A great dinner party had come to an end, and the Lord-Lieutenant of the county bowed low over the cold hand of his departing guest, in whose honour it had been given. A distant relationship gave Lord Westerdean privileges upon which he would willingly have improved. “You are leaving us early, Wilhelmina,” he murmured reproachfully. “How can I expect to keep my other guests if you desert us?” Wilhelmina withdrew the hand and nodded her other farewells. The heat of the summer evening had brought every one out from the drawing-room. The hall doors stood open. Those of the guests who were not playing bridge or billiards were outside upon the terrace—some had wandered into the gardens. “My dear Leslie,” she said, as she stood upon the broad steps, “you are losing your habit of gallantry. A year ago you would not have ventured to suggest that in my absence the coming or going of your other guests could matter a straw.” “You know very well that it doesn’t,” he answered, dropping his voice. “You know very well——” “To-night,” she interrupted calmly, “I will not be made love to! I am not in the humour for it.” He looked down at her curiously. He was a man of exceptional height, thin, grey, still handsome, an ex-diplomat, whose career, had he chosen to follow it, would have been a brilliant one. Wealth and immense estates had thrust their burdens upon him, however, and he was content to be the most popular man in his county. “There is nothing the matter?” he asked anxiously. She shook her head. “You are well?” he persisted, dropping his voice. “Absolutely,” she answered. “It is not that. It is a mood. I used to welcome moods as an escape from the ruts. I suppose I am getting too old for them now.” He shook his head. “I wonder,” he said, “if the world really knows how young you are.” “Don’t,” she interrupted, with a shudder, “I have outlived my years.” A motor omnibus and a small victoria came round from the stables. The party from Thorpe began slowly to assemble upon the steps. “I am going in the victoria—alone,” she said, resting her fingers upon his arm. “Don’t you envy me?” “I envy the vacant place,” he answered sadly. “Isn’t this desire for solitude somewhat of a new departure, though?” “Perhaps,” she admitted. “I am rather looking forward to my drive. To-night, as we came here, He broke off a cluster of pink roses and placed them in her hands. “If your thoughts must needs fill the empty seat,” he whispered, as he bent over her for his final adieux, “remember my claims, I beg. Perhaps my thoughts might even meet yours!” She laughed under her breath, but the light in his eyes was unanswered. “Perhaps!” she answered. “It is a night for thoughts and dreams, this. Even I may drift into sentiment. Good night! Such a charming evening.” The carriage rolled smoothly down the avenue from the great house, over which she might so easily have reigned, and turned into the road. A few minutes later the motor-car flashed by. Afterwards there was solitude, for it was already past midnight. Gilbert Deyes looked thoughtfully out at the carriage from his place in the car. He had begged—very hard for him—for that empty seat. “Of what is it a sign,” he asked, “when a woman seeks solitude?” Lady Peggy shrugged her shoulders. “Wilhelmina is tired of us all, I suppose,” she remarked. “She gets like that sometimes.” “Then of what is it a sign,” he persisted, “when a woman tires of people—like us?” Lady Peggy yawned. “In a woman of more primitive instincts,” she “One wonders,” Deyes remarked softly. “A woman like that is always something of a mystery. By the bye, wasn’t there a whisper of something the year she lived in Florence?” “People have talked of her, of course,” Lady Peggy answered. “In Florence, a woman without a lover is like a child without toys. To be virtuous there is the one offence which Society does not pardon.” “I believe,” Deyes said, “that a lover would bore Wilhelmina terribly.” “Why the dickens doesn’t she marry Leslie?” Austin asked, opening his eyes for a moment. “Too obvious,” Deyes murmured. “Some day I can’t help fancying that she will give us all a shock.” A mile or more behind, the lady with ice in her veins, leaned back amongst the cushions of her carriage, drinking in, with a keenness of appreciation which surprised even herself, the beauties of the still, hot night. The moon was as yet barely risen. In the half light, the country and the hills beyond, with their tumbled masses of rock, seemed unreal—of strange and mysterious outline. More than anything, she was conscious