The Three Jolly Anglers is an inn of a distinctly jovial aspect,
with its toppling gables, its creaking sign, and its bright lattices,
which, like merry little twinkling eyes, look down upon the eternal
river to-day with the same half-waggish, half-kindly air as they
have done for generations.
Upon its battered sign, if you look closely enough, you may still
see the Three Anglers themselves, somewhat worn and dim with time
and stress of weather, yet preserving their jollity through it all
with an heroic fortitude - as they doubtless will do until they
fade away altogether.
It is an inn with raftered ceilings, and narrow, winding passageways;
an inn with long, low chambers full of unexpected nooks and corners,
with great four-post beds built for tired giants it would seem, and
wide, deep chimneys reminiscent of Gargantuan rounds of beef; an inn
whose very walls seem to exude comfort, as it were - the solid
comfortable comfort of a bygone age.
Of all the many rooms here to be found I love best that which is
called the Sanded Parlour. Never were wainscoted walls of a mellower
tone, never was pewter more gleaming, never were things more bright
and speckless, from the worn, quaint andirons on the hearth to the
brass-bound blunderbuss, with the two ancient fishing-rods above.
At one end of the room was a long, low casement, and here I leaned,
watching the river near-by, and listening to its never-ceasing murmur.
I had dined an hour ago; the beef had been excellent - it always is
at the Three Jolly Anglers - and the ale beyond all criticism; also
my pipe seemed to have an added flavour.
Yet despite all this I did not enjoy that supreme content - that
philosophical calm which such beef and such ale surely warranted.
But then, who ever heard of Love and Philosophy going together?
Away over the uplands a round, harvest moon was beginning to rise,
flecking the shadowy waters with patches of silver, and, borne to
my ears upon the warm, still air, came the throb of distant violins.
This served only to deepen my melancholy, reminding me that somebody
or other was giving a ball to-night; and Lisbeth was there, and Mr.
Selwyn was there, of course, and I - I was here - alone with the
brass-bound blunderbuss, the ancient fishing-rods and the antique
andirons on the hearth; with none to talk to save the moon, and the
jasmine that had crept in at the open casement. And noting the
splendour of the night, I experienced towards Lisbeth a feeling of
pained surprise, that she should prefer the heat and garish glitter
of a ball-room to walking beneath such a moon with me.
Indeed, it was a wondrous night! one of those warm still nights
which seem full of vague and untold possibilities! A night with
magic in the air, when elves and fairies dance within their grassy
rings, or biding amid the shade of trees, peep out at one between
the leaves; or again, some gallant knight on mighty steed may come
pacing slowly from the forest shadows, with the moonlight bright
upon his armour.
Yes, surely there was magic in the air to-right! I half wished
that some enchanter might, by a stroke of his fairy wand, roll
back the years and leave me in the brutal, virile, Good Old Times,
when men wooed and won their loves by might and strength of arm,
and not by gold, as is so often the case in these days of ours. To
be mounted upon my fiery steed, lance in hand and sword on thigh,
riding down the leafy alleys of the woods yonder, led by the
throbbing, sighing melody. To burst upon the astonished dancers
like a thunder-clap; to swing her up to my saddle-bow, and clasped
in each other's arms, to plunge into the green mystery of forest.
My fancies had carried me thus far when I became aware of a small,
furtive figure, dodging from one patch of shadow to another. Leaning
from the window, I made out the form of a somewhat disreputable
urchin, who, dropping upon hands and knees, proceeded to crawl
towards me over the grass with a show of the most elaborate caution.
"Hallo!" I exclaimed, "halt and give the counter-sign!" The urchin
sat up on his heels and stared at me with a pair of very round,
bright eyes.
"Please, are you Mr. Uncle Dick?" he inquired.
"Oh," I said, "you come from the Imp, I presume." The boy nodded a
round head, at the same time fumbling with something in his pocket.
"And whom may you be?" I inquired, conversationally.
"I'm Ben, I am."
"The gardener's boy?" Again the round head nodded acquiescence, as
with much writhing and twisting he succeeded in drawing a
heterogeneous collection of articles from his pocket, whence he
selected a very dirty and crumpled piece of paper.
