“Miss - Eliz - beth,” he panted, very hot of face and moist of brow, “must beg - the - favour - of few words with you.”
“With pleasure, Mr. Selwyn,” answered Lisbeth, radiant with smiles; “as many as you wish.” Forthwith Mr. Selwyn panted out his indictment against the desperadoes of the Black Death, while the Imp glanced apprehensively from him to Lisbeth and stole his hand furtively into mine.
“I should not have troubled you with this, Miss Elizabeth,” Selwyn ended, “but that I would not have you think me neglectful of an appointment, especially with you.”
“Indeed, Mr. Selwyn, I am very grateful to you for opening my eyes to such a - a - “
“Very deplorable accident,” I put in.
“I - I was perfectly certain,” she continued, without so much as glancing in my direction, “that you would never have kept me waiting without sufficient reason. And now, Mr. Brent, if you will be so obliging as to take us to the bank, Mr. Selwyn shall row us back - if he will.”
“Delighted!” he murmured.
“I ordered tea served in the orchard at five o’clock,” smiled Lizbeth, “and it is only jest four, so - “
“Which bank would you prefer,” I inquired - “The right or the left?”
“The nearest,” said Lisbeth.
“Which should you think was the nearest, Mr. Selwyn?” I queried. Disdaining any reply, Selwyn ran his skiff ashore, and I obediently followed. Without waiting for my assistance, Lisbeth deftly made the exchange from one boat to the other, followed more slowly by Dorothy.
“Come, Reginald, ” she said, as Selwyn made ready to push off; we’re waiting for you!” The Imp squatted closer to me.
“Reginald Augustus!” said Lisbeth. The Imp shuffled uneasily. “Are you coming?” inquired Lisbeth.
“I - I’d rather be a pirate with Uncle Dick, please, Auntie Lisbeth,” he said at last.
“Very well,” nodded Lisbeth with an air of finality; “then of course I must punish you.” But her tone was strangely gentle, and as she turned away I’ll swear I saw the ghost of that dimple - yes, I’ll swear it. So we sat very lonely and dejected, the Imp and I, desperadoes though we were, as we watched Selwyn’s boat grow smaller and smaller until it was lost round a bend in the river.
“‘Spect I shall get sent to bed for this,” said the Imp after a long pause.
“I think it more than probable, my Imp.”
“But then, it was a very fine race - oh, beautiful!” he sighed; “an’ I couldn’t desert my ship an’ Timothy Bone, an’ leave you here all by your self - now could I, Uncle Dick?”
“Of course not, Imp.”
“What are you thinking about, Uncle Dick?” he inquired as I stared, chin in hand, at nothing in particular.
“I was wondering, Imp, where the River of Dreams was going to lead me, after all.”
“To the Land of Heart’s Delight, of course,” he answered promptly; “you said so, you know, an’ you never tell lies, Uncle Dick - never,”
IV
MOON MAGIC
The Three Jolly Anglers is an inn of a distinctly jovial aspect, with its toppling gables, its creaking sign, and its bright lattices, which, like merry little twinkling eyes, look down upon the eternal river to-day with the same half-waggish, half-kindly air as they have done for generations.
Upon its battered sign, if you look closely enough, you may still see the Three Anglers themselves, somewhat worn and dim with time and stress of weather, yet preserving their jollity through it all with an heroic fortitude - as they doubtless will do until they fade away altogether.
It is an inn with raftered ceilings, and narrow, winding passageways; an inn with long, low chambers full of unexpected nooks and corners, with great four-post beds built for tired giants it would seem, and wide, deep chimneys reminiscent of Gargantuan rounds of beef; an inn whose very walls seem to exude comfort, as it were - the solid comfortable comfort of a bygone age.
