Complete Project Gutenberg John Galsworthy Works eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 6,432 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg John Galsworthy Works.

Complete Project Gutenberg John Galsworthy Works eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 6,432 pages of information about Complete Project Gutenberg John Galsworthy Works.

“I don’t like it.”

“Will you let me look at it?  I am a painter.”

“It isn’t worth looking at, but—­if you wish—­”

He put the two halves of the sketch together.

“You see!” she said at last; “I told you.”

Harz did not answer, still looking at the sketch.  The girl frowned.

Harz asked her suddenly: 

“Why do you paint?”

She coloured, and said: 

“Show me what is wrong.”

“I cannot show you what is wrong, there is nothing wrong—­but why do you paint?”

“I don’t understand.”

Harz shrugged his shoulders.

“You’ve no business to do that,” said the girl in a hurt voice; “I want to know.”

“Your heart is not in it,” said Harz.

She looked at him, startled; her eyes had grown thoughtful.

“I suppose that is it.  There are so many other things—­”

“There should be nothing else,” said Harz.

She broke in:  “I don’t want always to be thinking of myself.  Suppose—­”

“Ah!  When you begin supposing!”

The girl confronted him; she had torn the sketch again.

“You mean that if it does not matter enough, one had better not do it at all.  I don’t know if you are right—­I think you are.”

There was the sound of a nervous cough, and Harz saw behind him his three visitors—­Miss Naylor offering him her hand; Greta, flushed, with a bunch of wild flowers, staring intently in his face; and the terrier, sniffing at his trousers.

Miss Naylor broke an awkward silence.

“We wondered if you would still be here, Christian.  I am sorry to interrupt you—­I was not aware that you knew Mr. Herr—­”

“Harz is my name—­we were just talking”

“About my sketch.  Oh, Greta, you do tickle!  Will you come and have breakfast with us to-day, Herr Harz?  It’s our turn, you know.”

Harz, glancing at his dusty clothes, excused himself.

But Greta in a pleading voice said:  “Oh! do come!  Scruff likes you.  It is so dull when there is nobody for breakfast but ourselves.”

Miss Naylor’s mouth began to twist.  Harz hurriedly broke in: 

“Thank you.  I will come with pleasure; you don’t mind my being dirty?”

“Oh no! we do not mind; then we shall none of us wash, and afterwards I shall show you my rabbits.”

Miss Naylor, moving from foot to foot, like a bird on its perch, exclaimed: 

“I hope you won’t regret it, not a very good meal—­the girls are so impulsive—­such informal invitation; we shall be very glad.”

But Greta pulled softly at her sister’s sleeve, and Christian, gathering her things, led the way.

Harz followed in amazement; nothing of this kind had come into his life before.  He kept shyly glancing at the girls; and, noting the speculative innocence in Greta’s eyes, he smiled.  They soon came to two great poplar-trees, which stood, like sentinels, one on either side of an unweeded gravel walk leading through lilac bushes to a house painted dull pink, with green-shuttered windows, and a roof of greenish slate.  Over the door in faded crimson letters were written the words, “Villa Rubein.”

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Complete Project Gutenberg John Galsworthy Works from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.