Michael
part from those immediately connected with his work had worn a very shadow-like aspect. He had, it is true, written with some regulari
realised that there was nothing in detail about those things that could possibly interest her, and that nothing except them really interested him. She on
seemed to be independent of all that was not directly connected with it. But a letter which he received next morning from his mother stated, in addition to the fact that Petsy had another of her tiresome bilious attacks (poor lamb), that his father and she thought it right that he should come down to Ashbridge for Christmas. It conveyed the sense that at this joyful season a truce, probably limite
so then, and sequentially he remembered with a pang of self-reproach that he had not as much as indicated his presence in London to Aunt Barbara, or set eyes on her since their meeting in August.
e cordial. And I wish to meet some of your nice friends. Ask one or two, please-a prima donna of some kind and a pianist, I think. I want them weird and original-the prima donna
a was late, and came in talking rapidly about the various causes that had detained her, which her fruitful imagination had suggested to her as she dressed. In order, perhaps, to suit herself to the circle in which she would pass the evening, she had put on (or, rather, it looked as if her maid had thrown at her) a
side the door, "but Og had so much to say, and there was a bl
enough, but infinitely worse was she who was to have been the full-blown barmaid. Instead was this magnificent girl, nearly as tall as her brother, with her small oval face crowning the column of her neck, her eyes merry, her mouth laughing at some brotherly retort that Hermann had just ma
tremor in his voice; "and Mr. Hermann Falbe, Lady Barbara Je
it: shook hands in her jolly m
pected-but there were to be spectacles and velveteen coats and the general air of an afternoon concert at Clapham Junction. But it is nice to be made such a fool of. I feel precisely like an elderly and sour governess who h
and Aunt Barbara could not help enla
upposed you were leading some obscure kind of existence. Instead of which I find this sort of thing. My dear, what good soup! I shall see if I can't induce your cook to leave you. But
Mr. Falbe,"
yet. I may have to revise what I
got into his carriage as the train was
ylvia, "which was worse. Bu
ived the day before we left f
e I get. But in the interval
giving him music lessons. Mike, hav
are Variations?"
s you think about on the piano, Aunt Barbara, wh
Will Mr. Falbe play t
he can. But I though
ordinary music, because the person who made it doesn't matter to me. But
turned t
ve for something I have
don't gi
't tell you
never looked at anybody except her friends; if she was engaged in conversation with a m
ve you leave if otherwise I shan't know what you h
the Variations t
ushed wit
rling of you," she said. "Hav
'll all
he Variations are mine
at, she knew, had never been characteristic of Michael; indeed, it would not have been far from the truth to say that the fact that he was talking to a girl was sufficient to make his countenance wear an expression of polite boredom. Then for a while, as dinner progressed, she doubted the validity of her conclusion, for the Michael who was entertaining her to-night was wholly different from the Michael she had known and liked and pitied. She felt that she did not know this new one yet, but she was certain that she liked him, and equally sure that she did not pity him at all. He had found his place, he had found his work; he evidently fitted into his life, which, after all, is the surest ground of happiness, and it might be that it w
ave borne better than Baireuth, and when Mr. Falbe asks me there I shall probably go. Your Uncle To
nich for a day during them. He
k to him, I supp
In fact, he talked too much, because I
came infinitely
Michael," she said. "
gland, Ashbridge, armies, navies, music.
, his attitud
iendly, and most inquisitive. I was never
suddenly tu
asked. "Were yo
rbara. I had
turalised Engli
am Ge
wiftly off
defensive measure, you must observe, because even if I talked it quite slowly they would understand just as little. But they think it is the pace that stupefies them, and they leave me in a curious, dazed condition. And now Miss Falbe and I
Barbara's intentions, for she chiefly wan
she said as they settled themselves fo
t entirely with her eyes, using her mouth only when it
tell you for certain that Hermann and I are both very fond of him, b
en you-for I imagine it is you who have done it-between you you have m
ecame qu
s us," she said. "He i
ara
t. But then, as I said, Michael hadn't flowered. No one understood him, or was interested. Then he
," said she. "His father
you would know that the only things he a
s out to the blaze, warming
s-" she began. "Ah, I call
t time," remarked Barbara.
