"Yes, child, I suppose it is. Night or day, it"s all one. Osmond, her father"s going to take her away from here."
"Rose!"
"Yes, dear, she"s going. Do you think it"s best to let her go with him?"
"No! It"s outrageous and impossible."
"I thought you"d say so. Well, Osmond, she meant to go away to-morrow morning without seeing you. But she sent you her love. It seemed to me that.... So I thought you"d better have it to-night."
She heard him breathing heavily, but he did not speak. Once he walked away from her and back again.
"What has made her want to go?"
"She doesn"t want it. But he has worked upon her. He"s told her she is bad; some dreadful things I guess he said. I don"t believe in that man, Osmond. I never did, first minute I laid eyes on him."
"No, grannie, he"s not to be believed."
"I thought maybe you"d better have the night-time to think it over in.
You may want to do something."
"Grannie, what can I do?"
"I don"t know, son. But you"re the head of the house."
Again he strode away on his impatient march, and grannie waited and prayed a little, and thought how her knees ached and how she hoped G.o.d would help him. He was back again.
"You know how it is with me?" he said roughly.
"Yes, child."
"It"s a big proposition."
"It"s the biggest there is, son. I"ve just been telling her so."
"Rose? What has Rose said?"
"Not much. Only I had the feeling, when I was with her, that she loved you and didn"t hardly know about your loving her. So I came down here."
"You did right to come."
Grannie drew a long breath. The thing was out of her hands, now, she knew. What his hands would do with it did not yet appear. She rose.
"Well, son," she said, "I"ll go back. Come with me to the wall. Then I"ll manage it alone."
He did go with her, helping her in a tender silence, and at the door she kissed him good-night.
"What time is breakfast, grannie?"
"Eight o"clock."
The next morning when they had a.s.sembled in the dining-room, grannie, standing with a hand on the back of her chair, waited. Her face had a flush of expectation. Her eyes sought the window.
"There!" she said, "he"s coming. Peter, I"ve moved your place. Osmond will sit opposite me."
"Osmond!" Peter almost shouted it.
"Yes," said grannie, in what seemed pride. "I thought Osmond would be here."
Osmond came in, a workman in his blouse, fresh from cold water and the night"s stern counseling. Rose, hearing his step, could not, for a minute, look at him, because he had once forbidden it. The commonplace room, with the morning light in it, swam before her. After he had spoken to grannie, he walked up to her and offered his hand. Then their eyes met. Hers were full of tears, and through their blur, even, his face looked stern and beautiful.
"I wanted to see you," Osmond said; and she answered, feeling his kindness as from some dim distance,--
"To say good-by?"
"No, not to say good-by."
Then they sat down, and there was no constraint, but a good deal of talking; and, strangely, it was Osmond who led it. He did not touch upon things of wider interest than his own garden ground, where he was at home. He had pleasant chronicles of the work to give grannie, and MacLeod took a genial interest. Only Peter sat, wide-eyed at the turn things were taking, and Rose grew paler and left her plate untouched.
She did not know whether it was joy that moved her, or grief at parting with him. Only the morning seemed like no other morning. When they rose from the table, Osmond turned at once to MacLeod.
"May I see you for a minute or two?" he asked. "We"ll go into the west room, grannie."
While Peter started forward, as if to help or hinder as the case might be when he understood it, Osmond had led the way, still with the air of being master of the house, and Rose stood with downcast eyes, as if miserably conscious that the interview would concern her. Inside the west room, cool in the morning, and with a restful bareness about it, a retreat where people went to sleep or read, Osmond turned at once to the man whom, at that moment, he delighted in as a worthy foe. Osmond had never known before the keen, salt taste of victory. All his triumphs up to this time had been as slow as the growth of a tree that recovers itself after lopped branches. Now he felt the antic.i.p.ation of combat.
"We needn"t sit down," he said rapidly, yet with self-possession. He looked taller, even, MacLeod thought with wonder. His dark eyes were full of fire. "I love your daughter," said Osmond, in a full, steady voice. He chose the words the poets had taught him to use simply, and also, perhaps, the novels he had been reading since he had known Rose.
"My dear fellow!" cried MacLeod expansively. And then, remembering the peculiar circ.u.mstances of the case, "I"m sorry, devilish sorry for you."
Osmond smiled. He felt capable, if there were no other way of doing it, of wresting the lady"s fate from evil chances with his hands. Yet he liked MacLeod to resist. It made the fight more splendid.
"She must not go back with you," he said. "You are not to insist on it.
Don"t insist. That will save us all trouble."
MacLeod had gathered himself together. He put his hand in his pocket and meditatively brought out his pipe, fingering the case with an absent and lingering interest, as if he felt the call to a lost rite.
"My dear fellow," he said again, "this is too bad. I"m sorry."
"Rose will remain here," said Osmond briefly. "My grandmother will take the kindest care of her."
"But I can"t allow it, you know," said the father, still with tolerance.
"Rose is due in Paris. We"re both due there. It"s very good of you, very hospitable and all that,--but you mustn"t carry this Lochinvar business too far. It"s too rapid a world, you know. I"m too busy, my dear fellow.
That"s the truth."
Osmond stood gazing at him reflectively, not in doubt or hesitation, but because he liked the look of so big an animal, and considering that it would be charming to see the creature yield. Osmond had not sharpened his weapons or even decided what they were. He only knew MacLeod must bend, and that there was in himself a big, even an invincible force to make him.
"Rose is not going," he said quietly.
Then MacLeod laughed. The morning was hurrying by and this vaporing was a hindrance to be shuffled off. "You say you love my daughter?" he remarked, with a veiled meaning in the tone. "What then? You don"t propose to marry her?" The tone said further, "You don"t tell me you propose to marry anybody?"
"I only said I loved her," returned Osmond simply. "I thought it would be well for you to know that. It seemed fairer."