back of his clenched teeth.

The silence was broken by little Wilberforce.

One can only gather that there lurks in the supposedly innocuous amber

of ginger ale an elevating something which the temperance reformers

have overlooked. Wilberforce Bray had, if you remember, tucked away no

fewer than three in the spot where they would do most good. One

presumes that the child, with all that stuff surging about inside him,

had become thoroughly above himself. He uttered a merry laugh.

'Never hit it!' said little Wilberforce.

He was kneeling beside the tee box as he spoke, and now, as one who has

seen all that there is to be seen and turns, sated, to other

amusements, he moved round and began to play with the sand. The

spectacle of his alluring trouser seat was one which a stronger man

would have found it hard to resist. To Ramsden Waters it had the aspect

of a formal invitation. For one moment his number II golf shoe, as

supplied to all the leading professionals, wavered in mid-air, then

crashed home.

Eunice screamed.

'How dare you kick my brother!'

Ramsden faced her, stern and pale.

'Madam,' he said, 'in similar circumstances I would have kicked the

Archangel Gabriel!'

Then, stooping to his ball, he picked it up.

'The match is yours,' he said to Miss Bingley, who, having paid no

attention at all to the drama which had just concluded, was practising

short chip shots with her mashie-niblick.

He bowed coldly to Eunice, cast one look of sombre satisfaction at

little Wilberforce, who was painfully extricating himself from a bed of

nettles into which he had rolled, and strode off. He crossed the bridge

over the water and stalked up the hill.

Eunice watched him go, spellbound. Her momentary spurt of wrath at the

kicking of her brother had died away, and she wished she had thought of

doing it herself.

How splendid he looked, she felt, as she watched Ramsden striding up to

the club-house--just like Carruthers Mordyke after he had flung

Ermyntrude Vanstone from him in chapter forty-one of 'Gray Eyes That

Gleam'. Her whole soul went out to him. This was the sort of man she

wanted as a partner in life. How grandly he would teach her to play

golf. It had sickened her when her former instructors, prefacing their

criticism with glutinous praise, had mildly suggested that some people

found it a good thing to keep the head still when driving and that

though her methods were splendid it might be worth trying. They had

spoken of her keeping her eye on the ball as if she were doing the ball

a favour. What she wanted was a great, strong, rough brute of a fellow

who would tell her not to move her damned head; a rugged Viking of a

chap who, if she did not keep her eye on the ball, would black it for

her. And Ramsden Waters was such a one. He might not look like a

Viking, but after all it is the soul that counts and, as this

afternoon's experience had taught her, Ramsden Waters had a soul that

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