PAGE 22
The Knight Errant
by
He reached up his hand to her as he sat.
“My dear, you make a charming gipsy,” he said. “You will have to sit for me.”
She laughed, touched his hand with a hint of shyness, and stepped down beside him.
“How is the supper getting on? Have you looked at it?”
He laid aside his paper to prepare for the meal. To her evident relief he made no further comment at the moment upon her appearance. But when supper was over and he was smoking his evening pipe, his eyes dwelt upon her continually as she flitted to and fro, having declined his assistance, and set everything in order after the meal.
The sun had disappeared, and a deep dusk was falling upon the forest. Ernestine moved, elf-like, in the light of the sinking fire. She took no notice of the man who watched her, being plainly too busy to heed his attention.
But her duties were over at last, and she turned from the ruddy firelight and moved, half reluctantly it seemed, towards him. She reached him, and stood before him.
“I’ve done now,” she said. “You can rake out the fire. Good-night!”
He took the little hand in his.
“Are you tired, Chirpy?”
“No, I don’t think so.” She sounded slightly doubtful.
“Won’t you stay with me for a little?” he said. She stood silent. “I was horribly lonely after you went to bed last night,” he urged gently.
She uttered a funny little sigh.
“I’m sure you must have been horribly uncomfortable too,” she said. “Did you lie awake?”
“No, I wasn’t uncomfortable. I’ve slept in the open heaps of times before. I was just–lonely.”
She laid her hand lightly on his shoulder as she stood beside him.
“It was rather awesome,” she admitted.
“I believe you were lonely too,” he said.
She laughed a little, and said nothing.
He took his pipe from his mouth and laid it tenderly upon the ground.
“Shall I tell you something, Chirpy?”
Her hand began to rub up and down uneasily on his shoulder.
“Well?” she said under her breath.
He looked up at her in the falling darkness.
“I feel exactly as you felt over that squirrel,” he said. “Do you remember? You wanted to kiss it, but the little fool didn’t understand.”
A slight quiver went through Ernestine. Again rather breathlessly, she laughed.
“Some little fools don’t,” she said.
He moved and very gently slipped his arm about her. “I didn’t mean to put it quite like that,” he said. “You will pardon my clumsiness, won’t you?”
She did not resist his arm, but neither did she yield to it. Her hand still fidgeted upon his shoulder.
“I wish you wouldn’t be so horribly nice to me,” she said suddenly.
“My dear Chirpy!”
“Yes,” she said with vehemence. “Why don’t you take what you want? I–I should respect you then.”
“But I want you to love me,” he answered quietly.
She drew a quick breath, and became suddenly quite rigid, intensely still.
His arm grew a little closer about her.
“Don’t you know I am in love with you, Chirpy?” he asked her very softly. “Am I such a dunderhead that I haven’t made that plain?”
“Are you?” she said, a sharp catch in her voice. “Are you?” Abruptly she stooped to him. “Knight Errant,” she said, and the words fell swift and passionate, “would you have really wanted to marry me–anyway?”
His face was upturned to hers. He could feel her breathing, sharp and short, upon his lips.
“My dear,” he said, “I have wanted to marry you ever since that afternoon you met me in St. Paul’s.”
He would have risen with the words, but she made a quick movement downwards to prevent him, and suddenly she was on her knees before him with her arms about his neck.
“Oh, I’m so glad you told me,” she whispered tremulously. “I’m so glad.”
He gathered her closely to him. His lips were against her forehead.
“It makes all the difference, dear, does it?”
“Yes,” she whispered back, clinging faster. “Just all the difference in the world, because–because it was that afternoon–I began–to want–you too.”
And there in the darkness, with the dim forest all about them, she turned her lips to meet her husband’s first kiss.