The Castle Inn - Page 75/559

Her seat, though quiet and remote from the bustle--for the Salisbury

road is the less frequented of the two roads--was in view of the gates

leading to the Inn; and her extreme beauty, which was that of expression

as well as feature, made her a mark for a dozen furtive eyes, of which

she affected to be unconscious. But as soon as Sir George's gaze fell on

her, her look met his frankly and she smiled; and then again her eyes

dropped and studied the road before her, and she blushed in a way Soane

found enchanting. He had been going into the town, but he turned and

went to her and sat down on the bridge beside her, almost with the air

of an old acquaintance. He opened the conversation by saying that it was

a prodigious fine day; she agreed. That the Downs were uncommonly

healthy; she said the same. And then there was silence.

'Well?' he said after a while; and he looked at her.

'Well?' she answered in the same tone. And she looked at him over the

edge of her fan, her eyes laughing.

'How did you sleep, child?' he asked; while he thought, 'Lord! How

handsome she is!' 'Perfectly, sir,' she answered, 'thanks to your excellency's kindness.' Her voice as well as her eyes laughed. He stared at her, wondering at

the change in her. 'You are lively this morning,' he said.

'I cannot say the same of you, Sir George,' she answered. 'When you came

out, and before you saw me, your face was as long as a coach-horse's.' Sir George winced. He knew where his thoughts had been. 'That was before

I saw you, child,' he said. 'In your company--' 'You are scarcely more lively,' she answered saucily. 'Do you flatter

yourself that you are?' Sir George was astonished. He was aware that the girl lacked neither wit

nor quickness; but hitherto he had found her passionate at one time,

difficult and farouche at another, at no time playful or coquettish.

Here, and this morning, she did not seem to be the same woman. She spoke

with ease, laughed with the heart as well as the lips, met his eyes with

freedom and without embarrassment, countered his sallies with

sportiveness--in a word, carried herself towards him as though she were

an equal; precisely as Lady Betty and the Honourable Fanny carried

themselves. He stared at her.

And she, seeing the look, laughed in pure happiness, knowing what was in

his mind, and knowing her own mind very well. 'I puzzle you?' she said.

'You do,' he answered. 'What are you doing here? And why have you taken

up with that lawyer? And why are you dressed, child--' 'Like this?' she said, rising, and sitting down again. 'You think it is

above my station?' He shrugged his shoulders, declining to put his views into words;

instead, 'What does it all mean?' he said.