Lavendar escaped from the house, where, even in the smoke-room, it seemed unregenerate to light a cigar, and took the path to the shore. “I wonder if one woman staying in a house full of men would find life as depressing as I do cooped up here under precisely opposite circumstances,” he thought, as he made his way through the little churchyard. “It cannot be the atmosphere of femininity that bores me, however, for Mrs. de Tracy has a strongly masculine flavour and Miss Smeardon is as nearly neuter as a person can be.” He took a couple of oars from the boat-house as he passed, and going to the little landing stage untied the boat and started for the farther shore. It was good to feel the water parting under his vigorous strokes and delightful to exert his strength after the hours of stifled irritation at the Manor. It was a bright, calm close of day, when in the rarefied evening air each sound began to acquire the sharpness that marks the hour. He could hear the rush of the waters behind the boat and the voices of the fishers farther up the stream. As he drew up to the bank and took in his oars the stillness was so great that you could have heard a pin fall, when suddenly from a tree above him a bird broke into one little finished song and then was still, as if it had uttered all it wished to say. “What a heavenly evening!” thought Lavendar, “and what a lovely spot! That must be the cottage just above me. Mrs. de Tracy said I should know it by the plum tree. Ah, there it is!” Tying up the boat he sprang up the steps and walked along the flagged path. The plum tree these last few days had begun to look its fairest. The blossoms did Waddling about on the flags close to the little table was a large fat duck wearing a look of inexpressible greed. “Quack, quack, quack!” it said, waddling off angrily as Lavendar approached. At the sound of the duck’s raucous voice both the women looked up. “Is this Mrs. Prettyman’s cottage, ma’am?” Lavendar asked with his charming smile. “Yes, sir, ’t is indeed, and who may you be, if I may be so bold as to ask?” “I’m Mr. Lavendar, Mrs. de Tracy’s lawyer, Mrs. Prettyman. I’m come to do some business at Stoke Revel,” he added, for the old face had clouded over, and Mrs. Prettyman’s whole expression changed to one of timid mistrust. “I really was sent by Mrs. de Tracy,” he went on, turning to Robinette, “Yes, I am Mrs. Loring,” she said, frankly holding out her hand to him. “I knew you were expected at Stoke Revel, but I sent the footman back myself. He spoils the scenery and the river altogether.” “I’ve got a boat down there; Mrs. de Tracy doesn’t quite like your taking the ferry; may I have the honour of rowing you across? My orders were to bring you back as soon as possible.” “I’m blest if I hurry,” was his unspoken comment as Robinette gaily agreed, and, having bidden good-bye to the old woman, with a quick caress that astonished him a good deal, she laid down the little shoe gently upon the bench, and turned to accompany him to the boat. The river was like a looking-glass; the air like balm. “We’ll take some time getting across, against the tide,” said Lavendar reflectively, as he resolved that the little voyage “Old Mrs. Prettyman was my mother’s nurse,” Robinette remarked as Lavendar dipped his oars gently into the stream and began to row. “I went to see her feeling quite grown up, and she seemed to consider me still a child; I was feeling about four years old at the moment when you appeared and woke me to the real world again.” She had dried her eyes now and had pulled her hat down so as to shade her face, but Lavendar could see the traces of her weeping, and the dear little ineffectual rag of a handkerchief was still in one hand. “What on earth was she crying about?” he thought, as with lowered eyes he rowed Was it possible that this lovely person was going to be his fellow-guest in that dull house? “My word! but she’s pretty! and what were the tears about ... and the little shoe? Did it belong to a child of her own? Can she be a widow, I wonder,” said Lavendar to himself. “I often think,” he said suddenly, raising his head, “that when two people meet for the first time as utter strangers to each other, they should be encouraged, not forbidden, to ask plain questions. It may be my legal training, but I’d like all conversation to begin in that way. As a child I was constantly reproved for my curiosity, especially when I once asked a touchy old gentleman, ‘Which is your glass eye? The one that moves, or the one that stands still?’” The tears had dried, the hat was pushed back again, the young woman’s face broke “Oh, come, let us do it,” she exclaimed. “I’d love to play it like a new game: we know nothing at all about each other, any more than if we had dropped from the moon into the boat together. Oh! do be quick! We’ve so little time; the river is quite narrow; who’s to open the ball?” “I’ll begin, by right of my profession; put the witness in the box, please.––What is your name, madam?” “Robinette Loring,” she said demurely, clasping her hands on her knee, an almost childlike delight in the new game dimpling the corners of her mouth from time to time. “What is your age, madam?” Lavendar hesitated just for a moment before putting this question. “I refuse to answer; you must guess.” “Contempt of Court––” “Well, go on; I’m twenty-two and six weeks.” “Thank you, you are remarkably well preserved. I can hardly believe––those six-weeks! What nationality?” “American, of course, or half and half; with an English mother and American ideas.” “Thank you. Where is your present place of residence?” “Stoke Revel Manor House.” “What is the duration of the visit?” “Fixed at a month, but may be shortened at any time for bad behaviour.” “Your purpose in coming to Stoke Revel?” “A Sentimental Journey, in search of fond relations.” “Have you found these relations?” “I’ve found them; but the fondness is still to seek.” “Have you left your family in America?” “I have no one belonging to me in the world,” she answered simply, and her bright face clouded suddenly. There was a moment’s rather embarrassed silence. “It’s getting to be a sad game”; “Mark.” “Mark Lavendar. ‘Mark the perfect man.’ Where have I heard that; in Pope or in the Bible? Thank you; very good; your age is between thirty and thirty-five, with a strong probability that it is thirty-three. Am I right?” “Approximately, madam.” “You are unmarried, for married men don’t play games like this; they are too sedate.” “You reassure me! Am I expected to acknowledge the truth of all your observations?” “You have only to answer my questions, sir.” “I am unmarried, madam.” “Your nationality?” “English of course. You don’t count a French grandmother, I suppose?” Robinette clapped her hands. “Of course I do; it accounts for this game; it just makes all the difference.––Why have you come to Stoke Revel; couldn’t you help it?” A twinkle passed from the blue eyes to the brown ones. “I am here on business connected with the estate.” “For how long?” “An hour ago I thought all might be completed in a few days, but these affairs are sometimes unaccountably prolonged!” (Was there another twinkle? Robinette could hardly say.) They were half-way across the river now. She leaned over and looked at herself in the water for a moment. Lavendar rested on his oars, and began to rub the palms of his hands, smiling a little to himself as he bent his head. “Yours is an odd Christian name,” he said. “I’ve never heard it before.” “Then you haven’t visited your National Gallery faithfully enough,” said Mrs. Loring. “Robinetta is one of the Sir Joshua pictures there, you know, and it was a great favourite of my mother’s in her girlhood. Indeed she saved up her pin-money for nearly two years that she might have a good copy of it made to hang in her bedroom where she could look at it night and morning.” “Then you were named after the picture?” “I was named from the memory of it,” said Robinette, trailing her hand through the clear water. “Mother took nothing to America with her but my father’s love (there was so much of that, it made up for all she left behind), so the picture was thousands of miles away when I was born. Mother told me that when I was first put into her arms she thought suddenly, as she saw my dark head, ‘Here is my own Robinetta, in place of “And they shortened the name to Robinette?” “I was christened properly enough,” she answered. “It was the world that clipped my name’s little wings; the world refuses to take me seriously; I can’t think why, I’m sure; I never regarded it as a joke.” “A joke,” said Lavendar reflectively; “it’s a sort of grim one at times; and yet it’s funny too,” he said, suddenly raising his eyes. “Now that’s the odd thing I was thinking as I looked at you just now,” Robinette said frankly. “You seem so deadly solemn until you look up and laugh––and then you do laugh, you know. That’s the French grandmother again! It was nice in her to marry your grandfather! It helped a lot!” He laughed then certainly, and so did she, and then pointed out to him that they were being slowly drifted out of their “I have met American women casually;” he said, bending to his oars, “but I have never known one well.” “It’s rather too bad to disturb the tranquillity of your impressions,” returned Mrs. Loring composedly. Lavendar looked up with another twinkle. She seemed to provoke twinkles; he did not realize he had so many in stock. “You mean American women are not painted in quite the right colours?” “I suppose black is a colour?” “Oh! I see your point of view!” and Lavendar twinkled again. “I can tell you in five sentences exactly what you have heard about us. Will you say whether I am right? If you refuse I’ll put you in the witness box and then you’ll be forced to speak!” “Very well; proceed.” “One: We are clever, good conversationalists, and as cold as icicles.” “Yes.” “Two: We dress beautifully and use extravagant means to compass our ends in this direction.” “Yes.” “Three: We keep our overworked husbands under strict discipline.” “Yes! I say,––I don’t like this game.” “Neither do I, but it’s very much played,––” “Four: We prefer hotels to home life and don’t bring up our children well.” “Yes.” “Five: We interfere with the proper game laws by bagging English husbands instead of staying on our own preserves. That’s about all, I think. Were not those rumours tolerably familiar to you in the ha’penny papers and their human counterparts?” Lavendar was so amused by this direct storming of his opinion that he could hardly The sun was going down now, and the rising tide came swelling up from the sea, lifting itself and silently swelling the volume of the river, in a way that had something awful about it. The whole current of the great stream was against it, but behind was the force of the sea and so it filled and filled with hardly a ripple, as the heart is filled with a new desire. Up from the mouth of the river came a faint breeze bringing the taste of the ocean into the deeply wooded creeks. It had freshened into a little wind, as they drew up at the boat-house, that flapped At the top of the hill, she paused to take breath, and look across the river. It was half dark already there, on the other side in the deep shadow of the hill; and a lamp in the window of the cottage shone like a star beside the faintly green shape of the budding plum tree. As Robinette entered the door of the Manor House she took out her little gold-meshed purse and handed Mark Lavendar a penny. “It’s none too much,” she said, meeting his astonished gaze with a smile. “I should have had to pay it on the public ferry, and you were ever so much nicer than the footman!” Lavendar put the penny in his waistcoat pocket and has never spent it to this day. It |