Название: The Key Note
Автор: Burnham Clara Louise
Издательство: Public Domain
Жанр: Зарубежная классика
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"Yes, divine huntress, if I ever succeed in making it."
"You will make it unless you are unpardonably dilatory and neglectful. Every time you utter a musical tone it sends a vibration coursing through my nerves with a pleasant thrill."
Philip looked up at the speaker with his sea-blue, curious gaze, which she received serenely.
"Bully for you, Miss Wilbur. That's all I can say. Bully for you."
"I am glad if that encourages you," she said kindly. "It is quite outside my own volition."
"Then I don't need to thank you, eh?"
"Oh, not in the least."
Philip laughed and stooped again to his job.
"Let me see, Apollo – he struck liars and knew how to prescribe for the croup, didn't he, besides being a looker beyond all comers?"
Diana smiled. "You think of everything in terms of humor, do you not?" she rejoined.
"Perhaps – of most things, but not of you."
"Oh, I think of me most of all."
"Far from it," said Philip. "I wouldn't dare. If my voice gives you a thrill, yours gives me a chill."
"I can't believe that really," said Diana equably, watching Philip's expert handling of the trowel. "You are always laughing at me. I don't in the least understand why, but it doesn't matter at all. I think it is a quite laudable mission to make people laugh. What a good gardener you are, Mr. Barrison."
"Oh, isn't he, though!" exclaimed Miss Priscilla, emerging from the house. "Think of my luck that Phil really likes to fuss with flowers. Ox-chains couldn't drag him to do it if he didn't like to."
"Really?" returned Diana. "Is she not maligning you, Mr. Barrison? Are you really the slave of caprice?"
"I deny it," said Philip. "It doesn't sound nice."
"It would be a dire thing for you," declared the girl. "But you do not ask me what I am naming the Inn."
"Oh, it is an Inn, is it?"
"Yes," put in Miss Priscilla. "Since the leaks are mended, both pipes and roof, and the stove's up and the chimney draws, I think we can call it that."
"What is it, then? 'The Dew Drop'?" inquired Philip.
"I particularly dislike puns," said Diana quietly. "I like 'The Wayside.' Why shouldn't we call it 'The Wayside Inn'?"
"You have my permission," said Philip.
"We do not need anything original, but we do need a name that is lovely. 'The Wayside Inn' is lovely."
"So be it," said Philip.
"And you're not forgettin' what you are goin' to do to-morrow, are you, dear boy?" said Miss Priscilla ingratiatingly.
"Not if it isn't to go again for the plumber," replied Philip. "His wrenches and hammers are too handy; and I'm sure one more call up here would render him dangerous."
"Mr. Buell is a very pleasant man," said Diana. "So is Mr. Blake, the carpenter. I have learned such interesting expressions from them. Mr. Blake was showing me the fault in one of the gables of this house. He said the builder had given the roof a 'too quick yank.' Is not that quaint?"
"Ha, ha, ha," laughed Philip up into the girl's serious face. "Bully for Matt. You may get the vernacular, after all."
"I'm not quick," said Diana. "I'm afraid I should not prove an apt pupil."
"But, Philip," said Miss Priscilla, "about to-morrow. You know you'll have to get the early boat to go to meet Veronica. It's perfectly splendid of you to go, dear boy. I don't know how I could spare the time. I've got to get several rooms ready for to-morrow, and the child is such an utter stranger in this part o' the world."
"Oh, yes, I'll go," said Philip carelessly. "I think the Inn will be relieved that I can get a hair-cut. My tresses are nearly ready to braid now."
Diana smiled pensively. "I think you are very amusing, Mr. Barrison," she said.
Philip vaulted up over the railing and took a seat beside her, regarding his earth-stained hands and then her serene countenance, whose gaze was bent upon him. He shook his head to toss the blond forelock out of his eyes.
"So my voice gives you a thrill, eh?"
"Oh, decidedly," was the devout response.
"That's a good thing. I thought perhaps you couldn't really be roused from your dreaminess before the fourth of July, but I have some tones that in that case will be warranted to set you and the echoes going at the same time."
Diana clasped her hands. "Oh, utter them," she begged.
"Can't," laughed Philip, wiping his warm forehead with his shirt-sleeve. "The stage isn't set."
Diana continued to look imploringly ardent. "'Drink to me only with thine eyes,'" she suggested.
"That's the only way they'll let you do it nowadays," responded Philip, kicking the heels of his sneakers gently against the railing.
Miss Burridge looked over her spectacles at Diana in her beseeching attitude, and her eyes widened still further as the girl went on slowly with her brown gaze fixed on Philip's quizzical countenance:
"How can I bear to leave thee!
One parting kiss I give thee – "
"Dear me," thought Miss Priscilla. "I'd never have believed it of her." And it occurred to her for the first time that Philip Barrison was a handsome man.
"Farewell," went on Diana, with soft fervor. "'Farewell, my own true love – '"
"Farewell," sang Philip, falling into the trap and finishing the phrase. "'Farewe-ell, my own – true – love.'"
"Oh," breathed Diana, and the way her clasped hands fell upon her heart caused Miss Priscilla much embarrassment.
"I can scarcely wait," said the girl slowly, "to hear you sing a real song with a real accompaniment. There is such rare penetrating richness in the quality of your voice."
Miss Burridge cleared her throat. "I shouldn't wonder if Miss Wilbur was a real help to you, Phil," she said. "Young folks need encouragement."
"And soap-suds," added Philip, regarding his earthy hands and glancing merrily up at Diana, who was still standing in her attitude of adoration; but there was no answering merriment in those brown orbs. Her brain might tell her later that Miss Burridge's patronizing remark had been amusing, but she would be obliged to think it over.
Philip jumped off the railing, whistling, and followed Miss Priscilla into the house and to the sink, while Diana, reminiscently humming "The Soldier's Farewell," descended the steps and wandered away.
When, the next day in town, Philip stood in the Union Station waiting for Veronica's train, he wondered how he was to know her, but remembering that Miss Burridge spoke of having instructed her to go the first thing to the transfer office about СКАЧАТЬ