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"Can't remember," said Loring. "I suppose so. But as for that, men don't like being laughed at either."
"_You_ don't, I know. But it's very good for you."
"Why isn't it good for the General?"
"My name's Bobby," came the small but haughty voice. At times her son reminded Sophy strikingly of Cecil. This was just Cecil's tone with presuming strangers.
"Very well, Bobby--do _you_ know why it's good for me to be laughed at, but not for you?"
"I don't fink it matters," said Chesney's son, again in exactly the tone that Chesney would have used. Sophy felt too awed to feel amused. She felt that with the law of continuance thus powerful, death, in one sense, ceased to exist.
"You don't like me, do you, Bobby?" asked Loring, looking queerly at the child.
"Not much--p'ease to 'scuse me," replied Bobby.
"Funny little tot you are," said Loring, rather hurt. Then, to his surprise, he suddenly realised that he on his side, didn't really like Bobby. It seemed as if the child came wilfully between him and Sophy. He walked on moodily, cutting with his riding-crop at the pyred flames of golden-rod, his handsome, short-lipped mouth very sullen.
"What's the matter?" asked Sophy, to break another too long silence.
"You look like a tinted marble of Endymion in the sulks."
Loring turned on her pa.s.sionately.
"Mrs. Chesney," said he, "would you mind letting up on my rotten appearance! It isn't my fault that I've got a nose like a d.a.m.ned statue's!"
His face was scarlet. Sophy put her hands up to her own face to temper the brutality of her wild mirth.
V
But this laughter of Sophy was so winsome, as she glanced at him through her shielding fingers, that Loring gave way and began to laugh himself.
This was another new sensation for him--the joining in a laugh against himself.
"I'm a frightful a.s.s, I know, to mind so much when you tease me," he said as they walked on. "But you make me feel such a fool--such a 'pretty fellow'...."
"You _are_ a pretty fellow," murmured Sophy. "When you get red with anger like that you're quite dazzling."
"Oh, I say! Don't you think you're a bit _too_ hard on me?" Loring protested.
He still writhed inwardly. It is acute agony to six and twenty to be made fun of by the object of its adoration.
Bobby's voice piped in again.
"_I_ don't fink you're pretty," he remarked.
"Thanks, old chap," said Loring, this time without laughter.
They had reached the woods, on whose edge stood the big chestnuts, all one-sided from the reaching of their branches towards the free sunlight of the open. Behind them stretched the forest, a glitter of trembling yellow, shot with the velvet black of twigs and stems. Here and there a bough of maple fluttered as with swarms of scarlet b.u.t.terflies. Above the leathern carpet of last year's leaves shone the lilac disks of autumn asters, and the brown, bee-like heads of self-heal, set with tiny, purple trumpets. The chestnuts were thick with greenish-brown burs.
"I see 'em! I see 'em!" Bobby cried, dancing gleefully, and making a noiseless clapping with mittened hands. For a moment the sight of the cl.u.s.tered burs among the pointed, russet leaves had made him forget his Kill-joy, Loring.
"_Oh! Che splendore!_" cried Rosa, running up.
She and Loring threw sticks among the laden branches. The nuts came down with pleasant _swups_ upon the smooth, thick mat of dead leaves.
It was charming to kneel there in the warm October sunlight, at the edge of the rustling wood, pounding away the p.r.i.c.kly hulls from the brown, smooth chestnuts. A fresh, pleasant scent rose from the bruised hulls.
The breath of the autumn wood was keenly sweet. It smelt of wild grapes and mushrooms. From a field close by stole the odour of pumpkins that had been lying in the sun all day. And this mingled fragrance, so deliciously of the earth earthy, seemed just the perfume that would be shaken from October's russet smock as he strode across the land.
Sophy stood up at last. She lifted her arms in a boyish stretch, and stamped her feet which had "pins and needles" in them from crouching so long. Her big, clubbed plait had been somewhat loosened by her vigorous pounding. Leaves and withered gra.s.ses clung to her short, cord skirt. As she stood there stretching her cramped limbs, and laughing nervously as her feet "woke up" again, with the light wind frowzing the loose strands of hair about her face, and her short skirt disclosing her ankles in their tight-laced, brown shooting-boots, she certainly looked quite young enough, and girlish enough, to be Loring's sweetheart rather than Bobby's mother.
And Loring was thinking vehemently, his hands clenched on the chestnuts in his pockets:
"She's _got_ to love me.... I'll _make_ her love me.... I'll _make_ her marry me.... I will.... I will!"
"Ouf!" said Sophy, letting her arms drop. "That was delicious! And what are you so fiercely determined over? You look ... but I won't say what you look like----"
"No ... don't, please," replied Loring shortly.
He turned away to help Rosa adjust the top of her hamper, which would not fit into place over the hard, round chestnuts.
It was beautifully still. The western sky was beginning to redden. A crisp rustling came from the shocks of Indian corn in a near field.
"It must be after five ... time for my Bobbikins to be trotting home,"
said Sophy, taking his sober face between her hands and crumpling it together like a soft flower. Then she laughed and kissed the crumpled flower of the little face.
"_Ho-o-o-g! Ho-o-o-g!_" came the long-drawn, minor wail of a negro-voice calling the swine from the mountain for their evening feed.
Rosa went off down the hill, with Bobby trotting at her side. Once the little fellow looked back--only once. His dignity forbade that he should be thought regretful. And "Muvvah" had promised to come and roast chestnuts for him before his bedtime.
"Now for a brisk walk!" said Sophy. "Let's strike into the woods at random and go a little way up the mountain--not far--I must be back to roast those chestnuts before Bobby's bedtime."
"You never break your word to him, do you?" said Loring, as they plunged into the golden depths that seemed aglow with stored sunlight.
"No. Never. I'd rather break my word to ten grown-ups than to one child."
They went on in silence for some yards, the dried leaves ruffling almost to their knees in places. Then Loring said:
"If you once gave your word you wouldn't break it to child or grown-up."
"I don't know.... I've never been tested."
"I know."
"Thanks. But you shouldn't get into the habit of idealising people.
You'll end as a cynic if you do."