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naturally will want to see his picture before the purchase is complete, but you need not see him. He will call at a time convenient to yourself. But should you care to see him, you will find him a very agreeable fellow.'

Mr Wroughton held up his hand, which was thin almost to transparency.

'No, spare me the sight of my executioner!' he said.

'I don't know where you get all these fine feelings from,' remarked his mother. Not from my side of the family. I'll see Mr. Ward for you, and see if I can't get him to buy some garnets of mine that I never wear. I shall like a month or two in Egypt with you, Philip.'

'Too long a journey for you, mother, I am afraid,' said Philip hastily.

There! I knew you'd say something mean,' said she rising. 'Well, I've finished my dinner, and I shall get to my Patience.'

The night had fallen hot and starry and still, and though it was not to be expected that Mr. Wroughton should risk himself in the air after dinner, Craddock and Joyce at his suggestion strolled down to the river's edge in the gathering dusk. The evensong of birds was over, bats wheeled in the darkening air, and moths hovered over the drowsy fragrance of the flower-beds. From somewhere not far away sounded the tinkle of a guitar accompanying some boyish tenor, and Joyce, without thought, found herself wondering whether this was the voice of Charles of the unknown surname, or the anonymous fashioner of the omelette. The tune was tawdry enough, a number from some musical comedy; and though the performer had no particular skill either of finger or throat, the effect was young and fresh, and not in discord with the midsummer stillness. Something of the same impression was made on Arthur Craddock also, who listened with an indulgent smile on his big face that gleamed whitely in the faded day and dimness of stars.

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He does not know how to play or sing very much,' he said, but it is somehow agreeable though a little heart-rending to my middleage. He is clearly quite young, his voice is unformed yet, and I should guess he is thinking of Her. Enviable young wretch! For though, Miss Joyce, we miserable ones go on thinking of one or another Her all our lives, they cease to think of us just when we need them most.'

There was considerable adroitness in this speech as a prelude to greater directness, and he looked at her out of his little grey eyne

with some intentness. She seemed more Diana-like than ever is this grey glimmer of starlight: it really seemed possible that she would spring up from the earth to meet the tawny moon-disc that was even now just rising in the east, and charioteer it over the starscattered fields of heaven. She seemed dressed for her part as Mistress of the Moon, all in white with a ribbon of silver in her bright hair. 'But what of us?' she said lightly. Do not you men cease to think of us even before we are middle-aged?'

Suddenly it struck Craddock that no more heaven-sent opportunity for carrying out the second of the purposes that had brought him down here could possibly be desired. He was in luck to-day, too: the business of the portrait had been carried through so smoothly, so easily. But immediately he became aware that he was not, in vulgar parlance, quite up to it. He needed the imperative call, the hunger of the soul. Clearly, too, her words did not refer, however remotely, to herself and him he felt that they were spoken quite impersonally. And immediately she changed the subject.

'I have to thank you,' she said, ' for trying to dissuade my father from selling the portrait. He told me you had suggested that he should not. That was kind of you.'

He caressed the side of his face with the usual gratifying result. 'I found his mind was made up,' he said though in accordance with your request I suggested he should not sell it. Always command me, Miss Joyce, and I will always fly on your quests. I am aware that I do not look particularly like a knight-errant, but there are motor-cars and railway-trains nowadays which transport us more swiftly and less hazardously than mettlesome chargers, especially if we can't ride.'

He had again made himself an opening; but again he found, when he came close, that it was barricaded to him. But this time some hint of his intentions, though he could not manage to carry them into effect, was communicated to her, and, conscious of them and uncomfortable at them, she again changed the subject.

'Oh, I am not going to ask you to take the train to-night,' she said. The most I shall ask of you is that you play bézique with my father by and by. I play so badly that it is no fun for him. Hark, the singing is coming closer.'

They had come to the landing-stage at the far end of the lawn, and looking up the tranquil lane of the river Joyce saw that the sound came from a Canadian canoe which was drifting down stream towards them. The boat itself was barely visible in the

shadow of the trees: it was conjectured rather than seen by the glimmer of shirt-sleeves that outlined it, and it was on the further side of the stream. By this time the moon had swung clear of the horizon, and though the boat was still shadowed, Joyce and Craddock standing on the lawn were in the full white light. At the moment the musical comedy song came to an end, and the voice of some imprudent person from the canoe, forgetting the distinctness with which sound traverses water, spoke in a voice that was perfectly audible to Joyce, though not to Craddock.

'Charles, there's the girl of the punt and her fat white man,' it observed.

Charles was more circumspect. His answer was a murmur quite inaudible, and instantly he thrummed his guitar again. The melody was new to Joyce, and though he might not have great skill in singing, he had a crisp enunciation, and the delicious old words were clearly audible,

See the chariot at hand here of Love
Wherein my Lady rideth.

