When I reached the charming little
Surrey village of Bishopstowe, I could see that it
bore out Kitwater’s description of it. A
prettier little place could scarcely have been discovered,
with its tree-shaded high-road, its cluster of thatched
cottages, its blacksmith’s shop, rustic inn
with the signboard on a high post before the door,
and last but not least, the quaint little church standing
some hundred yards back from the main road, and approached
from the lych-gate by an avenue of limes.
“Here,” I said to myself,
“is a place where a man might live to be a hundred,
undisturbed by the rush and bustle of the Great World.”
That was my feeling then, but since
I have come to know it better, and have been permitted
an opportunity of seeing for myself something of the
inner life of the hamlet, I have discovered that it
is only the life of a great city, on a small scale.
There is the same keen competition in trade, with
the same jealousies and bickerings. However, on
this peaceful Sunday morning it struck me as being
delightful. There was an old-world quiet about
it that was vastly soothing. The rooks cawed
lazily in the elms before the church as if they knew
it were Sunday morning and a day of rest. A dog
lay extended in the middle of the road, basking in
the sunshine, a thing which he would not have dared
to do on a weekday. Even the little stream that
runs under the old stone bridge, which marks the centre
of the village, and then winds its tortuous course
round the churchyard, through the Squire’s park,
and then down the valley on its way to the sea, seemed
to flow somewhat more slowly than was its wont.
Feeling just in the humour for a little
moralizing, I opened the lych-gate and entered the
churchyard. The congregation were singing the
last hymn, the Old Hundredth, if I remember rightly,
and the sound of their united voices fitted perfectly
into the whole scheme, giving it the one touch that
was lacking. As I strolled along I glanced at
the inscriptions on the various tomb-stones, and endeavoured
to derive from them some notion of the lives and characters
of those whose memories they perpetuated.
“Sacred to the memory of Erasmus
Gunning, twenty-seven years Schoolmaster of this Parish.
Born 24th of March, 1806, and rested from his labours
on September the 19th, 1876.” Seating myself
on the low wall that surrounded the churchyard, I
looked down upon the river, and while so doing, reflected
upon Erasmus Gunning. What had he been like, this
knight of the ferrule, who for twenty-seven years acted
as pedagogue to this tiny hamlet? What good had
he done in his world? Had he realized his life’s
ambition? Into many of the congregation now worshipping
yonder he must have driven the three R’s, possibly
with the assistance of the faithful ferrule aforesaid,
yet how many of them gave a thought to his memory!
In this case the assertion that he “rested from
his labours” was a trifle ambiguous. Consigning
poor Erasmus to oblivion, I continued my walk.
Presently my eyes caught an inscription that made me
halt again. It was dedicated to the “Loving
Memory of William Kitwater, and Susan, his wife.”
I was still looking at it, when I heard a step on
the gravel-path behind me, and turning round, I found
myself standing face to face with Miss Kitwater.
To use the conventional phrase, church had “come
out,” and the congregation was even now making
its way down the broad avenue towards the high-road.
“How do you do, Mr. Fairfax?”
said Miss Kitwater, giving me her hand as she spoke.
“It is kind indeed of you to come down.
I hope you have good news for us?”
“I am inclined to consider it
good news myself,” I said. “I hope
you will think so too.”
She did not question me further about
it then, but asking me to excuse her for a moment,
stepped over the little plot of ground where her dear
ones lay, and plucked some of the dead leaves from
the flowers that grew upon it. To my thinking
she was just what an honest English girl should be;
straight-forward and gentle, looking the whole world
in the face with frank and honourable simplicity.
When she had finished her labour of love, which only
occupied her a few moments, she suggested that we
should stroll on to her house.
“My uncle will be wondering
what has become of me,” she said, “and
he will also be most anxious to see you.”
“He does not accompany you to church then?”
“No,” she answered.
“He is so conscious of his affliction that he
cannot bear it to be remarked. He usually stays
at home and walks up and down a path in the garden,
brooding, I am afraid, over his treatment by Mr. Hayle.
It goes to my heart to see him.”
“And Mr. Codd?”
“He, poor little man, spends
most of his time reading such works on Archaeology
as he can obtain. It is his one great study, and
I am thankful he has such a hobby to distract his
mind from his own trouble.”
“Their coming to England must
have made a great change in your life,” I remarked.
“It has made a difference,”
she answered. “But one should not lead
one’s life exactly to please one’s self.
