ulder, walking back through the drenched
herbage.
"That," she said impulsively, "is not what I said a few moments ago to a
woman."
"What did you say a few moments ago to a woman?"
"I said, Mr. Siward, that I would not leave a--a certain man to go to
the devil alone!"
"Do you know any man who is going to the devil?"
"Do you?" she asked, letting herself go swinging out upon a tide of
intimacy she had never dreamed of risking--nor had she the slightest
idea whither the current would carry her.
They had stopped on the lawn, ankle deep in wet grass, the stars
overhead sparkling magnificently, and in their ears the outcrash of the
sea.
"You mean me," he concluded.
"Do I?"
He looked up into the lovely face; her eyes were very sweet, very
clear--clear with excitement--but very friendly.
"Let us sit here on the steps a little while, will you?" she asked.
So he found a place beside her, one step lower, and she leaned forward,
elbows on knees, rounded white chin in her palms, the starlight giving
her bare arms and shoulders a marble lustre and tinting her eyes a
deeper amethyst.
And now, innocently untethered, mission and all, she laid her heart
quite bare--one chapter of it. And, like other women-errant who believe
in the influence of their sex individually and collectively, she began
wrong by telling him of her engagement--perhaps to emphasise her pure
disinterestedness in a crusade for principle only. Which naturally
dampened in him any nascent enthusiasm for being ministered to, and so
preoccupied him that he turned deaf ears to some very sweet platitudes
which might otherwise have impressed him as discoveries in philosophy.
Officially her creed was the fashionable one in town; privately she had
her own religion, lacking some details truly enough, but shaped upon
youthful notions of right and wrong. As she had not read very widely,
she supposed that she had discovered this religion for herself; she was
not aware that everybody else had passed that way--it being the first
immature moult in young people after rejecting dogma.
And the ripened fruit of all this philosophy she helpfully dispensed for
Siward's benefit as bearing directly on his case.
Had he not been immersed in the unexpected proposition of her impending
matrimony, he might have been impressed, for the spell of her beauty
counted something, and besides, he had recently formulated for himself
a code of ethics, tinctured with Omar, a
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