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PAGE 11

Malvina of Brittany
by [?]

It was to Malvina that Flight Commander Raffleton addressed himself.

“This,” he said, “is Professor Littlecherry, my Cousin Christopher, about whom I told you.”

It was obvious that Malvina regarded the Professor as a person of importance. Evidently her intention was to curtsy, an operation that, hampered by those trailing yards of clinging khaki, might prove–so it flashed upon the Professor–not only difficult but dangerous.

“Allow me,” said the Professor.

His idea was to help Malvina out of Commander Raffleton’s coat, and Malvina was preparing to assist him. Commander Raffleton was only just in time.

“I don’t think,” said Commander Raffleton. “If you don’t mind I think we’d better leave that for Mrs. Muldoon.”

The Professor let go the coat. Malvina appeared a shade disappointed. One opines that not unreasonably she may have thought to make a better impression without it. But a smiling acquiescence in all arrangements made for her welfare seems to have been one of her charms.

“Perhaps,” suggested Commander Raffleton to Malvina while refastening a few of the more important buttons, “if you wouldn’t mind explaining yourself to my Cousin Christopher just exactly who and what you are–you’d do it so much better than I should.” (What Commander Raffleton was saying to himself was: “If I tell the dear old Johnny, he’ll think I’m pulling his leg. It will sound altogether different the way she will put it.”) “You’re sure you don’t mind?”

Malvina hadn’t the slightest objection. She accomplished her curtsy–or rather it looked as if the coat were curtsying–quite gracefully, and with a dignity one would not have expected from it.

“I am the fairy Malvina,” she explained to the Professor. “You may have heard of me. I was the favourite of Harbundia, Queen of the White Ladies of Brittany. But that was long ago.”

The friendly magician was staring at her with a pair of round eyes that in spite of their amazement looked kindly and understanding. They probably encouraged Malvina to complete the confession of her sad brief history.

“It was when King Heremon ruled over Ireland,” she continued. “I did a very foolish and a wicked thing, and was punished for it by being cast out from the companionship of my fellows. Since then”–the coat made the slightest of pathetic gestures–“I have wandered alone.”

It ought to have sounded so ridiculous to them both; told on English soil in the year One Thousand Nine Hundred and Fourteen to a smart young officer of Engineers and an elderly Oxford Professor. Across the road the doctor’s odd man was opening garage doors; a noisy milk cart was clattering through the village a little late for the London train; a faint odour of eggs and bacon came wafted through the garden, mingled with the scent of lavender and pinks. For Commander Raffleton, maybe, there was excuse. This story, so far as it has gone, has tried to make that clear. But the Professor! He ought to have exploded in a burst of Homeric laughter, or else to have shaken his head at her and warned her where little girls go to who do this sort of thing.

Instead of which he stared from Commander Raffleton to Malvina, and from Malvina back to Commander Raffleton with eyes so astonishingly round that they might have been drawn with a compass.

“God bless my soul!” said the Professor. “But this is most extraordinary!”

“Was there a King Heremon of Ireland?” asked Commander Raffleton. The Professor was a well-known authority on these matters.

“Of course there was a King Heremon of Ireland,” answered the Professor quite petulantly–as if the Commander had wanted to know if there had ever been a Julius Caesar or a Napoleon. “And so there was a Queen Harbundia. Malvina is always spoken of in connection with her.”

“What did she do?” inquired Commander Raffleton. They both of them seemed to be oblivious of Malvina’s presence.