They were in sore distress, and I am thankful that
they came to me, and that I had the power to help
them.”
This set me thinking. She spoke
gravely, and I knew that she meant what she said.
But underlying it there was a suggestion that, for
some reason or another, she had not been altogether
favourably impressed by her visitors. Whether
I was right in my suppositions I could not tell then,
but I knew that I should in all probability be permitted
a better opportunity of judging later on. We
crossed the little bridge, and passed along the high
road for upwards of a mile, until we found ourselves
standing at the entrance to one of the prettiest little
country residences it has even been my lot to find.
A drive, some thirty yards or so in length, led up
to the house and was shaded by overhanging trees.
The house itself was of two stories and was covered
by creepers. The garden was scrupulously neat,
and I fancied that I could detect its mistress’s
hand in it. Shady walks led from it in various
directions, and at the end of one of these I could
discern a tall, restless figure, pacing up and down.
“There is my uncle,” said
the girl, referring to the figure I have just described.
“That is his sole occupation. He likes it
because it is the only part of the garden in which
he can move about without a guide. How empty
and hard his life must seem to him, now, Mr. Fairfax?”
“It must indeed,” I replied.
“To my thinking blindness is one of the worst
ills that can happen to a man. It must be particularly
hard to one who has led such a vigorous life as your
uncle has done.”
I could almost have declared that
she shuddered at my words. Did she know more
about her uncle and his past life than she liked to
think about? I remembered one or two expressions
he had let fall in his excitement when he had been
talking to me, and how I had commented upon them as
being strange words to come from the lips of a missionary.
I had often wondered whether the story he had told
me about their life in China, and Hayle’s connection
with it, had been a true one. The tenaciousness
with which a Chinaman clings to the religion of his
forefathers is proverbial, and I could not remember
having ever heard that a Mandarin, or an official
of high rank, had been converted to the Christian
Faith. Even if he had, it struck me as being highly
improbable that he would have been the possessor of
such princely treasure, and even supposing that to
be true, that he would, at his death, leave it to
such a man as Kitwater. No, I fancied if we could
only get at the truth of the story, we should find
that it was a good deal more picturesque, not to use
a harsher term, than we imagined. For a moment
I had almost been tempted to believe that the stones
were Hayle’s property, and that these two men
were conducting their crusade with the intention of
robbing him of them. Yet, on maturer reflection,
this did not fit in. There was the fact that
they had certainly been mutilated as they described,
and also their hatred of Hayle to be weighed in one
balance, while Hayle’s manifest fear of them
could be set in the other.
“If I am not mistaken that is
your step, Mr. Fairfax,” said the blind man,
stopping suddenly in his walk, and turning his sightless
face in my direction. “It’s wonderful
how the loss of one’s sight sharpens one’s
ears. I suppose you met Margaret on the road.”
“I met Miss Kitwater in the churchyard,”
I replied.
“A very good meeting-place,”
he chuckled sardonically. “It’s where
most of us meet each other sooner or later. Upon
my word, I think the dead are luckier than the living.
In any case they are more fortunate than poor devils
like Codd and myself. But I am keeping you standing,
won’t you sit down somewhere and tell me your
news? I have been almost counting the minutes
for your arrival. I know you would not be here
to-day unless you had something important to communicate
to me. You have found Hayle?”
He asked the question with feverish
eagerness, as if he hoped within a few hours to be
clutching at the other’s throat. I could
see that his niece noticed it too, and that she recoiled
a little from him in consequence. I thereupon
set to work and told them of all that had happened
since I had last seen them, described my lucky meeting
with Hayle at Charing Cross, my chase after him across
London, the trick he had played me at Foxwell’s
Hotel, and my consequent fruitless journey to Southampton.
“And he managed to escape you
after all,” said Kitwater. “That man
would outwit the Master of all Liars Himself.
He is out of England by this time, and we shall lose
him.”
“He has not escaped me,”
I replied quietly. “I know where he is,
and I have got a man on his track.”
“Then where is he?” asked
Kitwater. “If you know where he is, you
ought to be with him yourself instead of down here.
You are paid to conduct the case. How do you
know that your man may not bungle it, and that we
may not lose him again?”
His tone was so rude and his manner
so aggressive, that his niece was about to protest.
I made a sign to her, however, not to do so.