Louder and more distinct every moment, as the boat drifted closer, came the beautiful lyric. The singer was not using more than half his voice, but as the distance between canoe and audience diminished, the light boyish tenor was sufficiently resonant to set the windless air a-quiver. Just as the canoe emerged into the blaze of moonlight opposite came the final stave, and the whiteshirted singer sang from a full and open throat :

Or have smelt o' the bud o' the briar ?

Or the nard in the fire ?

Or have tasted the bag of the bee?

O, so white! O, so soft! O, so sweet is she!

The silence of the night shut down like the lid of a jewel-box. Then after a little while came the drip of a paddle, and the canoe grew small and dim in the distance down stream.

'Those jolly boys again,' said Joyce.

Arthur Craddock heaved a long sigh, horribly conscious of his years and riches, and Joyce heard the creak of his shirt-front.

'That young man has diplomatic gifts,' he said. 'It is clear that he intended to serenade you, and he chose the far side of the river, so as to make it seem that he had no intention of any kind. It is a reasonable supposition that if serenading was his object-and it certainly was-he might be supposed not to see you standing here. So he serenaded with the open throat. If I tried to do the

same, which sorely tempts me, I should only convince you that I had not an open throat but a sore one. Nobody has ever heard me sing, not even when I was as young as that white-shirted youth in the canoe. He will paddle back to his tent before long, unless you stay here visible in the moonlight, and dream steadily about you till morning.'

Joyce laughed.

'Oh, what nonsense, Mr. Craddock!' she said, knowing in the very secret place of her girl's heart that it was not nonsense at all. 'Boats with guitars and singers go by every night, and often half the night. They can't all be serenading me.'

'I cannot imagine why not. A Mormonism of serenading young men is not illegal. I would join them myself, Miss Joyce, if I could sing, and if I did not think that any Canadian canoe in which I embarked would instantly sink.'

Philip Wroughton, in addition to the glass of champagne he had drunk at dinner, permitted himself the further indulgence of sitting up for nearly an hour beyond his usual bedtime to talk to his guest and read more about the delectable climate of the Upper Nile. While Craddock and Joyce were out in the garden, a train of thoughts had been suggested to him by his very shrewd mother before she began her Patience, which he was preparing to indicate ever so lightly to that gentleman after Joyce had gone upstairs.

'He's got your picture, Philip,' said that observart lady, ‘and now he's after your daughter. Why don't you send Joyce up to town for a month, and give the girl a chance? You're a selfish fellow, you know, like all Wroughtons.'

But she had not succeeded in provoking him to a retort, nor had she affected the independence of his own conclusions. It required no great perspicacity to see that Craddock was considerably attracted by the girl, and it seemed to her father that she might easily marry less suitably for himself. She had led a very solitary and sequestered life with him, and he did not propose to alter his habits in order that she might come more in contact with the world. True, in this projected Egyptian winter she was likely to meet more young men than she had ever come across in her life before; but he could not imagine anyone who would suit him (as if it was his own marriage that was in contemplation) better than Craddock. Philip found him quiet and deferential and agreeable, and since it was certainly necessary that Joyce and her husband (if she was permitted

to marry) should be with him a good deal, these were favourable points. He detested young men with their high spirits and loud laughs and automatic digestions, and he did not for a moment intend to have such a one about the house. Furthermore, Craddock was certainly very well off (Philip would have had a fit if he had known that he and his picture were in the act, so to speak, of enriching him more), and it was clearly desirable to have wealth about the house. Possibly some one more eligible might discover himself, but Philip had little difficulty in convincing himself that he would be failing in his duty towards his daughter if he did not let Craddock know that his attentions to Joyce were favourably regarded by her father. But if his meditations were stripped of the fabric of unrealities, until truth in bare austerity was laid open, it must be confessed that he planned Joyce's possible marriage with a single eye for his own comfort.

A game of bézique succeeded Craddock's stroll with Joyce, and a cigarette with a whisky and soda consoled him for the withdrawal of the ladies.

'And you have positively to go up to town again to-morrow?' said Philip. 'Cannot we by any means persuade you to stay another night? You in your modesty have no idea what a refreshment it is to us in our retirement to get a whiff of air from the busy bustling world. Yes, I may say "us," for my dear little Joyce was so pleased at your coming. Would you not be more prudent to close that window? I am sure you are sitting in a draught.'

This of course meant that Philip was, and Craddock did not misunderstand.

'I was saying that Joyce was so pleased,' repeated her father. 'I ask nothing better than to please Miss Joyce,' said Craddock. 'You do please her; I am sure of it. Dear Joyce! I know it cannot be long that I shall be able to give her a home. Her future continually occupies my thoughts. I daresay she will meet some one when we winter in Egypt who will attract her. She is not ill-looking, is she? I think there must be many suitable men whom she would be disposed to regard not unfavourably. Yes, yes.'

It was all spoken very softly and tunefully; the calm sunset of declining day seemed to brood over it. The effect was that Arthur Craddock got up and paced the room once or twice in silence.

'Will you give me your permission to ask Miss Joyce if she will make me the happiest of men?' he asked.

'My dear friend!' said Philip, with hand outstretched.

(To be continued.)

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