"Do you think he has any thought of her?"
"I am sure he loves her."
"Then why has he given no sign of life all these months?"
"I fancy he is waiting for the year of their mourning to elapse. But I confess that I am surprised that he has been able to restrain his impatience as long as this. Every day I have expected--"
"By Jove!" cried Campbell, springing to his feet, "there he is now!"
Miss Trevor turned and saw a tall figure emerge from the house.
Being plunged suddenly into the midst of romance, together with the unexpected and dramatic arrival of the hero, was too much for the little lady"s composure. Her bag, her knitting, her gla.s.ses fell to the ground unheeded as she rose hurriedly to receive Lord Wilmersley.
"So glad to see you! Let me give you a cup of tea, or would you prefer some whiskey and soda?" She was so fl.u.s.tered that she hardly knew what she was saying.
"Thanks, I won"t take anything. h.e.l.lo, Guy! You here? Rather fancied I might run across you."
Cyril"s eyes strayed anxiously hither and thither.
"Looking for Anita, are you?" asked Guy.
"I?" Cyril gave a start of guilty surprise. "Yes, I was wondering where she was." His tone was excessively casual.
"Humph!" grunted Campbell contemptuously.
"She has gone for a little walk, but as she never leaves the grounds, she can"t be very far off," said Miss Trevor.
"Perhaps--" Cyril hesitated; he was painfully embarra.s.sed.
Guy came to his rescue.
"Come along," he said. "I will show you where you are likely to find her."
"Thanks! I did rather want to see her--ahem, on business!"
"On business? Oh, you old humbug!" jeered Campbell as he sauntered off.
For a moment Cyril glared at Guy"s back indignantly; then mumbling an apology to Miss Trevor, he hastened after him.
They had gone only a short distance before they espied a small, black-robed figure coming towards them. Guy stopped short; he glanced at Cyril, but the latter was no longer conscious of his presence. Without a word he turned and hurriedly retraced his footsteps.
"Well, Trevie," he said, "I must be going. Can"t loaf forever, worse luck!" His manner was quite ostentatiously cheerful.
Miss Trevor, however, was not deceived by it. "You are a dear, courageous boy," she murmured.
With a flourish of his hat that seemed to repudiate all sympathy, Guy turned on his heel and marched gallantly away.
Meanwhile, in another part of the garden, a very different scene was being enacted.
On catching sight of each other Cyril and Anita had both halted simultaneously. Cyril"s heart pounded so violently that he could hardly hear himself think.
"I must be calm," he said to himself. "I must be calm! But how beautiful she is! If I only had a little more time to collect my wits! I know I shall make an a.s.s of myself!"
As these thoughts went racing through his brain, he had been moving almost automatically forward. Already he could distinguish the soft curve of her parted lips and the colour of her dilated eyes.
A sudden panic seized him. He was conscious of a wild desire to fly from her presence; but it was too late. He was face to face with her.
For a moment neither moved, but under the insistence of his gaze her eyes slowly sank before his. Then, without a word, as one who merely claims his own, he flung his arms around her and crushed her to his heart.
THE END