“I don’t think you need
be afraid, Mr. Kitwater,” I said more soothingly
than I felt. “My man is a very clever and
reliable fellow, and you may be sure that, having
once set eyes on Mr. Hayle, he will not lose sight
of him again. I shall leave for Paris to-morrow
morning, and shall immediately let you know the result
of my search. Will that suit you?”
“It will suit me when I get
hold of Hayle,” he replied. “Until
then I shall know no peace. Surely you must understand
that?”
Then, imagining perhaps, that he had
gone too far, he began to fawn upon me, and what was
worse praised my methods of elucidating a mystery.
I cannot say which I disliked the more. Indeed,
had it not been that I had promised Miss Kitwater
to take up the case, and that I did not want to disappoint
her, I believe I should have abandoned it there and
then, out of sheer disgust. A little later our
hostess proposed that we should adjourn to the house,
as it was neatly lunch-time. We did so, and I
was shown to a pretty bedroom to wash my hands.
It was a charming apartment, redolent of the country,
smelling of lavender, and after London, as fresh as
a glimpse of a new life. I looked about me, took
in the cleanliness of everything, and contrasted it
with my own dingy apartments at Rickford’s Hotel,
where the view from the window was not of meadows
and breezy uplands, but of red roofs, chimney-pots,
and constantly revolving cowls. I could picture
the view from this window in the early morning, with
the dew upon the grass, and the blackbirds whistling
in the shrubbery. I am not a vain man, I think,
but at this juncture I stood before the looking-glass
and surveyed myself. For the first time in my
life I could have wished that I had been better-looking.
At last I turned angrily away.
“What a duffer I am to be sure!”
I said to myself. “If I begin to get notions
like this in my head there is no knowing where I may
end. As if any girl would ever think twice about
me!”
Thereupon I descended to the drawing-room, which I found
empty. It was a true womans room, daintily furnished, with little
knick-knacks here and there, a work-basket put neatly away for the Sabbath, and
an open piano with one of Chopins works upon the music-rest. Leading out
of the drawing-room was a small conservatory, filled with plants. It was a
pretty little place and I could not refrain from exploring it. I am
passionately fond of flowers, but my life at that time was not one that
permitted me much leisure to indulge in my liking. As I stood now,
however, in the charming place, among the rows of neatly-arranged pots, I
experienced a sort of waking dream. I seemed to see myself standing in
this very conservatory, hard at work upon my flowers, a pipe in my mouth and my
favourite old felt hat upon my head. Crime and criminals were alike
forgotten; I no longer lived in a dingy part of the Town, and what was better
than all I had
“Do you know I feel almost inclined
to offer you the proverbial penny,” said Miss
Kitwater’s voice behind me, at the drawing-room
door. “Is it permissible to ask what you
were thinking about?”
I am not of course prepared to swear
it, but I honestly believe for the first time for
many years, I blushed.
“I was thinking how very pleasant
a country life must be,” I said, making the
first excuse that came to me. “I almost
wish that I could lead one.”
“Then why don’t you?
Surely it would not be so very difficult?”
“I am rather afraid it would,”
I answered. “And yet I don’t know
why it should be.”
“Perhaps Mrs. Fairfax would
not care about it,” she continued, as we returned
to the drawing-room together.
“Good gracious!” I remarked.
“There is no Mrs. Fairfax. I am the most
confirmed of old bachelors. I wonder you could
not see that. Is not the word crustiness
written plainly upon my forehead?”
“I am afraid I cannot see it,”
she answered. “I am not quite certain who
it was, but I fancy it was my uncle who informed me
that you were married.”
“It was very kind of him,”
I said. “But it certainly is not the case.
I fear my wife would have rather a lonely time of
it if it were. I am obliged to be away from home
so much, you see, and for so long at a time.”
“Yours must be indeed a strange
profession, Mr. Fairfax, if I may say so,” she
continued. “Some time ago I came across
an account, in a magazine, of your life, and the many
famous cases in which you had taken part.”
“Ah! I remember the wretched
thing,” I said. “I am sorry that you
should ever have seen it.”
“And why should you be sorry?”
“Because it is a silly thing,
and I have always regretted allowing the man to publish
it. He certainly called upon me and asked me a
lot of questions, after which he went away and wrote
that article. Ever since then I have felt like
a conceited ass, who tried to make himself out more
clever than he really was.”
“I don’t think you would
do that,” she said. “But, if you will
let me say so, yours must be a very trying life, and
also an extremely dangerous one. I am afraid
you must look upon human nature from a very strange
point of view!”
