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CHAPTER XVI—A PRIVATE CONVERSATION
 The name braced Stephen at once.  Here was danger, an enemy to be encountered; all the fighting blood of generations leaped to the occasion.  The short spell of sleep had helped to restore her.  There remained still quite enough of mental and nervous excitement to make her think quickly; the words were hardly out of the maid’s mouth before her resolution was taken.  It would never do to let Leonard Everard see she was diffident about meeting him; she would go down at once.  But she would take the precaution of having her aunt present; at any rate, till she should have seen how the land lay.  Her being just waked from sleep would be an excuse for asking her aunt to see the visitor till she came down.  So she said to the maid:  
‘I have been asleep.  I must have got tired walking in the wood in the heat.  Ask Auntie to kindly see Mr. Everard in the blue drawing-room till I come down.  I must tidy my hair; but I will be down in a few minutes.’
 
‘Shall I send Marjorie to you, miss?’
 
‘No!  Don’t mind; I can do what I want myself.  Hurry down to Miss Rowly!’
 
How she regarded Leonard Everard now was shown in her instinctive classing him amongst her enemies.
 
When she entered the room she seemed all aglow.  She wanted not only to overcome but to punish; and all the woman in her had risen to the effort.  Never in her life had Stephen Norman looked more radiantly beautiful, more adorable, more desirable.  Even Leonard Everard felt his pulses quicken as he saw that glowing mass of beauty standing out against the cold background of old French tapestry.  All the physical side of him leaped in answer to the call of her beauty; and even his cold heart and his self-engrossed brain followed with slower gait.  He had been sitting opposite Miss Rowly in one of the windows, twirling his hat in nervous suspense.  He jumped up, and, as she came towards him, went forward rapidly to greet her.  No one could mistake the admiration in his eyes.  Ever since he had made up his mind to marry her she had assumed a new aspect in his thoughts.  But now her presence swept away all false imaginings; from the moment that her loveliness dawned upon him something like love began to grow within his breast.  Stephen saw the look and it strengthened her.  He had so grievously wounded her pride the previous day that her victory on this was a compensation which set her more at her old poise.
 
Her greeting was all sweetness: she was charmed to see him.  How was his father, and what was the news?  Miss Rowly looked on with smiling visage.  She too had seen the look of admiration in his eyes, and it pleased her.  Old ladies, especially when they are maiden ladies, always like to see admiration in the eyes of young men when they are turned in the direction of any girl dear to them.
 
They talked for some time, keeping all the while, by Stephen’s clever generalship, to the small-talk of the neighbourhood and the minor events of social importance.  As the time wore on she could see that Leonard was growing impatient, and evidently wanted to see her alone.  She ignored, however, all his little private signalling, and presently ordered tea to be brought.  This took some little time; when it had been brought and served and drunk, Leonard was in a smothered fume of impatience.  She was glad to see that as yet her aunt had noticed nothing, and she still hoped that she would be able to so prolong matters, that she would escape without a private interview.  She did not know the cause of Leonard’s impatience: that he must see her before the day passed.  She too was an egoist, in her own way; in the flush of belief of his subjugation she did not think of attributing to him any other motive than his desire for herself.  As she had made up her mind on the final issue she did not want to be troubled by a new ‘scene.’
 
But, after all, Leonard was a man; and man’s ways are more direct than woman’s.  Seeing that he could not achieve his object in any other way, he said out suddenly, thinking, and rightly, that she would not wish to force an issue in the presence of her aunt:
 
‘By the way, Miss Norman,’ he had always called her ‘Miss Norman’ in her aunt’s presence: ‘I want to have two minutes with you before I go.  On a matter of business,’ he added, noticing Miss Rowly’s surprised look.  The old lady was old-fashioned even for her age; in her time no young man would have asked to see a young lady alone on business.  Except on one kind of business; and with regard to that kind of business gentlemen had to obtain first the confidence and permission of guardians.  Leonard saw the difficulty and said quickly:
 
‘It is on the matter you wrote to me about!’
 
