The next day was a very memorable
day for Jack. The day after a falling in love
is always a red-letter day; but the day after the falling
in love-ah!
One looks back-far back-to
the day before, and those hours of the day before,
when her sun had not yet dawned, and struggles to recollect
what ends life could have represented then. And
one looks forward to the next day, the next week,
the next year-but, particularly to the next
morning with sensations as indescribable as they are
delightful.
Whichever way you tip it, the kaleidoscope
of the future arranges itself in equally attractive
shapes of rainbow hue, and the prospect over land or
sea-even if it is raining-looks
brilliant green, and brighter red, and brightest yellow.
Upon that glorious “next day”
of Jack’s the weather was quite a thing apart
for February-partaking of the warmth of
May, and owing that fact to a sun which early June
need not have scorned to own. Under the circumstances
the house party overflowed the house and ravaged the
surrounding country, and Jack and Mrs. Rosscott began
it all by having the highest cart and the fastest
cob in the stables and making for the forest just
as the clock was tolling ten.
“Do you want a groom?”
asked Burnett, who was occasionally very cruel.
“Well, I’m not going to
wait for him to get ready now,” replied his
sister, who had sharp wits and did not disdain to give
even her own family the benefit of them.
Then she gathered up the reins and
whip in a most scientific manner, and they were off.
Jack folded his arms. He was simply flooded, drenched,
and saturated with joy. The evening before had
been Elysium when she had only been his now and again
for a minute’s conversation, but now she was
to be his and his alone until-until they
came back-and his mind seemed able to grasp
no dearer outlines of the form which Bliss Incarnate
may be supposed to take. He didn’t care
where they went or what they saw or what they talked
of, just if only he and she might be going, seeing,
and talking for the benefit of one another and of
one another alone.
They bowled away upon a firm, hard
road that skirted the park, and then plunged deeply
into the forest. Mrs. Rosscott handled the reins
and the whip with the hands of an expert.
“I like to drive,” said she.
“You appear to,” he answered.
“I like to do everything,” she said.
“I’m very athletic and energetic.”
“I’m glad of that,” he told her
warmly. “I like athletic girls.”
He really thought that he was speaking
the truth, although upon that first day if she had
declared herself lazy and languid he would have found
her equally to his taste-because it was
the first day.
“That’s kind of you, after
my speech,” she said smiling, “but let’s
wait a bit before we begin to talk about me.
Let us talk about you first-you’re
the company, you know.”
“But there’s nothing to
tell about me,” said Jack, “except that
I’m always in difficulties-financial-or
otherwise,-oftenest ‘otherwise,’
I must confess.”
“But you have a rich aunt, haven’t
you?” said Mrs. Rosscott. “I thought
that I had heard about your aunt.”
“Oh, yes, I have a rich aunt,”
Jack said, laughing, “and I can assure you that
if I am not much credit to my aunt, my aunt is the
greatest possible credit to me.”
“Yes, I’ve heard that,
too,” said Mrs. Rosscott, joining in the laugh,
“you see I’m well posted.”
“If you’re so well posted
as to me,” Jack said, “do be kind and post
me a little as to yourself. You don’t need
information and I do.”
She turned and looked at him.
“What shall I tell you first?” she inquired.
“Tell me what you like and what
you don’t like-and that will give
me courage to do the same later,” he added boldly.
She laughed outright at that and then sobered quickly.
“I told you that I liked to
drive and to do everything,” she said lightly;
“what else do you want to know about?”
“What you dislike.”
“But I don’t know of anything
that I dislike;” she said thoughtfully-“perhaps
I don’t like England; I am not sure, though.
I had a pretty good time there after all-only
you know, being in mourning was so stupid. And
then, too, I didn’t fit into their ideas.
I really didn’t seem to get the true inwardness
of what was expected of me. Oh, I never dared
let them know at home what a failure I was as an Englishwoman.
I mortified my husband’s sisters all the time.
