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"You're not, indeed," agreed Sara warmly.
"And your tone implies 'thanks be,'" he supplemented with a faint smile. "Oh, well," he went on ungraciously, "stay if you like--so long as you don't expect me to stay with you."
Sara hastily disclaimed any such desire, and, lifting his cap, he turned and strode away into the rain.
Another ten minutes crawled by, and still the rain came down as persistently as though it intended never to cease again. Sara fidgeted, and walked across impatiently to the open front of the summer-house, staring up moodily at the heavy clouds. They showed no signs of breaking, and she was just about to resume her weary waiting on the seat within the shelter, when quick steps sounded to her left, and Garth Trent reappeared, carrying an umbrella and with a man's overcoat thrown over his arm.
"It's going to rain for a good two hours yet," he said abruptly. "You'd better come up to the house."
Sara gazed at him in silent amazement; the invitation was so totally unexpected that for the moment she had no answer ready.
"Unless," he added sneeringly, misinterpreting her silence, "you're afraid of the proprieties?"
"I'm far more afraid of taking cold," she replied promptly, preparing to evacuate the summer-house.
"Here, put this on," he said gruffly, holding out the coat he had brought with him. "There's no object in getting any wetter than you must."
He helped her into the coat, b.u.t.toning it carefully under her chin, his dexterous movements and quiet solicitude contrasting curiously with the detachment of his manner whilst performing these small services. He was so altogether business-like and unconcerned that Sara felt not unlike a child being dressed by a conscientious but entirely disinterested nurse.
When he had fastened the last b.u.t.ton of the long coat, which came down to her heels, he unfurled the umbrella and held it over her.
"Keep close to me, please," he said briefly, nor did he volunteer any further remark until they had accomplished the journey to the house, and were standing together in the old-fas.h.i.+oned hall which evidently served him as a living room.
Here Trent relieved her of the coat, and while she stood warming her feet at the huge log-fire, blazing half-way up the chimney, he rang for his servant and issued orders for tea to be brought, as composedly as though visitors of the feminine persuasion were a matter of everyday occurrence.
Sara, catching a glimpse of Judson's almost petrified face of astonishment as he retreated to carry out his master's instructions, and with a vivid recollection of her last encounter with him, almost laughed out loud.
"Please sit down," said Trent. "And"--with a glance towards her feet--"you had better take off those wet shoes."
There was something in his curt manner of giving orders--rather as though he were a drill-sergeant, Sara reflected--that aroused her to opposition. She held out her feet towards the blaze of the fire.
"No, thank you," she replied airily. "They'll dry like this."
As she spoke, she glanced up and encountered a sudden flash in his eyes like the keen flicker of a sword-blade. Without vouchsafing any answer, he knelt down beside her and began to unlace her shoes, finally drawing them off and laying them sole upwards, in front of the fire to dry. Then he pa.s.sed his hand lightly over her stockinged feet.
"Wringing wet!" he remarked curtly. "Those silk absurdities must come off as well."
Sara sprang up.
"No!" she said firmly. "They shall not!"
He looked at her, again with that glint of mocking amus.e.m.e.nt with which he had first greeted her presence in his summer-house.
"You'd rather have a bad cold?" he suggested.
"Ever so much rather!" retorted Sara hardily.
He gave a short laugh, almost as though he could not help himself, and, with a shrug of his shoulders, turned and marched out of the room.
Left alone, Sara glanced about her in some surprise at the evidences of a cultivated taste and love of beauty which the room supplied. It was not quite the sort of abode she would have a.s.sociated with the grim, misanthropic type of man she judged her host to be.
The old-fas.h.i.+oned note, struck by the huge oaken beams supporting the ceiling and by the open hearth, had been retained throughout, and every detail--the blue willow-pattern china on the old oak dresser, the dimly l.u.s.trous pewter perched upon the chimney-piece, the silver candle-sconces thrusting out curved, gleaming arms from the paneled walls--was exquisite of its kind. It reminded her of the old hall at Barrow, where she and Patrick had been wont to sit and yarn together on winter evenings.
The place had a well-tended air, too, and Sara, who waged daily war against the slovenly shabbiness prevalent at Sunnyside, was all at once sensible of how desperately she had missed the quiet perfection of the service at Barrow. The nostalgia for her old home--the unquenchable, homesick longing for the _place_ that has held one's happiness--rushed over her in a overwhelming flood.
Wis.h.i.+ng she had never come to this house, which had so stirred old memories, she got up restlessly, driven by a sudden impulse to escape, just as the door opened to re-admit Garth Trent.
He gave her a swift, searching glance.
"Sit down again," he commanded. "There"--gravely depositing a towel and a pair of men's woolen socks on the floor beside her--"dry your feet and put those socks on."
He moved quickly away towards the window and remained there, with his back turned studiously towards her, while she obeyed his instructions.
When she had hung two very damp black silk stockings on the fire-dogs to dry, she flung a somewhat irritated glance at him over her shoulder.
"You can come back," she said in a small voice.
He came, and stood staring down at the two woolly socks protruding from beneath the short, tweed skirt. The suspicion of a smile curved his lips.
"They're several sizes too large," he observed. "Odd creatures you women are," he went on suddenly, after a brief silence. "You shy wildly at the idea of letting a man see the foot G.o.d gave you, but you've no scruples at all about letting any one see the selfishness that the devil's put into your hearts."
He spoke with a kind of savage contempt; it was as though the speech were tinged with some bitter personal memory.
Sara's eyes surveyed him calmly.
"I've no intention of making an exhibit of my heart," she observed mildly.
"It's wiser not, probably," he retorted disagreeably, and at that moment Judson came into the room and began to arrange the tea-table beside his master's chair.
"Put it over there," directed Trent sharply, indicating with a gesture that the table should be placed near his guest, and Judson, his face manifesting rather more surprise than is compatible with the wooden mask demanded of the well-trained servant, hastened to comply.
When he had readjusted the position of the tea-table, he moved quietly about the room, drawing the curtains and lighting the candles in their silver sconces, so that little pools of yellow light splashed down on to the smooth surface of the oak floor--waxed and polished till it gleamed like black ivory.
As he withdrew un.o.btrusively towards the door, Trent tossed him a further order.
"I shall want the car round in a couple of hours--at six," he said, and smiled straight into Sara's startled eyes.
CHAPTER IX
THE HERMIT'S Sh.e.l.l
Sara paused with the sugar-tongs poised above the Queen Anne bowl.
"Sugar?" she queried.
Trent regarded her seriously.
"One lump, please."