“Certainly. I forget what they are. But it doesn’t matter.”
“Of course it matters. Have them developed—and give me back my own.”
“If I develop them I shall be obliged to see yours—if you are on it. If I once see it I may not have the force of character to give it back. Your only safe course is to take it now.”
Ted burst into the affair with a derisive shout. “Oh, Rob! What a silly to care about that little bit of a picture! Let him have it. It was only the horses he wanted anyway!”
The two pairs of eyes met. His were full of deference, yet compelling. Hers brimmed with restrained laughter. With a gesture she waved back the roll and walked away toward the fire.
“Thank you,” said he behind her. “I’ll try to prove myself worthy of the trust.”
“Rufus! Dare you to run down the hill to that big tree with me!” Ted, no longer interested in this tame conclusion of what had promised to be an exciting encounter, challenged his sister. Ruth accepted, and the pair were off down a long, inviting slope none too smooth, with a stiff stubble, but not the less attractive for that.
Richard and Roberta were left standing at the top of the hill near the place where the fire was smouldering into dulness. Before them stretched the valley, brown and yellow and dark green in the November sunlight, with a gray-blue river winding its still length along. In the far distance a blue-and-purple haze enveloped the hills; above all stretched a sky upon whose fairness wisps of clouds were beginning to show here and there, while in the south the outlines of a rising bank of gray gave warning that those who gazed might look their fill to-day—to-morrow there would be neither sunlight nor purple haze. The two looked in silence for a minute, not at the boy and girl shouting below, but at the beauty in the peaceful landscape.
“An Indian-summer day,” said Roberta gravely, as if her mood had changed with the moment, “is like the last look at something one is not sure one shall ever see again.”
At the words Richard’s gaze shifted from the hill to the face of the girl beside him. The sunshine was full upon the rich bloom of her cheek, upon the exquisite line of her dark eyebrow. What was the beauty of an Indian-summer landscape compared with the beauty of budding summer in that face? But he answered her in the same quiet way in which she had spoken: “Yes, it’s hard to have faith that winter can sweep over all this and not blot it out forever. But it won’t.”
“No, it won’t. And after all I like the storms. I should like to stand just here, some day when Nature was simply raging, and watch. I wish I could build a stout little cabin right on this spot and come up here and spend the worst night of the winter in it. I’d love it.”
“I believe you would. But not alone? You’d want company?”
“I don’t think I’d even mind being alone—if I had a good fire for company—and a dog. I should be glad of a dog,” she owned.