Ann hurried through the meal as quickly as possible. She felt tremendously alive to-day, and the breezy sunshiny morning, the blue sky with white fleecy clouds blowing across it, the wheeling swallows, all seemed curiously in accord with her mood. She rose and, dressing quickly, went about her various household duties with a subconscious desire to get them finished and out of the way as soon as possible, and thus be free for whatever the day might bring forth.
That afternoon she and Robin were due at the rectory for tea. It was what Miss Caroline called her “day,” a bi-monthly occasion when she sat in state—and a villainous shade of mauve satin—to receive visitors. During the winter this sacred rite resolved itself chiefly into an opportunity for tea and feminine gossip in a hot, ill-ventilated room, but in the summer it was rather a pleasant little function. Tea was served in the pretty old rectory garden, and the proceedings developed on the lines of an informal garden-party at which most of the neighbours, of both sexes, showed up. For although Miss Caroline was of too inquiring a mind to be very popular, the rector himself was beloved by men and women alike.
The morning hours seemed to Ann interminably long. Insensibly she was keyed up to a delicate pitch of expectancy, her ear nervously alert for the sound of a familiar footstep on the flagged path. And as the leaden moments crawled by, and the warm, sunshiny silence which enfolded the Cottage remained unbroken, a vague sense of apprehension crept into her heart. The glamour of those moments alone with Eliot at the gate, the pulsating sweetness of the thoughts which, in the night, had sent little quivering rivulets of fire racing through her veins, grew dim and uncertain. Had she misunderstood—mistaken him? The bare idea sent a swift stab of fear through her whole being. But in a few moments her faith in the man she loved returned, and with it her serenity. She was ready to laugh at herself. Probably, she reflected, he had merely been detained by some unexpected piece of business which had cropped up necessitating his attention—and, as a matter of fact, this was precisely what had occurred.
So that when at length she and Robin made their way down a shady path and emerged on to the rectory lawn, dotted about with groups of people, and she perceived Coventry’s tall, lean figure in the distance, leaning rather moodily against a tree, she reproached herself for having doubted him even for an instant. While she was greeting Miss Caroline and the rector her heart seemed to be singing a little pæan of happiness all to itself.
“... so glad to see you.” Ann came suddenly down to earth, and tried to focus her attention on. Miss Caroline’s hospitable gabble. “Such a lot of people here this afternoon, too.... I’m so pleased. And a beautiful day, isn’t it? Even Mr. Coventry has been tempted out of his shell. He’ll be quite a social acquisition to the neighbourhood soon, at this rate.”
She turned to envelop Robin in a similar flood of meaningless prattle, while Ann and Tempest sauntered on together.
“Yes,” said the latter, his eyes resting thoughtfully on Eliot’s distant figure. “It’s a real joy to me to see Coventry here. He’s too much of a hermit. I’m afraid, though,” he admitted with a rueful laugh, “I rather badgered him into coming. And I expect now he is here he’s not exactly blessing me for my persistency! Will you go and be very nice to him, Ann”—he had dropped into the friendly usage of her Christian name, and Ann liked it—“and get me out of hot water?”
“I don’t suppose you’re in it very deeply,” she returned, with some amusement at his air of apprehension.
“Well, I really made him come,” confessed the rector apologetically: “I simply wouldn’t take ‘no’.”
“And you know perfectly well that nobody ever resents what you ‘make’ them do,” said Ann, smiling. “‘The rector have a way with him,’ as Maria remarked the other day.”