"Captain Langton," he said, "let me introduce you to my niece, Miss Darrell."
Not one feature of the girl"s proud, beautiful face moved, but there was some little curiosity in her dark eyes. They rested for a minute on the captain"s face, and then, with a dreamy look, she glanced over the heads of the white lilies behind him. He was not her ideal, not her hero, evidently. In that one keen, quick glance, she read not only the face, but the heart and soul of the man before her.
The captain felt as though he had been subjected to some wonderful microscopic examination.
"She is one of those dreadfully shrewd girls that pretend to read faces," he said to himself, while he bowed low before her, and replied with enthusiasm to the introduction.
"My niece is quite a Darrell," said Sir Oswald, proudly. "You see she has the Darrell face."
Again the gallant captain offered some flattering remark--a neatly turned compliment, which he considered ought to have brought her down, as a skillful shot does a bird--but the dark eyes saw only the lilies, not him.
"She is proud, like all the Darrells," he thought; "my father always said they were the proudest race in England."
"I hope," said Sir Oswald, courteously, "that you will enjoy your visit here, Aubrey. Your father was my dearest friend, and it gives me great delight to see you here."
"I am sure of it, Sir Oswald. I am equally happy; I cannot see how any one could be dull for one minute in this grand old place."
Sir Oswald"s face flushed with pleasure, and for the first time the dark eyes slowly left the lilies and looked at the captain.
"I find not only one minute, but many hours in which to be dull," said Pauline. "Do you like the country so well?"
"I like Darrell Court," he replied, with a bow that seemed to embrace Sir Oswald, his niece, and all his possessions.
"You like it--in what way?" asked Pauline, in her terribly downright manner. "It is your first visit, and you have been here only a few minutes. How can you tell whether you like it?"
For a few moments Captain Langton looked slightly confused, and then he rallied. Surely a man of the world was not to be defied by a mere girl.
"I have seen that at Darrell Court," he said, deferentially, "which will make the place dear to me while I live."
She did not understand him. She was far too frank and haughty for a compliment so broad. But Sir Oswald smiled.
"He is losing no time," thought the stately old baronet; "he is falling in love with her, just as I guessed he would."
"I will leave you," said Sir Oswald, "to get better acquainted. Pauline, you will show Captain Langton the aviary."
"Yes," she a.s.sented, carelessly. "But will you send Miss Hastings here?
She knows the various birds far better than I do."
Sir Oswald, with a pleased expression on his face, walked away.
"So you have an aviary at the Court, Miss Darrell. It seems to me there is nothing wanting here. You do not seem interested; you do not like birds?"
"Not caged ones," she replied. "I love birds almost as though they were living friends, but not bright-plumaged birds in golden cages. They should be free and wild in the woods and forests, filling the summer air with joyous song. I love them well then."
"You like unrestricted freedom?" he observed.
"I do not merely like it, I deem it an absolute necessity. I should not care for life without it."
The captain looked more attentively at her. It was the Darrell face, surely enough--features of perfect beauty, with a soul of fire shining through them.
"Yet," he said, musingly, cautiously feeling his way, "there is but little freedom--true freedom--for women. They are bound down by a thousand narrow laws and observances--caged by a thousand restraints."
"There is no power on earth," she returned, hastily, "that can control thoughts or cage souls; while they are free, it is untrue to say that there is no freedom."
A breath of fragrant wind came and stirred the great white lilies. The gallant captain saw at once that he should only lose in arguments with her.
"Shall we visit the aviary?" he asked.
And she walked slowly down the path, he following.
"She is like an empress," he thought. "It will be all the more glory for me if I can win such a wife for my own."
CHAPTER IX.
THE BROKEN LILY.
Pauline Darrell was a keen, shrewd observer of character. She judged more by small actions than by great ones; it was a characteristic of hers. When women have that gift, it is more to be dreaded than the cool, calm, matured judgment of men. Men err sometimes in their estimate of character, but it is very seldom that a woman makes a similar mistake.
The garden path widened where the tall white lilies grew in rich profusion, and there Pauline and Captain Langton walked side by side.
The rich, sweet perfume seemed to gather round them, and the dainty flowers, with their shining leaves and golden bracts, looked like great white stars.
Captain Langton carried a small cane in his hand. He had begun to talk to Pauline with great animation. Her proud indifference piqued him. He was accustomed to something more like rapture when he devoted himself to any fair lady. He vowed to himself that he would vanquish her pride, that he would make her care for him, that the proud, dark eyes should soften and brighten for him; and he gave his whole mind to the conquest. As he walked along, one of the tall, white lilies bent over the path; with one touch of the cane he beat it down, and Pauline gave a little cry, as though the blow had pained her. She stopped, and taking the slender green stem in her hand, straightened it; but the blow had broken one of the white leaves.
"Why did you do that?" she asked, in a pained voice.
"It is only a flower," he replied, with a laugh.
"Only a flower! You have killed it. You cannot make it live again. Why need you have cut its sweet life short?"
"It will not be missed from among so many," he said.
"You might say the same thing of yourself," she retorted. "The world is full of men, and you would hardly be missed from so many; yet you would not like----"
"There is some little difference between a man and a flower, Miss Darrell," he interrupted, stiffly.
"There is, indeed; and the flowers have the advantage," she retorted.
The captain solaced himself by twisting his mustache, and relieved his feelings by some few muttered words, which Miss Darrell did not hear. In her quick, impulsive way, she judged him at once.
"He is cruel and selfish," she thought; "he would not even stoop to save the life of the sweetest flower that blows. He shall not forget killing that lily," she continued, as she gathered the broken chalice, and placed it in her belt. "Every time he looks at me," she said, "he shall remember what he has done."
The captain evidently understood her amiable intention, and liked her accordingly. They walked on for some minutes in perfect silence; then Pauline turned to him suddenly.
"Have you been long in the army, Captain Langton?"