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Eloquent opened the parlour door for her with stiff politeness, and she pa.s.sed out with bent head and shoulders that trembled under the heavy fur. Surely this militant young person was not going to cry!
He followed her in some anxiety down to the garden gate, held it open for her to pa.s.s through, which she did in absolute silence, and he waited to watch her mount her bicycle.
This she did in a very curious fashion. She started to run with it, leapt lightly on one pedal, and then, to Eloquent's amazement, essayed to throw her other leg over like a boy.
The lady's skirt was tight, the Redmarley roads were extremely muddy, the unexpected jerk caused the bicycle to skid, and lady and bicycle came down sideways with considerable violence.
"d.a.m.n!" exclaimed Miss b.u.t.termish.
"Oh, those modern girls!" thought the shocked Eloquent as he ran forward to a.s.sist. He pulled the bicycle off Miss b.u.t.termish, and stood it against the wall. She sat up, her hat very much on one side.
"Do you know," she said rather huskily, "I do believe I've broken my confounded arm."
She held out her left hand to Eloquent, who pulled her to her feet.
Her right arm hung helpless, and even through her bespattered veil he could see that she was very white.
"Pray come in and rest for a little," he said concernedly, "and we can see what has happened."
"I'm sure it's broken, I heard the beastly thing snap----" the girl stumbled blindly, Eloquent caught her in his arms, and saw that she had fainted from pain.
He carried her into the house and laid her on the horsehair sofa, put a cushion under her arm, and seizing the large scissors that his orderly aunt kept hanging on a hook at the side of the fire, cut her jacket carefully along the seam from wrist to shoulder. She wore a very mannish, coloured flannel shirt. This sleeve, too, he cut, and disclosed a thin arm, extremely brown nearly to the elbow, and very fair and white above, but the elbow was distorted and discoloured; a bad break, Eloquent decided, with mischief at the joint as well probably. He had studied first-aid at cla.s.ses, and he shook his head.
It did not occur to him to call the little servant to a.s.sist him. With his head turned shyly away he removed the young lady's hat and loosened her heavy furs. Then he flew for water and a sponge, thinking the while of her curious Christian name "Elsmaria." She looked pathetically young and helpless lying there. Eloquent forgot her militancy and her shocking language in his sorrow over her pain. As he knelt down by the sofa to sponge her face he started so violently that he upset a great deal of the water he had brought.
It was already growing dark, but even in the dim light as he looked closely at Miss b.u.t.termish without her hat, her likeness to Mary Ffolliot was striking. She wore her hair cropped close. "Could she have been in prison?" thought Eloquent, remembering how light she was when he carried her in.
With hands that trembled somewhat he pushed the wet curly hair back from the forehead so like Mary's. There were the same wide brow, the same white eyelids with the sweeping arch and thick dark lashes, the delicate high-bridged nose and well-cut, kindly mouth; the same pure oval in the line of cheek and chin.
Certainly an extraordinary resemblance. She must at least be a cousin; and, in spite of his sincere commiseration of the young lady's suffering, he felt a jubilant thrill in the reflection that this accident must bring him into further contact with the Ffolliots.
There was no brandy in the house, for both he and his aunt were total abstainers, so he fetched a gla.s.s of water and held it to the young lady's lips as she opened her eyes. She drank eagerly, looked searchingly at him, then she glanced down at her bare arm and the cut sleeve. The colour flooded her face, and with real horror in her voice she exclaimed, "You've never gone and _cut_ that jacket!"
"I had to. Your arm ought to be set at once, and goodness knows where the doctor may be to-day. You'd best be taken to Marlehouse Infirmary, I think; it's a bad break."
"But it's her best coat, quite new," Miss b.u.t.termish persisted fretfully, "quite new; you'd no business to go and cut it. I promised to take such care of it."
"I'm very sorry," Eloquent replied meekly; "but it really was necessary that your arm should be seen to at once, and I dared not jerk it about."
"Can it be mended, do you think, so that it won't show?" There was real concern in her voice.
"I'm sure of it," he answered, much astonished at this fuss about a coat at such a moment; "I cut it carefully along the seam."
"I say," exclaimed Miss b.u.t.termish, "I must get out of this"--and she prepared to swing her feet off the sofa--rather big feet, he noted, in stout golfing shoes. Forcibly he held her legs down.
