A Bicycle of Cathay - Page 31/112

But if she felt any pique she quickly brushed it out of sight, for, as

I have said before, she was a young woman who had great command of

herself. Of course I said to her that I was very glad to have this

chance of seeing her again, and she answered, with a laugh: "If you really are glad, you ought to thank the Burton girl. This is

one of my favorite walks. The path runs along inside the wall for a

considerable distance and then turns around the little hill over

there, and so leads back to the house. When I happened to look over

the wall and saw you I was truly surprised."

The ground was lower on the outside of the wall than on the inside,

and as I stood and looked almost into the eyes of this girl, as she

leaned with her arms upon the smooth top of the wall, the idea which

the gardener's wife put into my head came into it again. This was a

beautiful face, and the expression upon it was different from

anything I had seen there before. Her surprise had disappeared, her

pique had gone, but a very great interest in the incident of my

passing this spot at the moment of her being there was plainly

evident. As I gazed at her my blood ran warmer through my veins, and

there came upon me a feeling of the olden time--of the days when the

brave cavalier rode up to the spot where, waiting for him, his lady

sat upon her impatient jennet.

Without the least hesitation, I asked: "Do you ride a wheel?"

She looked wonderingly at me for a moment, and then broke into a

laugh.

"Why on earth do you ask such a question as that? I have a bicycle,

but I am not a very good rider, and I never venture out upon the

public road by myself."

"You shouldn't think of such a thing," said I; and then I stood

silent, and my mind showed me two young people, each mounted, not upon

a swift steed, but upon a far swifter pair of wheels, skimming onward

through the summer air, still rolling on, on, on, through country

lanes and woodland roads, laughing at pursuit if they heard the

trampling of eager hoofs behind them, with never a telegraph wire to

stretch menacingly above them, and so on, on, on, their eyes

sparkling, their hearts beating high with youthful hope.

Again, through the tender mists of the afternoon, I saw them returning

from some secluded Gretna Green to bend their knees and bow their

heads before the lord of the fair bride's home.