Stephen was prepared for a nasty shock, but hardly for so nasty a one as this.  There was an indelicacy about it which went far beyond the bounds of thoughtless conventionality.  That such an appeal should be made to her, and in such a way, savoured of danger.  Her woman’s intuition gave her the guard, and at once she spoke, smilingly and gently as one recalling a matter in which the concern is not her own:
 
‘Of course!  It was selfish of me not to have thought of it, and to have kept you so long waiting.  The fact is, Auntie, that Leonard—I like to call him Leonard, since we were children together, and he is so young; though perhaps it would be more decorous nowadays to say “Mr. Everard”—has consulted me about his debts.  You know, Auntie dear, that young men will be young men in such matters; or perhaps you do not, since the only person who ever worried you has been myself.  But I stayed at Oxford and I know something of young men’s ways; and as I am necessarily more or less of a man of business, he values my help.  Don’t you, Leonard?’  The challenge was so direct, and the position he was in so daringly put, that he had to acquiesce.  Miss Rowly, who had looked on with a frown of displeasure, said coldly:
 
‘I know you are your own mistress, my dear.  But surely it would be better if Mr. Everard would consult with his solicitor or his father’s agent, or some of his gentlemen friends, rather than with a young lady whose relations with him, after all, are only those of a neighbour on visiting terms.  For my own part, I should have thought that Mr. Everard’s best course would have been to consult his own father!  But the things that gentlemen, as well as ladies do, have been sadly changed since my time!’  Then, rising in formal dignity, she bowed gravely to the visitor before leaving the room.
 
But the position of being left alone in the room with Leonard did not at all suit Stephen’s plans.  Rising quickly she said to her aunt:
 
‘Don’t stir, Auntie.  I dare say you are right in what you say; but I promised Mr. Everard to go into the matter.  And as I have brought the awkwardness on myself, I suppose I must bear it.  If Mr. Everard wants to see me alone, and I suppose he is diffident in speaking on such a matter before you—he didn’t play with you, you know!—we can go out on the lawn.  We shan’t be long!’  Before Leonard could recover his wits she had headed him out on the lawn.
 
Her strategy was again thoroughly good.  The spot she chose, though beyond earshot, was quite in the open and commanded by all the windows in that side of the house.  A person speaking there might say what he liked, but his actions must be discreet.
 
On the lawn Stephen tripped ahead; Leonard followed inwardly raging.  By her clever use of the opening she had put him in a difficulty from which there was no immediate means of extrication.  He could not quarrel overtly with Stephen; if he did so, how could he enter on the pressing matter of his debts?  He dared not openly proclaim his object in wishing to marry her, for had he done so her aunt might have interfered, with what success he could not be sure.  In any case it would cause delay, and delay was what he could not afford.  He felt that in mentioning his debts at just such a movement he had given Stephen the chance she had so aptly taken.  He had to be on his good behaviour, however; and with an apprehension that was new to him he followed her.
 
An old Roman marble seat was placed at an angle from the house so that the one of the two occupants within its curve must almost face the house, whilst the other gave to it at least a quarter-face.  Stephen seated herself on the near side, leaving to Leonard the exposed position.  As soon as he was seated, she began:
 
‘Now, Leonard, tell me all about the debts?’  She spoke in tones of gay friendliness, but behind the mask of her cheerfulness was the real face of fear.  Down deep in her mind was a conviction that her letter was a pivotal point of future sorrow.  It was in the meantime quite apparent to her that Leonard kept it as his last resource; so her instinct was to keep it to the front and thus minimise its power.
 
Leonard, though inwardly weakened by qualms of growing doubt, had the animal instinct that, as he was in opposition, his safety was in attacking where his opponent most feared.  He felt that there was some subtle change in his companion; this was never the same Stephen Norman whom only yesterday he had met upon the hill!  He plunged at once into his purpose.
 
‘But it wasn’t about my debts you asked me to meet you, Stephen.’
 
‘You surprise me, Leonard!  I thought I simply asked you to come to meet me.  I know the first subject I mentioned when we began to talk, after your grumbling about coming in the heat, was your money matters.’  Leonard winced, but went on:
 
‘It was very good of you, Stephen; but really that is not what I came to speak of to-day.  At first, at all events!’ he added with a sublime na?vetté, as the subject of his debts and his imperative want of money rose before him.  Stephen’s eyes flashed; she saw more clearly than ever through his purpose.  Such as admission at the very outset of the proffer of marriage, which she felt was coming, was little short of monstrous.  Her companion did not see the look of mastery on her face; he was looking down at the moment.  A true lover would have been looking up.
 
‘I wanted to tell you, Stephen, that I have been thinking over what you said to me in your letter, and what you said in words; and I want to accept!’  As he was speaking he was looking her straight in the face.
 
Stephen answered slowly with a puzzled smile which wrinkled up her forehead:
 
‘Accept what I said in my letter! why, Leonard, what do you mean? &nbs............
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