And it was a fine day; a delicious day, with the horror of the Infinite

veiled by the splendid tent of blue; a day innocently bright like a child

with a washed face, fresh like an innocent young girl, suave in welcoming

one's respects like--like a Roman prelate. I love such days. They are

perfection for remaining indoors. And I enjoyed it temperamentally in a

chair, my feet up on the sill of the open window, a book in my hands and

the murmured harmonies of wind and sun in my heart making an

accompaniment to the rhythms of my author. Then looking up from the page

I saw outside a pair of grey eyes thatched by ragged yellowy-white

eyebrows gazing at me solemnly over the toes of my slippers. There was a

grave, furrowed brow surmounting that portentous gaze, a brown tweed cap

set far back on the perspiring head.

"Come inside," I cried as heartily as my sinking heart would permit.

After a short but severe scuffle with his dog at the outer door, Fyne

entered. I treated him without ceremony and only waved my hand towards a

chair. Even before he sat down he gasped out: "We've heard--midday post."

Gasped out! The grave, immovable Fyne of the Civil Service, gasped! This

was enough, you'll admit, to cause me to put my feet to the ground

swiftly. That fellow was always making me do things in subtle discord

with my meditative temperament. No wonder that I had but a qualified

liking for him. I said with just a suspicion of jeering tone: "Of course. I told you last night on the road that it was a farce we

were engaged in."

He made the little parlour resound to its foundations with a note of

anger positively sepulchral in its depth of tone. "Farce be hanged! She

has bolted with my wife's brother, Captain Anthony." This outburst was

followed by complete subsidence. He faltered miserably as he added from

force of habit: "The son of the poet, you know."

A silence fell. Fyne's several expressions were so many examples of

varied consistency. This was the discomfiture of solemnity. My interest

of course was revived.

"But hold on," I said. "They didn't go together. Is it a suspicion or

does she actually say that . . . "

"She has gone after him," stated Fyne in comminatory tones. "By previous

arrangement. She confesses that much."

He added that it was very shocking. I asked him whether he should have

preferred them going off together; and on what ground he based that

preference. This was sheer fun for me in regard of the fact that Fyne's

too was a runaway match, which even got into the papers in its time,

because the late indignant poet had no discretion and sought to avenge

this outrage publicly in some absurd way before a bewigged judge. The

dejected gesture of little Fyne's hand disarmed my mocking mood. But I

could not help expressing my surprise that Mrs. Fyne had not detected at

once what was brewing. Women were supposed to have an unerring eye.




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