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"Oh, because it's so beautiful."
"I thought it was getting chilly," she objected.
5
"I don't see why you want to go to Ireland," she exclaimed, as she handed a cup of tea to him.
"I've told you why," he said.
"Oh, but that isn't a reason. And why does Gilbert want to go? He isn't Irish."
"I suppose!..."
"It's so absurd to go rushing about like this. I should have thought Gilbert would want to stay in town now that his play is on. Is it a success? I haven't looked at the papers, but then I never do. I can't read newspapers ... they're so dull. This tea is nice. And it's much nicer in town now than it can possibly be in Ireland. Besides, I don't want you to go!"
He let her chatter on, hoping that she would exhaust her interest in his visit to Ireland and begin to talk of something else, but he did not know that Cecily had greater tenacity than might appear from the incoherence of her conversation. She held on to a subject until it was settled irrevocably. She looked very charming as she sat opposite to him, and he wondered how Jimphy could be so careless of her loveliness.
The sunlight shining through the window above her head kindled her hair so that the ripples of it shone like gold, and the delicate sunburnt flush of her cheeks deepened in the soft glow. He put out his hand and touched her fingers. "Beautiful Cecily!" he said, and she smiled because she liked to be told how beautiful she was.
"But you're going to Ireland," she said.
He did not answer.
"You say you'd do anything for me," she proceeded, "but when I ask you not to go to Ireland, you refuse. If you really love me!..."
"I do love you, Cecily!"
"Well, why don't you stay in town! It's so queer to go away the moment you get to know me!" She began to laugh.
"What's the joke?" he asked.
"Oh, I've just remembered how little we know of each other. You kissed me the first time you came to my house!"
"I loved you the moment I saw you ... that day in the Park when I was with Gilbert ... I loved you then. I didn't know who you were, but I loved you. I couldn't help it, Cecily. You were looking at Gilbert and then your eyes shifted and you looked at me, and I loved you, dear. I worried Gilbert to tell me about you!..."
"What did he say?" she interrupted eagerly, leaning her elbows on the table and resting her chin in the cup of her hands.
"He told me who you were," Henry answered awkwardly.
"But didn't he say anything else?... didn't he?..."
"I've forgotten what he said.... Then I saw you at the St. James's ...
he told me you often went to first-nights, and I went specially, hoping to see you!..."
"Dear Paddy," she said, "and you were so shy!"
"And so jealous and angry because you talked all the time to Gilbert, and ignored me. You made me go out of the box with Jimphy, and as I went, I saw you putting your hand out to touch Gilbert, and I heard you calling him, 'Gilbert, darling.' ..."
She laughed, but did not speak.
"And I was frightfully jealous. Gilbert's my best friend, Cecily, but I hated him that night. I suppose ... oh, I don't know!"
"What were you going to say!" she asked.
He looked at her intently for a few moments. Her grey eyes were full of laughter, and he wondered whether she would answer his question seriously.
"Well?" she said.
"Do you still love Gilbert, Cecily! Am I ... just some one to fill in the time ... until Gilbert!..."
She sat back in her seat, and the laughter left her eyes.
"Let's go!" she said.
But he did not move. "You do love him," he persisted, "and you don't love me...."
"Are you going to Ireland with him?" she demanded.
"Yes!"
"Very well, then!" The tightened tone of her voice indicated that there was no more to be said, but he would not heed the warning, and persisted in demanding explanations.
"If you go to Ireland with Gilbert," she said, "I'll never speak to you again!"
She closed her lips firmly, and he saw the downward curve of them again, and while he pondered on what she had said, the thought shot across his mind that that downward curve would deepen as she grew older. "She'll get very bad-tempered!..."
"I mean it," she said, interrupting his thought and compelling him to pay heed to her. "I'll never speak to you again if you go away now."
"But I've promised, Cecily!" he protested.
She shrugged her shoulders. "I don't see what that's got to do with it,"
she answered.
6
They came out of the inn, and stood for a few moments before the door.
"Shall we go back to the Heath?" he said.
"No," she replied. "Let's go home."
"Very well!"
He felt broken and crushed and tongueless. Cecily did not speak to him as they walked towards the Spaniards' Road, nor did he speak to her. The angry look on her face deterred him.
He hailed a taxi, and they got into it and were driven down Fitzjohn's Avenue and homewards. Once she turned to him and said again, "Are you going to Ireland with him?" but when he answered, "I must, Cecily, I said I would!" she turned away again and did not speak until the taxi drew up before her door.