Sweet Mace - Sweet Mace Part 35
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Sweet Mace Part 35

"It must have been very tedious and tiresome," said Anne, innocently; "but then, Mace Cobbe is very nice and pleasant, is she not?"

Sir Mark looked sharply to the speaker to see if this was a venomed shaft, but Mistress Anne's eyes were as wide open as her face was vacant and smooth.

"Yes," he said, quickly; "a very pleasant, sensible girl. Well educated, too."

"Yes," said Anne, dreamily. "I like Mace Cobbe, only dear father and my mother don't quite approve of my making her an intimate."

The faint "Oh!" that escaped from Sir Thomas Beckley's lips must have been caused by a twinge of gout, for he did not venture to speak when he caught his daughter's eye.

"Will you not come and see my mother, Sir Mark?" continued Anne, sweetly. "She is down in her simple-garden, by the southern wall."

"I shall be delighted," was the reply; and rising, he escorted the lady out through an open bay window, and along the closely-shaven lawn.

"Anne means to marry him," said Sir Thomas, gazing after his daughter, and rubbing his nose in a vexed manner. "What a smooth, soft puss it is! Who'd think she had such claws?"

"She's innocence itself," said Sir Mark to himself, as he twisted his moustache-points, and smiled down tenderly at his companion, who blushed and trembled and faltered when he spoke to her, as naturally as a simple-hearted girl who had been longing for his return. "By all the gods it would be much easier work to make up matters here!"

"Let me run on, and tell my mother you have come, Sir Mark," said Anne, ingenuously.

"Nay, nay," said the guest, pressing the trembling little white hand he took; "I have not many hours to stay."

"Oh!" cried Anne, gazing with piteous wide open eyes. "You are not going away to-day?"

"In two hours' time, sweet, I must be on the road to London. Must--I must."

To give Anne credit for her efforts, she tried very hard to squeeze two little tears out of the corners of her eyes; but they were obstinate, and refused to come. She heaved a deep sigh, though, and gazed sadly down at her little silk shoes, as they toddled over the short grass, her heels being packed up on the bases of a couple of inverted pyramids, which just allowed her toes to reach the ground.

"Poor child!" thought Sir Mark; and the desire was very strong upon him to just bend down and kiss her. But he resisted the temptation bravely, his strength of mind being fortified by the knowledge that they were well in sight of the latticed windows.

A minute later, and they had to go through a narrow path, winding through and overarched by broad-leaved nut-stubbs, which formed quite a bower belaced with golden sunbeams, that seemed to fall in drops upon the enchanter's night-shade, the briony, and patches of long thick grass.

"Is this the way to the simple-garden, Mistress Anne?" he said, playing with the hand that lay upon his arm.

"Yes, Sir Mark," she faltered; "it is close at hand."

It might have been a mile away as far as seeing what went on in the nutwalk was concerned; and feeling this, and a very tender sensation of pitying sorrow for the weak girl at his side, Sir Mark thought that to yield to the temptation would be only kindness, and an act that would solace the poor child, so he said with a sigh:

"Yes, Mistress Anne, I must away in a couple of hours."

"So soon?" she whispered.

"Yes; so soon."

And then somehow, sweet Mistress Anne, in her girlish innocency, thought not of resistance, as her companion drew her softly nearer and nearer to him, one of his arms passing round her slight waist, so that she hung upon it, with her head thrown slightly back. Her veined lids drooped over her eyes, her lips were half parted to show her white teeth, and the lips themselves were red and moist as her soft perfumed breath. For she was very young, and did not know what it was to be taken in the arms of a man, saving upon such an occasion as that when Gil had held her and half borne her along. It was quite natural, then, that when Sir Mark's lips drew nearer and pressed hers, at first so softly that a gnat would have hardly felt the touch, then harder, more closely, and ended by joining them tightly, that she should not shrink from the contact, but, though motionless, seem to passively return kiss for kiss--a score of kisses joined in one.

