The two old ladies seemed not greatly pleased with all this talk; and as for Isabel she sat silent and overwhelmed. Mary Corbet glanced quickly at their faces when she had done, and turned a little in her seat.
“Ah! look at that peacock,” she cried out, as a stately bird stepped delicately out of the shrubbery on to the low wall a little way off, and stood balancing himself. “He is loyal too, and has come to hear news of his Queen.”
“He has come to see his cousin from town,” said Mr. James, looking at Miss Corbet’s glowing dress, “and to learn of the London fashions.”
Mary got up and curtseyed to the astonished bird, who looked at her with his head lowered, as he took a high step or two, and then paused again, with his burnished breast swaying a little from side to side.
“He invites you to a dance,” went on Mr. James gravely, “a pavane.”
Miss Corbet sat down again.
“I dare not dance a pavane,” she said, “with a real peacock.”
“Surely,” said Mr. James, with a courtier’s air, “you are too pitiful for him, and too pitiless for us.”
“I dare not,” she said again, “for he never ceases to practise.”
“In hopes,” said Mr. James, “that one day you will dance it with him.”