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"No, no," sharply, "she's too young, Drake. And you haven't known each other long enough."
"Things move rapidly in these days, sir."
The Doctor agreed. "It is one of the significant developments. We had become material. And now fire and flame. But all the more reason why I should keep my head. Jean will be safe here with Emily. And you may go any day."
"I wish I might think so. I'd be there now if I weren't bound."
"It won't hurt either of you to wait until I come back," was the Doctor's ultimatum, and Derry, longing for sympathy, left him presently and made his way to the Toy Shop.
"If we were to wait ten years do you think I'd love her any more than I do now?" he demanded of Emily. "I should think he'd understand."
"Men never do understand," said Emily--"fathers. They think their own romance was unique, or they forget that there was ever any romance."
"If you could put in a word for us," ventured Derry.
"I am not sure that it would do any good; Bruce is a Turk."
A customer came, and Derry lingered disconsolately while Emily served her. More customers, among them a tall spare man with an upstanding bush of gray hair. He had a potted plant in his arms, wrapped in tissue paper. He set it on the counter and went away.
When Miss Emily discovered the plant, she asked Derry, "Who put it there?"
Derry described the man. "You were busy. He didn't stop."
The plant was a cyclamen, blood-red and beautiful.
Miss Emily managed to remark casually that she had loaned his father an elephant, perhaps he had felt that he ought to make some return--but he needn't--.
"_An elephant_?"
"Not a real one. But the last of my plush beauties."
She set the cyclamen on a shelf, and wrapped up the parcel of toys which Derry had bought the day before, "I may as well take them to Margaret Morgan's kiddies," he told her. "I want to tell her about Jean."
After Derry had gone, Miss Emily stood looking at the cyclamen on the shelf. It was a lovely thing, with a dozen blooms. She wished that her benefactor had stayed to let her thank him. She was not sure that she even knew where to send a note.
She hunted him up in the telephone book, and found him--Ulrich Stolle.
His hot-houses were on the old Military Road. She remembered now to have seen them, and to have remarked the house, which was peaked up in several gables, and had quaint brightly-colored iron figures set about the garden--with pointed caps like the graybeards in Rip van Winkle, or the dwarf in Rumpelstiltzkin.
When Derry's car slid up to Margaret's door, he saw the two children at an upper window. They waved to him as he rang the bell. He waited several moments and no one came to open the door. He turned the k.n.o.b and, finding it unlatched, let himself in.
As he went through the hall he was aware of a strange stillness. Not a maid was in sight. Pa.s.sing Margaret's room on the second floor he heard voices.
The children were alone in the nursery. He was flooded with sunlight.
Margaret-Mary's pink wash frock, Teddy's white linen--yellow jonquils in a blue bow--snowy lambs gambolling on a green frieze--Bo-peeps, flying ribbons--it was a cheering and charming picture.
"How gay you are," said Derry.
"We are not gay in our hearts," Teddy told him.
"Why not?"
"Mother's crying--we heard her, and then Nurse went down and left us, and we looked out of the window and you came."
Derry's heart seemed to stop beating. "Crying?"
Even as he spoke, Margaret stood on the threshold. There were no tears, but it was worse than tears.
He started towards her, but with a gesture she stopped him.
"I am so glad you are--here," she said.
"My dear--what is it?"
She put her hand up to her head. "Teddy, dearest," she asked, "can you take care of Margaret-Mary until Cousin Derry comes back? I want to talk to him."
Teddy's grave eyes surveyed her. "You've been cryin'," he said, "I told Cousin Derry--"
"Yes. I have had--bad news. But--I am not going to cry--any more.
And you'll take care of sister?"
"I tell you, old chap," said Derry resourcefully, "you and Margaret-Mary can open my parcel, and when I come back we'll all play together."
Outside with Margaret, with the door shut on the children, he put his arm about her. "Is it Win--is he--hurt?"
"He is--oh, Derry, Derry, he is dead!"
Even then she did not cry. "The children mustn't know. Not till I get a grip on myself. They mustn't think of it as--sad. They must think of it as--glorious--that he went--that way--."
Held close in his arms, she shook with sobs, silent, hard. He carried her down to her room. The maids were gathered there--Nurse utterly useless in her grief. It came to Derry, as he bent over Margaret, that he had always thought of Nurse as a heartless automaton, playing Chorus to Teddy, yet here she was, a weeping woman with the rest of them.
He sent all of the servants away, except Nurse, and then Margaret told him, "He was in one of the French towns which the Germans had vacated, and he happened to pick up a toy--that some little child might have dropped---and there was an explosive hidden in it--and that child's toy killed him, Derry, killed him--"
"My G.o.d, Margaret--"
"They had put it there that it might kill a--child!"
"Derry, the children mustn't know how it happened. They mustn't think of him as--hurt. They know that something is the matter. Can you tell them, Derry? So that they will think of him as fine and splendid, and going up to Heaven because G.o.d loves brave men--?"
It was a hard task that she had set him, and when at last he left her, he went slowly up the stairs.
The children had strung the Midnight Camels across the room, the purple, patient creatures that Jean had made.
"The round rug is an oasis," Teddy explained, "and the jonquil is a palm--and we are going to save the dates and figs from our lunch."
"I want my lunch," Margaret-Mary complained.
Derry looked at his watch. It was after twelve. The servants were all demoralized. "See here," he said, "you sit still for a moment, and I'll go down for your tray."
He brought it up himself, presently, bread and milk and fruit.