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the young doctor told her; "all pink and white like the rest of it."
He let them go down ahead of him, and so it happened that he stood for a moment alone in a little upper porch at the back of the house which overlooked the wood. The shadows were gathering in its dim aisles, shutting out the daylight, shutting out the dreams which he had lost that day in the fragrant depths.
When later he came with the rest of them to Bower's, the river was stained with the sunset. Diogenes and the white duck breasted serenely the crimson surface. Certain old fishermen trailed belatedly up the bank.
Others sat spick and span and ready for supper on the porch.
Brinsley Tyson over the top of his newspaper hailed Richard.
"There's a telephone call for you. They've been trying to get you for an hour."
He went in at once, and coming out told Anne good-night. "Thank you for a happy afternoon," he said.
But she missed something in his voice, something that had been there when they had walked in the wood.
She watched him as he went away, square-shouldered and strong on his big white horse. She had a troubled sense that things had in some fateful and tragic way gone wrong with her afternoon, but it was not yet given to her to know that young Richard on his big white horse was riding out of her life.
It was after supper that Geoffrey asked her to go out on the river with him.
"Not to-night. I'm tired."
"Just a little minute, Mistress Anne. To see the moon come up over the island. Please." So she consented.
Helping her into the boat, Geoffrey's hands were shaking. The boat swept out from the pier in a wide curve, and he drew a long breath. He had her now--it would be a great adventure--like a book--better than any book.
Primitive man in prehistoric days carried his woman off captive under his arm. Geoffrey, pursuing modern methods, had borrowed Brinsley's boat. A rug was folded innocently on the cus.h.i.+ons; in a snug little cupboard under the stern seat were certain supplies--a great adventure, surely!
And now the boat was under the bridge; the signal lights showed red and green. Then as they slipped around the first island there was only the silver of the moons.h.i.+ne spread out over the waters.
Geoffrey stopped the motor. "We'll drift and talk."
"You talk," she told him, "and I'll listen, and we mustn't be too late."
"What is too late?"
"I told you I would stay just a little minute."
"There is no real reason why we shouldn't stay as long as we wish. You are surely not so prim that you are doing it for propriety."
"You know I am not prim."
"Yes you are. You are prim and Puritan and sometimes you are a prig. But I like you that way, Mistress Anne. Only to-night I shall do as I please."
"Don't be silly."
"Is it silly to love you--why?"
He argued it with her brilliantly--so that it was only when the red and green lights of a second bridge showed ahead of them that she said, sharply, "We are miles away from Bower's; we must go back."
"It won't take us long," he said, easily, and presently they were purring up-stream.
Then all at once the motor stopped. Geoffrey, inspecting it with a flashlight, said, succinctly, "Engine's on the blink."
"You mean that we can't go on?"
"Oh, I'll tinker it up. Only you'll have to let me get into that box under the stern seat for the tools. You can hold the light while I work."
As he worked they drifted. They pa.s.sed the second bridge. Anne, steering, grew cold and s.h.i.+vered. But she did not complain. She was glad, however, when Geoffrey said, "You'd better curl down among the cus.h.i.+ons, and let me wrap you in this rug."
"Can you manage without me?"
"Yes. I've patched it up partially. And you'll freeze in this bitter air."
The wind had changed and there was now no moon. She was glad of the warmth of the rug and the comfort of the cus.h.i.+oned s.p.a.ce. She shut her eyes, after a time, and, worn out by the emotions of the day, she dropped into fitful slumber.
Then Geoffrey, his hair blown back by the wind, stood at the wheel and steered his boat not up-stream toward the bridge at Bower's, but straight down toward the wider waters, where the river stretches out into the Bay.
CHAPTER XII
_In Which Eve Usurps an Ancient Masculine Privilege._
AUNT MAUDE CHESLEY belonged to the various patriotic societies which are dependent on Revolutionary fighting blood, on Dutch forbears, or on the ancestral holding of Colonial office. The last stood highest in her esteem. It was the hardest to get into, hence there was about it the sanct.i.ty of exclusiveness. Any man might spill his blood for his country, and among those early Hollanders were many whose blood was red instead of blue, but it was only a choice few who in the early days of the country's history had been appointed by the Crown or elected by the people to positions of influence and of authority.
When Aunt Maude went to the meeting of her favorite organization, she wore always black velvet which showed the rounds of her shoulders, point lace in a deep bertha, the family diamonds, and all of her badges. The badges had bars and jewels, and the effect was imposing.
Evelyn laughed at her. "n.o.body cares for ancestors any more. Not since people began to hunt them up. You can find anything if you look for it, Aunt Maude. And most of the crests are bought or borrowed so that if one really belongs to you, you don't like to speak of it, any more than to tell that you are a lady or take a daily bath."
"Our ancestors," said Aunt Maude solemnly, "are our heritage from the past--but you have reverence for nothing."
"They were a jolly old lot," Eve agreed, "and I am proud of them. But some of their descendants are a scream. If men had their minds on being ancestors instead of bragging of them there'd be some hope for the future of old families."
Aunt Maude, having been swathed by her maid in a silk scarf, so that her head was stiff with it, batted her eyes. "If you would go with me," she said, "and hear some of the speeches, you might look at it differently.
Now there was a Van Tromp----"
"And in New England there were Codcapers, and in Virginia there were Pantops. I take off my hat to them, but not to their descendants, indiscriminately."
And now Aunt Maude, more than ever mummified in a gold and black brocade wrap trimmed with black fur, steered her uncertain way toward the motor at the door.
"People in my time----" floated over her shoulder and then as the door closed behind her, her eloquence was lost.
Eve, alone, faced a radiant prospect. Richard was coming. He had telephoned. She had not told Aunt Maude. She wanted him to herself.
When at last he arrived she positively crowed over him. "Oh, d.i.c.ky, this is darling of you."
A shadow fell across her face, however, when he told her why he had come.