," said he. "I understand that you do not accept my devotion. "Do not press me to answer you," she said. "You postpone your answer!" "Please." Meantime dusk had begun to fall, the sounds of rejoicing Cockneys came more faintly from the river, the glow in the western sky faded into saffron, and overhead the vault of velvet blue grew infinitely more infinite. Birds chuckled and scurried through the bushes, bats extended angled wings for the preliminary trials of their nameless ghoulish errands, a nightingale bubbled suddenly, and a large yellow star swung into sight over the dim edge of the earth. But the lawn itself, save for a fine carpet of dew, that was spread without hands on the close-napped turf, reflected none of the evening influences. Servants hurried noiselessly about lighting the lamps that hung in the trees, and soon the tents where dinner was laid began to shimmer with white linen and gleam with silver. Jack was back from his golf, and Mrs. Brereton from an extremely short walk (for she had been recommended plenty of exercise), a few "Now, perhaps, we shall get on with The four consisted of the two Breretons, Lady Ardingly, and Jack Alston; at another table were four more, who, however, abandoned their game at about half-past one, again interrupting Lady Ardingly with their superfluous good-nights, for she was having a very good night indeed. Marie and Maud Brereton had long ago gone to bed, but the other four still played on, in silence for the most part. Occasionally the dummy rose, and refreshed his inner self with something from a side-table, and from time to time the note of a cigarette would sound crisply, as it were, on the soft air of the night. At last a strange change began to pass over the sky, from which the moon had now long set, hardly visible there at first, but making the faces of the players look suddenly white and wan. Then the miracle grew; the dark blue of the sky brightened into dove colour, the stars grew pale, and a little wind stirred in the trees. "You played that abominably, dear Mildred," said Lady Ardingly. "We should She pulled her cloak round her neck as Jack added it up. "The night is growing a little chilly," she said. Mildred, who had been following the figures, looked up. "The night?" she said. "Why what is happening? It is day, is it not?" "Very likely," said Lady Ardingly. "How much is it, Jack? Never mind, tell me to-morrow. I will pay you to-morrow?" Jack rattled his pencil-case between his teeth. "Thirty pounds exactly, Lady Ardingly," he said. They rose and walked across the lawn towards the house, Jack sauntering a little behind, his hands in his pockets, smiling to himself. Mildred dropped behind with him, the other two walking on a few paces ahead. "The most odious hour in the twenty-four!" said Lady Ardingly, looking ghastly in the dawn. "Very trying," said Andrew. "But we have spent the night very well," said the other, as they parted at the foot of And she hurried upstairs, conscious that she was looking awful, and, in that hour of low vitality which comes with the dawn, not wishing to appear thus before anybody, however insignificant. |