Mrs. Morres was looking benignantly,
for her, at Sir Robin Drummond.
“Well, I must say I’m
pleased to see you,” she said. “It’s
very handsome of you, too, to give up the affairs
of the nation for an old woman like me. How do
you suppose things are getting on without you?”
“The House is not sitting this
afternoon. You know it rises for the Easter vacation
to-morrow.”
“On Thursday I go down to Hazels.
I wanted that bad person, Mary Gray, to come with
me. She says she has to work at her book.
Did you ever hear such stuff and nonsense? As
though the world can’t get on without one young
woman’s book. I told her she could do it
at Hazels. She says she couldn’t that
she’ll have to be out all day long. London
will not tempt her out, she says. Is she to go
bending her back and dimming her eyes while the lambs
are at play in the fields and the primroses thick in
the woods?”
“She’s an obstinate person,
Mrs. Morres. When she has made up her mind to
do a thing
“Ah! you know her pretty well.”
“We first met about nine years ago.”
“Dear me! I had no idea
that you were such old friends. I thought you
met first in this house.”
“Lady Anne Hamilton, the old
lady who adopted Miss Gray, was my mother’s
friend.”
He said nothing about the fact that
twelve hours ago he had not known Mary Gray for the
child he had played with for one afternoon, nor of
the long gap between that occasion and their next
meeting. Not from any disingenuousness; but he
had a feeling that he liked to keep that meeting of
long ago to himself.
“Dear me, to be sure you would
be interested in Mary. You would know a good
deal about her. Nine years it is a
long time.”
If he had been the most consummate
plotter he could not better have paved the way for
the suggestion he was about to make.
“Put off your return to Hazels
till Saturday morning. I want to take you and
Miss Gray into the country for a day on Thursday.”
“Indeed, young man! And
wait for the Saturday crowd of holiday-makers!
A nice figure I should be struggling among them.”
“I will be at Victoria to see you off.”
“Oh, you needn’t do that.”
Mrs. Morres turned about with the inconsequence of
her sex. “I’ve brought one of the
maids up with me. She will take care of me better
than most men. She is alarming, this good Susan,
to the people who don’t know her. But I
thought you were going abroad?”
“So I am. Saturday morning will do me very
well.”
“How did you know I was in town?
No one is supposed to. All the blinds are down
in front and will be till her Ladyship returns.”
“Miss Gray told me. I saw her yesterday.”
She looked at him sharply. His
honest, plain face reassured her. A friendship
of nine years, too. What trouble could there possibly
arise after a friendship of nine years? Mary
must know that he was all but engaged to his cousin.
“Does she approve of the country trip?”
“I have not asked her.
I left that to you to do. She has been shut up
in London all the winter. She needs a breath
of country air.”
“So she does. She shows
the London winter, though you may not see it.
Very well, you shall take us both into the country
on Thursday. Mary will not dream of refusing
me.”
“That is it. She means
to spend those six days between Thursday and Wednesday
toiling at her book. I have heard her say that
she will spend Thursday at the British Museum.”
“Stuff and nonsense, she shan’t!
The world will do just as well without the book.
She must come to Hazels on Saturday. You will
help me to persuade her?”
“I will do my best. How did you leave Hazels?”
“Lovely. For the rest,
a wilderness of despairing dogs. They will forgive
me if I bring back Mary. By the way, what have
you got for me to do on Friday? If you will keep
me in town when all the shops are shut! Not that
it matters. I’ve finished all my shopping.
But am I to spend my Good Friday here, in this room?
London streets are no place for a poor woman on Good
Friday.”
“Will you go to church?
There is a service at a church near here, with Bach’s
Passion music.”
“I should like to, of all things.
Afterwards, perhaps, Mary would give us tea at her
eyrie. You and she must dine with me. She
is coming this evening to dinner. Come back to
dinner at half-past seven and help me to persuade
her. I can only give you a chop. Some mysterious
person in the lower region cooks for me. She
is the plainest of the plain.”
“It will be a banquet, with you.”
Sir Robin was not a young man who
paid compliments easily. When he did pay one
it had always an air of sincerity. Mrs. Morres
looked pleased. She was very fond of Robin Drummond.
When he and Mary met at the door a
few hours later he made a jest about their dining
together again so soon, and they laughed about it to
be sure, that dinner at the restaurant was a secret,
something that did not belong to the conventional
life. There was the air of a little understanding
between them when they presented themselves to Mrs.
Morres in the book-room which she used for all purposes
of a sitting-room during her flying visit to town.
It was a pleasant room, with book-cases all round
it filled with green glass in a lattice of brass-work.
The books were hidden by the glass, but it reflected
every movement of a bird or a twig or a cloud outside
like green waters. The ceiling was domed like
a sky and painted in sunny Italian scenery. It
was not dull in the book-room on the dullest day.
