The Motor Maid eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 352 pages of information about The Motor Maid.

The Motor Maid eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 352 pages of information about The Motor Maid.

“There are in summer, but they’re not open yet, and the inns—­well, if Fate casts us into one, Lady Turnour will have a fit.  My idea was:  a splendid run through some of the wildest and most wonderful scenery of France—­little known to tourists, too—­and then to get out of the Tarn region before dark.  We may do it yet, but if we have any more trouble—­”

He didn’t finish the sentence, because, as if he had been calling for it, the trouble came.  I thought that an invisible enemy had fired a revolver at us from behind a tree, but it was only a second tyre, bursting out loud, instead of in a ladylike whisper, like the other.

Down got Mr. Dane, with the air of a condemned criminal who wants every one to believe that he is delighted to be hanged.  Down got I also, to relieve the car of my weight during the weird process of “jacking up,” though the chauffeur assured me that I didn’t matter any more than a fly on the wheel.  Our birds of paradise remained in their cage, however, Lady Turnour glaring whenever she caught a glimpse of the chauffeur’s head, as if he had bitten that hole in the tyre.  But before us loomed mountains—­disagreeable-looking mountains—­more like embonpoints growing out of the earth’s surface than ornamental elevations.  On the tops there was something white, and I preferred having Lady Turnour glare at the chauffeur, no matter how unjustly, than that her attention should be caught by that far, silver glitter.

Suddenly my brother paused in his work, unbent his back, stood up, and regarded his thumb with as much intentness as if he were an Indian fakir pledged to look at nothing else for a stated number of years.  He pinched the nail, shook his hand, and then, abandoning it as an object of interest, was about to inflate the mended tyre when I came forward.

“You’ve hurt yourself,” I said.

“I didn’t know you were looking,” he replied, fixing the air-pump.  “Your back seemed to be turned.”

“A girl who hasn’t got eyes in the back of her head is incomplete.  What have you done to your hand?”

“Nothing much.  Only picked up a splinter somehow.  I tried to get it out and couldn’t.  It will do when we arrive somewhere.”

“Let me try,” I said.

“Nonsense!  A little flower of a thing like you!  Why, you’d faint at the sight of blood.”

“Oh, is it bleeding?” I asked, horrified, and forgetting to hide my horror.

He laughed.  “Only a drop or two.  Why, you’re as white as your name, child.”

“That’s only at the thought,” I said.  “I don’t mind the sight, although I do think if Providence had made blood a pale green or a pretty blue it would have been less startling than bright red.  However, it’s too late to change that now.  And if you don’t show me your thumb, I’ll have hysterics instantly, and perhaps be discharged by Lady Turnour on the spot.”

At this awful threat, which I must have looked terribly capable of carrying out, he obeyed without a word.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Motor Maid from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.