“Now, that's mighty cute of you,” she said admiringly, as she knelt beside him on the platform. “Let's see what you've caught. Look yer!” she added, suddenly lifting a limp stalk, “that's 'old man,' and thar ain't a scrap of it grows nearer than Springer's Rise,—four miles from home.”

“Are you sure?” he asked quickly.

“Sure as pop! I used to go huntin' it for smellidge.”

“For what?” he said, with a bewildered smile.

“For this,”—she thrust the leaves to his nose and then to her own pink nostrils; “for—for”—she hesitated, and then with a mischievous simulation of correctness added, “for the perfume.”

He looked at her admiringly. For all her five feet ten inches, what a mere child she was, after all! What a fool he was to have taken a resentful attitude towards her! How charming and graceful she looked, kneeling there beside him!

“Tell me,” he said suddenly, in a gentler voice, “what were you laughing at just now?”

Her brown eyes wavered for a moment, and then brimmed with merriment. She threw herself sideways, in a leaning posture, supporting herself on one arm, while with her other hand she slowly drew out her apron string, as she said, in a demure voice:—

“Well, I reckoned it was jest too killin' to think of you, who didn't want to talk to me, and would hev given your hull pile to hev skipped out o' this, jest stuck here alongside o' me, whether you would or no, for Lord knows how long!”

“But that was last night,” he said, in a tone of raillery. “I was tired, and you said so yourself, you know. But I'm ready to talk now. What shall I tell you?”