Just think-after a whole year I often forgot
to say ‘Fancy now!’ and used to say ‘Good
gracious!’ instead.”
Jack laughed.
“My husband’s sisters
were very unhappy about it. They did want to love
me, because I had so much money; but it was tough work
for them. Did you ever know any middle-aged English
young ladies?” she asked him suddenly.
“No, I never did,” he said.
“Really, they seem to be a thing
apart that can’t grow anywhere but in England.
Every married man has not less than two, nor more than
three, and they always are a little gray and embroider
very nicely. Someone told me that as long as
there’s any hope they wear stout boots and walk
about and hunt, but as soon as it’s hopeless
they take to embroidering.”
“It must be rather a blue day
for them when they decide definitely to make the change,”
said Jack.
“I never thought of that,”
said Mrs. Rosscott soberly. “Of course it
must! I was always very good to them. I
gave them ever so many things that I could have used
longer myself, and they used to set pieces of muslin
in behind the open-work places and wear them.”
She sighed.
“It’s quite as bad as
being a Girton girl,” she said. “Do
you know what a Girton girl is?”
“No, I don’t.”
“It’s a girl from Girton
College. It’s the most awful freak you ever
saw. They’re really quite beyond everything.
They’re so homely, and their hands and feet
are so enormous, and their pins never pin, and their
belts never belt. And no one has ever married
one of them yet!”
She paused dramatically.
“I won’t either, then,” he declared.
She laughed at that, and touched up the cob a trifle.
“Did you live long in England?” he asked.
“Forever!” she answered
with emphasis; “at least it seemed like forever.
Mamma left me there when I was nineteen (she married
me off before she left me, of course) and I stayed
there until last winter-until I was out
of my mourning, you know-and then I was
on the Continent for a while, and then I returned
to papa.”
“How do we strike you after your long absence?”
“Oh, you suit me admirably,”
she said, turning and smiling squarely into his face;
“only the terrible ‘and’ of the majority
does get on my nerves somewhat.”
“What ’and’?”
“Haven’t you noticed?
Why when an American runs out of talking material he
just rests on one poor little ‘and’ until
a fresh run of thought overwhelms him; you listen
to the next person you’re talking with, and
you’ll hear what I mean.”
Jack reflected.
“I will,” he said at last.
The road went sweeping in and out
among a thicket of bare tree trunks and brown copses,
and the sunlight fell out of the blue sky above straight
down upon their heads.
“If it don’t annoy you,
my referring to England so often,” said she
presently, “I will state that this reminds me
of Kaysmere, the country place of my father-in-law.”
“Is your father-in-law living yet?”
“Dear me, yes-and
still has hold of the title that I supposed I was
getting when I was married to his eldest son.
My father-in-law is a particularly healthy old gentleman
of eighty. He was forty years old when he married.
He didn’t expect to marry, you know-he
couldn’t see his way to ever affording it.
But he jumped into the title suddenly and then, of
course, he married right away. He had to.
You’d know what a hurry he must have been in
to look at my mamma-in-law’s portrait.”
“Was she so very beautiful?”
“No; she was so very homely. Maude’s
very like her.”
Jack laughed.
She laughed, too.
“Aren’t we happy together?” she
asked.
“My sky knows but one cloud,”
he rejoined, “and that is that Monday comes
after Sunday.”
“But we shall meet again,”
said Mrs. Rosscott. “Because,” she
added mischievously, “I don’t suppose
that it’s on account of my cousin Maude that
you rebel at the approach of Monday.”
“No,” said Jack.
“It may not be polite to say so to you, but I
wasn’t in the least thinking of your cousin.”
“Poor girl!” said Mrs.
Rosscott thoughtfully; “and she was so sweet
to you, too. Mustn’t it be terrible to
have a face like that?”
“It must indeed,” said
Jack; “I can think of but one thing worse.”
“What?”
“To marry a face like that.”
She laughed again.
“You’re cruel,”
she declared; “after all her face isn’t
her fortune, so what does it matter?”