“Not more strange probably than you do,”
I answered.
“But you are continually seeing
the saddest side of it. To you all the miseries
that a life of crime entails, are visible. The
greater part of your time is spent among desperate
men who are without hope, and to whom even their own
shadows are a constant menace. I wonder that you
still manage to retain your kind heart.”
“But how do you know that my heart is kind?”
I inquired.
“If for no other reason, simply
because you have taken up my uncle’s case,”
she answered. “Do you think when he was
so rude to you just now, that I could not see that
you pitied him, and for that reason you forbore to
take advantage of your power? I know you have
a kind heart.”
“And you find it difficult to
assimilate that kind heart with the remorseless detective
of Public Life?”
“I find it difficult to recognize
in you the man who, on a certain notable occasion,
went into a thieves’ den in Chicago unaccompanied,
and after a terrible struggle in which you nearly
lost your life, succeeded in effecting the arrest
of a notorious murderer.”
At that moment the gong in the hall
sounded for lunch, and I was by no means sorry for
the interruption. We found Kitwater and Codd awaiting
our coming in the dining-room, and we thereupon sat
down to the meal. When we left the room again,
we sat in the garden and smoked, and later in the
afternoon, my hostess conducted me over her estate,
showed me her vineries, introduced me to her two sleek
Jerseys, who had their home in the meadow I had seen
from the window; to her poultry, pigs, and the pigeons
who came fluttering about her, confident that they
would come to no harm. Meanwhile her uncle had
resumed his restless pacing up and down the path on
which I had first seen him, Codd had returned to his
archaeological studies, and I was alone with Miss Kitwater.
We were standing alone together, I remember, at the
gate that separated the garden from the meadowland.
I knew as well as possible, indeed I had known it
since we had met in the churchyard that morning, that
she had something to say to me, something concerning
which she had not quite made up her mind. What
it was, however, I fancied I could hazard a very good
guess, but I was determined not to forestall her, but
to wait and let her broach it to me in her own way.
This, I fancied, she was now about to do.
“Mr. Fairfax,” she began,
resting her clasped hands upon the bar of the gate
as she spoke, “I want, if you will allow me,
to have a serious talk with you. I could not
have a better opportunity than the present, and, such
as it is, I want to make the best of it.”
“I am quite at your service,
Miss Kitwater,” I replied, “and if I can
be of any use to you I hope you will tell me.
Pray let me know what I can do for you?”
“It is about my uncle and Mr.
Codd that I want to speak to you,” she said,
sinking her voice a little, as if she were afraid they
might hear.
“And what about them?”
“I want to be loyal to them,
and yet I want to know what you think of the whole
affair,” she said, looking intently at me as
she spoke. “Believe me, I have good and
sufficient reasons for my request.”
“I am to tell exactly what I
think about their pursuit of this man Hayle?
And what chances of success I think they possess?”
I said.
“I am not thinking so much of
their success,” she returned, “as of the
real nature of their case.”
“I believe I understand what
is passing in your mind,” I said. “Indeed
I should not be surprised if the suspicion you entertain
is not the same as I have myself.”
“You have been suspicious then?”
“I could scarcely fail to be,” I replied.
“Perhaps you will tell me what you suspect?”
“Will you forgive me, in my
turn, if I am abrupt, or if I speak my mind a little
too plainly?”
“You could not do that,”
she answered with a sigh. “I want to know
your exact thoughts, and then I shall be able to form
my own conclusions.”
“Well,” I said, “before
I begin, may I put one or two questions to you?
You will, of course, remember that I had never seen
or heard of your uncle and Mr. Codd until they stopped
me on Ludgate Hill. They were and practically
are strangers to me. I have heard their story
of their treasure, but I have not heard what any one
else has to say upon the subject.”
“I think I understand. Now what are your
questions?”
“In the first place, did your
late father ever speak to you of his brother as being
a missionary in China?”
She shook her head, and from the look
upon her face I could see that I had touched upon
something painful. This, at least, was one of
the things that had struck her as suspicious.
“If he were a missionary, I
am quite sure my father did not know it,” she
said. “In fact I always understood that
he was somewhat of a scapegrace, and in consequence
could never settle down to anything. That is
your first, now what is your second question, Mr. Fairfax?”
I paused for a moment before I replied.
