书城公版A Phyllis Of The Sierras
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第19章

Mainwaring, and as you suggest, a very proper return for their kindness.And, being here, it will come quite naturally for me to take up the affair again."

"And--I say, Richardson."

"Yes, sir?"

"As these ladies are rather short-handed in their domestic service,you know, perhaps you'd better not stay to luncheon or dinner, but go on to the Summit House--it's only a mile or two farther--and come back here this evening.I shan't want you until then."

"Certainly!" stammered Richardson."I'll just take leave of the ladies!"

"It's not at all necessary," said Mainwaring, quietly; "you would only disturb them in their household duties.I'll tell them what I've done with you, if they ask.You'll find your stick and hat in the passage, and you can leave the veranda by these steps.By the way, you had better manage at the Summit to get some one to bring my traps from here to be forwarded to Sacramento to-morrow.I'll want a conveyance, or a horse of some kind, myself, for I've given up walking for a while; but we can settle about that to-night.

Come early.Good morning?"

He accompanied his thoroughly subjugated countryman--who, however,far from attempting to reassert himself, actually seemed easier and more cheerful in his submission--to the end of the veranda, and watched him depart.As he turned back, he saw the pretty figure of Louise Macy leaning against the doorway.How graceful and refined she looked in that ****** morning dress!What wonder that she was admired by Greyson, by Johnson, and by that Spaniard!--no, by Jove,it was SHE that wanted to marry him!

"What have you sent away Mr. Richardson for?" asked the young girl,with a half-reproachful, half-mischievous look in her bright eyes.

"I packed him off because I thought it was a little too hard on you and Mrs. Bradley to entertain him without help."

"But as he was OUR guest, you might have left that to us," said Miss Macy.

"By Jove!I never thought of that," said Mainwaring, coloring in consternation."Pray forgive me, Miss Macy--but you see I knew the man, and could say it, and you couldn't."

"Well, I forgive you, for you look really so cut up," said Louise,laughing."But I don't know what Jenny will say of your disposing of her conquest so summarily."She stopped and regarded him more attentively."Has he brought you any bad news? if so, it's a pity you didn't send him away before.He's quite spoiling our cure."

Mainwaring thought bitterly that he had."But it's a cure for all that, Miss Macy," he said, with an attempt at cheerfulness, "and being a cure, you see, there's no longer an excuse for my staying here.I have been ****** arrangements for leaving here to-morrow."

"So soon?"

"Do you think it soon, Miss Macy?" asked Mainwaring, turning pale in spite of himself.

"I quite forgot--that you were here as an invalid only, and that we owe our pleasure to the accident of your pain."

She spoke a little artificially, he thought, yet her cheeks had not lost their pink bloom, nor her eyes their tranquillity.Had he heard Minty's criticism he might have believed that the organic omission noticed by her was a fact.

"And now that your good work as Sister of Charity is completed,you'll be able to enter the world of gayety again with a clear conscience," said Mainwaring, with a smile that he inwardly felt was a miserable failure."You'll be able to resume your morning rides, you know, which the wretched invalid interrupted."

Louise raised her clear eyes to his, without reproach, indignation,or even wonder.He felt as if he had attempted an insult and failed.

"Does my cousin know you are going so soon?" she asked finally.

"No, I did not know myself until to-day.You see," he added hastily, while his honest blood blazoned the lie in his cheek,"I've heard of some miserable business affairs that will bring me back to England sooner that I expected."

"I think you should consider your health more important than any mere business," said Louise."I don't mean that you should remain HERE," she added with a hasty laugh, "but it would be a pity, now that you have reaped the benefit of rest and taking care of yourself, that you should not make it your only business to seek it elsewhere."

Mainwaring longed to say that within the last half hour, living or dying had become of little moment to him; but he doubted the truth or efficacy of this timeworn heroic of passion.He felt, too, that anything he said was a mere subterfuge for the real reason of his sudden departure.And how was he to question her as to that reason?In escaping from these subterfuges--he was compelled to lie again.With an assumption of changing the subject, he said calmly, "Richardson thought he had met you before--in Menlo Park, I think."

Amazed at the evident irrelevance of the remark, Louise said coldly, that she did not remember having seen him before.

"I think it was at a Mr. Johnson's--or WITH a Mr. Johnson--or perhaps at one of those Spanish ranches--I think he mentioned some name like Pico!"

Louise looked at him wonderingly for an instant, and then gave way to a frank, irrepressible laugh, which lent her delicate but rather set little face all the color he had missed.Partially relieved by her unconcern, and yet mortified that he had only provoked her sense of the ludicrous, he tried to laugh also.

"Then, to be quite plain," said Louise, wiping her now humid eyes,"you want me to understand that you really didn't pay sufficient attention to hear correctly!Thank you; that's a pretty English compliment, I suppose."

"I dare say you wouldn't call it 'philandering'?"

"I certainly shouldn't, for I don't know what 'philandering'means."

Mainwaring could not reply, with Richelieu, "You ought to know";nor did he dare explain what he thought it meant, and how he knew it.Louise, however, innocently solved the difficulty.

"There's a country song I've heard Minty sing," she said."It runs--

Come, Philander, let us be a-marchin',Every one for his true love a-sarchin'

Choose your true love now or never. . . .

Have you been listening to her also?"