“Did you come together?” Mrs. Morres asked
curiously.
“I swear we did not,”
Sir Robin replied, with mock intensity. “I
came from the east, Miss Gray from the west.
We met on your doorstep.”
“You looked as if you were enjoying
a joke when you came in.”
“There was time for one between
the ringing of the bell and the opening of the door.”
“Ah, you see, the people downstairs are very
old.”
Mary allowed herself to be persuaded
to the country expedition next day. The spring
had been calling to her, calling to her to come out
of London to the fields. More, she consented
to go to Hazels on the Saturday. The spring had
disturbed her with a delicious disturbance. It
was no use trying to be dry-as-dust since the spring
had got into her blood. The book must wait till
she came back.
On Thursday the exodus from town had
not yet begun. They left soon after breakfast.
As Mary hurried from her Kensington flat to Paddington
Station she met the church-goers with their prayer-books
in their hands. It was Holy Thursday, to be sure a
day for solemn thought and thanksgiving. She
hoped hers would not be less acceptable because it
was made in the quietness of the fields.
It was an exquisite day of April true
Holy Week weather, with white clouds, like lambs straying
in the blue pastures of the sky, shepherded by the
south-west wind. The almond trees were in bloom.
They had begun to drop their blossoms on the pavements,
making a dust of roses in London streets. As
they went down from Paddington the river-side orchards
and gardens were starred with the blossom of pear and
plum. Everywhere the birds were singing jocundly.
The promise of spring a few days earlier had been
nobly fulfilled.
The sun shone powerfully as they left
the country station and went down a road set with
bare hedges on either side. A week ago there had
been frost. Now there was a grateful odour from
the millions and millions of little spear-heads of
grass that were pushing above the ground. On the
banks by the side of the road there were primroses
and violets, while there was yet a drift of last week’s
snow in the sheltered copses.
They found an inn by the side of the
road. To the back of it lay a belt of woods.
In front was a great stretch of cornfield and pasturage.
In the distance a church-spire and yet other woods.
There was no village in sight.
The village was, as a matter of fact, lying about
its green and velvety common just a little way down
the road. The place was full of the singing of
the birds, and of another sound as sweet, the rushing
of waters. A little river ran down from the higher
country and passed through the inn-garden, turning
a water-wheel as it went. The picture on the
old sign was of a water-wheel. The inn was called
the Water-Wheel.
“What a name to think upon!”
said Mary, with a sigh, “in a torrid London
August! it sounds full of refreshment.”
“Its patrons would no doubt
prefer the Beer-Keg,” said Mrs. Morres, and
was reproached for being cynical on such a day.
While they waited for a meal they
explored the delightful inn-garden. It was not
Sir Robin’s first visit, and he was able to point
out to them the lions of the place. There was
the landlord’s aviary of canary-birds, so hardy
that they lived in the open air all the year round.
There were the ferrets in a cage. Not far off,
in a proximity which must have profoundly interested
the ferrets, there was an enclosure of white rabbits.
There was a wild duck which had been picked up injured
in the leg one cold winter, and had become tame and
followed them about now from place to place.
There were a peacock and a peahen, a sty full of tiny,
squeaking black piglets, hives of bees, all manner
of pleasant country things. A lordly St. Bernard,
with deep eyes of affection, followed Sir Robin as
a well-remembered friend.
“Out in the woods,” Sir
Robin said, “there is a pond which later will
be covered with water-lilies. The nightingales
will have begun now. The wood is a grove of them.
The landlord owned up handsomely when I came here
first that ‘they dratted things kept one awake
at night.’ I was only sorry they did not
keep me. But after the first I slept too soundly.”
“What did you find to do?” Mrs. Morres
asked.
“Fish. There are plenty of trout in the
upper reaches of the river.”
They found their lunch of cold roast
beef and salad, rhubarb tart and cream, delicious.
The landlord had some good old claret in his cellar
and produced it as though Sir Robin were an honoured
guest. They sat to the meal by an open window.
There were wallflowers under the window. In a
bowl on the table were hyacinths and sweet-smelling
narcissi.
After the meal Mrs. Morres was tired.
“Let me rest,” she said, “till tea-time.
What did you say was the train? Five-thirty?
Will you order tea for half-past four? It is
half-past two now. Go and explore the woods.
I believe I shall go asleep if I’m allowed.
The buzzing of the bees out there is a drowsy sound.”
Mary voted for walking up-stream,
and confessed to a passion for tracking rivers to
their sources. They stepped out briskly.
She was wearing a long cloak of grey-blue cloth, which
became her. Presently she took it off and carried
it on her arm. Her frock beneath repeated the
colour of the cloak. It had a soft fichu about
the neck of yellowed muslin, with a pattern of little
roses. He looked at her with admiration.