"There is nothing so awful as to speak of people formally to their faces, and i
ael alway
s THERE, if you know what I mean, and so few people are there. They walk about your life,
ful of appearing inquisitive about Sylvia's impression of Michael, wh
e idle people who have leisure to look at themselves in the glass and pose. And I feel
a little,"
ing you have said. I somehow fe
ara sudde
u, who drove London crazy with delight last
a lau
she said. "Isn't it dreadful to hav
own again, in a so
t, so don't deny it, and having humourously told Michael I wished to see a prima donna and a pianist, he takes me at my word and produces THE Miss Falbe. I'm glad I knew that in time; I should infallibly have ask
a lau
ara," she said. "When we met I couldn't h
the impression that you were a tremendous swell. You didn't. I
good enough for
ly became engrossed in reading the finished Variations. Some
ead what I could remember of a variation out of the Handel theme. That next one's, oh, great
ies, and she had a moment's cold horror at the thought of Falbe having said so miserably tactless a thing to him. But t
," he said. "I know you'
d to the p
id. "If Lady Barbara won't mind, pla
row that you can't hear anything else afterwards. Do sing, M
Miss Falbe," she said. "I am suffering from s
master's accompaniment he was perfectly sure that he preferred, if possible,
for you, Miss Sy
ou? Thanks,
n move
ra while Lord Comber plays for Miss Sylvia,
ing boldness
then,"
ael," answered t
the left of the pian
e going to have
both know, for I've bro
ght at their house. He knew it perfectly by heart, but stumbled a little over the difficult syncopated time.
you've got it." And Michael smiled s
ttle indication, as she had done before, but for the most part her fingers rested immobile on his shoulder, and he seemed to understand her perfectly. Somehow this was a surprise to him; he had not known that Michael possessed that sort of second-sight that unerringly feels and tra
said when the song was over. "W
shyness, as if he had been surpri
efore for Miss-I mean
urned to
said. "And I'm greedy.
cital in the summer, had grown in significance to him, even as she had. It had seemed part of her the
the fireplace at the end of
self. And she lays it on pretty thick, too, doesn't she? Now, Sylvia, if you've fin
we've got it? If Hermann once sits down, you know, we shan't get him away for the re
ook his sister by the shoulder
t come away from that piano, I shall take Sylvia home at once. Now you may all talk as much
omething that should tax his powers, and he gave a great crash of laughter when for a moment Hermann was brought to a complete standstill in an octave
ow to read that," he shouted.
asked you to read
rs-yes, I see. An orang-outang apparently can do it, so why not I? Am I not much better than they? Go away, please; or, rather, stop there and tur
o was evoked again. Then the little dirge wept for the memories of something that had never happened, and leaving out the number he disapproved of, as reminiscent of the Handel theme, Hermann gathered himself u
st chord, and jumped up from h
must all have been in you before. And you've come to the age you are without letting any of it out. I suppose that's why it has come with a rush. You knew it all along,
two off, Michael came upstairs again to Aunt Bar
id. "No wonder you had not time to come and see me. Do they alw
sank int
st think what it means to me! He's going to play my tune
him in the train?"
ion, with Sylvia on the platform.
e as to what his reception would be. She would hardly have said so plainly that she and her brother were devoted to him if she had been devoted to him with that secret tenderness which, in its essentials, is reticent about itself. Her half-hour's conversation with the girl had given her a certain insight into her; still more had her attitude
she said. "What are
cal heaven, while her brother, seven years her senior, had spent his time in earning in order to give her the chance which she had so brilliantly taken. Now it was
German?"
a toy soldier? But that's the natu
olled to th
entirely English, and then a word slips from him like that, which shows he is entir
chair a little neare
ear about th
was tremendously friend
med to you re
l cons
he said. "It all seemed to m
ities of questions,
t pheasants, and spent the afternoon in a steam launch, apparently studying the deep-water channel o
did not hee
Harwich," she asked, "of which th
ter the concert there was the torchlight proces
there. W
Michael. "But what are yo
silent a
n valet, and when he went down to Portsmouth the other day to see the American ship that was there, he took him with him. And the man took
el th
ing away all day," he said. "He
arked Aunt Barbara drily. "Really, for childish simp
o you
endly, Michael? Do you know, for instance, what is a very common toast in German regimental messes? They do not drink it when there are foreigners the
Day,'" said Mic
'Der Tag' will dawn suddenly from a quiet, peaceful night, when they think we are all as
seen his aunt so serious, an
s God and as deep as the sea. They are working, working, while our toy soldiers play golf. I agree with that adorable pianist; and, what's more, I believe they think that 'Der Tag' is
ood with Michael
hat they may be astoundingly wrong. The fact of the great foreign peril-this nightmare, this Armageddon of European war-may be exactly that which will pull us together. But their diplomatists, anyhow, are studying the Irish question very closely, and German gold, without any doubt at all, is helping the Home Rule party. As a nation we are fast asleep. I wonder what we shall be like when we
the Emperor-"
ip. He has a great eye for detail, too; it seemed to him worth while to assure you even, my dear Michael, of his regard and affection for England. He was always impressi
of her. She had the quality of mind which when occupied with one idea is occupied with it to the exclusio
him. You see, I am such a chatterbox that people think I let out things by accident, which I never do. I let out what I want to let out on purpose, and they think they are pumping me. I had a long conversation the other day with one of the German Embassy, all about Irish a
ing of the kind
olf. But I expect you'll be too busy thinking about that new friend of yours, and perhaps his sister. What did she tell me we had got to do? 'To her garlands let us bring,' was it not? You and I will both send wreaths, Michael, though not for her funeral. Now don'