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And certainly no one else knew, as Winthrop found when occasionally, he being more lost than usual (on the barrens he was always lost to a certain degree, and liked it), he would stop his horse to ask of a pa.s.sing cracker in what direction some diverging trail would take him, in case he should follow it. The cracker, astride his sorry pony, would stare at him open-mouthed; but he never knew. Packed into the two-wheeled cart behind him, all his family, with their strange clay-colored complexions and sunburnt light hair, would stare also; and they never knew. They were a gentle, mummy-like people, too indolent even to wonder why a stranger should wish to know; they stared at him with apathetic eyes, and then pa.s.sed on, not once turning their heads, even the children, for a second look. But as a general thing Winthrop rode on without paying heed to the direction he was taking; he could always guide himself back after a fas.h.i.+on by the pocket-compa.s.s he carried.
One afternoon Winthrop, out on the barren, saw in the distance a horse and phaeton. There was no phaeton in all that country but his aunt's. He rode across to see who was in it. To his surprise it was Garda; she was leaning indolently back on the cus.h.i.+oned seat, the reins held idly in her hand, an immense bunch of roses fastened in her belt. The horse was one he did not know.
"Garda!--this you!" he said.
"Yes," she answered, laughing at his astonishment. "Everything was so dull at the house that I thought I _must_ do something. So I did this."
"I wasn't aware that you knew how to drive?"
"This isn't driving."
"No, I hardly think it is," he answered, looking at her reclining figure and the loose reins. "Where are you going?"
"Oh, I don't know."
"Whose horse have you?--if I may ask another question."
"Madam Giron's; I sent Pablo to borrow it, as I did not like to take your aunt's."
"Then they know what you are doing?"
"Pablo knows."
"And Margaret?"
"No, Margaret doesn't know. I should have told her, of course, if I could have seen her, or rather, if I could have seen her, I should not have come out at all. But that was the trouble--I couldn't see her; she has been shut up in Mrs. Rutherford's room ever since early this morning, and there's no prospect, according to Looth, of seeing her until to-morrow."
"Yes, I feared my aunt was going to have one of her bad days."
"Of course I'm sorry, but that doesn't make the hours any shorter, that I know of; there was no one to speak to; even you were away. _You_ have the advantage of being able to leave the house whenever you like, and staying out forever."
"Well, I've turned up now."
"I don't want you now; I've 'turned up' myself. Where are you going, may I ask in my turn?"
"Going to drive you home."
"Not if you intend to tie that horse of yours at the back of the phaeton, where he will nibble my shoulders all the way. But I'm not going home yet; haven't I told you how dull it was there? I'm going on."
"I don't know about letting you go on; I'm not satisfied with the look of that horse."
"Yes, he's the wildest one Madam Giron has; but that isn't very wild,"
said Garda, in a tone of regret.
"You are already over four miles from East Angels--"
"Delightful!"
"--and if you won't turn round, I shall have to follow you on horseback; I shouldn't have a clear conscience otherwise."
"Oh, have a clear conscience, by all means."
But she did not long like this arrangement; the sound of another horse behind made Madam Giron's horse restless, so that she could not keep the reins lying idle, as she liked.
"Let your horse go, and come and drive me," she said.
"Let him go? Where?"
"Home, I suppose."
"He wouldn't go; he's an animal of intelligence, and of course has observed that he could lead a nomadic life here perfectly, with constant summer, and water, and--but I can't say much for the gra.s.s. I think, however, that I can arrange it so that he shall not trouble you." And dismounting, he changed and lengthened some straps; then seating himself in the phaeton beside her, he took the reins, his own horse trotting along docielly at his side of the phaeton, fastened by a long line.
"It's caravanish," said Garda. "But I'll allow it because I want you to drive; it's more amusing than driving myself."
"More lazy, you mean."
"Yes; I ran away to be lazy."
"For a variety?"
She did not take this up, but, leaning back still further, half closed her eyes.
"Have you often been out in this way on the barrens, driving yourself?"
he went on.
"This is the first time I have ever driven--on the barrens or anywhere else."
"Yet you come out alone, and with this restless horse! I never knew you to do such a thing before."
"That only shows how short a time you have known me; I always like to do things I have never done before."
The phaeton rolled on towards the west--on and on, as she would not let him turn. But he did not wish to turn now; they had reached a part of the barren which he had not visited, though he had ridden to much greater distances both towards the north and the south. Here were wider pools; and here also was a sluggish narrow stream; far off on the left rose the long dark line of the great cypresses on the edge of a swamp.
The sluggish stream at length crossed their road, or rather their road essayed to cross the sluggish stream; but the dark water looked deep, there were no tracks of wheels on the little descent to show that any one had tried the ford lately--say within the last twenty years.
Winthrop hesitated.
"Go on," said Garda.
"But I might have to swim with you to the other sh.o.r.e."
"Nothing I should like better."
"To see me soaked?"
"To see you excited."
"That wouldn't excite me; I should only be wet and depressed. In any case it is time for us to turn back."
"No, I've set my heart upon going at least as far as that ridge." And she indicated a little rise of land on the other side of the stream, whose summit was covered thickly with Dr. Kirby's andromedas, and s.h.i.+ning laurel, sprays of yellow jessamine, bright with flowers, pus.h.i.+ng through the darker green and springing into the air. "There's a bridge,"
she added.