Of all the many rooms here to be found I love best that which is called the Sanded Parlour. Never were wainscoted walls of a mellower tone, never was pewter more gleaming, never were things more bright and speckless, from the worn, quaint andirons on the hearth to the brass-bound blunderbuss, with the two ancient fishing-rods above. At one end of the room was a long, low casement, and here I leaned, watching the river near-by, and listening to its never-ceasing murmur. I had dined an hour ago; the beef had been excellent - it always is at the Three Jolly Anglers - and the ale beyond all criticism; also my pipe seemed to have an added flavour.
Yet despite all this I did not enjoy that supreme content - that philosophical calm which such beef and such ale surely warranted. But then, who ever heard of Love and Philosophy going together?
Away over the uplands a round, harvest moon was beginning to rise, flecking the shadowy waters with patches of silver, and, borne to my ears upon the warm, still air, came the throb of distant violins. This served only to deepen my melancholy, reminding me that somebody or other was giving a ball to-night; and Lisbeth was there, and Mr. Selwyn was there, of course, and I - I was here - alone with the brass-bound blunderbuss, the ancient fishing-rods and the antique andirons on the hearth; with none to talk to save the moon, and the jasmine that had crept in at the open casement. And noting the splendour of the night, I experienced towards Lisbeth a feeling of pained surprise, that she should prefer the heat and garish glitter of a ball-room to walking beneath such a moon with me.
Indeed, it was a wondrous night! one of those warm still nights which seem full of vague and untold possibilities! A night with magic in the air, when elves and fairies dance within their grassy rings, or biding amid the shade of trees, peep out at one between the leaves; or again, some gallant knight on mighty steed may come pacing slowly from the forest shadows, with the moonlight bright upon his armour.
Yes, surely there was magic in the air to-right! I half wished that some enchanter might, by a stroke of his fairy wand, roll back the years and leave me in the brutal, virile, Good Old Times, when men wooed and won their loves by might and strength of arm, and not by gold, as is so often the case in these days of ours. To be mounted upon my fiery steed, lance in hand and sword on thigh, riding down the leafy alleys of the woods yonder, led by the throbbing, sighing melody. To burst upon the astonished dancers like a thunder-clap; to swing her up to my saddle-bow, and clasped in each other’s arms, to plunge into the green mystery of forest.
My fancies had carried me thus far when I became aware of a small, furtive figure, dodging from one patch of shadow to another. Leaning from the window, I made out the form of a somewhat disreputable urchin, who, dropping upon hands and knees, proceeded to crawl towards me over the grass with a show of the most elaborate caution.
“Hallo!” I exclaimed, “halt and give the counter-sign!” The urchin sat up on his heels and stared at me with a pair of very round, bright eyes.
“Please, are you Mr. Uncle Dick?” he inquired.
“Oh,” I said, “you come from the Imp, I presume.” The boy nodded a round head, at the same time fumbling with something in his pocket.
“And whom may you be?” I inquired, conversationally.
“I’m Ben, I am.”
“The gardener’s boy?” Again the round head nodded acquiescence, as with much writhing and twisting he succeeded in drawing a heterogeneous collection of articles from his pocket, whence he selected a very dirty and crumpled piece of paper.
“He wants a ladder so’s he can git out, but it’s too big fer me to lift, so he told me to give you this here so’s you would come an’ rescue him - please, Mr. Uncle Dick.” With which lucid explanation Ben handed me the crumpled note.
Spreading it out upon the windowsill, I managed to make out as follows:
DEAR UNKEL DICK: I’m riting this with my hart’s blood bekors I’m a prisner in a gloomie dungun. It isn’t really my hart’s blood it’s only red ink, so don’t worry. Aunty lisbath cent me to bed just after tea bekors she said I’m norty, and when she’d gone Nurse locked me in so i can’t get out and I’m tired of being a prisner, so please i want you to get the ladda and let me eskape, please unkel dick, will you. yours till deth, REGINALD AUGUSTUS.
Auntie was reading Ivanhoe to us and I’ve been the Black Knight and you can be Gurth the swine-herd if you like.
“So that’s the way of it?” I said.
