She did not answer; she leaned her cheek against Peggy"s fair head in silence.
"My dear lady," said Hunt-Goring, "you always took things too seriously."
She gave a brief sigh, and took up her work again. "Life is rather a serious matter, I find," she said, with a smile that was scarcely gay.
"Nonsense!" said Hunt-Goring.
"Don"t you find it so?" Daisy did not look up again; she st.i.tched on rapidly with the child leaning against her knee.
"I?" he said. "Oh, sometimes it seems so, when things don"t fit. But I don"t care, you know. I have a volatile mind, I am glad to say."
"Are you never afraid of growing old?" asked Daisy.
He laughed his soft, self-satisfied laugh. "Oh, really, you know, I don"t think they will let me do that at present."
"You never think of getting married?" asked Daisy.
Hunt-Goring"s smile changed a little, grew subtly harder. "Most people think of it at one time or another." he observed. "But personally I do not regard myself as a marrying man."
"And you are never lonely?" she said.
"I am seldom alone, my dear Mrs. Musgrave," he said.
She turned the conversation. "Where have you been living since your retirement?"
"I took a place in England in the hunting-country--quite a decent place."
"Ah? Where?"
"About two miles from a little town called Weir." Hunt-Goring spoke deliberately, still watching his hostess"s slim fingers at work.
"Why!" Swiftly Daisy looked up. "That is where the Ratcliffes live--Jim Ratcliffe and Olga. Olga is out here now with Nick. Did you know?"
Hunt-Goring nodded to each sentence. "I know it all. I know Jim Ratcliffe, and a burly old monster he is. I know Nick of Redlands--also the sedate Mrs. Nick. And, last but not least, I know--Olga."
He spoke mockingly; his look was derisive.
"I had no idea you had been living there," said Daisy.
"I was the hornet in the hive," said Hunt-Goring with his lazy laugh.
"It"s rather a hole of a place, though I liked The Warren well enough.
I"m not going back there. You can tell Olga so with my love."
"She and Nick are dining here to-night," observed Daisy, "so you will be able to tell her yourself."
"What! To meet me!" It was Hunt-Goring"s turn to look surprised. He did so with an accompanying sneer. "How did you describe me, I wonder? You couldn"t have mentioned my name."
Daisy regarded him steadily for a moment. "Is there any reason why she should not meet you?" she asked.
"None whatever," said Hunt-Goring, with a shrug. "Needless to say, I shall be quite charmed to meet her."
At this point the conversation was interrupted by the sudden appearance of Noel. He came out through the French window of the drawing-room with his habitual air of cheery a.s.surance, and was instantly pounced upon by Peggy who hailed him with delight.
He caught her up in his arms. "Well, little sweetheart, are we going for our ride? What does Mummy say?" He laughed down at Daisy, the child mounted high on his shoulder.
Daisy laughed back because she could not help it. "Oh, Noel, you are incorrigible! I don"t think I dare trust her to you. Why do you suggest these headlong things?"
"But, my dear Mrs. Musgrave," he protested, "does any harm ever come to her when she is with me? You know I would guard her with my life!"
"Yes, I know," smiled Daisy. "But I am not sure that that would be a very great safe-guard. You are so reckless yourself. By the way, let me introduce Major Hunt-Goring--an old friend. Major Hunt-Goring--Mr.
Wyndham!"
Noel nodded careless acknowledgment. Hunt-Goring merely lifted his brows momentarily. He did not greatly care for the boy"s familiarity with his hostess. It was a privilege which he did not wish to share.
"Well, shall we start?" said Noel. "I"ve brought one of my polo mounts for Peggy," he added to Daisy. "You know the Chimpanzee. He"s as quiet as a lamb. Come and give us a send-off! Really you needn"t be anxious."
He patted her arm coaxingly, rea.s.suringly, and Hunt-Goring took out his cigarette-case. He was plainly bored to extinction.
Daisy left him with a smiling apology. She did not suggest that he should accompany them, and he did not offer to do so.
"I don"t like that man," declared Peggy as Noel bore her away. "He looks so ugly when he smiles."
"Only the Daisies and Peggies of this world manage to look pretty always," observed Noel gallantly.
For which dainty compliment Daisy frowned upon him. "My vanity days are over," she said, "but do remember that hers are yet to come!"
They went round to the front of the bungalow where Noel had left the mounts; and after a good deal of discussion and many injunctions Peggy was, to her huge delight, perched astride the Chimpanzee, a creature of almost human intelligence who plainly took a serious view of his responsibilities, to Daisy"s immense relief.
She watched them ride away together at length at a walking pace, Noel on his tall Waler leading the polo-pony, from whose back Peggy waved her an ardent farewell; and finally went back to her guest feeling rea.s.sured.
Noel evidently had no intention of taking any risks with Peggy in his charge.
"It"s very good of him," she remarked, as she sat down again on the verandah.
Hunt-Goring opened his eyes a quarter of an inch. "I beg your pardon?"
"Oh, nothing," said Daisy, feeling slightly annoyed. "He"s a nice boy, that"s all; and I am grateful to him for being so kind to my little Peggy."
"It probably answers his purpose," said Hunt-Goring, smothering a yawn.
Daisy took up her work again in silence.
Hunt-Goring finished his cigarette in dreamy ease before he spoke again.
She thought he was half-asleep when unexpectedly he accosted her, referring to the subject in which he had seemed to take but slight interest.
"Did you say that puppy"s name was Wyndham?"
"He isn"t a puppy," said Daisy, quick to defend her friend.