“Indeed she does,” answered Millicent, characteristically making immediate atonement in voice and look for the mental criticism of the moment before. “It’s really going like a bird. I don’t suppose we shall ever have a sensation more like flying.”
“Not until our celestial pinions are adjusted,” said Anna. Brockton laughed, but Millicent went on:
“Seriously, the loveliest belief I ever lost was the one in the wings with which my virtues should be at last rewarded. To breast the ether among the whirling stars,—didn’t you ever lie awake and think of the possibility of that, Anna?”
“Never! I’m no poet in a state of suffocation, as I sometimes suspect you of being.”
“As for heaven,” declared Brockton, “I don’t take much stock in all that. We’re here—we know that—and we’d better make the most of it. For all we know, it’s our last chance to have a good time. Better take all that’s coming to you here and now, Miss Harned, and not count much on those wings of yours.”
Millicent smiled mechanically. Could any Elizabethan garden of delight compensate for the misery of having each butterfly of fancy crushed between Lemuel Brockton’s big hands in this fashion?
They were entering a village. Before them was the triangular green with the soldier’s monument upon it. About it were the post-office, the stores, the small neat houses of the place. A white church, tall-steepled, green-shuttered, rose behind the monument, and with it dominated the square. A wagon or two toiled lazily along the road; before the stores a few dusty buggies were tied. The place seemed drowsy to stagnation in the summer heat. Why, Millicent wondered, were towns so crude and unlovely in the midst of a country so beautiful?
There was a sudden explosive sound, and, with a crunch and a jerk which almost threw them from their seats, the machine came to a standstill. Brockton and his chauffeur were out in an instant, the one peering beneath, the other examining more closely. He emerged in a moment, and there was a jargon of explanation, unintelligible to the two women. All that Anna and Millicent understood was that the accident was not serious; that they would be delayed only a few minutes, and that Brockton was very angry with some one for the mishap. The two men worked together. Anna looked at her cousin.
“I’m dead sleepy,” she half whispered. “The wind in my face and the sun are too soporific for me. Let us not say a word to each other.”
“You read last night,” Millicent accused her. “But I don’t feel particularly conversational myself.”