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"Will you marry me the first leave I get, if I live to get any?"
"I'll think about that."
He gave her the ring she had refused before. Such an absurd little ring, with its one big sapphire set with diamonds, and "no backing to it,"
Miles said.
And he gave her a very heavy bra.s.s-studded collar for William, and on the plate was engraved her name and address.
"You see," he explained, "Miss Ross would never really have him, and I'd like to think he was your dog. And here's his licence."
Then Miles took her right up in his arms and hugged her close, and set her gently down and left her.
That night he asked his uncle and a brother-officer to witness his will.
He had left most of his money among his relations, but twenty thousand pounds he had left to Meg absolutely, in the event of his being killed before they were married.
His uncle pointed out that there was nothing said about her possible marriage. "She'll be all the better for a little money of her own if she does marry," Miles said simply. "I don't want her to go mourning all her days, but I do want the capital tied up on her so that he couldn't waste it ... if he was an unfortunate sort of chap over money."
The Squire blew his nose.
"You see," Miles went on, "she's a queer little thing. If I left her too much, she'd refuse it altogether. Now I trust to you, Uncle Edward, to see that she takes this."
"I'll do my best, my boy, I'll do my best," said the Squire; "but I hope with all my soul you'll make settlements on her yourself before long."
"So do I, but you never can tell in war, you know. And we must always remember," Miles added with his broad, cheerful smile, "there's a good deal of target about me."
Miles wrote to the little Major, a very manly, straightforward letter, telling him what he had done, but swearing him to secrecy as regarded Meg.
He also wrote to Jan, and at the end, he said, "I am glad she is to be with you, because you really apreciate her."
The one "p" in "appreciate" fairly broke Jan down. It was so like Miles.
Meg, white-faced and taciturn, went back to Wren's End on Tuesday night.
The Squire and Lady Mary remained in town.
In answer to Jan's affectionate inquiries, Meg was brief and business-like. Yes; she had seen Miles several times. He was very busy.
No, she did not expect to see him again before ... he left. Yes; he was going with the First Army.
Jan asked no more questions, but was quietly, consistently kind. Meg was adorable with her children and surpa.s.sed herself in the telling of stories.
The First Army left England for Flanders with the silence of a shadow.
But Meg knew when it left.
That night, Jan woke about one o'clock, conscious of a queer sound that she could neither define nor locate.
She sat up in bed to listen, and arrived at the conclusion that it came from the day-nursery, which was below her room.
Tony was sleeping peacefully. Jan put on her dressing-gown and went downstairs. The nursery door was not shut, and a shaft of light shone through it into the dark hall. She pushed it open a little way and looked in.
Meg was sitting at the table, making muslin curtains as if her life depended on it. She wore her nightgown, and over it a queer little j.a.panese kimono of the green she loved. Her bare feet were pillowed upon William, who lay snoring peacefully under the table.
Her face was set and absorbed. A grave, almost stern, little face. And her rumpled hair, pushed back from her forehead, gave her the look of a Botticelli boy angel. It seemed to merge into tongues of flame where the lamplight caught it.
The window was wide open and the sudden opening of the door caused a draught, though the night was singularly still.
The lamp flickered.
Meg rested her hand on the handle of the sewing-machine, and the whirring noise stopped. She saw Jan in the doorway.
"Dear," said Jan gently, standing where she was, half in and half out of the door, "are you obliged to do this?"
Meg looked at her, and the dumb pain in that look went to Jan's heart.
Jan came towards her and drew the flaming head against her breast.
"I'm sorry I disturbed you," Meg murmured, "but I was _obliged_ to do something."
William stirred at the voices, and turning his head tried to lick the little bare feet resting on his back.
"Dearest, I really think you should go back to bed."
"Very well," said Meg meekly. "I'll go now."
"He," Jan continued, "would be very angry if he thought you were making curtains in the middle of the night."
"He," Meg retorted, "is absurd--and dear beyond all human belief."
"You see, he left you in my charge ... what will he say if--when he comes back--he finds a haggard Meg with a face like a threepenny-bit that has seen much service?"
"All right, I'm coming."
When Meg got back to her room, she went and leaned over little Fay sleeping in the cot beside her bed. Rosy and beautiful, warm and fragrant, the healthy baby brought comfort to Meg's stricken heart.
Perhaps--who knows--the tramp of that silent army sounded in little Fay's ears, for she stretched out her dimpled arms and caught Meg round the neck.
"Deah Med!" she sighed, and was still.
William stood at attention.
Presently Meg knelt down by her bed, and according to the established ritual he thrust his head into her encircling arm.
"Pray for your master, William," Meg whispered. "Oh, William, pray for your master as you never prayed before."
The strange tense days went on in August weather serene and lovely as had not been seen for years. Young men vanished from the country-side and older men wistfully wondered what they could do to help.
Peter came down from Sat.u.r.day to Monday, telling them that every officer and every civilian serving in India was recalled, but he had not yet learned when he was to sail.