“My second partakes more of
the nature of an assertion than a question,”
I answered. “As I read it, you are more
afraid of what may happen should the two men meet
than anything else.”
“Yes, that is just what I am
afraid of,” she replied. “My uncle’s
temper is so violent, and his desire for revenge so
absorbing, that I dare not think what would happen
if he came into actual contact with Hayle. Now
that I have replied to your questions, will you give
me the answer I want? That is to say will you
tell me what you think of the whole affair?”
“If you wish it, I will,”
I said slowly. “You have promised to permit
me to be candid, and I am going to take advantage
of that permission. In my own mind I do not believe
the story they tell. I do not believe that they
were ever missionaries, though we have convincing proofs
that they have been in the hands of the Chinese.
That Hayle betrayed them I have not the least doubt,
it seems consistent with his character, but where
they obtained the jewels, that are practically the
keystones to the whole affair, I have no more notion
than you. They may have been honestly come by,
or they may not. So far as the present case is
concerned that fact is immaterial. There is still,
however, one vital point we have to consider.
If the gems in question belong equally to the three
men, each is entitled to his proper share, either of
the stones or of the amounts realized by the sale.
That share, as you already know, would amount to a
considerable sum of money. Your uncle, I take
it, has not a penny-piece in the world, and his companion
is in the same destitute condition. Now we will
suppose that I find Hayle for them, and they meet.
Does it not seem to you quite possible that your uncle’s
rage might lead him to do something desperate, in
order to revenge himself upon the other? But
if he could command himself he would probably get
his money? If, on the other hand, they do not
meet, then what is to be done? Forgive me, Miss
Kitwater, for prying into your private affairs, but
in my opinion it is manifestly unfair that you should
have to support these two men for the rest of their
existences.”
“You surely must see that I
would rather do that than let my father’s brother
commit a crime,” she returned, more earnestly
than she had yet spoken.
The position was decidedly an awkward
one. It was some proof of the girl’s sterling
qualities that she should be prepared to make such
a sacrifice for the sake of a man whom it was certainly
impossible to love, and for that reason even to respect.
I looked at her with an admiration in my face that
I did not attempt to conceal. I said nothing
by way of praise, however. It would have been
an insult to her to have even hinted at such a thing.
“Pardon me,” I said at
last, “but there is one thing that must be taken
into consideration. Some day, Miss Kitwater, you
may marry, and in that case your husband might not
care about the arrangement you have made. Such
things have happened before now.”
She blushed a rosy red and hesitated before she replied.
“I do not consider it very likely
that I shall ever marry,” she answered.
“And even if I did I should certainly not marry
a man who would object to my doing what I consider
to be my duty. And now that we have discussed
all this, Mr. Fairfax, what do you think we had better
do? I understood you to say to my uncle that you
intend leaving for Paris to-morrow morning, in order
to continue your search for the man Hayle. Supposing
you find him, what will you do then?”
“In such a case,” I said
slowly, looking at her all the time, “I should
endeavour to get your uncle’s and Codd’s
share of the treasure from him. If I am successful,
then I shall let him go where he pleases.”
“And supposing you are unsuccessful
in obtaining the money or the gems?”
“Then I must endeavour to think
of some other way,” I replied, “but somehow
I do not think I shall be unsuccessful.”
“Nor do I,” she answered,
looking me full and fair in the face. “I
fancy you know that I believe in you most implicitly,
Mr. Fairfax.”
“In that case, do you mind shaking
hands upon it?” I said.
“I will do so with much pleasure,”
she answered. “You cannot imagine what
a weight you have lifted off my mind. I have been
so depressed about it lately that I have scarcely
known what to do. I have lain awake at night,
turning it over and over in my mind, and trying to
convince myself as to what was best to be done.
Then my uncle told me you were coming down here, and
I resolved to put the case before you as I have done
and to ask your opinion.”
She gave me her little hand, and I
took it and held it in my own. Then I released
it and we strode back along the garden-path together
without another word. The afternoon was well
advanced by this time, and when we reached the summer-house,
where Codd was still reading, we found that a little
wicker tea-table had been brought out from the house
and that chairs had been placed for us round it.
To my thinking there is nothing that becomes a pretty
woman more than the mere commonplace act of pouring
out tea. It was certainly so in this case.
