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"I hope you won't marry out of your own cla.s.s, Boy," said Mrs. Woodburn at last quietly. "We're humble folk, as dad says."
"I don't think I shall marry at all," replied the girl curtly. "I don't feel like it."
The mother continued on her tranquil way.
"When you marry, marry your own sort," she advised.
Boy was silent for a time.
"Isn't Mr. Silver our sort?" she asked at last, her eyes on her mother's.
Mrs. Woodburn, for all her liberal mind, was of the older generation.
"My dear," she said, "he's an Eton man."
"He's not like one," replied the girl shortly. "He's a gentleman."
"My dear, Eton men are gentlemen," reproved Mrs. Woodburn.
"Some," replied the girl. "The Duke is." She added maliciously--"Sometimes."
Old Mat, Monkey Brand, and Albert started early for the meet.
It was a long hour later before mother and daughter, waiting in the parlour, heard the steady clop-clop of a horse's feet and the crisp trundle of wheels on the road.
In another moment the buggy had drawn up at the gate; Goosey Gander was stretching his neck, and Jerry of the corrugated brow was touching his hat to the descending pa.s.senger.
A tall, top-hatted figure, enfolded in long, s.h.a.ggy gray frieze coat, came up the paved yard toward them between clouds of arabis.
Silver had changed in the train on the way down. He was booted, spurred, and above all radiant.
Mrs. Woodburn went out on to the steps to meet him. The girl hid her hair behind her mother's stately figure.
"So you've managed it!" smiled Mrs. Woodburn.
"I was determined not to miss it," replied the young man, striding up the steps stiff in his top-boots. "Miss Woodburn, congratulations."
"Who told you?" cried Boy, taken aback.
"Billy Bluff, of course," replied the other. "Caddish of him, wasn't it?"
They went into the parlour.
Mrs. Woodburn did not offer the traveller a drink for the simple reason that it never occurred to her to do so.
"By Jove! I _am_ late!" cried the young man, glancing at the clock.
"There was a break-down at Hayward's Heath."
He stripped off his ulster, and stood up in his pink coat, his baggy white breeches, and top-boots.
In Boy Woodburn's judgment most men, so attired, looked supremely ridiculous. It was not so with Mr. Silver. It may be that his absolute lack of self-consciousness distracted attention from his costume. It may be that he was so real himself that he dominated his artificial habiliments. Certainly his strong, clean face, his short, crisp hair, and pleasant, booming voice possessed and pleased the girl.
"You'd better be off, or you'll have the Duke down on you," said Mrs.
Woodburn.
"Dad's gone an hour since," said Boy.
She led the way swiftly down long stone pa.s.sages out into the yard. He followed, his eyes on that shining bunch of hair before him.
The yard looked deserted. The fan-tails strutted vaingloriously; Maudie lay in the sun on the stable wall; and Billy Bluff's kennel was empty.
"Hullo, where's Bill?" cried the young man.
"Some idiot's let him off his chain," grumbled the girl. "Just like them. A hunting morning."
A great gray horse, led by little Jerry, was feeling his way through the stable-door. Banjo stood seventeen hands or over, but he was all quality. His long neck was hog-maned; and his Roman nose and sober colour gave him an air of wisdom and experience which a somewhat frivolous character belied.
Young Lollypop, a brown three-year-old, followed demurely behind. For all his sixteen hands, he looked a mere stripling beside the gray; but he was far too tall for the girl to mount without a.s.sistance. Stanley went for a bucket, but before he could return Silver had shot the girl into the saddle, and stood a moment looking up at her with eyes in which laughter and admiration mingled.
The girl seemed so slight and yet so masterful on these great larruping thoroughbreds she always rode!
Young Lollypop had the callow and awkward ways of a young giraffe, but, though only a three-year-old, he was sedate as an old maid and had the dignity of a churchwarden. His behaviour was an example to his flippant colleague.
For Banjo, directly he felt his master on his back, began to galumph about the yard with a clatter of hoofs among the injured fan-tails and to the discomfiture of Maudie.
"Right!" grunted Silver, settling into his saddle. "Now, you old hog, you!"
Brown Lollypop c.o.c.ked his long ears and watched with pained disapproval the gambols of his elder. Himself incorruptible, he was no doubt well pleased at heart that Banjo's misconduct should throw up in high relief his own immaculate conduct. Lollypop was in fact a bit of a prig. Had he been a boy he would have been head of his school, a Scholar of Balliol, and President of the Union at his University.
The girl followed her leader through the gate, the brown horse stepping gingerly, swinging his tail, and feeling his bit, while Banjo galumphed and grunted to the sound of a squeaking leather.
The meet was at Folkington Green, at the foot of the Downs on the edge of the low country.
Once in the road, Silver and the girl turned their backs on the sea and made through the village.
Just outside it a familiar figure was waiting them on the road, apologetic and pleading.
"I knew he would," said Boy. "He started with father and got turned back. Now he's waiting for us. _Go back, you bad dog!_"
"Poor boy!--he wants a bit of a hunt, too," said the young man.
"I'll hunt him!" cried the girl remorselessly, and proceeded to do so with vigour.
It was some time before the dog was routed and they were free to pursue their way.
"What's the time?" asked the girl.