“It doesn’t matter at
all to me,” said Jack. “I know of
very few things that can matter less to me than Miss
Lorne’s face.”
“Now, you’re cruel again;
and she was so nice to you too. Absolutely, I
don’t believe that the edges of her smile came
together once while she was talking to you last night.”
“Did you spy on us to that extent?”
said Jack. “I wouldn’t have believed
it of you.”
“Oh, I’m very awful,”
she said airily. “You’ll be more surprised
the farther you penetrate into the wilderness of my
ways.”
“And when will I have a chance
to plunge into the jungle, do you think?”
“Any Saturday or Sunday that you happen to be
in town.”
“Are you going to live in town?”
“For a while. I’ve
taken a house until the beginning of July. I expect
some friends over, and I want to entertain them.”
Jack felt the sky above become refulgent.
He was in the habit of spending every Saturday night
in the city-he and Burnett together.
“May I come as often as I like?” he asked.
“Certainly,” said she;
“because you know if you should come too often
I can tell the man at the door to say I’m ‘not
at home’ to you.”
“But if he ever says: ‘She’s
not at home to you,’ I shall walk right in and
fall upon the man that you are being at home to just
then.”
“But he is a very large man,”
said Mrs. Rosscott seriously; “he’s larger
than you are, I think.”
Jack felt the blue heavens breaking
up into thunderbolts for his head at this speech.
“But I’m ’way over
six feet,” he said, his heart going heavily faster,
even while he told himself that he might have known
it, anyhow.
“He’s all of six feet
two,” she said meditatively. “I do
believe he’s even taller. I remember liking
him at the first glance, just because he struck me
as so royal looking.”
He was miserably conscious of acute distress.
“Do-do you mind my smoking?”
he stammered.
(Might have known that, of course,
there was bound to be someone like that.)
“Not at all,” she rejoined
amiably. “I like the odor of cigarettes.
Shall I stop a little, while you set yourself afire?”
“It isn’t necessary,”
he said. “I can set myself afire under any
circumstances.”
He lit a cigarette.
“Is he English?” he couldn’t help
asking then.
“Yes,” she said; “I like the English.”
“You appear to like everything
to-day.” He did not intend to seem bitter,
but he did it unintentionally.
(Confounded luck some fellows have.)
“I do. I’m very well content to-day.”
He was silent, thinking.
“Well,” she queried, after a while.
He pulled himself together with an effort.
“I think perhaps it’s just as well,”
he said.
“What is just as well?”
“That I know.”
“Know what?”
“About him. I shan’t ever take the
chances of calling on you now.”
She laughed.
“He wouldn’t put you out
unless I told him to,” she said. “You
needn’t be too afraid of him, you know.”
His face grew a trifle flushed.
“I’m not afraid,”
he said, as coldly as it was in him to speak; “but
I’ll leave him the field.”
She turned and looked at him.
“The field?” she asked, with puzzled eyebrows.
“Yes.”
Then she frowned for an instant, and
then a species of thought-ray suddenly flew across
her face and she burst out laughing.
“Why, I do believe,” she
cried merrily, “I do believe you’re jealous
of the man at the door.”
“Weren’t you speaking
of a man in the drawing-room?” he asked, all
her phrases recurring to his mind together.
“No,” she said laughing;
“I was speaking of my footman. Oh, you are
so funny.”
The way the sun shone suddenly again!
His horizon glowed so madly that he quite lost his
head and leaning quickly downward seized her hand in
its little tan driving glove of stitched dogskin,
and kissed it-reins and all.
“I’m not funny,”
he said, “it was the most natural thing in the
world.”
She was laughing, but she curbed it.
“You’d better not be foolish,”
she said warningly. “It don’t mix
well with college.”
“I’m thinking of cutting college,”
he declared boldly.
“Don’t let us decide on
anything definite until we’ve known one another
twenty-four hours,” she said, looking at him
with a gravity that was almost maternal; and then
she turned the horse’s head toward home.