"He wants a ladder so's he can git out, but it's too big fer me to
lift, so he told me to give you this here so's you would come an'
rescue him - please, Mr. Uncle Dick." With which lucid explanation
Ben handed me the crumpled note.
Spreading it out upon the windowsill, I managed to make out as
follows:
DEAR UNKEL DICK: I'm riting this with my hart's blood bekors I'm a
prisner in a gloomie dungun. It isn't really my hart's blood it's
only red ink, so don't worry. Aunty lisbath cent me to bed just
after tea bekors she said I'm norty, and when she'd gone Nurse
locked me in so i can't get out and I'm tired of being a prisner,
so please i want you to get the ladda and let me eskape, please
unkel dick, will you.
yours till deth,
REGINALD AUGUSTUS.
Auntie was reading Ivanhoe to us and I've been the Black Knight and
you can be Gurth the swine-herd if you like.
"So that's the way of it?" I said.
"Well! well! such an appeal shall not go unanswered, at least. Wait
there, my trusty Benjamin, and I'll be with you anon." Pausing only
to refill my tobacco-pouch and get my cap, I sallied out into the
fragrant night, and set off along the river, the faithful Benjamin
trotting at my heels.
Very soon we were skirting blooming flower-beds, and crossing trim
lawns, until at length we reached a certain wing of the house from
a window of which a pillow-case was dangling by means of a string.
"That's for provisions!" volunteered Ben; "we pertended he was
starving, so he lets it down an' I fill it with onions out of the
vegetable garden." At this moment the curly head of the Imp
appeared at the window, followed by the major portion of his person.
"Oh, Uncle Dick!" he cried in a loud stage-whisper, "I think you
had better be the Black Knight, 'cause you're so big, you know."
"Imp," I said, "get in at once, do you want to break your neck?"
The Imp obediently wriggled into safety.
"The ladder's in the tool-house, Uncle Dick - Ben'll show you.
Will you get it, please?" he pleaded in a wheedling tone.
"First of all, my Imp, why did your Auntie Lisbeth send you to
bed - had you been a very naughty boy?"
"No-o!" he answered, after a moment's pause, "I don't think I was so
very naughty - I only painted Dorothy like an Indian chief - green,
with red spots, an' she looked fine, you know."
"Green, with red spots!" I repeated.
"Yes; only auntie didn't seem to like it."
"I fear your Auntie Lisbeth lacks an eye for colour."
"Yes, 'fraid so; she sent me to bed for it, you know."
"Still, Imp, under the circumstances I think it would be best if
you got undressed and went to sleep."
"Oh, but I can't, Uncle Dick!"
"Why not, my Imp?"
"'Cause the moon's so very bright, an' everything looks so fine down
there, an' I'm sure there's fairies about - Moon-fairies, you know,
and I'm 'miserable."
"Miserable, Imp?"
"Yes, Auntie Lisbeth never came to kiss me good-night, an' so I
can't go to sleep, Uncle Dick!"
"Why that alters the case, certainly."
"Yes, an' the ladder's in the tool-house."
"Imp," I said, as I turned to follow Benjamin, "oh, you Imp!"
There are few things in this world more difficult to manage than a
common or garden ladder; among other peculiarities it has a most
unpleasant knack of kicking out suddenly just as everything appears
to be going smoothly, which is apt to prove disconcerting to the
novice. However, after sundry mishaps of the kind, I eventually
got it reared up to the window, and a moment afterwards the Imp had
climbed down and stood beside me, drawing the breath of freedom.
As a precautionary measure we proceeded to hide the ladder in a
clump of rhododendrons hard by, and had but just done so when
Benjamin uttered a cry of warning and took to his heels, while the
Imp and I sought shelter behind a friendly tree. And not a whit
too soon, for, scarcely had we done so, when two figures came round
a corner of the house - two figures who walked very slowly and very
close together.
"Why it's Betty-the cook, you know-an' Peter!" whispered the Imp.
Almost opposite our hiding-place Betty paused to sigh heavily and
stare up at the moon.
"Oh, Peter!" she murmured, "look at that there orb!"
