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llow happy! Will you?"
Slowly she let her cold fingers slip into his warm, protecting palm as he smiled upon her. She yielded to the dignity and charm of Meynell's character as she had done a thousand times before; but in the proud, unhappy look she bent upon him there were new and disquieting things--prophecies of the coming womanhood, not to be unravelled. Meynell pressed her hand, and put it back upon the reins with a sigh he could not restrain.
He began to talk with a forced cheerfulness of their coming journey--of the French milieu to which she was going. Hester answered in monosyllables, every now and then--he thought--choking back a sob. And again and again the discouraging thought struck through him--"Has this fellow touched her heart?"--so strong was the impression of an emerging soul and a developing personality.
Suddenly through the dispersing trees a light figure came hurriedly toward them. It was Alice Puttenham.
She was pale and weary, and when she saw Hester, with Meynell beside her, she gave a little cry. But Meynell, standing behind Hester, put his finger on his lips, and she controlled herself. Hester greeted her without any sign of emotion; and the three went homeward along the misty ways of the park. The sun had been swallowed up by rising fog; all colour had been sucked out of the leaves and the heather, even from the golden glades of fern. Only Hester's hair, and her white dress as she passed along, uplifted, made of her a kind of luminous wraith, and beside her, like the supports of an altar-piece, moved the two pensive figures of Meynell and Alice.
From a covert of thorn in the park, a youth who had retreated into its shelter on their approach watched them with malicious eyes. Another man was with him--a sheepish, red-faced person, who peered curiously at the little procession as it passed about a hundred yards away.
"Quite a family party!" said Maurice Barron with a laugh.
* * * * *
In the late evening Meynell returned to th