The Story of Louie
hot-water-pipe system, and Priddy had a frame making there. Half this frame, protected by a board with "Wet Paint" chalked upon it, leaned against the outside wall, and, with his
face was handsome and slightly vacuous; his eyes in particular had something of the blankness of the little terra-cotta head; and his mouth was full and classically curved, and had the slightest of smudges of dark moustache along the
e had got his explanation by rote. He was ther
t tea-time. Izzard wanted to send it to Mazzicombe, but I told him they'd ch
his filing again. Louie, who had come for a couple of boards that had been put aside for her, took them and went out. She w
uite beyond the orchard, at the foot of the hill between Chesson's and the sea. There,
past month-or, more fairly, what she had conceived to be
aten from the same plate with her by day and shared her bed at night had she been permitted-also had she not left for her vacation a fortnight before; but Burnett Major-Louie was not so sure about Burnett Major. Her atti
od as anybody else's father; for that matter, mother's grandfather was only a farmer-mother told us so herself; but nobody likes being treated as if they were snobs.
Minor as having sobbed, bold and unconvinced. "He didn
presentation and all t
as a Scarisbrick when all was said and done-was she going to be driven willy-nilly into the society of Richenda Earle as company good enough for her. She could look after herself, thank you. Coventry is no unpleasant place provided you have the putting of yourself there, and at any rate her
less desirable than his physique-a discontented and ill-conditioned nature. But that did not mend matters. It merely made her, if it did a
ould feel the night wind on her face, and see the stars, and in h
n, this time for a couple of tent-pegs and a piece of cord for the better securing of her blankets. The vacant young Ta
s of the colour of blue porcelain to Louie, "I
had the bad luck to catch her at her brooding
I mean-
he
name Chaffinger?"
N
O
relented
My name's Causton. I suppose yours
No. Mine's Lovenant-Smi
ou're right. We have met
eved at being rid of a perplexity that he
mildly. "You were Louie Chaf
ie asked, "are
ated si
shroud on the port side, and the centre-board was hitched up with a piece of old rope instead of a chain and down it came
is hands together and then
am and all the
That was a pity,"
use the shed, aunt said, but she told me it was a fixed
uie thought.) "Then I mus
t you into a row too," said R
demurely still. "They hav
Roy Lovenant-
uie le
en, and she felt herself to be far more than four years his senior now. He was the adjutant's son, she supposed. Well, he would hardly need Chaff's usual extenuation about his being a bad fellow at all: Louie would be very much surprised if he had wit enough to be very bad, or, fo
aches and their unvarying smell of tobacco to some girl of the kind she knew they accounted "pretty." They were quite different beings from the fairy prince of her childhood; and since her childhood's days she had grown gradually, she did not know how, to a fairly accurate estimate in retrospect of the "little party" to which Chaff had o
man had she ev
le coiffe déjà Sainte Catherine," the remorseless Pigou had said: oh, had she? Did she? Moreover, you cannot put yourself gloomily into Coventry; others mus
Richenda by the little green door of the espaliered wall that led to the orchards. Richenda had made an advance, willing, apparent
he had asked, as they had
replied. "I'd go right down to the sho
wanted anything d
hould I
ou don't have headaches
There's quite a jolly place here.
read," Richenda h
heaps bett
uts like this at herself) that both of their fathers were literary. But she
sorry for what I said that night-you know-when I snapped at
ished she hadn't said it, Earle'
ad broken out impulsively. "It was all mine. I ough
here," Louie had cut
ne on. "I was stupi
at you were. You
was,
, I don't think much
r head. Then, as Louie had thrown down her mattress, "
't sleep in
your thin
on't come up, then, and run down to th
ping on you yet!" Earle h
ithout t
shoul
she might find remedies for her headaches
tramp, sullying the air behind her, crept slowly up to Bristol; a single nodding grass-head near at hand shut her out almost completely. Mazzicombe, down under the hill, was hidden. Louie watched it all, thinking of not
perturbable voice behind
nt-Smith was returning with a ba
id not know whether she was gla
e," he repli
then: "I thought you hadn't t
how can I get over the stile when yo
et off on my proper side." S
eness, walked a few yards with his p
re. I don't think she's worth bothering about, but Izzard says she'll be q
return of h
zzard?"
