"Not at all. Why, Hubert?"

"Oh, if you would only go away, and not spoil our fun when the Major

comes."

For once Rachel did laugh, but she did not take the hint, and Alison

obtained only the satisfaction of hearing that she had at least not been

in Mackarel Lane. The wheels sounded on the gravel, out rushed the boys;

Alison and Rachel sat in strange, absolute silence, each forgetful

of the other, neither guarding her own looks, nor remarking her

companion's. Alison's lips were parted by intense listening; Rachel's

teeth were set to receive her enemy. There was a chorus of voices in

the hall, and something about tea and coming in warned both to gather up

their looks before Lady Temple had opened the door, and brought in upon

them not one foe, but two! Was Rachel seeing double? Hardly that, for

one was tall, bald, and bearded, not dangerously young, but on that very

account the more dangerously good-looking; and the other was almost a

boy, slim and light, just of the empty young officer type. Here, too,

was Fanny, flushed, excited, prettier and brighter than Rachel had seen

her at all, waving an introduction with head and hand; and the boys

hanging round the Major with deafening exclamations of welcome, in which

they were speedily joined by the nursery detachment. Those greetings,

those observations on growth and looks, those glad, eager questions and

answers, were like the welcome of an integral part of the family; it was

far more intimate and familiar than had been possible with the Curtises

after the long separation, and it was enough to have made the two

spectators feel out of place, if such a sensation had been within

Rachel's capacity, or if Alison had not been engaged with the tea. Lady

Temple made a few explanations, sotto voce, to Alison, whom she always

treated as though in dread of not being sufficiently considerate. "I do

hope the children have been good; I knew you would not mind; I could not

wait to see you, or I should have been too late to meet the train, and

then he would have come by the coach; and it is such a raw east wind. He

must be careful in this climate."

"How warm and sunshiny it has been all day," said Rachel, by way of

opposition to some distant echo of this whisper.

"Sunshiny, but treacherous," answered Colonel Keith; "there are cold

gusts round corners. This must be a very sheltered nook of the coast."

"Quite a different zone from Avoncester," said the youth.

"Yes, delightful. I told you it was just what would suit you," added

Fanny, to the colonel.

"Some winds are very cold here," interposed Rachel. "I always pity

people who are imposed upon to think it a Mentone near home. They are

choking our churchyard."




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