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'Well,' said Hazel, pulling a grape from the bunch. 'Perhaps my misleading powers may be equal to that. This one is quite good--and not at all sour,' she added, with a flash of her eyes--which, however, went to Mrs. Byw.a.n.k. 'What do you want, Dingee?'
Dingee advanced and laid a card on the table.
'Say I am at breakfast. I cannot be expected to keep awake all night and all day too.'
'Permit me to inquire,' said Rollo, as he also attacked the grapes, but not looking at them, 'whether you did your share of growling this morning? I am sure no one had more cause.'
'No,' said the girl, laughing. 'I feel that I have a great reserve in store for somebody. Well, Dingee?'
A card with a written message this time. Hazel looked at it, drew her brows together, and, seizing a pencil, wrote a vigorous 'No,' across the lines.
'For somebody,' Rollo repeated. 'I am not sure that we got hold of the right delinquent. After all, peaches are the best thing after waffles and coffee. Try that.' And he placed a fine one alongside of Wych Hazel's plate.
'The thing is,' said Hazel, 'that unless you can growl with authority, n.o.body marks you.'
'General Merrick and Major Seaton, Missee Hazel, ma'am,' said her dark retainer, coming back.
'I thought I told you I was at breakfast?' said Hazel, in a tone of displeasure.
'Yes'm--but the Major he bound to know 'bout sumfin Missee Hazel left onsartin last night. 'Spect he'd like a keep-sake, too,' said Dingee, laying down another card. 'Mas' May put _his_ away mighty safe.'
If ever his little mistress was near being furious, I think it was then. Eyes and cheeks were in a flame.
'I left nothing uncertain last night!' she said, turning upon him. 'Major Seaton knows that, if he will take the trouble to remember. And Dingee, if you bring me another message--of any sort--before I whistle for you, I will put you out of service for a month. Now go!'
'Is that the way you punish unlucky servitors?' said Rollo, looking much amused.
She had come back to her grapes, giving them the closest attention, feeling shy and nervous and disturbed to any point; but now fun got the upper hand. So first she bit her lips, and then--the laugh must come! Clear and ringing and mirthsome, as if there was never a growl in all the world.
'That is one way,' she said.
'Sounds peaceable,' said Rollo demurely, though smiling; 'but I don't know! I am afraid it might prove very severe. What is the appeal from one of your sentences?'
'There is none. I am a Mede and a Persian combined. Byo, why don't you give Mr. Rollo some cream with his peaches, and postpone me till another time?'
'She'll have to postpone me, too,' said Rollo. 'I must go.
Shall I come for you at four o'clock? It will be too hot, I am afraid, before; and we have a good way to go.'
CHAPTER XXIX.
JEANNIE DEANS.
It wanted some time of four o'clock yet, when Miss Kennedy came quietly into Mr. Falkirk's study and sat down by the window.
'Are you at leisure, sir?' she said, intertwining her fingers in a careless sort of way among the vines that hung there.
'My dear, I have been at leisure so long that I wish I could say I was busy. But I am not busy. What is it, Miss Hazel?'
'Only a few business questions, sir,' she said, attending to the vines. 'Will you let me ride with Major Seaton on Thursday?'
'Would you like to go with him?'
'I always like to ride, sir.'
'You have not a horse yet, my dear; that is a difficulty. I do not know this Major Seaton's horses--nor himself.'
'Quite reliable, sir--according to him. Will you let me ride with Mr. Rollo this afternoon?'
'I suppose there is no good reason to be a.s.signed against that,' said Mr. Falkirk, rather growingly, and after a pause.
It sounded a little as if he would have liked it if the fact had been otherwise.
'You consider Wednesday a more safe day than Thursday, sir?'
'I am not superst.i.tious, Miss Hazel. The only thing I ever was in fear of is enchantment!'
'Well sir,--you have doubtless studied the case enough to know which is the more "enchanting" of the two,' said Miss Hazel, daringly. 'Shall I give Mr. May a ride on Friday?'
'Will you have a horse on Friday?'
'My horse seems to be a slow one, by the time it takes him to come,' said Wych Hazel. 'Will he be here this afternoon, Mr.
Falkirk?'
'I suppose Rollo will see to that,' said Mr. Falkirk, beginning to turn about some papers that were on the table.
'Yes, sir,' said his ward, with her small fingers still playing among the vines; 'I suppose he will. It is rather Mr.
Rollo's style. But that makes it slightly awkward for me, Mr.
Falkirk.'
'In what respect, Miss Hazel?'
'Most of these other gentlemen think themselves qualified to "see to" so small a consignment as myself; and not being posted as to your scale of enchantment and danger, may feel it the reverse of a compliment to meet me riding with Mr. Rollo, on his horse.'
'Well, my dear, what do you wish me to do in the matter? You are not obliged to go with Rollo, that I know of. Do you wish to compliment these other small fry?'
'I want to ride, Mr. Falkirk, I believe I should go with Mr.
Simms--if he were the only chance; and that is saying a good deal. However, I can throw all the responsibility on you, sir; that is one comfort.'
'It won't break me,' said Mr. Falkirk; 'that is another. Why do they all come for you so, this hot weather!'
But she laughed at that, and went off out of the room.
When she came down to the side entrance of Chickaree some hour or two later, she found her side-saddle going on an Arab- looking brown mare, and Rollo playing hostler. His own horse standing by was clearly also a new comer; a light bay, nervous and fidgety, for he did not keep still one minute; ears, hoofs, eyes and head were constantly and restlessly s.h.i.+fting.
The brown mare stood still, only lifting her pretty head and looking as Wych Hazel came out. She ran down the steps.
'I got leave!' she said, gleefully,--'did you?'--then stopped, surveying operations. 'But was there n.o.body about the place to do that but Mr. Rollo?
The quiet negative which answered this covered more ground than the question. Rollo finished his work carefully, with one or two looking on; mounted the little lady, and went to his own horse. Before mounting, here, he seemed to hold some conversation with the creature; caressed him; stood in front and spoke to him, patting and stroking his head; then in another moment was on his back.