Perhaps, though, it was just as well they were here
when he came. Because she knew she ought to be
furiously angry with him, and somehow that was never
a
role she could play. Before excitement
reached that point, she always got hurt, or troubled,
or timid—and just now she was too tired.
If he told her to sit there and count her fingers,
she should hardly have spirit to resist. How
ever had he dared to take hold of said fingers as
he had done!—and with that came a sudden
rush to Miss Kennedy’s cheeks which made her
wish she could go for hot chocolate instead of Dingee.
He had hindered her by sheer force. Gentle force,—and
gentlemanlike,—but none the less true to
its name. There was one of the peculiar advantages
of being a woman! Or a girl. She should be
stronger in full womanhood. But oh, she was woman
enough to take care of Reo!—and if Reo
were dying, and Mr. Rollo did not want to have her
go, he would sit calmly there and want more chocolate!—She
glanced at him from under the long eyelashes, and
another flush (of impatience this time) tinged her
cheeks. But she did not stint him in sugar, nor
make any mistakes with the cream. Then her eyes
went away over the long slope, where birds and sunshine
held their revels. Wait?—what did people
wait for, ‘all their lives?’ And why did
Mr. Maryland’s last words come up to her again?
And why did the aforesaid eyelashes grow wet?
She was all shaken out of herself by the morning’s
work. She would send Dingee to inquire!—and
not wait. But then if this strange man should
order
him back—and Dingee could
not be relied on to go silently. No, she could
not have a scene before all these people. And
a wee bit of a sigh, well kept in hand, went to the
compounding of Miss Phinny’s third cup.
’Womanly patience?’—how was
hers to be grown, yet? And what did he know about
it, any way? She should like to see him thoroughly
thwarted, for once, and see how much manly patience
he had on hand. And another swift glance went
his way; but with anxiety rousing up again, the glance
lingered, and was more inquiring than she meant it
should be.
Luncheon was really over at last. The Governor’s
lady said some gracious words of welcome to her young
hostess, invited her to a dinner-party a few days
off, and having ordered up her carriage, swept away
with her daughters. What will be now? thought
Primrose.
Rollo had put the ladies into their carriage, and
stood long enough to let them get out of observation
behind the woods; then he came up on the verandah
and going round the table sat down beside Wych Hazel.
Primrose saw—did the other?—the
easy motion which was universal with him, the fine
figure, the frank, bright face. Primrose did
not mean to watch, but she saw it all, and the look
with which he sat down. It was not that of a
man about to make an apology, neither had it any smile
of attempted ingratiation. It was rather a sweet,
confidential look of inquiry, which, however, went
down through the depths of the brown eyes he was looking
into, and rifled them of all their secrets. It
was a sort of look before which a woman’s eyes
fall.