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"What is it?" she said. Alwynne flushed and gathered up her flowers.
"It's your birthday," she apologised. "Look, Clare, aren't they darlings? I know you hate the school fusses, but your own birthday is important. Must you go on writing? It ought to be a holiday. May I get vases? Clare, I've such heaps to tell you, heaps and heaps, only I can't if you stand and look at me from such a long way off. Won't you sit down and smell your lilacs and let me talk to you comfortably?"
With enormous daring she put her arm round Clare and drew her on to the sofa. Clare made no resistance, but she sat stiffly, unsupported, still smiling, her eyes glittering oddly. But the acquiescence was enough for Alwynne and she slid to the ground and sat there sorting her flowers, her face level with Clare's knee, radiant and fearless again.
"I wonder what you will say? It's about Roger."
Clare raised her eyebrows.
"Oh, Clare, don't you know? I wrote such a lot about him from Dene."
"I am to remember every detail of your epistles?"
Alwynne looked up quaintly--
"I suppose there is a good deal to wade through. There always seems so much to say to you. Do you really mind?"
"You remind me that I've letters to finish."
Alwynne looked at the clock in sudden alarm.
"Am I awfully early? You did expect me to tea?"
"And you're never on the late side, are you?" Clare was still smiling, but her tone stung.
Alwynne got up quickly.
"I'm very sorry. Don't bother about me. I'll arrange these things while you finish. I didn't know you were really busy."
Clare put out her hand to the table behind her.
"I'm not busy. It seems one mayn't tease you since you've stayed at Dene."
Alwynne's eyes flashed.
"That's not fair. It's only that--that sometimes now you tease with needles--you used to tease with straws."
"So I had better not tease at all?"
"You know I don't mean that."
Clare lifted an opened parcel from the table. Alwynne recognised it and beamed. So Clare was pleased!
"If I tease with needles," she smoothed the paper and began to straighten the little heap of knotted string, "it's because you annoy me so often. Why did you send me this, Alwynne?"
She shrugged her shoulders.
"It was your birthday."
"I hate birthdays."
"I know." She spoke flatly, a lump in her throat. She might have known and saved herself her trouble and her pleasure.... She thought of the weeks of careful work and her delight in it; of the little sacrifices; the early rising; the walks with Roger curtailed and foregone....
Everybody had admired it, even Elsbeth had been sure that Clare would be charmed.... But Clare was angry.... Perhaps it was only that Clare did not understand.... She roused herself.
"Clare, it's different. Don't you remember?"
Clare gave no sign. She had disentangled the string and was retying it with elaborate care. Alwynne spoke with eyes fixed upon the dexterous fingers--
"You challenged me, don't you remember, Clare? When Marion showed us the things she was making for her sister's trousseau? And you said, would I ever have the patience, let alone my clumsy fingers? And I said I could, and you said you would wear all I made. And you did laugh at me so. So I thought I'd surprise you, and Elsbeth taught me the pillow-lace, and I was frightfully careful. It's taken months and months, and you love lace, and oh, Clare! I thought you would be a little bit pleased."
Her lip quivered; she was very childlike in her eagerness and disappointment.
"Did you think I should wear it?"
Alwynne dimpled.
"It's your size, Clare. Wouldn't you just try it?"
Clare looked at her inscrutably.
"You've taken great pains," she said. "I've been pleased to see it. But you've shown it to me and I've told you that you've learned to work well, so it has fulfilled its purpose, hasn't it? And now you'd better take it back with you. I'm sure you will be able to use it."
She held out the neatly fastened package.
Alwynne's face hardened. She put her hands behind her back.
"I shall do nothing of the kind," she said.
Clare did not seem ruffled.
"Of course you will. And you'll look very pretty in it." She smiled amiably.
But Alwynne's face did not relax.
"I won't take it back. I gave it to you. I made it to give you pleasure.
If you don't want it, burn it, give it to your maid, throw it away. Do you think I care what becomes of it? But I won't take it back. That is an insult. You say that to hurt me."
"You'll take it back because I wish you to."
"I won't. You shouldn't wish me to."
"You know I dislike presents."
"I never labelled it a present in my mind. You talk as if we were strangers."
"Perhaps, then," murmured Clare, still smiling, "I dislike the hint that you consider my wardrobe inadequate."
Alwynne caught her breath. For the last ten minutes she had been growing angry, not in her usual summer-tempest fas.h.i.+on, but with a slow, cold anger that was pain. She felt Clare's att.i.tude an indelicacy--the discussion a degradation. She sickened at its pettiness. She seemed to be defending, not herself, but some shrinking, weaponless creature, from attack and outrage.... The fight had been sudden, desperate; but at Clare's last sentence she knew herself vanquished, knew that the first love of her life had been most mortally wounded.