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she said curtly.
Maria surveyed her with frank disapproval.
"You should take shame to yourself, speaking that way, miss," she admonished severely. "But I expect you'm hungry-like, that's what 'tis.
And I've a beautiful young chicken roasting for your lunch. You'll feel different when you've got a bit of something solid inside you."
The roast chicken, combined with a gla.s.s of champagne, certainly contributed towards producing a more cheerful outlook on life, and when, later on in the afternoon, Mrs. Hilyard called, armed with some books for the invalid, and was graciously permitted by Maria to come upstairs, Ann welcomed her with unfeigned delight.
"Well, it's quite nice to see you alive," smiled Cara as they kissed each other. "I really thought you were going to drown before my very eyes the other day."
"Instead of which I've turned up again like a bad penny!"
"Thanks to Mr. Coventry. If he hadn't chanced to be taking a const.i.tutional in the direction of Berrier Cove that morning, I don't know what would have happened."
Ann was not looking at her. Instead, her gaze was directed towards the open window as though the view which offered were of surpa.s.sing interest.
"I wondered how it was he came to be on the spot just in the nick of time,"
she said negligently.
"That was how," nodded Cara. "He'd been for a walk along the sh.o.r.e, and luckily came home by way of the Cove."
"I suppose I shall have to thank him," remarked Ann gloomily.
Cara looked a trifle mystified. Then she smiled.
"It would be--just polite," she submitted.
Ann frowned.
"I always seem to be thanking him!" she complained, and, in response to the other's glance of inquiry, recounted the various occasions on which Coventry had rendered her a service.
"Not a bad record of knight-errantry for a confirmed woman-hater, is it?"
she added with a rueful touch of humour.
"He wasn't always a woman-hater," answered Cara slowly. Her pansy-dark eyes held a curious dreaming look.
"I'd forgotten. Of course, you'd met him before you came here. Did you know him pretty well?"
"It was so many years ago," deprecated Cara, with a little wave of her hand which seemed to set her former friends.h.i.+p with Eliot away in the back ages.
"But I knew a good deal about him--we knew his people when I was a girl in my teens--and I can understand why--how he became such a misanthrope."
Ann made no answer. Somehow she felt she could not put any direct questions about this man whose changing, oddly contradictory moods had baffled her so completely and--although she would not have acknowledged it--had caught and held her imagination with equal completeness. Perhaps she was hardly actually aware how much the queer, abrupt owner of Heronsmere occupied her thoughts. Mrs. Hilyard, however, continued speaking without waiting to be questioned.
"Eliot Coventry has had just the sort of experience to make him cynical,"
she went on in her pretty, dragging voice. "Particularly as regards women.
His mother was a perfectly beautiful woman, with the temper of a fiend. She lived simply and solely for her own enjoyment, and never cared tuppence about either Eliot or his sister."
"Oh, has he a sister?" The question sprang from Ann's lips without her own volition.
"Yes. She was a very pretty girl, too, I remember."
Ann's thoughts flew back to the day of the Fete des Narcisses, recalling the pretty woman whom she had observed driving with Eliot in the prize car.
Probably, since he so disliked women in general, his companion on that occasion had been merely his sister! She felt oddly pleased and contented at this solution of a matter which had nagged her curiosity more than a little at the time.
"Mrs. Coventry--the mother--was utterly selfish, and insisted upon her own way in everything." Cara was pursuing her recollections in a quiet, retrospective fas.h.i.+on which gave Ann the impression that they had no very deep or poignant interest for her. "If she _didn't_ get it--well, there were fireworks!"--smiling. "Once, I remember, Eliot crossed her wishes over something and she flew into a perfect frenzy of temper. There was a small Italian dagger lying on a table near, and she s.n.a.t.c.hed it up and flung it straight at him. It struck him just below one of his eyes; that's how he came by that scar on his cheekbone. She might have blinded him," she added, and for a moment there was a faint tremor in her voice.
"What a brute she must have been!" exclaimed Ann in horror.
"Yes," agreed Cara. "He was unlucky in his mother." After a pause she went on: "And he was unlucky in the woman he loved. He wasn't at all well-off in those days, and she threw him over--broke off the engagement and married a very wealthy man instead."
Ann felt her heart contract.
"I suppose that's what makes him so bitter, then," she said in a low voice.
"Probably--he still cares for her."
"No." Cara shook her head. "Eliot Coventry isn't the sort of man to go on caring for a woman who'd proved herself unworthy. I think--I think he'd just wipe her clean out of his life."
"It would be what she deserved," a.s.serted Ann rather fiercely.
"Yes, I suppose it would. But one can feel a little Sorry for her. She spoilt her own life, too."
"Did you know her, then?"
"Yes, I knew her. I think the only excuse to be made for her is that she was very young when it all happened."
"I'm young," said Ann grimly, "but I hope I wouldn't be as mean as that."
"You?" Cara's eyes rested with a wistful kind of tenderness on the flushed face against the pillows. "But, my dear, there's a world of difference between you and the girl Eliot Coventry was in love with."
She got up and, moving across to the window, stood looking out. Below, the pleasant, happy-go-lucky garden rambled desultorily away to the corner where stood the ancient oak supporting Ann's hammock--a garden of odd, unexpected nooks and lawns, with borders of old English flowers, without definite form and looking as if it had grown of its own sweet will into its present comeliness. But the garden conjured up before Cara's mental vision was a very different one--a stately, formal garden entered through an arch of jessamine, with a fountain playing in its centre, tinkling coolly into a marble basin, and a high-backed, carved stone bench set beneath the shade of scented trees. Above all pulsated the deep, sapphire blue of an Italian sky.
The pictured garden faded and Cara turned slowly back into the room. Her eyes looked sad.
"Poor Eliot!" she said. "It's all ancient history now. But one wishes it was possible to give him back his happiness."
When she had gone, Ann lay thinking over the story she had just heard.
So it was all true, then--the tale that Eliot had been jilted years ago!
It threw a vivid flash of illumination on the many complexities she had come up against in his character. The two women who should mean most in a man's life had both failed him. He bore on his body a scar which surely he must never see reflected in the mirror without recalling the travesty of motherhood that was all he had ever known. And scored into his soul, hidden beneath a bitter reticence and unforgiving cynicism, lay the still deeper scar of that hurt which the woman who was to have been his wife had dealt him.
Ann's annoyance with him because he hadn't troubled to call personally to ascertain how she was melted away in a rush of pitying comprehension. She was conscious of an intense anger against that unknown woman who had so marred his life. She hoped she was being made to pay for it, suffer for it in some way!
And then, all at once, came the realisation that if she had remained faithful, Eliot would probably have been married years ago ... she herself would never have met him.... A burning flush mounted to her very temples, and she hid her face in her hands, trying to shut out the swift, unbidden thought which had wakened within her a strange tumult of emotion. When at last she uncovered her face, her eyes held the wondering, startled look of a young fawn.
She was very young and whole-hearted, utterly innocent of that great miracle which transforms the world, as yet unrecognising of the voice of love--the Voice which, once heard, can never again be muted and forgotten.
And now something stirred within her--something new and disturbing and a little frightening.
It was as though she had heard some distant call which she but half understood and, only partly understanding, feared.