"Ar!" said Peter, gazing obediently upward.
"Peter, ain't it 'eavenly; don't it stir your very soul?"
"Ar!" said Peter.
"Peter, are you sure you loves me more than that Susan thing at the
doctor's?" A corduroy coat-sleeve crept slowly about Betty's plump
waist, and there came the unmistakable sound of a kiss.
"Really and truly, Peter?"
"Ar!" said Peter, "so 'elp me Sam!" The kissing sound was repeated,
and they walked on once more, only closer than ever now on account
of the corduroy coat-sleeve.
"Those two are in love, you know," nodded the Imp. "Peter says the
cheese-cakes she makes are enough to drive any man into marrying
her, whether he wants to or not, an' I heard Betty telling Jane that
she adored Peter, 'cause he had so much soul! Why is it," he
inquired, thoughtfully, as he watched the two out of sight, "why is
it, Uncle Dick, that people in love always look so silly?"
"Do you think so?" I asked, as I paused to light my pipe.
"'Course I do!" returned the Imp; "what's any one got to put their
arm round girls for, just as if they wanted holding up - I think
it's awfull' silly!"
"Of course it is, Imp - your wisdom is unassailable - still, do you
know, I can understand a man being foolish enough to do it -
occasionally."
"But you never would, Uncle Dick?"
"Alas, Imp!" I said, shaking my head, "Fortune seems to preclude all
chances of it."
"'Course you wouldn't," he exclaimed; "an' Ivanhoe wouldn't - "
"Ah, but he did!" I put in; "have you forgotten Rowena?"
"Oh!" cried the Imp dolefully, "do you really think he ever put his
arm round her?"
"Sure of it," I nodded. The Imp seemed much cast down, and even
shocked.
"But there was the Black Knight," he said, brightening suddenly -
"Richard of the Lion Heart, you know - he never did!"
"Not while he was fighting, of course, but afterwards, if history
is to be believed, he very frequently did; and we are all alike,
Imp - everybody does sooner or later."
"But why? Why should any one want to put their arm round a girl,
Uncle Dick?"
"For the simple reason that the girl is there to put it round, I
suppose. And now, Imp, let us talk of fish."
Instinctively we had wandered towards the river, and now we stood
to watch the broad, silver path made by the moon across the mystery
of its waters.
"I love to see the shine upon the river like that," said the Imp,
dreamily; "Auntie Lisbeth says it's the path that the Moon-fairies
come down by to bring you nice dreams when you've been good. I've
got out of bed lots of times an' watched an' watched, but I've never
seen them come. Do you think there are fairies in the moon, Uncle
Dick?"
"Undoubtedly," I answered; "how else does it keep so bright? I
used to wonder once how they managed to make it shine so."
"It must need lots of rubbing!" said the Imp; "I wonder if they ever
get tired?"
"Of course they do, Imp, and disheartened, too, sometimes, like the
rest of us, and then everything is black, and people wonder where
the moon is. But they are very brave, these Moon-fairies, and they
never quite lose hope, you know; so they presently go back to their
rubbing and polishing, always starting at one edge. And in a little
while we see it begin to shine again, very small and thin at first,
like a - "
"Thumb-nail!"
"Yes, just like a thumb-nail; and so they go on working and working
at it until it gets as big and round and bright as it is to-night."
Thus we walked together through a fairy world, the Imp and I, while
above the murmur of the waters, above the sighing of the trees, came
the soft, tremulous melody of the violins.
"I do wish I had lived when there were knights like Ivanhoe," burst
out the Imp suddenly; "it must have been fine to knock a man off
his horse with your lance."
"Always supposing he didn't knock you off first, Imp."
"Oh! I should have been the sort of knight that nobody could knock
off, you know. An' I'd have wandered about on my faithful charger,
fighting all sorts of caddish barons, and caitiffs, an' slaying
giants; an' I'd have rescued lovely ladies from castles grim
- though I wouldn't have put my arm round them, of course!"
"Perish the thought, my Imp!"
"Uncle Dick!" he said, insinuatingly, "I do wish you'd be the Black
Knight, an' let me be Ivanhoe."
