h my own crowd. When I left home I was
obliged to send a note by a boy to say `ta-ta' to escape it all, don't
you know."
Hoste guffawed. It was just the sort of thing that George Payne,
philosopher and cynic, would do.
"Some few of them are sensible, though," went on the latter, flaring up
a vesuvian to light his pipe. "Mrs Carhayes, for instance. She don't
make any fuss, or turn on the hose. Takes things as they come--as a
rational person should."
Hoste guffawed again.
"Now, George, who the very deuce should she make a fuss over or turn on
the hose for?" he said. "You or me, for instance. Eh?"
"N-no, I suppose not. Milne, perhaps. He's a sort of brother or cousin
or something, isn't he?"
If Eustace had felt disposed to resent this kind of free-and-easiness he
forebore, and that for two reasons. He liked the speaker, who, withal,
was something of an original, and therefore a privileged person, and
again the very carelessness of the remark of either man showed that no
suspicion as to his secret had found place in their minds--a matter as
to which he had not been without a misgiving a few minutes back.
On opening the packet which Eanswyth had put into his hand at parting,
Eustace found it to consist of a little antique silver tobacco-box,
beautifully chased. This contained a photograph of herself, and a
letter; the last a short, hurriedly penned note, which, perused there
alone, with all the desolation of the recent parting fresh upon him, was
effectual to thrill his heart to the very core.
"And now," it ended--"And now, oh, my precious one, good-bye--I dare not
say `God bless you.' Coming from me it would entail a curse rather than
a blessing. I am too wicked. Yet, is our love so wicked? Could it be
so divinely, so beautifully sweet if it were? Ah, I neither know nor
care. I only know that were anything to befall you--were you never to
come back to me--my heart would be broken. Yes, broken. And yet, it
would be only just that I should suffer through you. Good-bye, my
dearest one--my only love. We may not meet again alone before you
start, but I want you, in all your dangers and hardships, to have always
with you these poor little lines, coming, as they do, warm from my hand
and heart--"
The writing broke off abruptly and there were signs that more than one
tear had fallen upon the silent, but oh, so eloquent paper.
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN.
IN THE ENEMY'S COUNTRY.
"Hi, Hoste,
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