alth.
Q. Is Five-Bob a very pretty place?
A. Yes; one of the show places of the district. Q. Does he often come to
Caddagat?
A. Yes, he often drops in.
Q. What makes his hair so black and his moustache that light colour?
A. You'll have to study science to find that out. I'm sure I can't tell
you.
Q. Does he--?
"Now, Sybylla," said auntie, laughing, "you are taking a suspicious
interest in my sunburnt young giant. Did I not tell you he was taking
time by the forelock when he brought the apples?"
"Oh, auntie, I am only asking questions because--"
"Yes, because, because, I understand perfectly. Because you are a girl,
and all the girls fall a victim to Harry's charms at once. If you don't
want to succumb meekly to your fate, 'Heed the spark or you may dread the
fire.' That is the only advice I can tender you."
This was a Thursday, and on the following Sunday Harold Beecham
reappeared at Caddagat and remained from three in the afternoon until
nine at night. Uncle Julius and Frank Hawden were absent. The weather had
taken a sudden backward lurch into winter again, so we had a fire. Harold
sat beside it all the time, and interposed yes and no at the proper
intervals in grannie's brisk business conversation, but he never
addressed one word to me beyond "Good afternoon, Miss Melvyn," on his
arrival, and "Good night, Miss Melvyn," when leaving.
I studied him attentively all the while. What were his ideas and
sentiments it were hard to tell: he never expressed any. He was fearfully
and wonderfully quiet. Yet his was an intelligent silence, not of that
wooden brainless description which casts a damper on company, neither was
it of the morose or dreaming order.
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
Principally Letters
Caddagat, 29th Sept., 1896
My dearest Gertie,
I have started to write no less than seven letters to you, but something
always interrupted me and I did not finish them. However, I'll finish
this one in the teeth of Father Peter himself. I will parenthesize all
the interruptions. (A traveller just asked me for a rose. I had to get up
and give him one.) Living here is lovely. (Another man inquired the way
to Somingley Gap, and I've just finished directing him.) Grannie is
terribly nice. You could not believe. She is always giving me something,
and takes me wherever she goes. Auntie is an angel. I wish you could hear
the piano. It is a beauty. There are dozens of papers and books to read.
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