In my one London season, I met only officers.Out here, I find Lord Thomas turned into Tommy Atkins, and I meet him every day.But, aside from the war, what do you think of Cape Town?""What would I think of Table Mountain without its tablecloth?" he parried."In both cases, the two things seem inseparable.""Wait till you know the place better, then," she advised him."It really does have a life of its own, apart from its military setting.""I am afraid there's not much chance of my knowing it better," he answered a little regretfully.
"Maitland is only three miles away, and you've not met my mother yet," she suggested.
"Is she at home now?" Weldon asked, with the conscious air of a man suddenly recalled to his social duty.
"Not this afternoon.She has taken Miss Arthur for a drive through Rondebosch.That is quite one of the things to do, you know.""I didn't know.Is the redoubtable Miss Arthur well?"The dimple beside the girl's firm lips displayed itself suddenly, and her eyes lighted.
"Wonderfully.Her convalescence has been remarkably short.More remarkable still is the fact that she has neglected to mention her illness to any one.""How soon does she go back?"
The blue eyes met his eyes in frank merriment.
"Not until she has finished informing my mother of the present London code of chaperonage."Weldon raised his brows.
"Then I shall find her here, when I come back at the end of the war."She made no pretence of misunderstanding him.
"Are you so much less strict in Canada?"
"We are--different," he confessed."Miss Arthur's lorgnette would be impossible with us.I don't mean the lorgnette itself; but the acute accent which she contrives to give to it.Mrs.Scott is more of a colonial matron.""Dear little lady! Have you seen her since she landed?""Once.They are at the Mount Nelson, and Carew and I called on them there.They are leaving for De Aar, Monday.""And what about Mr.Carew?"
"He goes with me to Maitland.He is Trooper Carew now."The girl sat staring thoughtfully out across the lawn.
"I wonder what sort of a soldier he will make," she said, half to herself.Weldon faced her sharply.
"Why?"
"Because life is an embodied joke to him."Weldon rose a little stiffly.His call had lasted its allotted time;nevertheless, under other conditions, it might have lasted even longer.He liked Ethel Dent absolutely; yet now and then she had a curious fashion of antagonizing him.The alternations of her cordial moments with her formal ones were no more marked than were the alternations of her viewpoint.As a rule, she looked on life with the impartial eyes of a healthy-minded boy; occasionally, however, she showed herself hidebound by the fetters of tradition, and, worst of all, she wore the fetters as if they lay loosely upon her.At such moments, he longed acutely to impress her with his own point of view, as the only just one possible.
"I think perhaps you don't fully understand Carew, Miss Dent," he said courteously, yet with a slight accent of finality."He laughs at life like a child; but he lives it like a man.I have known him since we were boys together; I have never known him to shirk or to funk a difficult point.If the Scottish Horse ever sees the firing line, it will hold no better trooper than Harry Carew."He bowed in farewell and turned away.Looking after him, Ethel Dent told herself that Weldon's ****** words had been descriptive, not only of his friend, but of his loyal, honest self.
Half-way across the heart-shaped bit of lawn enclosed within the curve of the drive, Weldon met another guest going towards the steps.There was no need of the trim uniform of khaki serge to assure him that the man was also a soldier.The starred shoulder straps were needless to show him that here was one born to command.
Glancing up, Weldon looked into a pair of keen blue eyes exactly on a level with his own, took swift note of the full, broad forehead, of the black lashes contrasting with the yellow hair and of the resolute lines of the shaven chin.Then, mindful of his frock-coat and shining silk hat, he repressed his inclination to salute, and walked steadily on, quite unconscious of the part in his life which the stranger was destined to play, during the coming months.