Robert W. Chambers

Ailsa Paige


Скачать книгу

is doing night and day, Mrs. Paige. Has your brother-in-law gone to business?"

      "Oh, yes. He and Stephen went at eight this morning."

      "Is your sister-in-law well. God bless her!" shouted the Captain.

      "Uncle, you mustn't shout," remonstrated Camilla gently.

      "I'm only exercising my voice,"—and to Ailsa:

      "I neglect nothing, mental, physical, spiritual, that may be of the slightest advantage to my country in the hour when every respiration, every pulse beat, every waking thought shall belong to the Government which I again shall have the honour of serving."

      He bowed stiffly from the waist, to Ailsa, to his niece, turned right about, and marched off into the house, his white moustache bristling, his hair on end.

      "Oh, dear," sighed Camilla patiently, "isn't it disheartening?"

      "He is a dear," said Ailsa. "I adore him."

      "Yes—if he'd only sleep at night. I am very selfish I suppose to complain; he is so happy and so interested these days—only—I am wondering—if there ever should be a war—would it break his poor old heart if he couldn't go? They'll never let him, you know."

      Ailsa looked up, troubled:

      "You mean—because!" she said in a low voice.

      "Well I don't consider him anything more than delightfully eccentric."

      "Neither do I. But all this is worrying me ill. His heart is so entirely wrapped up in it; he writes a letter to Washington every day, and nobody ever replies. Ailsa, it almost terrifies me to think what might happen—and he be left out!"

      "Nothing will happen. The world is too civilised, dear."

      "But the papers talk about nothing else! And uncle takes every paper in New York and Brooklyn, and he wants to have the editor of the Herald arrested, and he is very anxious to hang the entire staff of the Daily News. It's all well enough to stand there laughing, but I believe there'll be a war, and then my troubles will begin!"

      Ailsa, down on her knees again, dabbled thoughtfully in the soil, exploring the masses of matted spider-wort for new shoots.

      Camilla looked on, resignedly, her fingers playing with the loosened masses of her glossy black hair. Each was following in silence the idle drift of thought which led Camilla back to her birthday party.

      "Twenty!" she said still more resignedly—"four years younger than you are, Ailsa Paige! Oh dear—and here I am, absolutely unmarried. That is not a very maidenly thought, I suppose, is it Ailsa?"

      "You always were a romantic child," observed Ailsa, digging vigorously in the track of a vanishing May beetle. But when she disinterred him her heart failed her and she let him scramble away.

      "There! He'll probably chew up everything," she said. "What a sentimental goose I am!"

      "The first trace of real sentiment I ever saw you display," began

       Camilla reflectively, "was the night of my party."

      Ailsa dug with energy. "That is absurd! And not even funny."

      "You were sentimental!"

      "I—well there is no use in answering you," concluded Ailsa.

      "No, there isn't. I've seen women look at men, and men look back again—the way he did!"

      "Dear, please don't say such things!"

      "I'm going to say 'em," insisted Camilla with malicious satisfaction. "You've jeered at me because I'm tender-hearted about men. Now my chance has come!"

      Ailsa began patiently: "There were scarcely a dozen words spoken——"

      Camilla, delighted, shook her dark curls.

      "You've said that before," she laughed. "Oh, you pretty minx!—you and your dozen words!"

      Ailsa Paige arose in wrath and stretched out a warning arm among her leafless roses; but Camilla placed both hands on the fence top and leaned swiftly down from the veranda steps,

      "Forgive me, dear," she said penitently. "I was only trying to torment you. Kiss me and make up. I know you too well to believe that you could care for a man of that kind."

      Ailsa's face was very serious, but she lifted herself on tiptoe and they exchanged an amicable salute across the fence.

      After a moment she said: "What did you mean by 'a man of that kind'?"

      Camilla's shrug was expressive. "There are stories about him."

      Ailsa looked thoughtfully into space. "Well you won't say such things to me again, about any man—will you, dear?"

      "You never minded them before. You used to laugh."

      "But this time," said Ailsa Paige, "it is not the least bit funny.

       We scarcely exchanged——"

      She checked herself, flushing with annoyance. Camilla, leaning on the garden fence, had suddenly buried her face in both arms. In feminine plumpness, when young, there is usually something left of the schoolgirl giggler.

      The pretty girl below remained disdainfully indifferent. She dug, she clipped, she explored, inhaling, with little thrills, the faint mounting odour of forest loam and sappy stems.

      "I really must go back to New York and start my own garden," she said, not noticing Camilla's mischief. "London Terrace will be green in another week."

      "How long do you stay with the Craigs, Ailsa?"

      "Until the workmen finish painting my house and installing the new plumbing. Colonel Arran is good enough to look after it."

      Camilla, her light head always ringing with gossip, watched Ailsa curiously.

      "It's odd," she observed, "that Colonel Arran and the Craigs never exchange civilities."

      "Mrs. Craig doesn't like him," said Ailsa simply.

      "You do, don't you?"

      "Naturally. He was my guardian."

      "My uncle likes him. To me he has a hard face."

      "He has a sad face," said Ailsa Paige.

       Table of Contents

      Ailsa and her sister-in-law, Mrs. Craig, had been unusually reticent over their embroidery that early afternoon, seated together in the front room, which was now flooded with sunshine—an attractive, intimate room, restful and pretty in spite of the unlovely Victorian walnut furniture.

      Through a sunny passageway they could look into Ailsa's bedroom—formerly the children's nursery—where her maid sat sewing.

      Outside the open windows, seen between breezy curtains, new buds already clothed the great twisted ropes of pendant wistaria with a silvery-green down.

      The street was quiet under its leafless double row of trees, maple, ailanthus, and catalpa; the old man who trudged his rounds regularly every week was passing now with his muffled shout:

      Any old hats

       Old coats

       Old boots!

       Any old mats Old suits, Old flutes! Ca-ash!

      And, leaning near to the sill, Ailsa saw him shuffling along, green-baize bag bulging, a pyramid of stove-pipe hats crammed down over his ears.

      At intervals from somewhere in the neighbourhood sounded the pleasant bell of the scissors grinder, and the not unmusical call of "Glass put in!" But it was really very tranquil there in the sunshine of Fort Greene