"Please don't," he implored. "You must not jar that arm any more than can be helped. Shall I go up to the Manor House and get them to send a conveyance for you?--you really mustn't think of walking, and I don't know where else we could get one to-day."
Miss b.u.t.termish closed her eyes and frowned heavily. Then in a faint voice--
"How do you know I'm from the Manor House?"
"Well, for one thing, you're very like . . . the family."
"_All_ of them?" she asked anxiously.
"You are very like certain members of the family I have seen," he said cautiously. "May I go? I'll send the servant to sit with you----"
Miss b.u.t.termish clutched at him violently with her left hand, exclaiming, "No, no--don't send anybody yet; I must get out of this beastly skirt before anyone comes. . . . Look here, you're a very decent chap and I'm sorry I rotted you--will you play the game when you go home and hide these beastly clothes before anyone comes? The blessed thing hooks at the side, see; it's coming undone now; if you'll just give a pull I can wriggle out without getting up. . . . Oh, confound . . . I'm Buz, you know, I dressed up on purpose to rot you . . . but if you _could_ not mention it . . ."
Her head fell back and she nearly fainted again from pain. Eloquent divested her of her skirt, and with it the last remnant of Miss b.u.t.termish disappeared--a slim slip of a boy in running shorts, with bare knees, and a gym-belt lay p.r.o.ne on the sofa, very pale and shivering.
In absolute silence Eloquent folded the skirt and the coat, and laying hat and furs on the top, placed them in a neat heap on a chair in the corner.
He went to his bedroom, fetched the eiderdown off his own bed and covered the boy with it. As he was tucking in the eiderdown at the side Buz put out a cold left hand and held him by the coat sleeve, saying curiously--"Are you in an awful bait? are you going to be really stuffy about it?"
Eloquent looked straight into the quizzical grey eyes that held his.
The boy's voice belied the eyes, for it was anxious.
"Of course not," he said quite seriously, "I'm only too sorry your trick should have had such a disastrous conclusion. Who shall I ask for up at the house, and what shall I do with the things?"
"Oh take them with you--could you? Give 'em to Fusby, and tell him to put them in their rooms--the furs are granny's. He'll do it and never say a word; decent old chap, Fusby. I say, I'm awfully sorry to be such a nuisance. I'm certain I could walk home if you'll let me."
"That you certainly must not do, I'll go at once. Here's the hand-bell. I'll tell the maid that she is to come if you ring. I expect my aunt will be in directly--I'll be as quick as I can--cheer up."
Eloquent bustled about putting the remains of Miss b.u.t.termish tidily into his suit-case while the grey eyes followed his movements with amused interest.
"I'm most awfully obliged," said Buz in a very low voice; "I do feel such an a.s.s lying here."
There was a murmur of voices in the pa.s.sage. The front door was closed with quiet decorum and the little sitting-room grew darker. Two big tears rolled over and Buz sniffed helplessly, for his handkerchief was in the pocket of the jacket lately worn with such gay impudence by Miss Elsmaria b.u.t.termish.
CHAPTER XIII
THE THIN END
Eloquent rode the bicycle left outside by Miss b.u.t.termish, rode carefully, bearing the suit-case in his left hand. The village was quite deserted and he reached the great gates of the Manor House unchallenged. The gates stood open and he entered the dark shadowy drive without having encountered a living soul. Lights gleamed from the lower windows of the house, but the porch was in darkness. He rang loudly, and Fusby, the old manservant, switched on the light as he opened the door and revealed a square, oak-panelled room and the warning cards. The inner door leading to the hall was closed, but the sound of cheerful voices reached Eloquent.
Fusby stood expectant, and in spite of his imperturbable and almost benedictory manner he looked mildly surprised.
"Is Mrs Ffolliot at home?" Eloquent asked rather breathlessly.
"She is, sir," Fusby answered, but in a tone that subtly conveyed the unspoken "to some people," fixing his eyes the while on the suitcase.
"Do you think she could speak to me here?" Eloquent continued humbly.
"I think not, sir; the mistress at present is dispensing tea to the fam'ly. She does not as a rule see people at the door. Can I take a message?"
"I fear I must disturb her," said Eloquent, conscious all the time that Fusby's mild gaze was concentrated on the suit-case. "One of her sons"--for the life of him he couldn't remember the boy's ridiculous name--"has broken his arm."