PAGE 5
The Emergency Men
by
One day–it was the last of the old year–Miss Connolly and Harold were strolling along a path on which the wintry sunshine was tracing fantastic patterns as it streamed through the naked branches of the giant beech-trees. The young man had a gun on his shoulder, but he was paying little attention to the nimble rabbits that now and then frisked across the road. He was thinking, and thinking deeply.
He could not hope for many more such quiet walks with his fair companion. She would soon have more efficient chaperons than the children, who often made a pretence of accompanying them, but invariably dashed off, disdainful of the sober pace of their elders. Before long–next day probably–he would be handed over to the tender mercies of Jack, who had constantly lamented the occupations that prevented his paying proper attention to his guest. The heir of Lisnahoe had promised to show the young stranger some “real good sport” as soon as other duties would permit. That time was close at hand now. The Emergency men had been at work for several days; they were thoroughly at home in their duties; besides, the fat cattle would be finished very shortly and sent off to be sold in Dublin. Jack had announced his intention of stealing a holiday on the morrow, and taking Hayes to a certain famous “snipe bottom,” when the game was, to use Dick’s expression, “as thick as plums in one of Polly’s puddings.”
It was hard to guess then they might have such another rumble, and Harold had much to say to the girl at his side; and yet, for the life of him, he could not utter the words that were trembling on his lips.
“I don’t believe you care much for shooting, Mr. Hayes.”
A rabbit loped slowly across die road not twenty yards from the gun, but Harold had not noticed it. He roused himself with a start, however, at the sound of his companion’s voice.
“Oh yes, I do, sometimes,” he answered, glancing alertly to both sides of the road; but no game was in sight for the moment.
“If this frost should break up, you may have some hunting,” pursued Miss Connolly. “I’m afraid you’re having an awfully stupid time.”
Harold interposed an eager denial.
“Oh yes, you must be,” insisted the young lady; “but Jack will find more time now, and if we have a thaw you will have a day with the hounds. Are you fond of hunting?”
“I am very fond of riding, but I have never hunted,” answered the New-Yorker.
“Just like me. I am never so happy as when I am on horseback, but mamma won’t let me ride to hounds. She says she does not approve of ladies on the field. It is traditional, I suppose, that every mistress of Lisnahoe should oppose hunting.”
“Indeed, why so?” inquired Harold.
“Why, don’t you know?” asked the girl. “Has nobody told you our family ghost-story?”
“No one as yet,” answered Hayes.
“Then mine be the pleasing task; and there is a peculiar fitness in your hearing it just now, for to-morrow will be New-Year’s Day.”
Harold failed to see the applicability of the date, but he made no observation, and Miss Connolly went on.
“Ever so many years ago this place belonged to an ancestor of mine who was devoted to field-sports of all kinds. He lived for nothing else, people thought, but suddenly he surprised all the world by getting married.”
Harold thought that if her remote grandmother had chanced to resemble the fair young girl at his side, there was a good excuse for the sportsman; but he held his tongue.
“The bride was exacting–or perhaps she was only timid. At any rate, she used her influence to wean her husband from his outdoor pursuits–especially hunting. He must have been very much in love with her, for she succeeded, and he promised to give it all up–after one day more. It seems that he could not get out of this last run. The meet was on the lawn; the hunt breakfast was to be at Lisnahoe House. In short, it was an affair that could neither be altered nor postponed.