Pearl Of Pearl Island - BestLightNovel.com
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"Say, Graeme, I've been wondering what you'd have done if I'd played mule and persisted in kicking up my heels in church. I asked Miss Penny--and, by Jove, I tell you, that's about as sensible a girl as I've met for a long time--"
"Miss Penny is an extremely clever girl and an exceptionally fine character. Good family too. Her father was the Brigadier-General Penny who was killed in Afghanistan."
"So?"
"She's an M.A., and she's worked like a slave to educate her brothers and sisters, and they're all turning out well. I don't know any girl, except Meg, of whom I think so highly as Hennie Penny."
"Henrietta?"
Graeme nodded.
"Well now," said Pixley presently. "As a matter of information, what was in your mind to do if I'd gone on?"
"You'd never have got as far as the church, my boy."
"No? Why?"
"If the Seigneur hadn't stopped you, I would. But I'm inclined to think he'd have seen to you all right."
"By Jove, he looked it! What would he have done?"
"Confined you as a harmless lunatic till the ceremony was over, I should say, and then sent you home with the proverbial insect in your ear."
"And if he hadn't?"
"Then I should have taken matters into my own hands and bottled you up till you couldn't do any mischief. You could have hauled me before the court here, and I'd probably have been fined one and eightpence. It would have been worth the money, and cheap at the price, simply to see the proceedings."
"It's an extraordinary place this."
"It's without exception the most delightful little place in the world."
"Jolly nice house you've got here too. Think of stopping long?"
"Some months probably. The curious thing about Sark is that the longer you stop the longer you want to stop. It grows on you. First week I was here it seemed to me very small--felt afraid of walking fast lest I should step over the edge, and all that kind of thing. Now that I've been here a couple of months it is growing bigger every day. I'm not sure that one could know Sark under a lifetime. We'll take you round in a boat and show it you from the outside."
"I'll have to get back, I'm sorry to say. You see, I started at a moment's notice. Things are duller than a ditch in the City, but I'd no chance to make any arrangements for a stay. But I'll tell you what.
If you're stopping on here and like to send me an invitation for a week or two, I'd come like a shot. I'll take a carriage up that road from the harbour, though, next time. Jove! I felt like a convict on the treadmill."
"You have the invitation now, my boy, and we'll be delighted to see you whenever it suits you to come."
"That's very good of you. Miss Penny be stopping on with you?"
"As long as she will. She'd got a bit run down and it's done her a heap of good."
"Well, if you'll show me how to go, I'll toddle off home now. I haven't the remotest idea where my digs are."
And Graeme led him through the back fields among the tethered cows, who stopped their slow chewing as they pa.s.sed, and lay gazing after them in blank astonishment, into the Avenue and so to the Bel-Air.
"I'll come round then a bit before eleven and we'll all go along together," was Charles Svendt's parting word.
"Right! Au revoir!" and Graeme went home across the fields smiling happily to himself.
XVII
When Graeme came swinging over the green d.y.k.e in the early morning, with his towel round his neck and his two dogs racing in front, he found the Seigneur sitting in a long chair in the verandah, with four aristocratic dogs wandering about, who proceeded to intimate to Punch and Scamp that they were rather low fisher-dogs and not of seigneurial rank.
"Well, what about your would-be breaker of the peace?" asked the Seigneur, with a smile.
"He's come to his senses. I was going to bring you word as soon as I thought you'd be up. He's promised to be best man, and I'm hoping to get him to play heavy father also and give the bride away."
"Capital!"
"He was very anxious last night to know what would have happened if, as he put it, he'd persisted in playing mule and kicking up his heels in church."
"We'd have tied his heels so that he couldn't kick much," said the Seigneur, with his deep quizzical smile.
"That's what I told him. He seemed to think Sark a decidedly odd kind of place. But he's getting to like it, and I've invited him to come and visit us later on."
"That's all right as long as he behaves himself."
"Oh, he's a very decent chap. The only thing I had against him was that he wanted to marry my wife."
"Then all the ways are smooth now?"
"All smooth now, thanks to your a.s.sistance!"
"Well, all happiness to you both!" said the Seigneur as he rose. "My wife sends all good wishes"--for the Lady of the Manor lay sick in the great house among the trees and he would not leave her.
XVIII
As Graeme proposed, they talk still of that wedding in Sark.
Everything went smoothly. The Vicar had coached himself, by wifely tuition and much private repet.i.tion, into a certain familiarity with the Wedding Service in English, but would still have been more at home with it in French.
The church was more crowded than it had been within the memory of woman. Margaret looked charming, and Miss Penny absolutely pretty.
Charles Svendt could hardly take his eyes off her, and caught himself wondering what the dooce she had done to herself since last night.
For, by Jove! she's as pretty almost as Margaret herself--he said to himself.
And if Jeremiah Pixley could have seen his son, in fatherly fas.h.i.+on give away the bride that should have been his, he would without doubt have had fits--if the first one had not been of such a character as to obviate the necessity for any additional ones.
The habitants, old and young, had made holiday, donned their best as if it were Sunday, and crowded the church as if it were all the Sundays of the year rolled into one.
The Vicar had serious thoughts of improving so unique an occasion, but wisely decided to confine himself to the intricacies of the English language as displayed in The Form of the Solemnisation of Matrimony.
Mrs. Vicar presided at the harmonium, which had been specially tuned for the occasion, and the choir enjoyed to the full their privileges of position and observation and made ample use of them.