"But there are no caitiffs and things left for us to fight, Imp,
and no lovely ladies to rescue from castles grim, alas!"
Now we had been walking on, drawn almost imperceptibly by the magic
thread of the melody, which had led us, by devious paths, to a low
stone wall, beyond which we could see the gleam of lighted windows
and the twinkle of fairy-lamps among the trees. And over there,
amid the music and laughter, was Lisbeth in all the glory of her
beauty, happy, of course, and light-hearted; and here, beneath the
moon, was I.
"We could pretend this was a castle grim, you know, Uncle Dick, full
of dungeons an' turrets, an' that we were going to rescue Auntie
Lisbeth."
"Imp," I said, "that's really a great idea."
"I wish I'd brought my trusty sword," he sighed, searching about
for something to supply its place; "I left it under my pillow, you
know."
Very soon, however, he had procured two sticks, somewhat thin and
wobbly, yet which, by the magic of imagination, became transformed
into formidable, two-edged swords, with one of which he armed me,
the other he flourished above his head.
"Forward, gallant knights!" he cried; "the breach! the breach! On!
on! St. George, for Merrie England!" With the words he clambered
upon the wall and disappeared upon the other side.
For a moment I hesitated, and then, inspired by the music and the
thought of Lisbeth, I followed suit. It was all very mad, of course,
but who cared for sanity on such a night - certainly not I.
"Careful now, Imp!" I cautioned; "if any one should see us they'll
take us for thieves, or lunatics, beyond a doubt."
We found ourselves in an enclosed garden with a walk which led
between rows of fruit trees. Following this, it brought us out
upon a broad stretch of lawn, with here and there a great tree,
and beyond, the gleaming windows of the house. Filled with the
spirit of adventure, we approached, keeping in the shadow as much
as possible, until we could see figures that strolled to and fro
upon the terrace or promenaded the walks below.
The excitement of dodging our way among so many people was intense;
time and again we were only saved from detection by more than one
wandering couple, owing to the fact that all their attention was
centred in themselves. For instance, we were skirmishing round a
clump of laurels, to gain the shadow of the terrace, when we almost
ran into the arms of a pair; but they didn't see us for the very
good reason that she was staring at the moon, and he at her.
"So sweet of you, Archibald!" she was saying.
"What did she call him 'bald for, Uncle Dick?" inquired the Imp in
a loud stage-whisper, as I dragged him down behind the laurels.
'He's not a bit bald, you know! An' I say, Uncle Dick, did you see
his arm, it was round - "
"Yes - yes!" I nodded.
"Just like Peter's, you know."
"Yes - yes, I saw."
"I wonder why she called him - "
"Hush!" I broke in, "his name is Archibald, I suppose."
"Well, I hope when I grow up nobody will ever call me - "
"Hush!" I said again, "not a word - there's your Auntie Lisbeth!
She was, indeed, standing upon the terrace, within a yard of our
hiding-place, and beside her was Mr. Selwyn.
"Uncle Dick," whispered the irrepressible Imp, "do you think if we
watch long enough that Mr. Selwyn will put his arm round - "
"Shut up!" I whispered savagely. Lisbeth was clad in a long,
trailing gown of dove-coloured silk - one of those close-fitting
garments that make the uninitiated, such as myself, wonder how they
are ever got on. Also, she wore a shawl, which I was sorry for,
because I have always been an admirer of beautiful things, and
Lisbeth's neck and shoulders are glorious. Mr. Selwyn stood beside
her with a plate of ice cream in his hand, which he handed to her,
and they sat down. As I watched her and noticed her weary, bored
air, and how wistfully she gazed up at the silver disc of the moon,
I experienced a feeling of decided satisfaction.
"Yes," said Lisbeth, toying absently with the ice cream, "he painted
Dorothy's face with stripes of red and green enamel, and goodness
only knows how we can ever get it all off!"
Mr. Selwyn was duly shocked and murmured something about 'the
efficacy of turpentine' in such an emergency.
"Of course, I had to punish him," continued Lisbeth, "so I sent him
to bed immediately after tea, and never went to say good-night, or
tuck him up as I usually do, and it has been worrying me all the
evening."
