Guy Livingstone; eBook

George Alfred Lawrence
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 316 pages of information about Guy Livingstone;.

Guy Livingstone; eBook

George Alfred Lawrence
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 316 pages of information about Guy Livingstone;.

Just then Forrester rode up.  “Woe to the vanquished!” he said.  “All is lost but honor.  Will you say something kind to me after my defeat, Miss Raymond?  You will find your pet not punished in the least, and without a scratch on her.”

Without answering, she held out her hand.  As he bent over it, and whispered, what I could not hear, I saw her eyes sparkle, and a happy consciousness flush her cheeks, till they glowed like a sky at sunset when a storm is passing away in the west.  Then I knew that he had won a richer prize than ever was set on a race since the first Great Metropolitan was run for at Olympia.

Livingstone had washed away the traces of his fall (his wound was only a cut under the hair, above the temple), and was going to get the horses in line to start them for the farmers’ cup.  As he passed Miss Bellasys he checked his horse for an instant, and said, very coldly,

“You are satisfied, I trust?”

“All’s well that ends well,” answered Flora; “but I began to tremble for my bets.  I thought you were waiting too long.”

Guy did not wish to pursue the subject apparently, for he rode on without reply.  Flora made no attempt to detain him.  She had studied the signs of the times in his countenance long enough to be weather-wise, and to know that the better part of valor was advisable when the quicksilver had sunk to Stormy.

The cup was a great success.  Eleven started, and three made a most artistic finish—­scarcely a length between first and third.  The farmers of the present day ride very differently from their ancestors of fifty years ago, whose highest ambition was to pound along after the slow, sure “currant-jelly dogs.”

Go down into the Vale of Belvoir; watch one of the duke’s tenants handing a five-year old over the Smite, and say if the modern agriculturists might not boast with Tydides,

     "hemeis de pateron meg’ ameinones euchometh’ einai."

They are getting so erudite, too, that I dare say they would quote it in the original.

When all was over, and they were returning to Kerton, Guy ranged up to his cousin’s side.  He looked rather embarrassed and penitent—­an expression which sat upon his stern, resolute face very strangely.  But Isabel was radiant with happiness, and did not even sigh as she held out the forfeited ring.  He put it back with a decided gesture of his hand, and, leaning over her, whispered something in her ear.  I don’t know how they arranged it; but Miss Raymond wore the turquoises at the next county ball—­the ring, to her dying day.

CHAPTER X.

     “Souvent femme varie;
     Bien fol est, qui s’y fie.”

We sat by the firelight in the old library of Kerton Manor.  The dreary January evening was closing in, with a sharp sleet lashing the windows and rattling on their diamond panes, but the gleams from the great burning logs lighted up the dark crimson cushions of Utrecht and the polished walnut panels so changefully and enticingly that no one had the heart to think of candles.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Guy Livingstone; from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.