The Broad Highway - Page 229/374

"But you work so very, very hard, and earn so little and that

little--"

"I work that I may live, Charmian, and lo! I am alive."

"And dreadfully poor!"

"And ridiculously happy."

"I wonder why?" said she, beginning to draw designs on the page

before her.

"Indeed, though I have asked myself that question frequently

of late, I have as yet found no answer, unless it be my busy,

care-free life, with the warm sun about me and the voice of the

wind in the trees."

"Yes, perhaps that is it."

"And yet I don't know," I went on thoughtfully, "for now I come

to think of it, my life has always been busy and care-free, and I

have always loved the sun and the sound of wind in trees--yet,

like Horace, have asked 'What is Happiness?' and looked for it in

vain; and now, here--in this out-of-the-world spot, working as a

village smith, it has come to me all unbidden and unsought--which

is very strange!"

"Yes, Peter," said Charmian, still busy with her pen.

"Upon consideration I think my thanks are due to my uncle for

dying and leaving me penniless."

"Do you mean that he disinherited you?"

"In a way, yes; he left me his whole fortune provided that I

married a certain lady within the year."

"A certain lady?"

"The Lady Sophia Sefton, of Cambourne," said I.

Charmian's pen stopped in the very middle of a letter, and she

bent down to examine what she had been writing.

"Oh!" said she very softly, "the Lady Sophia Sefton of Cambourne?"

"Yes," said I.

"And--your cousin--Sir Maurice--were the conditions the same in

his case?"

"Precisely!"

"Oh!" said Charmian, just as softly as before, "and this lady

--she will not--marry you?"

"No," I answered.

"Are you quite--sure?"

"Certain!--you see, I never intend to ask her."

Charmian suddenly raised her head and looked at me, "Why not, Peter?"

"Because, should I ever marry--a remote contingency, and most

improbable--I am sufficiently self-willed to prefer to exert my

own choice in the matter; moreover, this lady is a celebrated

toast, and it would be most repugnant to me that my wife's name

should ever have been bandied from mouth to mouth, and hiccoughed

out over slopping wineglasses--"

The pen slipped from Charmian's fingers to the floor, and before

I could pick it up she had forestalled me, so that when she

raised her head she was flushed with stooping.