Mr. Selwyn was sure that he was all right, and positively certain
that at this moment he was wrapped in balmy slumber. Despite my
warning grasp, the Imp chuckled, but we were saved by the band
striking up. Mr. Selwyn rose, giving his arm to Lisbeth, and they
re-entered the ball-room. One by one the other couples followed
suit until the long terrace was deserted. Now, upon Lisbeth's
deserted chair, showing wonderfully pink in the soft glow of the
Chinese lanterns, was the ice cream.
"Uncle Dick," said the Imp in his thoughtful way, "I think I'll
be a bandit for a bit."
"Anything you like," I answered rashly, "so long as we get away
while we can."
"All right," he whispered, "I won't be a minute," and before I
could stop him he had scrambled down the steps and fallen to upon
the ice cream.
The wonderful celerity with which the Imp wolfed down that ice
cream was positively awe-inspiring. In less time almost than it
takes to tell the plate was empty. Yet scarcely had he swallowed
the last mouthful when he heard Mr. Selwyn's voice close by. In
his haste the Imp dropped his cap, a glaring affair of red and
white, and before he could recover it Lisbeth reappeared, followed
by Mr. Selwyn.
- "It certainly is more pleasant out here!" he was saying.
Lisbeth came straight towards the cap-it was a moral impossibility
that she could fail to see it - yet she sank into her chair without
word or sign. Mr. Selwyn, on the contrary, stood with the empty
ice plate in his hand, staring at it in wide-eyed astonishment.
"It's gone!" he exclaimed.
"Oh!" said Lisbeth.
"Most extraordinary!" Said Mr. Selwyn, fixing his monocle and staring
harder than ever; "I wonder where it can have got to?"
"Perhaps it melted!" Lisbeth suggested, "and I should so have loved
an ice!" she sighed.
"Then, of course, I'll get you another, with pleasure," he said and
hurried off, eyeing the plate dubiously as he went.
No sooner was Lisbeth alone than she kicked aside the train of her
dress and picked up the tell-tale cap.
"Imp!" she whispered, rising to her feet, "Imp, come here at once,
sir!" There was a moment's breathless pause, and then the Imp
squirmed himself into view.
"Hallo, Auntie Lisbeth!" he said, with a cheerfulness wholly assumed.
"Oh!" she cried, distressfully, "whatever does this mean; what are
you doing here? Oh, you naughty boy!"
"Lisbeth," I said, as I rose in my turn and confronted her, "Do not
blame the child - the fault is mine - let me explain; by means of a
ladder - "
"Not here," she whispered, glancing nervously towards the ball-room.
"Then come where I can."
"Impossible!"
"Not at all; you have only to descend these steps and we can talk
undisturbed."
"Ridiculous!" she said, stooping to replace the Imp's cap; but being
thus temptingly within reach, she was next moment beside us in the
shadows.
"Dick, how could you, how dared you?"
"You see, I had to explain," I answered very humbly; "I really
couldn't allow this poor child to bear the blame of my fault - "
"I'm not a 'poor child,' Uncle Dick," expostulated the Imp; "I'm a
gallant knight and - "
" - The blame of my fault, Lisbeth," I continued, "I alone must face
your just resentment, for - "
"Hush!" she whispered, glancing hastily about.
" - For, by means of a ladder, Lisbeth, a common or garden ladder - "
"Oh, do be quiet!" she said, and laid her hand upon my lips, which
I immediately imprisoned there, but for a moment only; the next it
was snatched away as there came the unmistakable sound of some one
approaching.
"Come along, Auntie Lisbeth," whispered the Imp, "fear not, we'll
rescue you."
Oh! surely there was magic in the air to-night; for, with a swift,
dexterous movement, Lisbeth had swept her long train across her arm,
and we were running hand in hand, all three of us, running across
lawns and down winding paths between yew hedges, sometimes so close
together that I could feel a tress of her fragrant hair brushing my
face with a touch almost like a caress. Surely, surely, there was
magic in the air to-night!
Suddenly Lisbeth stopped, flushed and panting.
