“Oh, I'm going back next week,” Honora cried. “I wish I were going with you.”
“And leave all this,” he said incredulously, “for trolley rides and Forest Park and—and me?”
He stopped in the garden path and looked upon the picture she made standing in the sunlight against the blazing borders, her wide hat casting a shadow on her face. And the smile which she had known so well since childhood, indulgent, quizzical, with a touch of sadness, was in his eyes. She was conscious of a slight resentment. Was there, in fact, no change in her as the result of the events of those momentous ten months since she had seen him? And rather than a tolerance in which there was neither antagonism nor envy, she would have preferred from Peter an open disapproval of luxury, of the standards which he implied were hers. She felt that she had stepped into another world, but he refused to be dazzled by it. He insisted upon treating her as the same Honora.
“How did you leave Uncle Tom and Aunt Mary?” she asked.
They were counting the days, he said, until she should return, but they did not wish to curtail her visit. They did not expect her next week, he knew.
Honora coloured again.
“I feel—that I ought to go to them,” she said.
He glanced at her as though her determination to leave Silverdale so soon surprised him.
“They will be very happy to see you, Honora,” he said. “They have been very lonesome.”
She softened. Some unaccountable impulse prompted her to ask: “And you? Have you missed me—a little?”