This one might have lasted an hour or a moment--Sir Mark did not know.

All he knew was that for the time being Mace Cobbe was forgotten, and that the kiss was very nice. In fact, it seemed to him that he was just in the middle of it when an excited voice broke it right in half by exclaiming--

"Oh, my gracious!"

Looking up, he found himself face to face with dumpy, chubby Dame Beckley, staring vacantly astounded, in her spectacles and garden-gloves, her basket having dropped from her hand.

"I--beg--I--"

"Oh, Sir Mark!" exclaimed the lady, angrily; and then, catching her daughter's eye, she went on in a trembling, fluttering way; "I never thought--I couldn't see--I really--Oh, dear me; how do you do, Sir Mark?

I--I--I am glad to see you back."

He held out his hand, smiling in her face the while, and in her confusion Dame Beckley placed therein a little trowel, making him start.

Then, starting herself, she grew more confused, and snatched the trowel away, dropped it, and nearly struck her head against the visitor, as he stooped quickly to pick up the fallen tool.

"I beg your pardon, Sir Mark," she stammered, as she finally succeeded in getting trowel and garden-gloves comfortably settled in the basket, a frown from her daughter hastening her pace.

"Sir Mark was coming with me to see you in the simple-garden, mother,"

said Mistress Anne, calmly enough. "Will you show him some of your choicest plants?"

"Oh, yes, child, if I--that is--bless me, I hardly know what I am saying. This way, Sir Mark, this way," and turning abruptly she led the little party down the garden.

Sir Mark pressed Mistress Anne's hand, and gave her a meaning look and smile, but he was disconcerted to find his companion's face as innocent and guileless-looking as her limpid eyes.

"Confound it all," he muttered; "I must not trifle with her, or I shall break the poor girl's heart."

"These are my simples, Sir Mark," said the dame, pointing to the various old-fashioned herbs growing beneath the shelter of a sunny wall; lavender, rosemary, rue, and balm; peppermint, spearmint, and lemon-thyme; pennyroyal, basil, and marigold; wall-hyssop; and sweet marjoram, borage, and dill, with a score more,--which she hastened to point out to hide her confusion.

"That is agrimony, Sir Mark, for fevers, and that is the new long snake-rooted glycorice from Spain, a fine thing for colds and burning throats. These are the echeverias for making up when there are scalds and burns, and applying cool to the place."

"And what is that great long-leaved plant, madame?" said Sir Mark, showing an interest in what he saw.

"The Indian weed--tobacco, sir, and this is a strange new gourd from the same land; and this is a root that grows into curious floury lumps or balls, when underground. But maybe you have heard of them before we simple people in the country. It is the batata."

"Yes; I have heard of that, and tasted it too," said Sir Mark.

"Would you like to see my vines, Sir Mark?" said the lady, eagerly.

"They are in the shelter of the old walls here, and I ripen my grapes, and make my wine, that you shall taste when we go in."

"I thank you, madam, and shall be right glad."

"Here, too, is my woodsage, or germander," cried Dame Beckley, eagerly.

"It is a fine bitter, with which we make our ale. I have tried to get Cobbe at the Pool to use it when he brews, but he is obstinate and headstrong, and will take the strange-smelling hop-nettle, which twines and runs up the stakes. Maybe Sir Mark has seen the plantation there."

"Ay, that I have," said Sir Mark, smiling at Anne, while her mother prattled on.

"The founder has a goodly garden, but not like mine," said the little lady, proudly. "He never grows such apples as these, nor yet such berries or such plums. I have told him much and given him many seeds, but he is a headstrong and a hard man to teach."

Sir Mark bowed.

"I gave him the graft to place in his stock for the choice Christmas pippins,--the Noel beauty, Sir Mark,--or he would not have had a worthy apple in his garden. Now, I prithee, come and see my bees."

"Perhaps Sir Mark would not care to see the bees, mother," said Mistress Anne, demurely; "he might get stung."