‘You often come this way?’
said Festus to Anne rather before he had overtaken
her.
‘I come for the newspaper and
other things,’ she said, perplexed by a doubt
whether he were there by accident or design.
They moved on in silence, Festus beating
the grass with his switch in a masterful way.
‘Did you speak, Mis’ess Anne?’ he
asked.
‘No,’ said Anne.
’Ten thousand pardons.
I thought you did. Now don’t let me drive
you out of the path. I can walk among the high
grass and giltycups-they will not yellow
my stockings as they will yours. Well, what do
you think of a lot of soldiers coming to the neighbourhood
in this way?’
‘I think it is very lively,
and a great change,’ she said with demure seriousness.
‘Perhaps you don’t like us warriors as
a body?’
Anne smiled without replying.
‘Why, you are laughing!’
said the yeoman, looking searchingly at her and blushing
like a little fire. ‘What do you see to
laugh at?’
‘Did I laugh?’ said Anne, a little scared
at his sudden mortification.
‘Why, yes; you know you did,
you young sneerer,’ he said like a cross baby.
’You are laughing at me-that’s
who you are laughing at! I should like to know
what you would do without such as me if the French
were to drop in upon ye any night?’
‘Would you help to beat them off?’ said
she.
’Can you ask such a question?
What are we for? But you don’t think
anything of soldiers.’
O yes, she liked soldiers, she said,
especially when they came home from the wars, covered
with glory; though when she thought what doings had
won them that glory she did not like them quite so
well. The gallant and appeased yeoman said he
supposed her to mean chopping off heads, blowing out
brains, and that kind of business, and thought it quite
right that a tender-hearted thing like her should
feel a little horrified. But as for him, he
should not mind such another Blenheim this summer as
the army had fought a hundred years ago, or whenever
it was-dash his wig if he should mind it
at all. ‘Hullo! now you are laughing again;
yes, I saw you!’ And the choleric Festus turned
his blue eyes and flushed face upon her as though
he would read her through. Anne strove valiantly
to look calmly back; but her eyes could not face his,
and they fell. ‘You did laugh!’
he repeated.
‘It was only a tiny little one,’ she murmured.
‘Ah-I knew you did!’ thundered
he. ‘Now what was it you laughed at?’
‘I only-thought that
you were-merely in the yeomanry,’
she murmured slily.
‘And what of that?’
‘And the yeomanry only seem farmers that have
lost their senses.’
‘Yes, yes! I knew you
meant some jeering o’ that sort, Mistress Anne.
But I suppose ’tis the way of women, and I take
no notice. I’ll confess that some of us
are no great things: but I know how to draw a
sword, don’t I?-say I don’t
just to provoke me.’
‘I am sure you do,’ said
Anne sweetly. ’If a Frenchman came up to
you, Mr. Derriman, would you take him on the hip,
or on the thigh?’
‘Now you are flattering!’
he said, his white teeth uncovering themselves in
a smile. ’Well, of course I should draw
my sword-no, I mean my sword would be already
drawn; and I should put spurs to my horse-charger,
as we call it in the army; and I should ride up to
him and say-no, I shouldn’t say anything,
of course-men never waste words in battle;
I should take him with the third guard, low point,
and then coming back to the second guard-’
‘But that would be taking care
of yourself-not hitting at him.’
‘How can you say that!’
he cried, the beams upon his face turning to a lurid
cloud in a moment. ’How can you understand
military terms who’ve never had a sword in your
life? I shouldn’t take him with the sword
at all.’ He went on with eager sulkiness,
’I should take him with my pistol. I should
pull off my right glove, and throw back my goat-skin;
then I should open my priming-pan, prime, and cast
about-no, I shouldn’t, that’s
wrong; I should draw my right pistol, and as soon as
loaded, seize the weapon by the butt; then at the word
“Cock your pistol” I should-’
’Then there is plenty of time
to give such words of command in the heat of battle?’
said Anne innocently.
‘No!’ said the yeoman,
his face again in flames. ’Why, of course
I am only telling you what would be the word
of command if-there now! you la-’
’I didn’t; ‘pon my word I didn’t!’
’No, I don’t think you
did; it was my mistake. Well, then I come smartly
to Present, looking well along the barrel-along
the barrel-and fire. Of course I
know well enough how to engage the enemy! But
I expect my old uncle has been setting you against
me.’
‘He has not said a word,’
replied Anne; ’though I have heard of you, of
course.’
’What have you heard?
Nothing good, I dare say. It makes my blood boil
within me!’
‘O, nothing bad,’ said
she assuringly. ‘Just a word now and then.’
’Now, come, tell me, there’s
a dear. I don’t like to be crossed.
It shall be a sacred secret between us. Come,
now!’
Anne was embarrassed, and her smile
was uncomfortable. ’I shall not tell you,’
she said at last.
‘There it is again!’ said
the yeoman, throwing himself into a despair.
’I shall soon begin to believe that my name
is not worth sixpence about here!’
’I tell you ‘twas nothing against you,’
repeated Anne.
‘That means it might have been
for me,’ said Festus, in a mollified tone.
’Well, though, to speak the truth, I have a good
many faults, some people will praise me, I suppose.
‘Twas praise?’
‘It was.’
’Well, I am not much at farming,
and I am not much in company, and I am not much at
figures, but perhaps I must own, since it is forced
upon me, that I can show as fine a soldier’s
figure on the Esplanade as any man of the cavalry.’
‘You can,’ said Anne;
for though her flesh crept in mortal terror of his
irascibility, she could not resist the fearful pleasure
of leading him on. ‘You look very well;
and some say, you are-’
’What? Well, they say
I am good-looking. I don’t make myself,
so ’tis no praise. Hullo! what are you
looking across there for?’
‘Only at a bird that I saw fly
out of that tree,’ said Anne.
‘What? Only at a bird,
do you say?’ he heaved out in a voice of thunder.
’I see your shoulders a-shaking, young madam.
Now don’t you provoke me with that laughing!
By God, it won’t do!’
‘Then go away!’ said Anne,
changed from mirthfulness to irritation by his rough
manner. ’I don’t want your company,
you great bragging thing! You are so touchy
there’s no bearing with you. Go away!’
’No, no, Anne; I am wrong to
speak to you so. I give you free liberty to
say what you will to me. Say I am not a bit of
a soldier, or anything! Abuse me-do
now, there’s a dear. I’m scum, I’m
froth, I’m dirt before the besom-yes!’
’I have nothing to say, sir.
Stay where you are till I am out of this field.’
’Well, there’s such command
in your looks that I ha’n’t heart to go
against you. You will come this way to-morrow
at the same time? Now, don’t be uncivil.’
She was too generous not to forgive
him, but the short little lip murmured that she did
not think it at all likely she should come that way
to-morrow.
‘Then Sunday?’ he said.
‘Not Sunday,’ said she.
‘Then Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday,
surely?’ he went on experimentally.
She answered that she should probably
not see him on either day, and, cutting short the
argument, went through the wicket into the other field.
Festus paused, looking after her; and when he could
no longer see her slight figure he swept away his
deliberations, began singing, and turned off in the
other direction.