Anne Severn and the Fieldings - Page 5/574

With the perfect curve of a great supple animal, she turned and settled

in her lair, under her tree.

Presently, down the steps and across the lawn, Anne's father came

towards her, grave, handsome, and alone.

Handsome even after fifteen years of India. Handsomer than when he was

young. More distinguished. Eyes lighter in the sallowish bronze. She

liked his lean, eager, deerhound's face, ready to start off, sniffing

the trail. A little strained, leashed now, John's eagerness. But that

was how he used to come to her, with that look of being ready, as if

they could do things together.

She had tried to find his youth in Anne's face; but Anne's blackness and

whiteness were her mother's; her little nose was still soft and vague;

you couldn't tell what she would be like in five years' time. Still,

there was something; the same strange quality; the same

forward-springing grace.

Before he reached her, Adeline was smiling again. A smile of the

delicate, instinctive mouth, of the blue eyes shining between curled

lids, under dark eyebrows; of the innocent white nose; of the whole

soft, milk-white face. Even her sleek, dark hair smiled, shining. She

was conscious of her power to make him come to her, to make herself felt

through everything, even through his bereavement.

The subtle Eliot, looking over the terrace wall, observed her and

thought, "The mater's jolly pleased with herself. I wonder why."

It struck Eliot also that a Commissioner of Ambala and a Member of the

Legislative Council and a widower ought not to look like Mr. Severn. He

was too lively, too adventurous.

He turned again to the enthralling page. "The student should lay open

the theoracic cavity of the rabbit and dissect away the thymous gland

and other tissues which hide the origin of the great vessels; so as to

display the heart..."

Yearp, the vet, would show him how to do that.

iv "His name's Benjy. He's a butterfly smut," said Jerrold.

The rabbit was quiet now. He sat in Anne's arms, couching, his forepaws

laid on her breast. She stooped and kissed his soft nose that went in

and out, pushing against her mouth, in a delicate palpitation. He was

white, with black ears and a black oval at the root of his tail. Two

wing-shaped patches went up from his nose like a moustache. That was his

butterfly smut.

"He _is_ sweet," she said.

Colin said it after her in his shrill child's voice: "He is sweet."

Colin had a habit of repeating what you said. It was his way of joining

in the conversation.