The woman had dropped upon her knees by the cradle, while he was speaking. She neither looked at him nor seemed to hear him. With hands clasped above her head, she rocked herself wildly to and fro. ‘Oh my God! Oh my God!’ was all she said, over and over again.
Sylvie and Bruno gently unclasped her hands and drew them down—till she had an arm round each of them, though she took no notice of them, but knelt on with eyes gazing upwards, and lips that moved as if in silent thanks-giving. The man kept his face hidden, and uttered no sound: but one could see the sobs that shook him from head to foot.
After a while he raised his head—his face all wet with tears. ‘Polly!’ he said softly; and then, louder, ‘Old Poll!’
Then she rose from her knees and came to him, with a dazed look, as if she were walking in her sleep. ‘Who was it called me old Poll?’ she asked: her voice took on it a tender playfulness: her eyes sparkled; and the rosy light of Youth flushed her pale cheeks, till she looked more like a happy girl of seventeen than a worn woman of forty. ‘Was that my own lad, my Willie, a-waiting for me at the stile?’
His face too was transformed, in the same magic light, to the likeness of a bashful boy: and boy and girl they seemed, as he wound an arm about her, and drew her to his side, while with the other hand he thrust from him the heap of money, as though it were something hateful to the touch. ‘Tak it, lass,’ he said, ‘tak it all! An’ fetch us summat to eat: but get a sup o’ milk, first, for t’ bairn.’
‘My little bairn!’ she murmured as she gathered up the coins. ‘My own little lassie!’ Then she moved to the door, and was passing out, but a sudden thought seemed to arrest her: she hastily returned—first to kneel down and kiss the sleeping child, and then to throw herself into her husband’s arms and be strained to his heart. The next moment she was on her way, taking with her a jug that hung on a peg near the door: we followed close behind.
We had not gone far before we came in sight of a swinging sign-board bearing the word ‘DAIRY’ on it, and here she went in, welcomed by a little curly white dog, who, not being under the ‘eerie’ influence, saw the children, and received them with the most effusive affection. When I got inside, the dairyman was in the act of taking the money. ‘Is’t for thysen, Missus, or for t’
bairn?’ he asked, when he had filled the jug, pausing with it in his hand.
‘For t’ bairn!’ she said, almost reproachfully. ‘Think’st tha I’d touch a drop mysen, while as she hadna got her fill?’
‘All right, Missus,’ the man replied, turning away with the jug in his hand. ‘Let’s just mak sure it’s good measure.’ He went back among his shelves of milk-bowls, carefully keeping his back towards her while he emptied a little measure of cream into the jug, muttering to himself ‘mebbe it’ll hearten her up a bit, the little lassie!’
The woman never noticed the kind deed, but took back the jug with a simple ‘Good evening, Master’, and went her way: but the children had been more observant, and, as we followed her out, Bruno remarked ‘That were welly kind: and I loves that man: and if I was welly rich I’d give him a hundred pounds—and a bun. That little grummeling dog doosn’t know its business!’
He referred to the dairyman’s little dog, who had apparently quite forgotten the affectionate welcome he had given us on our arrival, and was now following at a respectful distance, doing his best to ‘speed the parting guest’ with a shower of little shrill barks, that seemed to tread on one an other’s heels.
‘What is a dog’s business?’ laughed Sylvie. ‘Dogs ca’n’t keep shops and give change!’
‘Sisters’ business isn’t to laugh at their brothers,’ Bruno replied with perfect gravity. ‘And dogs’ businesses is to bark—not like that: it should finish one bark before it begins another: and it should—Oh Sylvie, there’s some dindledums!’
And in another moment the happy children were flying across the common, racing for the patch of dandelions.
While I stood watching them, a strange dreamy feeling came upon me: a railway-platform seemed to take the place of the green sward, and, instead of the light figure of Sylvie bounding along, I seemed to see the flying form of Lady Muriel; but whether Bruno had also undergone a transformation, and had become the old man whom she was running to overtake, I was unable to judge, so instantaneously did the feeling come and go.
When I re-entered the little sitting-room which I shared with Arthur, he was standing with his back to me, looking out of the open window, and evidently had not heard me enter. A cup of tea, apparently just tasted and pushed aside, stood on the table, on the opposite side of which was a letter, just begun, with the pen lying across it: an open book lay on the sofa: the London paper occupied the easy chair; and on the little table which stood by it, I noticed an unlighted cigar and an open box of cigar-lights: all things betokened that the Doctor, usually so methodical and so self-contained, had been trying every form of occupation, and could settle to none!
‘This is very unlike you, Doctor!’ I was beginning, but checked myself, as he turned at the sound of my voice, in sheer amazement at the wonderful change that had taken place in his appearance. Never had I seen a face so radiant with happiness, or eyes that sparkled with such unearthly light! ‘Even thus,’ I thought, ‘must the herald-angel have looked, who brought to the shepherds, watching over their flocks by night, that sweet message of "peace on earth, good-will to men"!’
‘Yes, dear friend!’ he said, as if in answer to the question that I suppose he read in my face. ‘It is true! It is true!’
No need to ask what was true. ‘God bless you both!’ I said, as I felt the happy tears brimming to my eyes. ‘You were made for each other!’
‘Yes,’ he said, simply, ‘I believe we were. And what a change it makes in one’s Life! This isn’t the same world! That isn’t the sky I saw yesterday! Those clouds—I never saw such clouds in all my life before! They look like troops of hovering angels!’
To me they looked very ordinary clouds indeed: but then I had not fed ‘on honeydew, And drunk the milk of Paradise’!
‘She wants to see you—at once,’ he continued, descending suddenly to the things of earth. ‘She says that is the one drop yet wanting in her cup of happiness!’
‘I’ll go at once,’ I said, as I turned to leave the room. ‘Wo’n’t you come with me?’
‘No, Sir!’ said the Doctor, with a sudden effort—which proved an utter failure—to resume his professional manner. ‘Do I look like coming with you? Have you never heard that two is company, and—’
‘Yes,’ I said, ‘I have heard it: and I’m painfully aware that I am Number Three! But, when shall we three meet again?’
‘When the hurly-burly’s done!’ he answered with a happy laugh, such as I had not heard from him for many a year.