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"What?" says Tommy.
"Do you pledge yourself to declare where Miss Kavanagh is now?"
"Is it Joyce?" says Tommy, coming forward and standing undaunted in his knickerbockers and an immaculate collar that defies suspicion.
"Yes--Joyce," says Mr. Browne, who never can hold his tongue.
"Well, I know." Tommy pauses, and an unearthly silence falls on the a.s.sembled company. Half the county is present, and as Tommy, in the character of _reconteur_, is widely known and deservedly dreaded, expectation spreads itself among his audience.
Lady Baltimore moves uneasily, and for once d.i.c.ky Browne feels as if he should like to sink into his boot.
"She's up on the top of the hill with Mr. Dysart," says Tommy, and no more. Lady Baltimore sighs with relief, and Mr. Browne feels now as if he should like to give Tommy something.
"How do you know?" asks Beauclerk, as though he finds it impossible to repress the question.
"Because I saw her there," says Tommy, "when Mabel and me was coming here. I like Mr. Dysart, don't you?" addressing Beauclerk specially. "He is a very kind sort of man. He gave me half a crown."
"For what, Tommy?" asks Baltimore, idly, to whom Tommy is an unfailing joy.
"To go away and leave him alone with Joyce," says Tommy, with awful distinctness.
Tableau!
Lady Baltimore lets her spoon fall into her saucer, making a little quick clatter. Everybody tries to think of something to say; n.o.body succeeds.
Mr. Browne, who is evidently choking, is mercifully delivered by beneficent nature from a sudden death. He gives way to a loud and sonorous sneeze.
"Oh, d.i.c.ky! How funny you do sneeze," says Lady Swansdown. It is a safety valve. Everybody at once affects to agree with her, and universal laughter makes the room ring.
"Tommy, I think it is time for you and Mabel to go home," says Lady Baltimore. "I promised your mother to send you back early. Give her my love, and tell her I am so sorry she couldn't come to me to-day, but I suppose last night's fatigue was too much for her."
"'Twasn't that," says Tommy; "'twas because cook----"
"Yes, yes; of course. I know," says Lady Baltimore, hurriedly, afraid of further revelations. "Now, say good-bye, and, Bertie, you can go as far as the first gate with them."
The children make their adieus, Tommy reserving d.i.c.ky Browne for a last fond embrace.
"Good-bye, old man! So-long!"
"What's that?" says Tommy, appealing to Beauclerk for information.
"What's what?" says Beauclerk, who isn't in his usual amiable mood.
"What's the meaning of that thing d.i.c.ky said to me?"
"'So-long?' Oh that's Browne's charming way of saying good-bye."
"Oh!" says Tommy, thoughtfully. He runs it through his busy brain, and brings it out at the other end satisfactorily translated. "I know," says he: "Go long! That's what he meant! But I think," indignantly, "he needn't be rude, anyway."
The children have hardly gone when Joyce and Dysart enter the room.
"I hope I'm not dreadfully late," cries Joyce, carelessly, taking off her cap, and giving her head a little light shake, as if to make her pretty soft hair fall into its usual charming order. "I have no idea what the time is."
"Broken your watch, Dysart?" says Beauclerk, in a rather nasty tone.
"Come and sit here, dearest, and have your tea," says Lady Baltimore, making room on the lounge beside her for Joyce, who has grown a little red.
"It is so warm here," says she, nervously, that one remark of Beauclerk's having, somehow, disconcerted her. "If--if I might----"
"No, no; you mustn't go upstairs for a little while," says Lady Baltimore, with kindly decision. "But you may go into the conservatory if you like," pointing to an open door off the library, that leads into a bower of sweets. "It is cooler there."
"Far cooler," says Beauclerk, who has followed Joyce with a sort of determination in his genial air. "Let me take you there, Miss Kavanagh."
It is impossible to refuse. Joyce, coldly, almost disdainfully and with her head held higher than usual, skirts the groups that line the walls on the western side of the room and disappears with him into the conservatory.
CHAPTER XXI.
"Who dares think one thing and another tell, My heart detests him as the gates of h.e.l.l."
"A little foolish going for that walk, wasn't it?" says he, leading her to a low cus.h.i.+oned chair over which a gay magnolia bends its white blossoms. His manner is innocence itself; ignorance itself would perhaps better express it. He has decided on ignoring everything; though a shrewd guess that she saw something of his pa.s.sages with Miss Maliphant last night has now become almost a certainty. "I thought you seemed rather played out last night--fatigued--done to death. I a.s.sure you I noticed it. I could hardly," with deep and affectionate concern, "fail to notice anything that affected you."
"You are very good!" says Miss Kavanagh icily. Mr. Beauclerk lets a full minute go by, and then----
"What have I done to merit that tone from you?" asks he, not angrily; only sorrowfully. He has turned his handsome face full on hers, and is regarding her with proud, reproachful eyes. "It is idle to deny," says he, with some emotion, half of which, to do him justice, is real, "that you are changed to me; something has happened to alter the feelings of--of--friends.h.i.+p--that I dared to hope you entertained for me. I had hoped still more, Joyce--but----What has happened?" demands he suddenly, with all the righteous strength of one who, free from guilt, resents accusation of it.
"Have I accused you?" says she, coldly.
"Yes, a thousand times, yes. Do you think your voice alone can condemn?
Your eyes are even crueller judges."
"Well I am sorry," says she, faintly smiling. "My eyes must be deceivers then. I bear you no malice, believe me."
"So be it," says he, with an a.s.sumption of relief that is very well done. "After all, I have worried myself, I daresay, very unnecessarily.
Let us talk of something else, Miss Maliphant, for example," with a glance at her, and a pleasant smile. "Nice girl eh? I miss her."
"She went early this morning, did she?" says Joyce, scarcely knowing what to say. Her lips feel a little dry; an agonized certainty that she is slowly growing crimson beneath his steady gaze brings the tears to her eyes.
"Too early. I quite hoped to be up to see her off, but sleep had made its own of me and I failed to wake. Such a good, genuine girl! Universal favorite, don't you think? Very honest, and very," breaking into an apparently irrepressible laugh, "ugly! Ah! well now," with smiling self condemnation, "that's really a little too bad; isn't it?"
"A great deal too bad," says Joyce, gravely. "I shouldn't speak of her if I were you."
"But why, my dear girl?" with arched brows and a little gesture of his handsome hands. "I allow her everything but beauty, and surely it would be hypocrisy to mention that in the same breath with her."
"It isn't fair--it isn't sincere," says the girl almost pa.s.sionately.
"Do you think I am ignorant of everything, that I did not see you with her last night in the garden? Oh!" with a touch of scorn that is yet full of pain, "you should not. You should not, indeed!"