She looked wistfully across the river.
Jack watched her. His heart ached for her, and he bent nearer.
"Forgive me for causing you any unhappiness," he said. "Will you?"
"Yes."
Oh! where was her vengeance now? So far beneath her!
"These four days have been the most wretched days to me, the most unhappy I have ever lived," he said. The emotion in his voice brought the soft colour to her face. She did not answer; she would have if she had wished to check him.
"I will never again, as long as I live, give you one moment"s--displeasure." He was going to say "pain," but he dared not.
Still she was silent, her idle white fingers clasped in her lap, her eyes fixed on the river. Little by little the colour deepened in her cheeks. It was when she felt them burning that she spoke, nervously, scarcely comprehending her own words: "I--I also was unhappy--I was silly; we both are very silly--don"t you think so?
We are such good friends that it seems absurd to quarrel as we have.
I have forgotten everything that was unpleasant--it was so little that I could not remember if I tried! Could you? I am very happy now; I am going to listen while you amuse me with stories." She curled up against a tree and smiled at him--at the love in his eyes which she dared not read, which she dared not acknowledge to herself.
It was there, plain enough for a wilful maid to see; it burned under his sun-tanned cheeks, it softened the firm lips. A thrill of contentment pa.s.sed through her. She was satisfied; the world was kind again.
He lay at her feet, pulling blades of gra.s.s from the bank and idly biting the whitened stems. The voice of the Lisse was in his ears, he breathed the sweet wood perfume and he saw the sunlight wrinkle and crinkle the surface ripples where the water washed through the sedges, and the long gra.s.ses quivered and bent with the glittering current.
"Tell you stories?" he asked again.
"Yes--stories that never have really happened--but that should have happened."
"Then listen! There was once--many, many years ago--a maid and a man--"
Good gracious--but that story is as old as life itself! He did not realize it, nor did she. It seemed new to them.
The sun of noon was moving towards the west when they remembered that they were hungry.
"You shall come home and lunch with me; will you? Perhaps papa may be there, too," she said. This hope, always renewed with every dawn, always fading with the night, lived eternal in her breast--this hope, that one day she should have her father to herself.
"Will you come?" she asked, shyly.
"Yes. Do you know it will be our first luncheon together?"
"Oh, but you brought me an ice at the dance that evening; don"t you remember?"
"Yes, but that was not a supper--I mean a luncheon together--with a table between us and--you know what I mean."
"I don"t," she said, smiling dreamily; so he knew that she did.
They hurried a little on the way to the Chateau, and he laughed at her appet.i.te, which made her laugh, too, only she pretended not to like it.
At the porch she left him to change her gown, and slipped away up-stairs, while he found old Pierre and was dusted and fussed over until he couldn"t stand it another moment. Luckily he heard Lorraine calling her maid on the porch, and he went to her at once.
"Papa says you may lunch here--I spoke to him through the key-hole. It is all ready; will you come?"
A serious-minded maid served them with salad and thin bread-and-b.u.t.ter.
"Tea!" exclaimed Jack.
"Isn"t that very American?" asked Lorraine, timidly. "I thought you might like it; I understood that all Americans drank tea."
"They do," he said, gravely; "it is a terrible habit--a national vice--but they do."
"Now you are laughing at me!" she cried. "Marianne, please to remove that tea! No, no, I won"t leave it--and you can suffer if you wish. And to think that I--"
They were both laughing so that the maid"s face grew more serious, and she removed the teapot as though she were bearing some strange and poisonous creature to a deserved doom.
As they sat opposite each other, smiling, a little flurried at finding themselves alone at table together, but eating with the appet.i.tes of very young lovers, the warm summer wind, blowing through the open windows, bore to their ears the songs of forest birds. It bore another sound, too; Jack had heard it for the last two hours, or had imagined he heard it--a low, monotonous vibration, now almost distinct, now lost, now again discernible, but too vague, too indefinite to be anything but that faint summer harmony which comes from distant breezes, distant movements, mingling with the stir of drowsy field insects, half torpid in the heat of noon.
Still it was always there; and now, turning his ear to the window, he laid down knife and fork to listen.
"I have also noticed it," said Lorraine, answering his unasked question.
"Do you hear it now?"
"Yes--more distinctly now."
A few moments later Jack leaned back in his chair and listened again.
"Yes," said Lorraine, "it seems to come nearer. What is it?"
"It comes from the southeast. I don"t know," he answered.
They rose and walked to the window. She was so near that he breathed the subtle fragrance of her hair, the fresh sweetness of her white gown, that rustled beside him.
"Hark!" whispered Lorraine; "I can almost hear voices in the breezes--the murmur of voices, as if millions of tiny people were calling us from the ends and outer edges of the earth."
"There is a throbbing, too. Do you notice it?"
"Yes--like one"s heart at night. Ah, now it comes nearer--oh, nearer! nearer! Oh, what can it be?"
He knew now; he knew that indefinable battle--rumour that steals into the senses long before it is really audible. It is not a sound--not even a vibration; it is an immense foreboding that weights the air with prophecy.
"From the south and east," he repeated; "from the Landesgrenze."
"The frontier?"
"Yes. Hark!"
"I hear."
"From the frontier," he said again. "From the river Lauter and from Wissembourg."
"What is it?" she whispered, close beside him.
"Cannon!"