if the line from Stoneborough to Whitford presented a succession of novelties.

‘What’s that old place on the river there, with crow-stepped gables and steep roofs, like a Flemish picture?’

‘Don’t you know?’ said Leonard, ‘it is the Vintry mill, where my relative lives, that wants to make a dusty miller of me.’

‘No fear of that, old fellow,’ said Aubrey, regarding him in some dismay, ‘you’ve got better things to grind at.’

‘Ay, even if I don’t get the Randall next time, I shall be sure of it another.’

‘You’ll have it next.’

‘I don’t know; here is a quarter clean gone, and the other fellows will have got before me.’

‘Oh, but most of them have had a spell of fever!’

‘Yes, but they have not had it so thoroughly,’ said Leonard. ‘My memory is not properly come back yet; and your father says I must not try it too soon.’

‘That’s always his way,’ said Aubrey. ‘He would not let Ethel so much as pack up my little Homer.’

Leonard’s quick, furtive glance at Ethel was as if he suspected her of having been barely prevented from torturing him.

‘Oh, it was not her doing,’ said Aubrey, ‘it was I! I thought Tom would find me gone back; and, you know, we must keep up together, Leonard, and be entered at St. John’s at the same time.’

For Aubrey devoutly believed in Tom’s college at Cambridge, which had recovered all Dr. May’s allegiance.

The extra brightness was not of long duration. It was a very hot day, such as exactly suited the salamander nature of Dr. Spencer; but the carriage became like an oven. Aubrey curled himself up in a corner and went to sleep, but Leonard’s look of oppressed resignation grieved Ethel, and the blue blinds made him look so livid, that she was always fancying him fainting, and then his shyness was dreadful—it was impossible to elicit from him anything but ‘No, thank you.’

He did nearly faint when they left the train; and while Aubrey was eagerly devouring the produce of the refreshment room, had to lie on a bench under Dr. Spencer’s charge, for Ethel’s approach only brought on a dangerous spasm of politeness. How she should get on with him for a month, passed her imagination.

There was a fresher breeze when they drove out of the station, up a Dorset ridge of hill, steep, high, terraced and bleak; but it was slow climbing up, and every one was baked and wearied before the summit was gained, and the descent commenced. Even then, Ethel, sitting backwards, could only see height develop above height, all green, and scattered with sheep, or here and there an unfenced turnip-field, the road stretching behind like a long white ribbon, and now and then descending between steep chalk cuttings in slopes, down which the carriage slowly scrooped on its drag, leaving a broad blue-flecked trail. Dr. Spencer was asleep, hat off, and the wind lifting his snowy locks, and she wished the others were; but Aubrey lamented on the heat and the length, and Leonard leant back in his corner, past lamentation.

Down, down! The cuttings were becoming precipitous cliffs, the drag made dismal groans; Aubrey, after a great slip forward, looking injured, anchored himself, with his feet against the seat, by Ethel; and Dr. Spencer was effectually wakened by an involuntary forward plunge of his opposite neighbour. ‘Can this be safe?’ quoth Ethel; ‘should not some of us get out?’

‘Much you know of hills, you level landers!’ was the answer; and just then they were met and passed by four horses dragging up a stage coach, after the fashion of a fly on a window-pane—a stage coach! delightful to the old-world eyes of Dr. Spencer, recalling a faint memory to Ethel, and presenting a perfect novelty to Aubrey.

Then came a sudden turn upon flat ground, and a short cry of wonder broke from Aubrey. Ethel was sensible of a strange salt weedy smell, new to her nostrils, but only saw the white-plastered, gray-roofed houses through which they were driving; but, with another turn, the buildings were only on one side—on the other there was a wondrous sense of openness, vastness, freshness—something level, gray, but dazzling; and before she could look again, the horses stopped, and close to her, under the beetling, weather-stained white cliff, was a low fence, and within it a verandah and a door, where stood Flora’s maid, Barbara, in all her respectability.

Much wit had been expended by Aubrey on being left to the tender mercy of cruel Barbara Allen, in whom Ethel herself anticipated a tyrant; but at the moment she was invaluable. Every room was ready and inviting, and nothing but the low staircase between Leonard and the white bed, which was the only place fit for him; while for the rest, the table was speedily covered with tea and chickens; Abbotstoke eggs, inscribed with yesterday’s date; and red mail-clad prawns, to prove to touch and taste that this was truly seaside. The other senses knew it well: the open window let in the indescribable salt, fresh odour, and the entire view from it was shore and sea, there seemed nothing to hinder the tide from coming up the ridge of shingle, and rushing straight into the cottage; and the ear was constantly struck by the regular roll and dash of the waves. Aubrey, though with the appetite of recovery and sea-air combined, could not help pausing to listen, and, when his meal was over, leant back in his chair, listened again, and gave a sigh of content. ‘It is one constant hush, hushaby,’ he said; ‘it would make one sleep pleasantly.’

His companions combined their advice to him so to use it; and in less than half an hour Ethel went to bid him good night, in the whitest of beds and cleanest of tiny chambers, where he looked the picture of sleepy satisfaction, when she opened his window, and admitted the swell and dash that fascinated his weary senses.

‘My child is all right,’ said Ethel, returning to Dr. Spencer; ‘can you say the same of yours?’

‘He must rest himself into the power of sleeping. I must say it was a bold experiment; but it will do very well, when he has got over the journey. He was doing no good at home.’

‘I hope he will here.’

‘Depend on it he will. And now what are you intending?’

‘I am thirsting to see those waves near. Would it be against the manners and customs of sea-places for me to run down to them so late?’

‘Sea-places have no manners and customs.’

Ethel tossed on her hat with a feeling of delight and freedom. ‘Oh, are you coming, Dr. Spencer? I did not mean to drag you out. You had rather rest, and smoke.’

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