Rotha was silent. But the whole conversation had rather given new food for the meditations it had interrupted and which had occasioned it. Where was all this to end?—the young man asked himself. And when should it end, in so far as the immediate state of things was concerned? As soon as possible! his judgment said. Rotha was already clinging to him with a devotion that would make the parting a hard business, even now; every week would make it harder. Besides, he had other work to do, and could not permanently play tutor. As soon as Mrs. Busby came home he would go to her and broach the matter. That would be, for the present, the best plan he could hit upon. A week or two more—
Which calculations, like so many others of human framing, came to nothing. A day or two later, driving in the Park one evening, a pair of unruly horses coming at a run round a corner dashed into the little phaeton which held Mr. Digby and Rotha, and threw them both out. The phaeton was broken; Rotha was unhurt; Mr. Digby could not stand up. He believed it was a sprain, he said; no more; but one foot was unmanageable.
A carriage was procured, he was assisted into it, Rotha took her place beside him, and the coachman was ordered to drive slowly.
A silent pair they were for some distance; and both faces very pale.
Rotha was the first one to speak.
"Mr. Digby—does it hurt much?"
"Rather, just now," he said forcing a smile. "Rotha, are you all right?"
"O yes. What can I do, Mr. Digby?"
"There is nothing to be done, till we get home."
For which now Rotha waited in an impatience which seemed to measure every yard of the way. Arrived at last, Mr. Digby was assisted out of the phaeton, and with much difficulty into the house. Here he himself examined the hurt, and decided that it was only a sprain; no doctor need be sent for.
"Is a sprain bad?" asked Rotha, when the assistants had withdrawn.