The Three Partners eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 247 pages of information about The Three Partners.

The Three Partners eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 247 pages of information about The Three Partners.

It did not belie his enthusiastic description.  A triangular hollow, niched in a shelf of the mountain-side, narrowed to a point from which the overflow of the spring percolated through a fringe of alder, to fall in what seemed from the valley to be a green furrow down the whole length of the mountain-side.  Overhung by pines above, which met and mingled with the willows that everywhere fringed it, it made the one cooling shade in the whole basking expanse of the mountain, and yet was penetrated throughout by the intoxicating spice of the heated pines.  Flowering reeds and long lush grasses drew a magic circle round an open bowl-like pool in the centre, that was always replenished to the slow murmur of an unseen rivulet that trickled from a white-quartz cavern in the mountain-side like a vein opened in its flank.  Shadows of timid wings crossed it, quick rustlings disturbed the reeds, but nothing more.  It was silent, but breathing; it was hidden to everything but the sky and the illimitable distance.

They threaded their way around it on the spongy carpet, covered by delicate lace-like vines that seemed to caress rather than trammel their moving feet, until they reached an open space before the pool.  It was cushioned and matted with disintegrated pine bark, and here they sat down.  Mrs. Horncastle furled her parasol and laid it aside; raised both hands to the back of her head and took two hat-pins out, which she placed in her smiling mouth; removed her hat, stuck the hat-pins in it, and handed it to Barker, who gently placed it on the top of a tall reed, where during the rest of that momentous meeting it swung and drooped like a flower; removed her gloves slowly; drank still smilingly and gratefully nearly a wineglassful of the water which Barker brought her in the green twisted chalice of a lily leaf; looked the picture of happiness, and then burst into tears.

Barker was astounded, dismayed, even terror-stricken.  Mrs. Horncastle crying!  Mrs. Horncastle, the imperious, the collected, the coldly critical, the cynical, smiling woman of the world, actually crying!  Other women might cry—­Kitty had cried often—­but Mrs. Horncastle!  Yet, there she was, sobbing; actually sobbing like a schoolgirl, her beautiful shoulders rising and falling with her grief; crying unmistakably through her long white fingers, through a lace pocket-handkerchief which she had hurriedly produced and shaken from behind her like a conjurer’s trick; her beautiful eyes a thousand times more lustrous for the sparkling beads that brimmed her lashes and welled over like the pool before her.

“Don’t mind me,” she murmured behind her handkerchief.  “It’s very foolish, I know.  I was nervous—­worried, I suppose; I’ll be better in a moment.  Don’t notice me, please.”

But Barker had drawn beside her and was trying, after the fashion of his sex, to take her handkerchief away in apparently the firm belief that this action would stop her tears.  “But tell me what it is.  Do Mrs. Horncastle, please,” he pleaded in his boyish fashion.  “Is it anything I can do?  Only say the word; only tell me something!”

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Project Gutenberg
The Three Partners from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.