Big Game - A Story for Girls - Page 129/145

Margot shut her eyes, and the line of curling lashes looked

astonishingly black against her cheek.

"I see. Very kind! I'm--tired, Ron. I can't talk any more."

Ron rose from his seat with, it must be confessed, a sigh of relief. He

was ill at ease in the atmosphere of the sick-room, and hardly

recognised his jaunty, self-confident companion in this wan and languid

invalid. He dropped a light kiss on Margot's forehead, and hurried

downstairs, to be encountered on the threshold of the inn by George

Elgood, who for once seemed anxious to enter into conversation.

"You have been to see your sister. Did she--er--was she well enough to

send any message before we go?"

"Oh, she's all right--quite quiet and sensible again, but doesn't bother

herself much about what is going on. I told her you were off, but she

didn't seem to take much notice. Expect she's so jolly thankful to feel

comfortable again that she doesn't care for anything else."

"Er--quite so, quite so!" repeated the Editor hastily; and Ron passed on

his way, satisfied that he had been all that was tactful and

considerate, and serenely unconscious that he had eclipsed the sun of

that summer's day for two anxious hearts!

There was little sleep for poor Margot that night, and in the morning

Edith noticed with alarm the flushed cheeks and shining eyes which

seemed to predict a return of the feverish symptoms. She drew down the

blind and seated herself by the bedside, determined to guard the door

and allow no visitors. The child had evidently had too much excitement

the day before, and must now be kept absolutely quiet. But Margot

tossed and fidgeted, and threw the clothes restlessly about, refusing to

shut her eyes, and allow herself to be tucked up, as the elder sister

lovingly advised. Her eyes were strained, and every now and then she

lifted her head from the pillow with an anxious, listening movement. At

last it came, the sound for which she had been waiting--the rumble of

wheels, the clatter of horses' hoofs, the grunts and groans of the

ostler as he lifted the heavy bags to their place. Margot's brown eyes

looked up with a piteous entreaty.

"They are going! You must be quick, Edie. Run down quickly and say

good-bye!"

"It isn't necessary, dear. I saw them before coming upstairs. Ron is

there, and father."

"But you must! I want you to go. Quickly, before it is too late.

Edie, you must!"

There was no denying so vehement a command. Edith turned silently away,

confirmed in a growing suspicion, and yearning tenderly over the little

sister's suffering. It was the younger brother, of course!--the tall,

silent man, whose lips had been so dumb, whose eyes so eloquent, during

the critical days of Margot's illness, and who had been the girl's

companion on the misty moor. What had happened during those hours of

suspense and danger? What barriers had been swept aside; what new

vistas opened? Edith's own love was too sweet and sacred a thing to

allow her to pry and question into the heart-secrets of another, as is

the objectionable fashion of many so-called friends, but with her keen

woman-senses she took in George Elgood's every word, look, and movement

during the brief parting scene.