“Well! well! such an appeal shall not go unanswered, at least. Wait there, my trusty Benjamin, and I’ll be with you anon.” Pausing only to refill my tobacco-pouch and get my cap, I sallied out into the fragrant night, and set off along the river, the faithful Benjamin trotting at my heels.
Very soon we were skirting blooming flower-beds, and crossing trim lawns, until at length we reached a certain wing of the house from a window of which a pillow-case was dangling by means of a string.
“That’s for provisions!” volunteered Ben; “we pertended he was starving, so he lets it down an’ I fill it with onions out of the vegetable garden.” At this moment the curly head of the Imp appeared at the window, followed by the major portion of his person.
“Oh, Uncle Dick!” he cried in a loud stage-whisper, “I think you had better be the Black Knight, ‘cause you’re so big, you know.”
“Imp,” I said, “get in at once, do you want to break your neck?”
The Imp obediently wriggled into safety.
“The ladder’s in the tool-house, Uncle Dick - Ben’ll show you. Will you get it, please?” he pleaded in a wheedling tone.
“First of all, my Imp, why did your Auntie Lisbeth send you to bed - had you been a very naughty boy?”
“No-o!” he answered, after a moment’s pause, “I don’t think I was so very naughty - I only painted Dorothy like an Indian chief - green, with red spots, an’ she looked fine, you know.”
“Green, with red spots!” I repeated.
“Yes; only auntie didn’t seem to like it.”
“I fear your Auntie Lisbeth lacks an eye for colour.”
“Yes, ‘fraid so; she sent me to bed for it, you know.”
“Still, Imp, under the circumstances I think it would be best if you got undressed and went to sleep.”
“Oh, but I can’t, Uncle Dick!”
“Why not, my Imp?”
“‘Cause the moon’s so very bright, an’ everything looks so fine down there, an’ I’m sure there’s fairies about - Moon-fairies, you know, and I’m ‘miserable.”
“Miserable, Imp?”
“Yes, Auntie Lisbeth never came to kiss me good-night, an’ so I can’t go to sleep, Uncle Dick!”
“Why that alters the case, certainly.”
“Yes, an’ the ladder’s in the tool-house.”
“Imp,” I said, as I turned to follow Benjamin, “oh, you Imp!”
There are few things in this world more difficult to manage than a common or garden ladder; among other peculiarities it has a most unpleasant knack of kicking out suddenly just as everything appears to be going smoothly, which is apt to prove disconcerting to the novice. However, after sundry mishaps of the kind, I eventually got it reared up to the window, and a moment afterwards the Imp had climbed down and stood beside me, drawing the breath of freedom.
As a precautionary measure we proceeded to hide the ladder in a clump of rhododendrons hard by, and had but just done so when Benjamin uttered a cry of warning and took to his heels, while the Imp and I sought shelter behind a friendly tree. And not a whit too soon, for, scarcely had we done so, when two figures came round a corner of the house - two figures who walked very slowly and very close together.
“Why it’s Betty-the cook, you know-an’ Peter!” whispered the Imp.
Almost opposite our hiding-place Betty paused to sigh heavily and stare up at the moon.
“Oh, Peter!” she murmured, “look at that there orb!”
“Ar!” said Peter, gazing obediently upward.
“Peter, ain’t it ‘eavenly; don’t it stir your very soul?”
“Ar!” said Peter.
“Peter, are you sure you loves me more than that Susan thing at the doctor’s?” A corduroy coat-sleeve crept slowly about Betty’s plump waist, and there came the unmistakable sound of a kiss.
“Really and truly, Peter?”
“Ar!” said Peter, “so ‘elp me Sam!” The kissing sound was repeated, and they walked on once more, only closer than ever now on account of the corduroy coat-sleeve.
“Those two are in love, you know,” nodded the Imp. “Peter says the cheese-cakes she makes are enough to drive any man into marrying her, whether he wants to or not, an’ I heard Betty telling Jane that she adored Peter, ‘cause he had so much soul! Why is it,” he inquired, thoughtfully, as he watched the two out of sight, “why is it, Uncle Dick, that people in love always look so silly?”
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