The Third Violet
Copyright© 2024 by Stephen Crane
Chapter 13
One day Hollanden said, in greeting, to Hawker, “Well, he’s gone.”
“Who?” asked Hawker.
“Why, Oglethorpe, of course. Who did you think I meant?”
“How did I know?” said Hawker angrily.
“Well,” retorted Hollanden, “your chief interest was in his movements, I thought.”
“Why, of course not, hang you! Why should I be interested in his movements?”
“Well, you weren’t, then. Does that suit you?”
After a period of silence Hawker asked, “What did he—what made him go?”
“Who?”
“Why—Oglethorpe.”
“How was I to know you meant him? Well, he went because some important business affairs in New York demanded it, he said; but he is coming back again in a week. They had rather a late interview on the porch last evening.”
“Indeed,” said Hawker stiffly.
“Yes, and he went away this morning looking particularly elated. Aren’t you glad?”
“I don’t see how it concerns me,” said Hawker, with still greater stiffness.
In a walk to the lake that afternoon Hawker and Miss Fanhall found themselves side by side and silent. The girl contemplated the distant purple hills as if Hawker were not at her side and silent. Hawker frowned at the roadway. Stanley, the setter, scouted the fields in a genial gallop.
At last the girl turned to him. “Seems to me,” she said, “seems to me you are dreadfully quiet this afternoon.”
“I am thinking about my wretched field of stubble,” he answered, still frowning.
Her parasol swung about until the girl was looking up at his inscrutable profile. “Is it, then, so important that you haven’t time to talk to me?” she asked with an air of what might have been timidity.
A smile swept the scowl from his face. “No, indeed,” he said, instantly; “nothing is so important as that.”
She seemed aggrieved then. “Hum—you didn’t look so,” she told him.
“Well, I didn’t mean to look any other way,” he said contritely. “You know what a bear I am sometimes. Hollanden says it is a fixed scowl from trying to see uproarious pinks, yellows, and blues.”
A little brook, a brawling, ruffianly little brook, swaggered from side to side down the glade, swirling in white leaps over the great dark rocks and shouting challenge to the hillsides. Hollanden and the Worcester girls had halted in a place of ferns and wet moss. Their voices could be heard quarrelling above the clamour of the stream. Stanley, the setter, had sousled himself in a pool and then gone and rolled in the dust of the road. He blissfully lolled there, with his coat now resembling an old door mat.
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