The narrative exchanged by Plank in return for Siward's intensely interested questions was a simple, limpid review of a short but terrific campaign that only yesterday had threatened to rage through court after court, year after year. In the sudden shock of the cessation from battle, Plank himself was a little dazed. Yet he himself had expected the treason that ended all; he himself had foreseen it. He had counted on it as a good general counts on such things, confidently, but with a dozen plans as substitutes in case that plan failed--each plan as elaborately worked out to the last detail as though it alone existed as the only hope of victory. But if Siward suspected something of this it was not from Plank that he learned it.
"Plank," he said at last, "there is nothing in the world that men admire more than a man. It is a good deal of a privilege for me to tell you so."
Plank turned red with surprise and embarrassment, stammering out something incoherent.
That was all that was said about the victory. Siward, unusually gay for awhile, presently turned sombre; and it was Plank's turn to lift him out of it by careless remarks about his rapid convalescence, and the chance for vacation he so much needed.
Once Siward looked up vacantly: "Where am I to go?" he asked. "I'd as soon stay here."
"But I'm going," insisted Plank. "The Fells is all ready for us."
"The Fells! I can't go there!"
"W-what?" faltered Plank, looking at Siward with hurt eyes.
"Can't you--don't you understand?" said Siward in a low voice.
"No. You once promised--"
"Plank, I'll go anywhere except there with you. I'd rather be with you than with anybody. Can I say more than that?"
"I think you ought to, Siward. A--a fellow feels the refusal of his offered roof-tree."
"Man! man! it isn't your roof I am refusing. I want to go; I'd give anything to go. If it were anywhere except where it is, I'd go fast enough. Now do you understand? If--if Shotover House and Shotover people were not next door to the Fells, I'd go. Now do you understand?"
Plank said: "I don't know whether I understand. If you mean Quarrier, he's on his way here, and he'll have business to keep him here for the next few months, I assure you. But"--he looked very gravely across at Siward--"if you don't mean Quarrier--" He hesitated, ill at ease under the expressionless scrutiny of the other.
"Do you know what's the matter with me, Plank?" he asked at length.
"I think so."
"I have wondered. I wonder now how much you know."