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"Well, here we are across the Rubicon," she said at last.
He nodded.
"Are you sorry?"
"No, not in the least. I'm more astonished than anything else at the ridiculous simplicity of my emanc.i.p.ation. Yesterday at this hour I was a highly respectable if slightly pampered person with a shrewd sense of my own importance in the economic and social scheme; to-day I'm a mere biped--an instinct on legs, with nothing to recommend me but an amiable disposition and an abnormal appet.i.te.
"You've made progress," he laughed lazily. "Yesterday you lisped knowingly of devil-wagons. You weren't even a biped. I'll admit it's something to have discovered the possession of legs."
"I do. And it's something more to have discovered the possession of an appet.i.te."
"And still something more to discover a means to gratify it," he grunted.
If he sought to intimidate her, he failed of his object, for she only laughed at him.
"Oh, I shall not starve. Presently you shall hear me practice with my orchestra. Just now, _mon ami_, I'm too delightfully sleepy to think of doing anything else."
"Sleep, then."
He laid his coat on the rock, and she sank back upon it, but not to close her eyes. They were turned on a squadron of clouds which sailed in the wide bay between the forest and the hilltop. Markham, leaning on an elbow, puffed at his pipe in silence. She turned her head and looked at him.
"It's curious--" she began, and then pa.s.sed.
"What is--curious?"
She laughed.
"Curious with what little ceremony I threw myself on your mercy; curious that you've been so tolerant with me; curious that--you've no curiosity."
"I never believe in being curious," he laughed. "When you're ready, you'll tell me and not before.
"About what?"
"About young Armistead, for instance."
"We disagreed. He insisted on marrying me."
"That was tactless of him."
"You know it was only a trial engagement, and it _was_--a trial--to both of us."
Markham grinned.
"You've relieved my mind of one burden, at least," he said. "I like Reggie. He's a nice boy. But I haven't any humor to find him poking around in these bushes with a shotgun." "Oh, there's no danger of that," she replied demurely, oblivious of his humor. "Reggie and I have parted."
Markham's eyes were turned upon the clouds. "That's rather a pity--in a way," he said quietly. "I thought you were quite suited to each other. But then--" and he surprised a curious look in her yes "--if you were going to marry Reggie, you see, you couldn't be here--and I would be the loser."
"I don't see that that would have made the slightest difference," she replied rather tartly, "provided I had not married him."
"Oh, don't you?" he finished with a smile.
"No, I don't. And I don't believe you when you way that you think Reggie and I were sited to each other. Because if you thought I was the kind of girl to be satisfied with Reggie, you wouldn't have thought it worth while to make a vagabond of me."
His brows drew downward. "I haven't made a vagabond of you--not yet."
She examined his face steadily.
"You mean--that you don't believe me to be sincere?"
He didn't reply at once.
"I won't quibble with you, Hermia," he said in a moment. "You've paid me a pretty compliment by coming with me out here. But I'm not going to let it blind my judgment. You were hopelessly bored--back there.
You've admitted it. You felt the need of some other form of amus.e.m.e.nt--so you chose this. That's all."
Hermia straightened and sat with her hands clasped around her knees, looking at vacancy. "That's unkind of you," she said quietly.
"I don't mean it to be unkind," he went on softly. "I don't deny the genuineness of your impulse. But you mustn't forget that you and I have grown up in different schools. I'm selfish in my way as you are in yours. I choose this life because I love it better than anything else, because it's my idea of contentment. I've approached it thoughtfully and with a great deal of respect, as a result of some years of patient and unsuccessful experiment with other forms of existence. That's the reason why I'm a little jealous for it, a little suspicious of your sudden conversion."
[Ill.u.s.tration: "Even Clarissa stopped her grazing long enough to look up."]
"You have no right to doubt my sincerity--not yet," she said.
"No," slowly. "Not yet. I'm only warning you that it isn't going to be easy--warning you that you will be placed in positions that may be unpleasant to you, when our relations may be questioned--"
"I've considered that," quickly. "I'm prepared for that. I will do what is required of me."
He took her hand and held it for a moment in his own, but she would not look at him.
"Hermia--"
"What, Philidor?"
"You're not angry?"
"Not in the least. I'm not a fool--"
Suddenly she sprang down the rock away from him, and, before he knew what she was about, had fastened her "orchestra" around her and was making the air hideous with sound. He sat up, swinging his long legs over the edge of the rock, watching her and laughing at the futile efforts of her members to achieve a concert. Even Clarissa stopped her grazing long enough to look up, ears erect, eying the musician in grave surprise, and then, with a contemptuous flirt of her tail, went on with her repast.
"Everyone knows a donkey has no soul for music," laughed Hermia, in a breathless pause between efforts.
"Meaning me?"
"Meaning both of you," said Hermia. "Wait a moment."
She tuned her mandolin, and, neglecting the harmonica, in a moment drew forth some chords and then sang:
"Sur le pont d'Avignon L'on y danse, l'on y danse, Sur le pont d'Avignon L'on y danse tout en rond."