CHAPTER VI - AT THE MOORHEAD INN
The ruddy glow of a crimson sunset
illumined cliff and hamlet, tinting the distant ocean
into every shade of golden glory, as Myra walked up
the gravelled path to the rustic porch of the Moorhead
Inn, and looked around her with a growing sense of
excited refreshment.
She had come on foot from the little
wayside station, her luggage following in a barrow;
and this mode of progression, minus a footman and
maid, and carrying her own cloak, umbrella, and travelling-bag,
was in itself a charming novelty.
At the door, she was received by the
proprietress, a stately lady in black satin, wearing
a double row of large jet beads, who reminded her
instantly of all Lord Ingleby’s maiden aunts.
She seemed an accentuated, dignified, concentrated
embodiment of them all; and Myra longed for Billy,
to share the joke.
“Aunt Ingleby” requested
Mrs. O’Mara to walk in, and hoped she had had
a pleasant journey. Then she rang a very loud
bell twice, in order to summon a maid to show her
to her room; and, the maid not appearing at once,
requested Mrs. O’Mara meanwhile to write her
name in the visitors’ book.
Lady Ingleby walked into the hall,
passing a smoking-room on the left, and, noting a
door, with “Coffee Room” upon it in gold
lettering, down a short passage immediately opposite.
Up from the centre of the hall, on her right, went
the rather wide old-fashioned staircase; and opposite
to it, against the wall, between the smoking-room
and a door labelled “Reception Room,”
stood a marble-topped table. Lying open upon this
table was a ponderous visitors’ book. A
fresh page had been recently commenced, as yet only
containing four names. The first three were dated
May the 8th, and read, in crabbed precise writing:
Below these, bearing date a week later,
in small precise writing of unmistakable character
and clearness, the name:
Pen and ink lay ready, and, without
troubling to remove her glove, Lady Ingleby wrote
beneath, in large, somewhat sprawling, handwriting:
A maid appeared, took her cloak and
bag, and preceded her up the stairs.
As she reached the turn of the staircase,
Lady Ingleby paused, and looked back into the hall.
The door of the smoking-room opened,
and a very tall man came out, taking a pipe from the
pocket of his loose Norfolk jacket. As he strolled
into the hall, his face reminded her of Ronnie’s,
deep-bronzed and thin; only it was an older face strong,
rugged, purposeful. The heavy brown moustache
could not hide the massive cut of chin and jaw.
Catching sight of a fresh name in
the book, he paused; then laying one large hand upon
the table, bent over and read it.
Myra stood still and watched, noting
the broad shoulders, and the immense length of limb
in the leather leggings.
He appeared to study the open page
longer than was necessary for the mere reading of
the name. Then, without looking round, reached
up, took a cap from the antler of a stag’s head
high up on the wall, stuck it on the back of his head;
swung round, and went out through the porch, whistling
like a blackbird.
“Jim Airth,” said Myra
to herself, as she moved slowly on; “Jim Airth
of London. What an address! He might
just as well have put: ’of the world!’
A cross between a guardsman and a cowboy; and very
likely he will turn out to be a commercial-traveller.”
Then, as she reached the landing and came in sight
of the rosy-cheeked maid, holding open the door of
a large airy bedroom, she added with a whimsical smile:
“All the same, I wish I had taken the trouble
to write more neatly.”