At this moment, out from the copse the soft head of a doe appeared, and at the thrilling sight Halcyone slipped her hand into her companion"s, and held his tight lest he should move or rustle a leaf.
"See," she whispered right in his ear. "She will cross to the other side by the stream--and oh! there is the fawn! Is he not the dearest baby angel you have ever seen--!"
And the doe, feeling herself safe, trotted by, followed by a minute son in pale drab velvet hardly a month old.
The pair in the tree watched them breathlessly until they had entered the copse again beyond the bend, and then Halcyone said:
"That makes six--and perhaps there are more. Oh! how I hope the Long Man will not see them!"
John Derringham did not let go her hand at once; there was something soft and pleasant in the touch of the cool little fingers.
"I want to hear about everything," he said. "Tell me of the Long Man--and the fawns, and why there are only six. I am having the happiest morning I have had for years."
So Halcyone began. She glossed a good deal over the facts she had told Mr. Carlyon upon the subject because she did not feel she knew this stranger well enough to let him into her aunts" private affairs--so she turned the interest to the deer themselves, and they chatted on about all sorts of animals and their ways, and John Derringham was entranced and felt quite aggrieved when she said it was getting late and she must go back to the house for her early dinner. He swung himself down from the tree by the high branch with ease and stood ready to catch her, but with a nimbleness he did not expect, she crept round to the lower side and was landed upon the soft turf before he could reach her.
Then he walked back with her to the broken gate, telling her about his own old home the while, and then they paused to say good-by.
Halcyone carried a twig of freshly sprouting oak which she had brought from the tree, having broken it off in her lightning descent.
"Give me one leaf and you keep the other," he said. "And then, whenever I see it, I will try to remember that I must always be good and true."
With grave earnestness she did as he asked, and then opened the gate.
"I want to tell you," she said--and she looked down for a second, and then up into his eyes from beyond the bars. "I did not like the thought of your coming--and at first I did not like you--but now I see something quite different at the other side of your head--Good-by."
And before he could answer, she was off as the young fawn would have been--a flitting shape among the trees. And John Derringham walked slowly back to the orchard house, musing as he went.
But when he got there a telegram from his Chief had arrived, recalling him instantly to London.
And he did not see Halcyone again for several years.
CHAPTER IX
The seasons came and went with peaceful regularity, unbroken by a jarring note from the outside world. Mr. Anderton, being well a.s.sured by the Misses La Sarthe that his stepdaughter was receiving a splendid education, was only too glad to leave her in peace, and Mrs. Anderton felt her duty achieved when at the beginning of each summer and winter she sent a supply of what she considered suitable clothes. It took Priscilla and Hester hours to alter them to Halcyone"s slender shape.
Mr. Carlyon was seldom absent from his house during this period, only twice a year, when he spent a fortnight in London in June, and another week in November with his brother, a squire of some note in the Cornish world. Halcyone made green his old age with the exquisite quality of her opening mind. And deep down in her heart there always dwelt the image of John Derringham, and whatever new hero she read about, he unconsciously a.s.sumed some of his features or mien. She pa.s.sed through enthusiasms for all periods, and for quite six months was under the complete spell of the "Morte d"Arthur" and the adventures of the knights contained therein. She read voraciously and systematically, but her first love for all things Greek regained its hold and undoubtedly colored her whole view of life.
Her education was exotic and might have ruined a brain of lesser fiber.
But for her it seemed to bring forth all that was clear and fine and polish it with a diamond l.u.s.ter. Twice a week alternately the French and German master from the Applewood Grammar School came to her, and she also learned to read music from the organist at the church, and then played to herself with no technique but much taste.
And of all her masters, Nature and the fearless study of her night moods molded her soul the most.
For the first few months after John Derringham"s visit Mr. Carlyon often spoke of him and read aloud bits of his letters, and Halcyone listened with rapt attention, but she never embarked upon the subject herself--and then the Professor had an accident to his knee which kept him a prisoner for months. And somehow the interest of this seemed to dwarf less present things, and as time went on, John Derringham grew to be mentioned only by fits and starts, when his rapidly rising political career called forth cynical grunts of admiration from his old master.
There had been a dissolution of Parliament and a short term of office for the other side, and then at the General Election John Derringham"s Chief had come in again stronger than ever, and he himself had been made Under-Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs. It was a tremendous rise for one so young. He was at that time not more than twenty-nine years old--but two years before this happened, when Halcyone was about fifteen, he came again to the orchard house for a short Sat.u.r.day to Monday visit.
