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As the evening progressed Michael slightly increased the number of times he tapped Kathleen's hand with his, and after about an hour's promenade of the pier he was doing a steady three taps a minute. He now began to speculate whether Kathleen was aware of these taps, and from time to time he would glance round at her over his shoulder, hopeful of catching her eyes.
"Are you admiring my sister's brooch?" asked Miss McDonnell. "Eh, I think it's grand. Don't you?"
Kathleen giggled lightly at this, and asked her sister how she could, and then Michael with a boldness that on reflection made him catch his breath at the imagination of it, said that while he was admiring Miss Kathleen's brooch he was admiring her eyes still more.
"Oh, Mr. Fane. How can you!" exclaimed Kathleen.
"Well, he's got good taste, I'm sure," said Miss McDonnell. "But, there, after all, what can you expect from an Irish girl? All Irish girls have fine eyes."
When Michael went to bed he felt that on the whole he had acquitted himself that first evening with considerable success, and as he fell asleep he dreamed triumphantly of a daring to-morrow.
It was an April day, whose deeps of azure sky made the diverse foliage of spring burn in one ardent green. Such a day spread out before his windows set Michael on fire for its commemoration, and he made up his mind to propose a long bicycling expedition to the two Miss McDonnells.
He wished that it were not necessary to invite the elder sister, but not even this April morning could embolden him so far as to ask Kathleen alone. Mrs. Fane smilingly approved of his proposal, but suggested that on such a warm day it would be wiser not to start until after lunch. So it was arranged, and Michael thoroughly enjoyed the consciousness of escorting these girls out of Bournemouth on their trim bicycles. Indeed, he enjoyed his position so much that he continually looked in the shop-windows, as they rode past, to observe the effect and was so much charmed by the result that he crossed in front of Miss McDonnell, and upset her and her bicycle in the middle of the town.
"Eh, that's a nuisance," said Miss McDonnell, surveying bent handlebars and inner tyre swelling like a toy balloon along the rim. "That was quite a mishap," she added, shaking the dust from her skirt.
Michael was in despair over his clumsiness, especially when Miss Kathleen McDonnell remarked that there went the ride she'd been looking forward to all day.
"Well, you two go on an I'll walk back," Miss McDonnell offered.
"Oh, but I can easily hire another machine," said Michael.
"No. I'll go back. I've grazed my knee a bit badly."
Michael was so much perturbed to hear this that without thinking he anxiously asked to be allowed to look, and wished that the drain by which he was standing would swallow him up when he realized by Kathleen's giggling what he had said.
"It's all right," said Miss McDonnell kindly. "There's no need to worry.
I hope you'll have a pleasant ride."
"I say, it's really awfully ripping of you to be so jolly good-tempered about it," Michael exclaimed. "Are you sure I can't do anything?"
"No, you can just put my bicycle in the shop along there, and I'll take the tram back. Mind and enjoy yourselves, and don't be late."
The equable Miss McDonnell then left her sister and Michael to their own devices.
They rode along in alert silence until they left Branksome behind them and came into hedgerows, where an insect earned Michael's cordial grat.i.tude by invading his eye. He jumped off his bicycle immediately and called for Kathleen's aid, and as he stood in the quiet lane with the girl's face close to his and her hand brus.h.i.+ng his cheeks, Michael felt himself to be indeed a favourite of fortune.
"There it is, Mr. Fane," said Miss Kathleen McDonnell. And, though he tried to be sceptical for a while of the insect's discovery, he was bound to admit the evidence of the handkerchief.
"Thanks awfully," said Michael. "And I say, I wish you wouldn't call me Mr. Fane. You know my Christian name."
"Oh, but I'd feel shy to call you Michael," said Miss McDonnell.
"Not if I called you Kathleen," Michael suggested, and felt inclined to shake his own hand in congratulation of his own magnificent daring.
"Well, I must say one thing. You don't waste much time. I think you're a bit of a flirt, you know," said Kathleen.
"A flirt," Michael echoed. "Oh, I say, do you really think so?"
"I'm afraid I do," murmured Kathleen. "Shall we go on again?"
They rode along in renewed silence for several miles, and then they suddenly came upon Poole Harbour lying below them, washed in the tremulous golden airs of the afternoon.
"I say, how ripping!" cried Michael, leaping from his machine and flinging it away from him against a bank of vivid gra.s.s. "We must sit down here for a bit."
"It is pretty," said Kathleen. "It's almost like a picture."
"I'm glad you're fond of beautiful things," said Michael earnestly.
"Well, one can't help it, can one?" sighed Kathleen.
"Some people can," said Michael darkly. "There's rather a good place to sit over there," he added, pointing to a broken gate that marked the entrance to an oak wood, and he faintly touched the sleeve of Kathleen's blouse to guide her towards the chosen spot.
Then they sat leaning against the gate, she idly plucking sun-faded primroses, he brooding upon the nearness of her hand. In such universal placidity it could not be wrong to hold that hand wasting itself amid small energies. Without looking into her eyes, without turning his gaze from the great tranquil water before him, Michael took her hand in his so lightly that save for the pulsing of his heart he scarcely knew he held it. So he sat breathless, enduring pins and needles, tolerating the uncertain pilgrimage of ants rather than move an inch and break the yielding spell which made her his.
"Are you holding my hand?" she asked, after they had sat a long while pensively.
"I suppose I am," said Michael. Then he turned and with full-blooded cheeks and swimming eyes met unabashed Kathleen's demure and faintly mocking glance.
"Do you think you ought to?" she enquired.
"I haven't thought anything about that," said Michael. "I simply thought I wanted to."
"You're rather old for your age," she went on, with an inflection of teazing surprize in her soft voice. "How old are you?"
"Seventeen," said Michael simply.
"Goodness!" cried Kathleen, withdrawing her hand suddenly. "And I wonder how old you think I am?"
"I suppose you're about twenty-five."
Kathleen got up and said in a brisk voice that destroyed all Michael's bravery, "Come, let's be getting back. Norah will be thinking I'm lost."
Just when they were nearing the outskirts of Branksome, Kathleen dismounted suddenly and said:
"I suppose you'll be surprized when I tell you I'm engaged to be married?"
"Are you?" faltered Michael; and the road swam before him.
"At least I'm only engaged secretly, because my fiance is poor. He's coming down soon. I'd like you to meet him."
"I should like to meet him very much," said Michael politely.
"You won't tell anybody what I've told you?"
"Good Lord, no. Perhaps I might be of some use," said Michael. "You know, in arranging meetings."
"Eh, you're a nice boy," exclaimed Kathleen suddenly.