“What did it mean?”
“That I’m defeated.”
“In a way, I’m sorrier than you are.”
“For God’s sake, why?”
She smiled with a trace of bitter humor, earnestly. “Well, some one ought to be able to subdue me. God, I need it!” Angry tears came to her eyes, and she thrust her foot petulantly into the stirrup. Riding alone, she had just been marveling at the narrowness of the margin by which she had avoided the disruption of her present life. But for a grotesque trifle, she might have been riding at this very moment away from Hillside, forever, with Dare at her side. “That’s where I score,” he reflected, lugubriously. “For at least now I taste the desolate joy of capitulation to a stronger opponent. While we were opponents I wished to keep a few points ahead. The fact that I no longer wish to do so, but ask nothing better than to be trampled on till I can’t bear it another minute,—well, what do you make of that?”
“You’re off your game,” she evaded. “Buck up!”
They rode on in silence until they came within sight of the broad meadow at the edge of the pine ridge.
“Louise!”
“What!”
“Do I have to go to Japan?”