"Truly?" There was the merest flavor of playful sarcasm in the uptilt of
the word, but it was gone when she went on.
"Being so good a friend to Dick, then, you can advise me the better.
Tell me, if you please, must I marry him--when--"
"When you are free to do it?" I finished for her. "Why should you not,
my dear?"
She was pulling the threads from the lace edging of her kerchief and
would not for a king's ransom let her eyes meet mine.
"You used to say--in that other time--that love should go before a
marriage; did you not? Or do I remember badly?"
"You remember well. I said it then, and I say it again at this present.
But Dick loves you well and truly, sweetheart; and you--"
She looked up quickly with the little laugh that used to mind me of
happy children at play.
"And I?--now you will read a woman's heart for me, Monsieur John. Tell
me; do I love him as his mistress should?"
"Nay, surely," said I, gravely, for somehow her laugh jarred upon me,
"surely that is for you to say. But you have said it, long since."
"Have I?" she queried, with an arch lifting of the penciled brows that
came straight from her French mother. "Mayhap you overheard me say it,
Monsieur Eavesdropper?"
"God help me, little one--so I did," said I.
All in a flash her laughing mood was gone and she stood before me like
an accusing goddess.
"You told me once the past was like a dream to you; you must have
dreamed that part of it, sir. And yet you said a little while ago that
I had not failed in any wifely duty!"
"The time and circumstance were their own best excuse.
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