Philip held to his resolution for
three months, and grew thin and pale. Then another
letter came from Pete a letter for himself,
and he wondered what to do with it. To send it
by post, pretending to be ill again, would be hypocrisy
he could not support. He took it.
The family were all at home.
Nancy had just finished a noisy churning, and Kate
was in the dairy, weighing the butter into pounds and
stamping it. Philip read the letter in a loud
voice to the old people in the kitchen, and the soft
thumping and watery swishing ceased in the damp place
adjoining. Pete was in high feather. He had
made a mortal lot of money lately, and was for coming
home quickly. Couldn’t say exactly when,
for some rascally blackleg Boers, who had been corrupting
his Kaffirs and slipped up country with a pile of
stones, had first to be followed and caught.
The job wouldn’t take long though, and they might
expect to see him back within a twelvemonth, with enough
in his pocket to drive away the devil and the coroner
anyway.
“Bould fellow!” said Caesar.
“Aw, deed on Pete!” said Grannie.
“Now, if it wasn’t for that Ross ”
said Nancy.
Philip went into the dairy, where
Kate was now skimming the cream of the last night’s
milking. He was sorry there was nothing but a
message for her this time. Had she answered Pete’s
former letters? No, she had not.
“I must be writing soon, I suppose,”
she said, blowing the yellow surface. “But
I wish puff I could have
something to tell him puff, puff about
you.”
“About me, Kate?”
“Something sweet, I mean “ puff,
puff, puff.
She shot a sly look upward. “Aren’t
you sure yet? Can’t say still? Not
properly? No?”
Philip pretended not to understand.
Kate’s laugh echoed in the empty cream tins.
“How you want people to say things!”
“No, really ” began Philip.
“I’ve always heard that
the girls of Douglas are so beautiful. You must
see so many now. Oh, it would be delicious to
write a long story to Pete. Where you met in
church, naturally. What she’s like fair,
of course. And and all about it, you
know.”
“That’s a story you will
never tell to Pete, Kate,” said Philip.
“No, never,” said Kate
quite as light, and this being just what she wished
to hear, she added mournfully. “Don’t
say that, though. You can’t think what
pleasure you are denying me, and yourself, too.
Take some poor girl to your heart, Philip. You
don’t know how happy it will make you.”
“Are you so happy, then, Kate?”
Kate laughed merrily. “Why, what do you
think?”
“Dear old Pete how happy he
should be,” said Philip.
Kate began to hate the very name of
Pete. She grew angry with Philip also. Why
couldn’t he guess? Concealment was eating
her heart out. The next time she saw Philip,
he passed her in the market-place on the market-day,
as she stood by the tipped-up gig, selling her butter.
There was a chatter of girls all round as he bowed
and went on. This vexed her, and she sold out
at a penny a pound less, got the horse from the “Saddle,”
and drove home early.
On the way to Sulby she overtook Philip
and drew up. He was walking to Kirk Michael to
visit the old Deemster, who was ill. Would he
not take a lift? He hesitated, half declined,
and then got into the gig. As she settled herself
comfortably after this change, he trod on the edge
of her dress. At that he drew quickly away as
if he had trodden on her foot.
She laughed, but she was vexed; and
when he got down at “The Manx Fairy,”
saying he might call on his way back in the evening,
she had no doubt Grannie would be glad to see him.
The girls of the market-place were
standing by the mill-pond, work done, and arms crossed
under their aprons, twittering like the pairing birds
about them in the trees, when Philip returned home
by Sulby. He saw Kate coming down the glen road,
driving two heifers with a cushag for switch and flashing
its gold at them in the horizontal gleams of sunset.
She had recovered her good-humour, and was swinging
along, singing merry snatches as she came all
life, all girlish blood and beauty.
She pretended not to see him until
they were abreast, and the heifers were going into
the yard. Then she said, “I’ve written
and told him.”
“What?” said Philip.
“That you say you are a confirmed old bachelor.”
“That I say so?”
“Yes; and that I say
you are so distant with a girl that I don’t
believe you have a heart at all.”
“You don’t?”
“No; and that he couldn’t
have left anybody better to look after me all these
years, because you haven’t eyes or ears or a
thought for any living creature except himself.”
“You’ve never written that to Pete?”
said Philip.
“Haven’t I, though?” said Kate,
and she tripped off on tiptoe.
He tripped after her. She ran
into the yard. He ran also. She opened the
gate of the orchard, slipped through, and made for
the door of the dairy, and there he caught her by
the waist.
“Never, you rogue! Say no, say no!”
he panted.
“No,” she whispered, turning up her lips
for a kiss.