"That's the clergyman?" said Victor, making a grimace. "I don't affect clergymen, as a general thing, but for your sake I will try to be favorably impressed; your friends I always try to admire; our host, for instance, who just passed down the terrace, without so much as a look toward us, though he could not possibly have avoided seeing us. Why do you bite your lip?" continued he, watching me narrowly. "I cannot learn the signs of your face. Pale and red, smiling and frowning, like any April day. There! what chord have I touched now? The thought gave you actual pain."
"Nothing!" I exclaimed, hurriedly. "There's Stephen on the lawn. I want to talk to him," and I ran across to where he stood, leaning on his rake, watching us. While I talked to him, Victor threw himself upon the heap of new-cut hay at a little distance from us, and played with Tigre. I saw that Stephen's eyes often wandered to where he lay, his hat off, the wind lifting the dark hair from his handsome face.
"If I might make so bold," said Stephen, in a low tone, as I was turning away, "has that young gentleman lived long in this country?"
"I do not know, really," I said, with a laugh. "Shall I ask him, Stephen?"
"No, Miss, I shouldn't like you to ask him; but I should like to know."
"I'll find out for you sometime," I said, as I nodded a good bye and rejoined Victor.
It was, as he said, a splendid day—all sultriness dissipated by the strong wind. We had a beautiful walk through the woods, though I couldn't quite forget "our rustic friend," as Victor called his unknown enemy; but he made such a joke of it that it was impossible to have much feeling of alarm connected with it. The village, however, he seemed not to care to visit.
"Had I not better wait for you here?" he said, lingering as we passed out of the woods into the lane that led to the village.
"No, indeed," I said, perversely; "if you stay here I shall go home another way."
He laughed, but rather uneasily, and followed me.