"Well!" she exclaimed, staring from me to the Imp, and back again,
"was ever anything so mad!"
"Everything is mad to-night," I said; "it's the moon!"
"To think of my running away like this with two - two - "
"Interlopers," I suggested.
"I really ought to be very, very angry with you - both of you, she
said, trying to frown.
"No, don't be angry with us, Auntie Lisbeth," pleaded the Imp,
"'cause you are a lovely lady in a castle grim, an' we are two
gallant knights, so we had to come an' rescue you; an' you never came
to kiss me good-night, an' I'm awfull' sorry 'bout painting Dorothy's
face - really!"
"Imp," cried Lisbeth, falling on her knees regardless of her silks
and laces, "Imp, come and kiss me." The Imp drew out a decidedly
grubby handkerchief, and, having rubbed his lips with it, obeyed.
"Now, Uncle Dick!" he said, and offered me the grubby handkerchief.
Lisbeth actually blushed.
"Reginald!" she exclaimed, "whatever put such an idea into your
head?"
"Oh! everybody's always kissing somebody you know," he nodded; "an'
it's Uncle Dick's turn now."
Lisbeth rose from her knees and began to pat her rebellious hair
into order. Now, as she raised her arms, her shawl very naturally
slipped to the ground; and standing there, with her eyes laughing
up at me beneath their dark lashes, with the moonlight in her hair,
and gleaming upon the snow of her neck and shoulders, she had never
seemed quite so bewilderingly, temptingly beautiful before.
"Dick," she said, "I must go back at once - before they miss me."
"Go back!" I repeated, "never - that is, not yet."
"But suppose any one saw us!" she said, with a hairpin in her mouth.
"They shan't," I answered; "you will see to that, won't you, Imp?"
"'Course I will, Uncle Dick!"
"Then go you, Sir Knight, and keep faithful ward behind yon apple
tree, and let no base varlet hither come; that is, if you see any
one, be sure to tell me." The Imp saluted and promptly disappeared
behind the apple tree in question, while I stood watching Lisbeth's
dexterous fingers and striving to remember a line from Keats
descriptive of a beautiful woman in the moonlight. Before I could
call it to mind, however, Lisbeth interrupted me.
"Don't you think you might pick up my shawl instead of staring at
me as if I was - "
"The most beautiful woman in the world!" I put in.
- "Who is catching her death of cold," she laughed, yet for all her
light tone her eyes drooped before mine as I obediently wrapped the
shawl about her, in the doing of which, my arm being round her, very
naturally stayed there, and - wonder of wonders, was not repulsed.
And at this very moment, from the shadowy trees behind us, came the
rich, clear song of a nightingale.
Oh! most certainly the air was full of magic to-night!
"Dick," said Lisbeth very softly as the trilling notes died away,
"I thought one could only dream such a night as this is."
"And yet life might hold many such for you and me, if you would only
let it, Lisbeth," I reminded her. She did not answer.
"Not far from the village of Down, in Kent," I began.
"There stands a house," she put in, staring up at the moon with
dreamy eyes.
"A very old house, with twisted Tudor chimneys and pointed gables
- you see I have it all by heart, Dick - a house with wide stairways
and long pannelled chambers - "
"Very empty and desolate at present," I added. "And amongst other
things, there is a rose-garden - they call it My Lady's Garden,
Lisbeth, though no lady has trod its winding paths for years and
years. But I have dreamed, many and many a time, that we stood among
the roses, she and I, upon just such another night as this is. So
I keep the old house ready and the gardens freshly trimmed, ready
for my lady's coming; must I wait much longer, Lisbeth?" As I ended
the nightingale took up the story, pleading my cause for me, filling
the air with a melody now appealing, now commanding, until it
gradually died away in one long note of passionate entreaty.
Lisbeth sighed and turned towards me, but as she did so I felt a tug
at my coat, and, looking round, beheld the Imp.
"Uncle Dick," he said, his eyes studiously averted, doubtless on
account of the position of my arm, "here's Mr. Selwyn!"
With a sudden exclamation Lisbeth started from me and gathered up her
skirts to run.