of a sense of softness. The angles were gone from all the crude places, it was peace itself which had settled upon the land. Peace, and a wonderful silence! The birds had long The woman in the carriage looked out with steady tireless eyes upon this visionary land. The breath of the honeysuckle and the pleasant odour of warm hay seemed to give life to the sensuous joy of the wonderful night. She herself was a strange being to be abroad in these quiet lanes. Her only wrap was a long robe of filmy lace, which she had thrown back, so that her shoulders and neck, with its collar of lustrous pearls, were bare to the faint breeze, which only their own progress made. Her gleaming dress of white satin, undecorated, unadorned, fell in delicate lines about her limbs. No wonder that the only person whom they passed, a belated farmer, rubbed his eyes and stared at her as at a ghost! It seemed to her that something of the confusion of this delightful, half-seen world, had stolen, too, into her thoughts. All day long she had been conscious of it. There was something alien there, something wholly unrecognizable. She felt a new light falling upon her life. From where? She could not tell. Only she knew that its pitiless routine, its littleness, its frantic struggle for the front place in the great pleasure-house, seemed suddenly to stand revealed in pitiful colours. Surely it belonged to some other woman! It could not be she who did those things and called them life. It was when they were within a mile or two of home that an awakening came. They had turned into a lonely lane leading to one of the back entrances to Thorpe, and were climbing a somewhat steep hill. Suddenly the horses plunged and almost stopped. She leaned forward. “What is it, Johnson?” she asked. The man touched his hat. “The ’osses shied, madam, at the light in the trees there. Enough to frighten ’em, too.” Her eyes followed his pointing finger. A few yards back from the roadside, a small, steady light was burning amongst the trees. “What is it?” she asked quickly. “I can’t say, madam,” the man answered. “It looks like a lantern or a candle, or something of that sort.” “There is no cottage there?” she asked. The man shook his head. “There’s none nearer than the first lodge, madam,” he answered. “There’s a bit of a shelter there—Higgs, the keeper, built it for a watchman.” “Can I take care of the horses for a moment, while you go and see what it is?” she asked. “They take a bit of holding, madam,” the man answered doubtfully. “We got your message so late at the stables, or I should have had a second man.” Wilhelmina stepped softly out into the road. “I will go myself,” she said. “I daresay it is nothing. If I call, though, you must leave the horses and come to me.” She opened the gate, and raising her skirts with both hands, stepped into the plantation. Her small, white-shod feet fell noiselessly upon the thick undergrowth; she reached the entrance of the shelter without making any sound. Cautiously she peeped in. Her eyes grew round with surprise, her bosom began rapidly to rise and fall. It was Macheson who lay there, fast asleep! He had fallen asleep She bent more closely over him, holding her breath, although he showed no signs of waking. Her senses were in confusion, and there was a mist before her eyes. An unaccountable impulse was urging her on, driving her, as it seemed, into incredible folly. Lower and lower she bent, till her hot breath fell almost upon his cheek. Suddenly he stirred. She started back. After all he did not open his eyes, but the moment was gone. She moved backwards towards the opening. She was seized now with sudden fright. She desired to escape. She was breathless with fear, the fear of what she might not have escaped. Yet in the midst of it, with hot trembling fingers she loosened the roses from her dress and dropped them by his side. Then she fled into the semi-darkness. The habits of a lifetime die hard. They are proof, as a rule, against these fits of temporary madness. Wilhelmina stepped languidly into her carriage, and commanded her coachman’s attention. “Johnson,” she said, “I found a poor man sleeping there. There is no necessity for him to be disturbed. It is my wish that you do not mention the occurrence to any one—to any one at all. You understand?” The man touched his hat. He would have been dull-witted, indeed, if he had not appreciated the note of finality in his mistress’ tone. His horses sprang forward, and a few minutes later turned into the dark avenue which led to the house. |