“A month ago.”
“Mrs. Bruce come down here with you?”
Hiram’s eyes as he asked the question left his companion’s face for the first time, and roved toward the windows of the cottage retreating amid its greenery.
As if his question had evoked the apparition, a light-haired lady suddenly appeared in the open doorway. She was a woman of about forty-five years, but her blonde hair concealed its occasional silver threads, and her figure was girlishly slender. She regarded the couple for a moment through her gold eye-glasses, and then came down the steps and through the garden-path.
“I thought I couldn’t be mistaken, Captain Salter,” she said graciously, extending one hand, ringed and sparkling, and with the other protecting the waves of her carefully dressed hair from the boisterous breeze.
The captain, continuing to trail the rug behind him, touched his cap and allowed his rough fingers to be taken for a moment.
“The Clever Betsy here was carrying too much sail,” he explained. “I took ’em down.”
Mrs. Bruce laughed amiably.
“And found you’d run into a squall, no doubt,” she responded, observing her handmaid’s reddened countenance.