about and leaving me to do all the work. He's away there somewhere now." He pointed vaguely across the Channel. "I suppose he'll
not tell him that she didn't care either
lace? Seems funny to me.... Mind yo
icombe. Louie stood aside from the stile. Priddy climbed over it and
cool! Don't those fellows
rned her clear grey eyes on h
.. What are you lookin
ich Louie replied dropped
sked, with his innocent
wn bowler hat was disappearing over the edge of
"You don't mean to say
ded. He
into a row for
may
oking apart?" he s
ps he
ok here, shall I go bac
ink I would," said Louie,
all! I say,
O
ot you into a row, o
eant sorry you stopp
t is, if it doesn't
f it d
ing people into rows. Look here
es. "I've been in ro
p. "Oh, I see! You mea
t the recollection of Mrs. Lovenant-Smith
ight with her," said Roy
n innocent! "You know what
ha
hat you wouldn'
ted on her hands
lf. "Oh, never mind ab
n't mind my calling you Louie, do you? I used
r not," she said, wi
llow can't get a girl into a mess
once again, to see whether
what I
t him to mean, but "Well, onc
about here, at th
can get away fr
t chap in Mazzicombe, ma
se do
not taking
ouble about that s
ll ought. All right,
od-
d again. At any rate, a lark with a pleasant image was better than a hole-in-corn
tand mute as a fish, and to have it assumed that you accept the bond, was the largior ether indeed. Louie did not even feel called upon to say that she declined to consider herself bound. Mrs. Lovenant-Smith might take her "off her honour" again. She
Louie found herself hoping that Izzard, whoever he was, would not return from "
he mere disregarding of Mrs. Lovenant-Smith was a pleasure she felt it incumbent upon herself not to forgo. Next, there was the instinctive courage with which she translated her sulks into carelessness and gaiety. Next-but allow what you will for the rest: pique, vanity, her deriv
plored her to tell them all, all about it; she talked about everything else, but not about that, and hearts and mouths watered. They offered to do things for her-to carry her mattress, to do her Sunday watering, even to clean her bicycle; and Louie let them-but told them nothing. Nay, s
ed Richenda. What was her Mr. Weston like? Well (Richenda said), some might think him an oddity-the Secretary Bird, his nickname was-but he was, oh, a soul so sensitive, so gentle! Was there any prospect of their marrying soon? Richenda sighed; it would be a long time; if she got her post at Chesson's he might apply for a country schoolma
a hundred here
ich means if I get my
be two hundred between them-tw
"I thought people got
idn't know," said
just to go through her engagements, opening bazaars and charities a
Moone," came fro
ifty pounds, and lived with them.
er said when he a
ren't paid at that rate! Why, some cooks g
came from th
ou strike an average, or
terrupted, soft
n't, don't,
There must be something wrong with Richenda, probably with her Weston too; she did not look quite right; she was very different from the rosy housemaids at Trant, for example. One hundred pounds a year!... She had forgotten all about Roy. When, presently, Richenda came as near to putting a question about him as she dar
d Moone behind
r and a public-house be
you think
g it all, long after Richenda h
stile again. She was restless, unsettled, she
you," she said; "that's twice I'
ll, and sat down under a gorse-bush. He made her move quite behind it, and even
t," he said. "How's
ow. I haven
te a fellow's h
e to-day.-No, I don'
he matter
ne I shall go. I didn't sl
cally. "I say, isn't it funny, Louie, when you come to think o
awake thinking of yo
" He put out h
"Oh, don't!" she snapped. "Really I
t him sulk, and watched the sea, always of a milky bloom, and the sky, still
get paid?" she
He spoke over
-you know w
(He was going into the army.) "What
those
expo
re wanted to charge me two pounds for patching up that centre-board, that
nt to
ardeners been g
N
putting a patch on a piece of wood!-I think it will hold all right," he continued na?vely; "we shall make a deuce of a lot of leeway if it doesn't. We're flat-bottomed, you se
Richenda's "grousing" was a little spo
et," she said. "Let's
ou do play the dickens
r the
to go just this minu
did not with
sing her. He had never kissed her yet. Wh
flected), especially
rhaps it was to summon up resolution to do so that he
most moments of perturbation only turned her paler; but at t
sign that she was Louie again was that she for
ntfully; "then we may as
ant to see
edn't be stuf
re distrac
t him with a fain
allenged him (but she had for a moment a faint
ocked; nevertheless it was with a rather
O
ined, "you did let
e saying presently that she had asked him to kiss her
u did," he a
"Out of the mouths of
ne can defeat guile! After all, it was too unpardonab
rmured, her face, even h
eam seemed to irradiat
th the newness of the idea, "you mean-do yo
should kiss her "properl
s too late now. You can't ve
ed. "Of cou
, R
wil
geous. She mad
very well you don't
aren't ugly
ens! She "w
ips whose degree of prettiness he estimated so nicely. "I'm going t
t and talk-sensibly-I don't know what mad
none to say "P
yacht now. They walked together back to the stile. T
aboard her to-m
y we
ourse she's a cutter, not a lugger. That'
all
girl is mine,' it is. And I say, you'd better put some ol
rig
ovey?" he ask
wn on a slate wh
"I-say!... You wouldn't t
y n
t-ch
y honour'-impuden
what fright
d-by
a mi
el
, "'
d-by
r name after
ha
d-by
oy--" She wa
isfaction, she had made him
the hall-slate: "Gone to Mazzicombe: L. Causton." Then