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Margaret winced. "Well, if it is any satisfaction to you, I am realising nothing but misery from it," she said in a low voice.
"I don't see how you can help that," replied Annie simply. Then she went away.
It proved Margaret's unflinching trust in the girl and Annie's recognition of no possibility except that trust, that no request nor promise as to secrecy had been made. Annie, after she got home, almost forgot the whole for a time, since her Aunt Harriet, and Aunt Harriet was the sister who was subject to rose-colds, announced her determination to call at Mr. von Rosen's the next afternoon with Annie and see his famous collection.
"Of course," said she, "the invitation was meant particularly for me, since I am one of his paris.h.i.+oners, and I think it will be improving to you, Annie, to view antiquities."
"Yes, Aunt Harriet," said Annie. She was wondering if she would be allowed to wear her pale blue muslin and the turquoise necklace which was a relic of her grandmother's girlhood. Aunt Susan sniffed delicately.
"I will stay with Mother," she said with a virtuous air.
The old lady, stately in her black satin, with white diamonds gleaming on her veinous hands, glanced acutely at them. The next day, when her daughter Harriet insisted that the cross barred muslin was not too spoiled to wear to the inspection of curios, she declared that it was simply filthy, and that Annie must wear her blue, and that the little string of turquoise beads was not in the least too dressy for the occasion.
It therefore happened that Annie and her Aunt Harriet set forth at three o'clock in the afternoon, Annie in blue, and her aunt in thin black grenadine with a glitter of jet and a little black bonnet with a straight tuft of green rising from a little wobble of jet, and a black-fringed parasol tilted well over her eyes. Annie's charming little face was framed in a background of white parasol. Margaret saw them pa.s.s as she sat on her verandah. She had received more congratulatory letters that day, and the thief envied the one from whom she had taken. Annie bowed to Margaret, and her Aunt Harriet said something about the heat, in a high shrill voice.
"She is a wonderful woman, to have written that successful novel,"
said Aunt Harriet, "and I am going to write her a congratulatory note, now you have bought that stationery at Tiffany's. I feel that such a subject demands special paper. She is a wonderful woman and her family have every reason to be proud of her."
"Yes," said Annie.
"It is rather odd, and I have often thought so," said Aunt Harriet, moving alongside with stately sweeps of black skirts, "that you have shown absolutely no literary taste. As you know, I have often written poetry, of course not for publication, and my friends have been so good as to admire it."
"Yes, Aunt Harriet," said Annie.
"I realise that you have never appreciated my poems," said Aunt Harriet tartly.
"I don't think I understand poetry very well," little Annie said with meekness.
"It does require a peculiar order of mind, and you have never seemed to me in the least poetical or imaginative," said her aunt in an appeased voice. "For instance, I could not imagine your writing a book like Mrs. Edes, and _The Poor Lady_ was anonymous, and anybody might have written it as far as one knew. But I should never have imagined her for a moment as capable of doing it."
"No," said Annie.
Then they had come to the parsonage and Jane Riggs, as rigid as starched linen could make a human being, admitted them, and presently after a little desultory conversation, the collection, which was really a carefully made one, and exceedingly good and interesting, was being displayed. Then came the charming little tea which Von Rosen had planned; then the suggestion with regard to the rose-garden and Aunt Harriet's terrified refusal, knowing as she knew the agony of sneezes and sniffs sure to follow its acceptance; and then Annie, a vision in blue, was walking among the roses with Von Rosen and both were saying things which they never could remember afterward--about things in which neither had the very slightest interest. It was only when they had reached the end of the pergola, trained over with climbers, and the two were seated on a rustic bench therein, that the conversation to be remembered began.
Chapter VIII
The conversation began, paradoxically, with a silence. Otherwise, it would have begun with plat.i.tudes. Since neither Von Rosen nor Annie Eustace were given usually to plat.i.tudes, the silence was unavoidable. Both instinctively dreaded with a pleasurable dread the shock of speech. In a way this was the first time the two had been alone with any chance of a seclusion protracted beyond a very few minutes. In the house was Aunt Harriet Eustace, who feared a rose, as she might have feared the plague, and, moreover, as Annie comfortably knew, had imparted the knowledge to Von Rosen as they had walked down the pergola, that she would immediately fall asleep.
"Aunt Harriet always goes to sleep in her chair after a cup of tea,"
Annie had said and had then blushed redly.
"Does she?" asked Von Rosen with apparent absent-mindedness but in reality, keenly. He excused himself for a moment, left Annie standing in the pergola and hurried back to the house, where he interviewed Jane Riggs, and told her not to make any noise, as Miss Eustace in the library would probably fall asleep, as was her wont after a cup of tea. Jane Riggs a.s.sented, but she looked after him with a long, slow look. Then she nodded her head stiffly and went on was.h.i.+ng cups and saucers quietly. She spoke only one short sentence to herself.
"He's a man and it's got to be somebody. Better be her than anybody else."
When the two at the end of the pergola began talking, it was strangely enough about the affair of the Syrian girl.
"I suppose, have always supposed, that the poor young thing's husband came and stole his little son," said Von Rosen.
"You would have adopted him?" asked Annie in a shy voice.
"I think I would not have known any other course to take," replied Von Rosen.
"It was very good of you," Annie said. She cast a little glance of admiration at him.
Von Rosen laughed. "It is not goodness which counts to one's credit when one is simply chucked into it by Providence," he returned.
Annie laughed. "To think of your speaking of Providence as 'chucking.'"
"It is rather awful," admitted Von Rosen, "but somehow I never do feel as if I need be quite as straight-laced with you."
"Mr. von Rosen, you have talked with me exactly twice, and I am at a loss as to whether I should consider that remark of yours as a compliment or not."
"I meant it for one," said Von Rosen earnestly. "I should not have used that expression. What I meant was I felt that I could be myself with you, and not weigh words or split hairs. A clergyman has to do a lot of that, you know, Miss Eustace, and sometimes (perhaps all the time) he hates it; it makes him feel like a hypocrite."
"Then it is all right," said Annie rather vaguely. She gazed up at the weave of leaves and blossoms, then down at the wavering carpet of their shadows.
"It is lovely here," she said.
The young man looked at the slender young creature in the blue gown and smiled with utter content.
"It is very odd," he said, "but nothing except blue and that particular shade of blue would have harmonised."
"I should have said green or pink."
"They would surely have clashed. If you can't melt into nature, it is much safer to try for a discord. You are much surer to chord. That blue does chord, and I doubt if a green would not have been a sort of swear word in colour here."
"I am glad you like it," said Annie like a school girl. She felt very much like one.
"I like you," Von Rosen said abruptly.
Annie said nothing. She sat very still.
"No, I don't like you. I love you," said Von Rosen.
"How can you? You have talked with me only twice."
"That makes no difference with me. Does it with you?"
"No," said Annie, "but I am not at all sure about--"
"About what, dear?"
"About what my aunts and grandmother will say."
"Do you think they will object to me?"