From the moment that she knew he was coming a strange stillness seemed to fall upon the child. She had grown long-legged and was at the fledgling stage when even a pretty girl sometimes looks plain, and she, who had as yet no claim to beauty, was at her worst. She was quite aware of it, with her intense soul-worship of all beautiful things. Some unreasoned impulse made her keep away from her master during the first day, but on the Sunday he summoned her, and, as once before, she came and poured out the tea, but it was a cold and windy autumn afternoon, and it was not laid out of doors. John Derringham had been for a walk, and came in while she sat in a shadowy corner behind the table, teapot in hand.
He was greatly changed, she thought, in the three years. He had grown a beard! and looked considerably older, with his thin commanding figure and arrogant head. He was not handsome now, but peculiarly distinguished-looking. He could very well be Pericles, she decided at once. As for him, he had almost forgotten her. Life had been so full of many things; but, seeing a pale, slender, overgrown girl with mouse-colored clouds of hair now confined in a demure pigtail, it came to his mind that this must be the Professor"s pupil again. Had she not been called Hebe or Psyche--or Halcyone--some Greek name? And gradually his former recollection of her came back, and of their morning in the tree.
"Why, how do you do," he said politely, and Halcyone bowed without speaking. She felt much as Hans Andersen"s Ugly Duckling used to feel, and when John Derringham had said a few ordinary things about her having grown out of all likeness, he turned to the Professor again, and almost forgot her presence.
His talk was most wonderful to listen to, she thought, his language was so polished, and there was a courtesy added to the former vehemence.
They spoke of nothing but politics, which she did not understand, and Cheiron chaffed him a good deal in his kindly cynical way. He was still fighting his chimeras, it seemed, and fighting them successfully. As he spoke, Halcyone, behind the teapot, thrilled with a kind of worship. To be strong and young and manful, and to combat modern dragons, appeared to her to be a G.o.d-like task.
In the midst of a heated argument she rose to slip away. Her comings and goings were so natural to the Professor that he was unaware that she was leaving the room until John Derringham broke off in the middle of a sentence, to rise and open the door for her.
"Good-by," she said. "Aunt Roberta is not very well to-day, so I must not be late. Good night, Cheiron"--and she went out and closed the door.
"But it is quite dark!" exclaimed John Derringham. "Is there a servant waiting? She can"t go all alone!"
The Professor leaned back in his chair.
"Don"t disturb yourself," he said. "Halcyone is accustomed to the twilight. It is a strange night-creature--leave it alone."
John Derringham sat down again.
"She is not nearly so attractive-looking as she used to be. If I remember, she was rather a weirdly pretty child."
"Just a chrysalis now," grunted the professor between [**TR Note: was betwen in original; typesetter"s error.] puffs of smoke. "But there is more true philosophy and profound knowledge of truth in that little head than either you or I have got in ours, John."
"You always thought the world of her, Master--you, with your ineradicable contempt for women!"
"She is not a woman--yet. She is an intelligence and a brain--and a soul."
"Oh, she has a soul, then!" and John Derringham smiled. "I remember once you said when I should meet a woman with a soul I should meet my match!
I do not feel very alarmed."
One of the Professor"s penthouse brows raised itself about half an inch, but he did not speak.
"In which school have you taught her?" John Derringham asked--"you who are so much of a cynic, Master. Does she study the ethics of Aristotle with you here in this Lyceum, or do you reconstruct Plato"s Academy? She is no sophist, apparently, since you say she can see the truth."
Mr. Carlyon looked into the fire.
"She is almost an Epicurean, John, in all but the disbelief in the immortality of the soul. She has evolved a theory of her own about that.
It partakes of Buddhism. After I have discussed metaphysical propositions with her over which she will argue clearly, she will suddenly cut the whole knot with a lightning flash, and you see the naked truth, and words become meaningless, and discussion a jest."
"All this, at fifteen!" John Derringham laughed antagonistically, and then he suddenly remembered her words to himself upon honor in the tree that summer morning three years ago, and he mused.
Perhaps some heaven-taught beings were allowed to come to earth after all, now and then as the centuries rolled on.
"She knows Greek pretty well?" he asked.
"Fairly, for the time she has learnt. She can read me bits of Lucian.
She would stumble over the tragedies. I read them to her." Then he continued, as though it were a subject he loved, "She has a concrete view upon every question; her critical faculty is marvelous. She never lays down the law, but if you ask her, you have your answer in a nutsh.e.l.l, the simplest truth, which it always appears to her so strange that you have not seen all the time."