A Bicycle of Cathay - Page 94/112

I leaned my bicycle against a tree and went in-doors. The place did

not seem so quiet as when I first saw it. I had noticed a lady sitting

under a tree in front of the house. There was a nurse-maid attending a

child who was playing on the grass. Entering the hall, I glanced into

the large room which I had called the "office," and saw a man there

writing at a table.

Presently a maid-servant came into the hall. She was not one I had

noticed before. I asked if I could see Mrs. Chester, and she said she

would go and look for her. There were chairs in the hall, and I might

have waited for her there, but I did not. I entered the parlor, and

was pleased to find it unoccupied. I went to the upper end of the

room, as far as possible from the door.

In a few minutes I heard a step in the hall. I knew it, and it was

strange how soon I had learned to know it. She stopped in front of the

office, then she went on towards the porch, and turning she came into

the parlor, first looking towards the front of the room and then

towards the place where I stood.

The light from a window near me fell directly upon her as she

approached me, and I could see that there was a slight flush on her

face, but before she reached me it had disappeared. She did not greet

me. She did not offer me her hand. In fact, from what afterwards

happened, I believe that she did not consider me at that moment a fit

subject for ordinary greeting. She stood up in front of me. She gazed

steadfastly into my face. Her features wore something of their

ordinary pleasant expression, but to this there was added a certain

determination which I had never seen there before. She gave her head a

little quick shake.

"No, sir!" she said.

This reception amazed me. I had been greatly agitated as I heard her

approach, turning over in my mind what I should first say to her, but

now I forgot everything I had prepared. "No what?" I exclaimed.

"'No' means that I will not marry you."

I stood speechless. "Of course you are thinking," she continued, "that

you have never asked me to marry you. But that isn't at all necessary.

As soon as I saw you standing there, back two weeks before your

vacation is over, and when I got a good look at your face, I knew

exactly what you had come for. I was afraid when you left here that

you would come back for that, so I was not altogether unprepared. I

spoke promptly so as to spare you and to make it easier for me."