When I and Nettie had been sixteen
we had been just of an age and contemporaries altogether.
Now we were a year and three-quarters older, and she—her
metamorphosis was almost complete, and I was still
only at the beginning of a man’s long adolescence.
In an instant she grasped the situation.
The hidden motives of her quick ripened little mind
flashed out their intuitive scheme of action.
She treated me with that neat perfection of understanding
a young woman has for a boy.
“But how did you come?” she asked.
I told her I had walked.
“Walked!” In an instant
she was leading me towards the gardens. I must
be tired. I must come home with her at once and
sit down. Indeed it was near tea-time (the Stuarts
had tea at the old-fashioned hour of five). Every
one would be so surprised to see me. Fancy
walking! Fancy! But she supposed a man thought
nothing of seventeen miles. When could I
have started!
All the while, keeping me at a distance,
without even the touch of her hand.
“But, Nettie! I came over to talk to you?”
“My dear boy! Tea first,
if you please! And besides—aren’t
we talking?”
The “dear boy” was a new
note, that sounded oddly to me.
She quickened her pace a little.
“I wanted to explain—” I began.
Whatever I wanted to explain I had
no chance to do so. I said a few discrepant things
that she answered rather by her intonation than her
words.
When we were well past the shrubbery,
she slackened a little in her urgency, and so we came
along the slope under the beeches to the garden.
She kept her bright, straightforward-looking girlish
eyes on me as we went; it seemed she did so all the
time, but now I know, better than I did then, that
every now and then she glanced over me and behind
me towards the shrubbery. And all the while,
behind her quick breathless inconsecutive talk she
was thinking.
Her dress marked the end of her transition.
Can I recall it?
Not, I am afraid, in the terms a woman
would use. But her bright brown hair, which had
once flowed down her back in a jolly pig-tail tied
with a bit of scarlet ribbon, was now caught up into
an intricacy of pretty curves above her little ear
and cheek, and the soft long lines of her neck; her
white dress had descended to her feet; her slender
waist, which had once been a mere geographical expression,
an imaginary line like the equator, was now a thing
of flexible beauty. A year ago she had been a
pretty girl’s face sticking out from a little
unimportant frock that was carried upon an extremely
active and efficient pair of brown-stockinged legs.
Now there was coming a strange new body that flowed
beneath her clothes with a sinuous insistence.
Every movement, and particularly the novel droop of
her hand and arm to the unaccustomed skirts she gathered
about her, and a graceful forward inclination that
had come to her, called softly to my eyes. A
very fine scarf—I suppose you would call
it a scarf—of green gossamer, that some
new wakened instinct had told her to fling about her
shoulders, clung now closely to the young undulations
of her body, and now streamed fluttering out for a
moment in a breath of wind, and like some shy independent
tentacle with a secret to impart, came into momentary
contact with my arm.
She caught it back and reproved it.
We went through the green gate in
the high garden wall. I held it open for her
to pass through, for this was one of my restricted
stock of stiff politenesses, and then for a second
she was near touching me. So we came to the trim
array of flower-beds near the head gardener’s
cottage and the vistas of “glass” on our
left. We walked between the box edgings and beds
of begonias and into the shadow of a yew hedge within
twenty yards of that very pond with the gold-fish,
at whose brim we had plighted our vows, and so we
came to the wistaria-smothered porch.
The door was wide open, and she walked
in before me. “Guess who has come to see
us!” she cried.
Her father answered indistinctly from
the parlor, and a chair creaked. I judged he
was disturbed in his nap.
“Mother!” she called in her clear young
voice. “Puss!”
Puss was her sister.
She told them in a marveling key that
I had walked all the way from Clayton, and they gathered
about me and echoed her notes of surprise.
“You’d better sit down,
Willie,” said her father; “now you have
got here. How’s your mother?”
He looked at me curiously as he spoke.
He was dressed in his Sunday clothes,
a sort of brownish tweeds, but the waistcoat was unbuttoned
for greater comfort in his slumbers. He was a
brown-eyed ruddy man, and I still have now in my mind
the bright effect of the red-golden hairs that started
out from his cheek to flow down into his beard.
He was short but strongly built, and his beard and
mustache were the biggest things about him. She
had taken all the possibility of beauty he possessed,
his clear skin, his bright hazel-brown eyes, and wedded
them to a certain quickness she got from her mother.
Her mother I remember as a sharp-eyed woman of great
activity; she seems to me now to have been perpetually
bringing in or taking out meals or doing some such
service, and to me—for my mother’s
sake and my own—she was always welcoming
and kind. Puss was a youngster of fourteen perhaps,
of whom a hard bright stare, and a pale skin like her
mother’s, are the chief traces on my memory.
All these people were very kind to me, and among them
there was a common recognition, sometimes very agreeably
finding expression, that I was—“clever.”
They all stood about me as if they were a little at
a loss.
“Sit down!” said her father. “Give
him a chair, Puss.”
We talked a little stiffly—they
were evidently surprised by my sudden apparition,
dusty, fatigued, and white faced; but Nettie did not
remain to keep the conversation going.
“There!” she cried suddenly,
as if she were vexed. “I declare!”
and she darted out of the room.
“Lord! what a girl it is!”
said Mrs. Stuart. “I don’t know what’s
come to her.”
It was half an hour before Nettie
came back. It seemed a long time to me, and yet
she had been running, for when she came in again she
was out of breath. In the meantime, I had thrown
out casually that I had given up my place at Rawdon’s.
“I can do better than that,” I said.
“I left my book in the dell,”
she said, panting. “Is tea ready?”
and that was her apology. . .
We didn’t shake down into comfort
even with the coming of the tea-things. Tea at
the gardener’s cottage was a serious meal, with
a big cake and little cakes, and preserves and fruit,
a fine spread upon a table. You must imagine
me, sullen, awkward, and preoccupied, perplexed by
the something that was inexplicably unexpected in
Nettie, saying little, and glowering across the cake
at her, and all the eloquence I had been concentrating
for the previous twenty-four hours, miserably lost
somewhere in the back of my mind. Nettie’s
father tried to set me talking; he had a liking for
my gift of ready speech, for his own ideas came with
difficulty, and it pleased and astonished him to hear
me pouring out my views. Indeed, over there I
was, I think, even more talkative than with Parload,
though to the world at large I was a shy young lout.
“You ought to write it out for the newspapers,”
he used to say. “That’s what you ought
to do. I never heard such nonsense.”
Or, “You’ve got the gift
of the gab, young man. We ought to ha’
made a lawyer of you.”
But that afternoon, even in his eyes,
I didn’t shine. Failing any other stimulus,
he reverted to my search for a situation, but even
that did not engage me.