He knew as little about clothes as most men, and, like
most men, he loved blue. She did well to wear
blue on such a day. The grey of her eyes took
on the blue of her garments, a blue slightly silvered,
like the blue of the April sky.
As the ground ascended, the stream
brawled and leaped over little boulders green with
the water-stain and lichens. There were quiet
pools beside the boulders. As they stood by one
they saw the fin of a trout in the obscurity.
They met no one. Presently they
were higher than the woods and out on a green hillside.
When they first appeared the place was alive with
rabbits, who hurried to their burrows with a flash
of white scuts.
“If we sit down on the hillside
we can see the valley,” Sir Robin said.
“We can look down into the valley at our leisure.
It is filled with a golden haze. This good sun
is drawing out the winter damps. You shall have
my coat to sit on. Wasn’t I far-seeing to
bring it?”
He spread the coat, which he had been
carrying on his arm, for Mary, and she sat down on
the very edge of the incline. The St. Bernard
laid his silver and russet head on her skirt.
They had lost sight of the river now. It had
retired into the woods. When they sat down Sir
Robin consulted his watch, and found that they might
stay for nearly an hour. There was a bruised
sweetness in the atmosphere about them, which they
discovered presently to be wild thyme. They were
sitting on a bed of it. He thought of it afterwards
as one of the sweetnesses that must be always associated
with Mary Gray, like the smell of violets. The
full golden sun poured on them, warming them to the
heart. The bees buzzed about the wild thyme and
the golden heads of gorse. Little blue moths
fluttered on the hillside. The rabbits, lower
down the hill, came out of their burrows again and
gambolled in the sunshine.
“How sweet it all is!”
Mary said impulsively. “I shall always remember
this day.”
“And I.”
He plucked idly at the wild thyme
and the little golden vetches among the coarse grass
of the hillside. A fold of the blue dress lay
beside him. He touched it inadvertently, and
the colour came to his cheek: unobserved, because
he had his hat pulled down over his eyes, and Mary
was sketching for him in detail the plan of her book.
It interested him because it was hers. Her voice
sounded like poetry. He had not wanted poetry.
Blue-books and statistics had satisfied him very well,
hitherto. But, to be sure, he had read poetry
in his Oxford days. Lines and tags of it came
into his mind dreamily as he listened to her voice.
He did not touch that fold of her gown again.
If he was sure but he was not quite sure.
And there was Nelly. He supposed Nelly cared for
him if she was willing to marry him. If Nelly
cared why, then, he had no right to think
of other possibilities.
Something had gone out of the glory
and enchantment of the day as they went back down
the hillside. Those lambs of clouds had suddenly
banked themselves up into grey fleeces which covered
the sun. The wind blew a little cold.
“It is the capriciousness of
April,” said Mary, unconscious of any change
in the mental atmosphere.
He stopped on the downhill path, took
her cloak from her arm, and with kind carefulness
laid it about her shoulders. As he arranged it
he touched one of the soft curls that lay on her white
neck, and again a thrill passed through him.
He began to wish that he had not planned this country
expedition, after all. He ought really to have
started this morning for the Continent. Going
on Saturday, he would have very little time to stay.
On the homeward way Mrs. Morres reproached
him with his dulness. What had come to him?
He hesitated, glancing at Mary in
her corner. Mary had enjoyed her day thoroughly,
and was wearing an air of great content. She was
carrying a bunch of the wild thyme. She had taken
off her hat and her cloudy hair seemed blown about
her head like an aureole. She had a delicate,
wild, elusive air. He withdrew his glance abruptly.
“It is a guilty conscience,”
he said. “I ought not to come back and dine
with you to-night. I ought to put you into a cab
and myself into another, go home for my bag and take
the night-express to Paris. The House only rises
for ten days and I have to be in my place on the opening
night.”
Mary looked up at him with a friendly air of being
disappointed. She was engaged in putting the wild thyme into a bunch, stalk by
stalk. Mrs. Morres began to protest
“Well, of all the deceitful
persons! After luring me to spend a Good Friday
in town. To be sure, I shall have Mary. Will
you come to the Good Friday service at St. Hugh’s
with me, Mary?”
“I should love to come.”
“Very well, then. Have
your bag packed and come back with me to sleep.
We shall get off the earlier on Saturday morning.
So we shan’t miss you at all, Sir Robin.”
He looked at her with great contrition.
“My mother ” he began.
“To be sure, your mother has first claim.
To say nothing of another.”
He coloured. Mary was looking
at him with kind interest. Mrs. Morres sent him
a quick glance then looked away again.
“To be sure, you must go, Sir
Robin,” she said, in a serious voice. “I
was only jesting. Ah! here we are! So it
is good-bye.”
“Au revoir,” he corrected.
“Well, au revoir.
I hope you’ll have a very happy time at Lugano.
But you are sure to.”
A moment later they had gone off in
their cab, and he was feeling the blank of their absence.