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Then the largest tear I have ever seen brimmed, trickled and dropped.
On leaving the house she had dared me to notice anything about her eyes; but it is another matter when a tear so engulfs a ladybird that it is a question whether the creature's pretty wing-cases will ever be the same again. I had to speak after that.
"Cheer up, Jennie," I said softly.
She gulped. "Why were you so horrid and cross with him!"
"This morning in the shop?"
"Yes."
"Well ... I fancied he'd played me rather a mean trick."
"He didn't!" she flashed. "I'm sure he wouldn't do anything mean!"
"Then say a trick I didn't expect from him."
"I heard him tell the woman in the shop he was waiting for you, and--and you walked straight past him without looking at him!"
"It might have been better if you'd done the same, Jennie."
"Did he come to fetch you out last night?"
"I took him out."
"Is he the--the Monsieur Arnaud the maid meant?"
"That's the name he goes by."
"Isn't it his name?"
"I suppose it is."
"Then why do you say it like that?... I want you to tell me about him, Uncle George, please," she ordered me.
I too wanted to do that; but I found it anything but simple. I might have told her that he was simply a vagrant, just a fellow who wandered about sketching, here to-day and gone to-morrow. That would have been perfectly true. But it would have been equally untrue. That was no picture of Derry. She had seen a far, far truer picture of him when she had turned her head towards him in the toyshop.
"Well, of course that _is_ why I asked you to come for a walk this afternoon, Jennie," I said slowly. "As a matter of fact M'sieur Arnaud's had a very curious experience that I can't very well tell you about. The result of this is that he's--a rather odd sort of person to know. In fact he's better not known. He wanted me to introduce him to your mother, and I told him I'd rather not do so. Anyway he's going away soon."
"That doesn't sound like a horrid sort of person," she commented. "Is that why he came last night--to be introduced to mother?"
"No, he came for something quite different last night."
"What?"
Here again I might have answered with a certain appearance of truth that he had come for money, though it was his own money; but that too would be to misrepresent him. The cigales crackled loudly. I suppose the ladybird was all right again, for it was nowhere to be seen. I mused, and then turned to her.
"You said yesterday that you wished you were back in England, Jennie," I said. "How would you like to come and stay with me in Surrey for a bit?"
"No thank you, Uncle George. Thank you very much."
"It's quite jolly there in its way, and I dare say I could get somebody quite nice to be with you."
"I should like to some day, of course," she said, "but not just now, if you don't think it horrid of me." And she added, "I love being here."
"Since yesterday?"
She did not reply.
Of course I had not expected for a moment that she would say Yes, even had I made up my own mind to abandon Derry to his fate, which I had not done. Yet a thought flashed into my mind. Were I to return to England, taking Jennie with me, Derry would still not be unlooked-after. The moment I left, Julia Oliphant, I felt certain, would fly to his side.
And if Jennie would not come with me, what would the impossible combination be then?... My half-formed thought became a sudden picture, a contrast, vivid and arresting, between two women--the one who experimented with her dress and wanted to know what a c.o.c.ktail tasted like, the other this fragrant hawthorn-bough by my side. And between the two rose his grave and sunbrowned face....
I stared at my picture, fascinated. The three of them together!
Exquisite and horrible complication! Suppose it should ever come to that!
Then the picture vanished, and I saw the translucent untwinkling sea.
The roofs of distant St Lunaire made a pale cl.u.s.ter of brightness. The wind rippled the edges of the satiny poppies.
All at once she clutched my sleeve with both her hands and buried her face against it. It broke, the storm that had been pent up for nearly twenty hours. As the marguerites exposed their yearning golden hearts, so she kept nothing back, laid bare her own heart to the sun that was its lord.
"Oh, what shall I do, what shall I do! I can't bear it; it's too--too--oh, tell me what to do, Uncle George! I know he's my darling!
I don't want to live without him! If he goes away I don't know what will happen! It's all since yesterday--I didn't sleep a wink--I went out into the garden when they'd all gone and stood in the same place. Then I heard father moving about and hid.... And then this morning when you were horrid to him--no, you weren't horrid, dear Uncle George--I know it's all a stupid mistake--I love him! I don't care if he doesn't speak a word of English. I want him here now! I want to be with him! Please, please introduce him to mother. She loves French people. And he did ask you to, so he can't be horrid. I'm sure he didn't mean to play you a mean trick. There must be a mistake. I'm sure he can explain if you'll let him. Dear, dear Uncle George--do, do!"
I put my hand on her hat, which was as much of her as I could see.
"Don't look at me, please--I don't want to move for just a minute."
"As long as you like, my dear."
"Oh, I'll do anything if you only will! Where is he staying? I never saw him in Dinard before. Where is he staying? Does he live here all the time? I could see him if you came too, couldn't I? And I don't care what sort of clothes he wears ... do, do, Uncle George!"
Then she straightened herself, and looked full at me through her flooded eyes. She was suddenly imperious.
"Now tell me something else, please. When you went off with him last night. Did he say anything about me?"
Perhaps I did not lie with sufficient prompt.i.tude. "About you? No, of course not."
She looked accusingly at me; she caught her breath.
"Oh, how _can_ you say that! I don't believe it! He did!"
"But he couldn't even see you in the dark!"
"It wasn't dark--it wasn't a _bit_ dark--it was quite light enough to see anybody--_you_ saw him----"
"Well, he's going away, and there's an end of it."
Like a rainbow was the light that woke in her lately showering eyes. Up went the soft lip, out peeped the pearls. Back, back from their golden hearts lay the petals of the marguerites.