When I looked at the white cloth upon the table, the
heavy brass tray, and the silver jugs and teapot,
and thought of my own cracked earthenware vessel, then
reposing in a cupboard in my office, and in which I
brewed my cup of tea every afternoon, I smiled to
myself. I felt that I should never use it again
without recalling this meal. After that I wondered
whether it would ever be my good fortune to sit in
this garden again, and to sip my Orange Pekoe from
the same dainty service. The thought that I might
not do so was, strangely enough, an unpleasant one,
and I put it from me with all promptness. During
the meal, Kitwater scarcely uttered a word. We
had exhausted the probabilities of the case long since,
and I soon found that he could think or talk of nothing
else. At six o’clock I prepared to make
my adieux. My train left Bishopstowe for London
at the half-hour, and I should just have time to walk
the distance comfortably. To my delight my hostess
decided to go to church, and said she would walk with
me as far as the lych-gate. She accordingly left
us and went into the house to make her toilet.
As soon as she had gone Kitwater fumbled his way across
to where I was sitting, and having discovered a chair
beside me, seated himself in it.
“Mr. Fairfax,” said he,
“I labour under the fear that you cannot understand
my position. Can you realize what it is like to
feel shut up in the dark, waiting and longing always
for only one thing? Could you not let me come
to Paris with you to-morrow?”
“Impossible,” I said.
“It is out of the question. It could not
be thought of for a moment!”
“But why not? I can see no difficulty in
it?”
“If for no other reason because
it would destroy any chance of my even getting on
the scent. I should be hampered at every turn.”
He heaved a heavy sigh.
“Blind! blind!” he said
with despair in his voice. “But I know that
I shall meet him some day, and when I do
His ferocity was the more terrible
by reason of his affliction.
“Only wait, Mr. Kitwater,”
I replied. “Wait, and if I can help you,
you shall have your treasure back again. Will
you then be satisfied?”
“Yes, I’ll be satisfied,”
he answered, but with what struck me as almost reluctance.
“Yes, when I have my treasure back again I’ll
be satisfied, and so will Codd. In the meantime
I’ll wait here in the dark, the dark in which
the days and nights are the same. Yes, I’ll
wait and wait and wait.”
At that moment Miss Kitwater made
her reappearance in the garden, and I rose to bid
my clients farewell.
“Good-bye, Mr. Kitwater,”
I said. “I’ll write immediately I
reach Paris, and let you know how I am getting on.”
“You are very kind,” Kitwater
answered, and Codd nodded his head.
My hostess and I then set off down
the drive to the righ road which we followed towards
the village. It was a perfect evening, and the
sun was setting in the west in a mass of crimson and
gold. At first we talked of various commonplace
subjects, but it was not very long before we came
back, as I knew we should do, to the one absorbing
topic.
“There is another thing I want
to set right with you, Miss Kitwater,” I said,
as we paused upon the bridge to which I have elsewhere
referred. “It is only a small matter.
Somehow, however, I feel that I must settle it, before
I can proceed further in the affair with any satisfaction
to myself.”
She looked at me in surprise.
“What is it?” she asked, “I thought
we had settled everything.”
“So far as I can see that is
the only matter that remains,” I answered.
“Yet it is sufficiently important to warrant
my speaking to you about it. What I want to know
is, who I am serving?”
“I don’t think I understand,”
she said, drawing lines with her umbrella upon the
stone coping of the bridge as she spoke.
“And yet my meaning is clear,”
I returned. “What I want to be certain of
is, whether I am serving you or your uncle?”
“I don’t think you are
serving either of us,” she answered.
“You are helping us to right a great wrong.”
“Forgive me, but that is merely
trifling with words. I am going to be candid
once more. You are paying the money, I believe?”
In some confusion she informed me
that this certainly was the case.
“Very well, then, I am certainly
your servant,” I said. “It is your
interests I shall have to study.”
“I can trust them implicitly
to you, I am sure, Mr. Fairfax,” she replied.
“And now here we are at the church. If you
walk quickly you will be just in time to catch your
train. Let me thank you again for coming down
to-day.”
“It has been a great pleasure
to me,” I replied. “Perhaps when I
return from Paris you will permit me to come down
again to report progress?”
“We shall be very pleased to
see you,” she answered. “Now, good-bye,
and a pleasant journey to you!”
We shook hands and parted. As
I passed along the road I watched her making her way
along the avenue towards the church. There was
need for me to shake my head.
“George Fairfax,” said
I, “it would require very little of that young
lady’s society to enable you to make a fool of
yourself.”