Across the girl's olive cheeks her heavy eyelashes shadowed down like a fringe of black ferns. "Yes—how I can dance," she murmured almost inaudibly.
"Why didn't you let anybody know?" demanded Barton.
"Yes—why didn't I let anybody know?" repeated the girl in an utter panic of bashfulness.
"Oh, I say," whispered Barton, "won't you even look at me?"
Mechanically the girl opened her eyes and stared at him fixedly until his own eyes fell.
"Eve!" called her father sharply from the next room, "where in creation is my data concerning North American orchids?"
"In my steamer-trunk," began the girl. "On the left hand side. Tucked in between your riding-boots and my best hat."
"O—h," called her father.
Barton edged forward in his chair and touched the girl's brown, boyish little hand.
"Really, Miss Eve," he stammered, "I'm awfully sorry you got hurt! Truly I am! Truly it made me feel awfully squeamish! Really I've been thinking a lot about you these last few days! Honestly I have! Never in all my life did I ever carry any one as little and hurt as you were! It sort of haunts me, I tell you. Isn't there something I could do for you?"