"Whereaway, my Imp?"
"Coming across the lawn."
"Reginald," I said, solemnly, listen to me; you must sally out upon
him with lance in rest, tell him you are a Knight-errant, wishful
to uphold the glory of that faire ladye, your Auntie Lisbeth, and
whatever happens you must manage to keep him away from here, do you
understand?"
"Yes, only I do wish I'd brought my trusty sword, you know," he
sighed.
"Never mind that now, Imp."
"Will Auntie Lisbeth be quite - "
"She will be all right."
"I suppose if you put your arm - "
"Never mind my arm, Imp, go!"
"Then fare thee well!" said he, and with a melodramatic flourish of
his lance, trotted off.
"What did he mean about your arm, Dick?"
"Probably this!" I answered, slipping it around her again.
"But you must get away at once," whispered Lisbeth; "if Mr. Selwyn
should see you - "
"I intend that he shall. Oh, it will be quite simple; while he is
talking to me you can get back to the - "
"Hush!" she whispered, laying her fingers on my lips; "listen!"
"Hallo, Mr. Selwyn!" came in the Imp's familiar tones.
"Why, good Heavens!" exclaimed another voice, much too near to be
pleasant, "what on earth are you doing here - and at this time of
night?"
"Looking for base varlets!"
"Don't you know that all little boys - all nice little boys -
should have been in bed hours ago?"
"But I'm not a nice little boy; I'm a Knight-errant; would you like
to get a lance, Mr. Selwyn, an' break it with me to the glory of my
Auntie Lisbeth?"
"The question is, what has become of her?" said Mr. Selwyn. We
waited almost breathlessly for the answer.
"Oh! I 'specks she's somewhere looking at the moon; everybody looks
at the moon, you know; Betty does, an' the lady with the man with a
funny name 'bout being bald, an'-"
"I think you had better come up to the house," said Mr. Se1wyn.
"Do you think you could get me an ice cream if I did?" asked the
Imp, persuasively; "nice an' pink, you know, with - "
"An ice!" repeated Mr. Selwyn; "I wonder how many you have had
already to-night?"
The time for action was come. "Lisbeth," I said, "we must go; such
happiness as this could not last; how should it? I think it is
given us to dream over in less happy days. For me it will be a
memory to treasure always, and yet there might be one thing more
- a little thing Lisbeth - can you guess?" She did not speak, but
I saw the dimple come and go at the corner of her mouth, so I stooped
and kissed her. For a moment, all too brief, we stood thus, with the
glory of the moonlight about us; then I was hurrying across the lawn
after Selwyn and the Imp.
"Ah, Mr. Selwyn!" I said as I overtook them, "so you have found him,
have you?" Mr. Selwyn turned to regard me, surprise writ large upon
him, from the points of his immaculate, patent-leather shoes, to the
parting of his no less immaculate hair.
"So very good of you," I continued; "you see he is such a difficult
object to recover when once he gets mislaid; really, I'm awfully
obliged." Mr. Selwyn's attitude was politely formal. He bowed.
"What is it to-night," he inquired, "pirates?"
"Hardly so bad as that," I returned; "to-night the air is full of
the clash of armour and the ring of steel; if you do not hear it
that is not our fault."
"An' the woods are full of caddish barons and caitiff knaves, you
know, aren't they, Uncle Dick?"
"Certainly," I nodded, with lance and spear-point twinkling through
the gloom, but in the silver glory of the moon, Mr. Selwyn, walk
errant damozels and ladyes faire, and again, if you don't see them,
the loss is yours." As I spoke, away upon the terrace a grey shadow
paused a moment ere it was swallowed in the brilliance of the
ball-room; seeing which I did not mind the slightly superior smile
that curved Mr. Selwyn's very precise moustache; after all, my
rhapsody had not been altogether thrown away. As I ended, the
opening bars of a waltz floated out to us. Mr. Selwyn glanced back
over his shoulder.
"Ah! I suppose you can find your way out?" he inquired.
"Oh, yes, thanks."
"Then if you will excuse me, I think I'll leave you to - ah - to do
it; the next dance is beginning, and - ah - "
"Certainly," I said, "of course - good-night, and much obliged -
really!" Mr. Selwyn bowed, and, turning away, left us to our own
resources.
"I should have liked another ice, Uncle Dick," sighed the Imp,
regretfully.
"Knights never ate ice cream!" I said, as we set off along the
nearest path.
"Uncle Dick," said the Imp suddenly, "do you 'spose Mr. Selwyn wants
to put his arm round Auntie Lis - "
"Possibly!"
"An' do you 'spose that Auntie Lisbeth wants Mr. Selwyn to - "
"I don't know - of course not - er - kindly shut up, will you, Imp?"
"I only wanted to know, you know," he murmured.
Therewith we walked on in silence and I fell to dreaming of Lisbeth
again, of how she had sighed. of the look in her eves as she turned
to me with her answer trembling on her lips - the answer which the
Imp had inadvertently cut short. In this frame of mind I drew near
to that corner of the garden where she had stood with me, that quiet,
shady corner, which henceforth would remain enshrined within my
memory for her sake which -
I stopped suddenly short at the sight of two figures - one in the cap
and apron of a waiting maid and the other in the gorgeous plush and
cold braid of a footman; and they were standing upon the very spot
where Lisbeth and I had stood, and in almost the exact attitude - it
was desecration. I stood stock still despite the Imp's frantic tugs
at my coat all other feelings swallowed up in one of half-amused
resentment. Thus the resplendent footman happened to turn his head,
presently espied me, and removing his plush-clad arm from the waist
of the trim maid-servant, and doubling his fists, strode towards us
with a truly terrible mien.
"And w'ot might your game be?" he inquired, with that supercilious
air inseparable to plush and gold braid; "oh, I know your kind, I
do - I know yer!"
"Then, fellow," quoth I, "I know not thee, by Thor, I swear it and
Og the Terrible, King of Bashan!"
"'Ogs is it?" said he indignantly, "don't get trying to come over
me with yer 'ogs; no nor yet yer fellers! The question is, wo't are
you 'anging round 'ere for?" Now, possibly deceived by my pacific
attitude, or inspired by the bright eyes of the trim maid-servant,
he seized me, none too gently, by the collar, to the horrified dismay
of the Imp.
"Nay, but I will, give thee moneys - "
"You are a-going to come up to the 'ouse with me, and no blooming
nonsense either; d'ye 'ear ?"
"Then must I needs smite thee for a barbarous (dog - hence - base
slave - begone!" Wherewith I delivered what is technically known in
"sporting" circles as a "right hook in the ear," followed by a "left
swing to the chin," and my assailant immediately disappeared behind
a bush, with a flash of pink silk calves and buckled shoes. Then,
while the trim maidservant filled the air with her lamentations, the
imp and I ran hot-foot for the wall, over which I bundled him neck
and crop, and we set off pellmell along the river-path.
"Oh, Uncle Dick,'' he panted, "how - how fine you are! you knocked
yon footman - I mean varlet - from his saddle like - like anything.
Oh, I do wish you would play like this every night!"
"Heaven forbid!" I exclaimed fervently.
Coming at last to the shrubbery gate, we paused awhile to regain
our breath.
"Uncle Dick," said the Imp, regarding me with a thoughtful eye, "did
you see his arm - I mean before you smote him 'hip and thigh' ?"
"I did."
"it was round her waist."
"Imp, it was."
"Just like Peter's?"
"Yes."
"An' the man with the funny name ?"
"Archibald's, yes,"
"An' - an - "
"And mine," I put in, seeing he paused.
"Uncle Dick - why ?"
"Ah! who knows, Imp - perhaps it was the Moon-magic. And now by
my troth! 'tis full time all good knights were snoring, so hey for
bed and the Slumber-world!"
The ladder was dragged from its hiding place, and the Imp, having
mounted, watched me from his window as I returned it to the laurels
for very obvious reasons.
"We didn't see any fairies, did we, Uncle Dick?"
"Well, I think I did, Imp, just for a moment; I may have been
mistaken, of course, but anyhow, it has been a very wonderful night
all the same. And so - God rest you, fair Knight!"