This plan was acted on at once. Tristrem was shown to the room which he was to occupy, and proceeded to get his things in order. From his shirt-box, which, with his valise, had already been brought upstairs, he took the ring, the brooch, the pin, and placed them on the mantel. Then he found other garments, and began to dress. In five minutes he was in readiness, but as yet he heard nothing indicative of Viola’s return. He went to the window and looked out. Above the trees, in an adjacent property, there loomed a tower. The window was at the back of the house; he could not see the ocean, but he heard its resilient sibilants, and from the garden came the hum of insects. It had grown quite dark, but still there was no sign of Viola’s return.
He took up the volume which he had brought with him in the cars. It was the Rime Nuove of Carducci, and with the fancies of that concettist of modern Rome he stayed his impatience for a while. There was one octave that had appealed to him before. He read it twice, and was about to endeavor to repeat the lines from memory, when through the open window he heard the clatter of horses’ hoofs, the roll of wheels; it was evident that some conveyance had stopped at the gate of the villa. Then came the sound of hurrying feet, a murmur of voices, and abruptly the night was cut with the anguish of a woman’s cry.
Tristrem rushed from the room and down the stairs. Through the open door beyond a trembling star was visible, and in the road a group of undistinguished forms.
“She’s only fainted,” someone was saying; “she was right enough a minute ago.”
Before the sentence was completed, Tristrem was at the gate. Hatless, with one hand ungloved and the other clutching a broken whip, the habit rent from hem to girdle, dust-covered and dishevelled, the eyes closed, and in the face the pallor and contraction of mortal pain, Viola Raritan lay, waist-supported, in her mother’s arms.
“Help me with her to the house,” the mother moaned. Then noticing Tristrem at her side, “She’s been thrown,” she added; “I knew she would be—I knew it—”
And as Tristrem reached to aid her with the burden, the girl’s eyes opened, “It’s nothing.” She raised her ungloved hand, “I—” and swooned again.
They bore her into a little sitting room, and laid her down. Mrs. Raritan followed, distraught with fright. In her helplessness, words came from her unsequenced and obscure. But soon she seemed to feel the need of action. One servant she despatched for a physician, from another a restorative was obtained. And Tristrem, meanwhile, knelt at the girl’s side, beating her hand with his. It had been scratched, he noticed, as by a briar, and under the nails were stains such as might come from plucking berries that are red.
As he tried to take from her the whip, that he might rub the hand that held it too, the girl recovered consciousness again. The swoon had lasted but a moment or so, yet to him who watched it had been unmeasured time. She drew away the hand he held, and raising herself she looked at him; to her lips there came a tremulousness and her eyes filled.
“My darling,” Mrs. Raritan sobbed, “are you hurt? Tell me. How did it happen? Did the horse run away with you. Oh, Viola, I knew there would be an accident. Where are you hurt? Did the horse drag you?”
The girl turned to her mother almost wonderingly. It seemed to Tristrem that she was not yet wholly herself.
“Yes,” she answered; “no, I mean—no, he didn’t, it was an accident, he shied. Do get me upstairs.” And with that her head fell again on the cushion.
Tristrem sought to raise her, but she motioned him back and caught her mother’s hand, and rising with its assistance she let the arm circle her waist, and thus supported she suffered herself to be led away.
Tristrem followed them to the hall. On the porch a man loitered, hat in hand; as Tristrem approached he rubbed the brim reflectively.
“I saw the horse as good as an hour ago,” he said, “I was going to Caswell’s.” And with this information he crooked his arm and made a backward gesture. “It’s down yonder on the way to the Point,” he explained. “As I passed Hazard’s I looked in the crossroad—I call it a road, but after you get on a bit it’s nothing more than a cow-path, all bushes and suchlike. But just up the road I see’d the horse. He was nibbling grass as quiet as you please. I didn’t pay no attention, I thought he was tied. Well, when I was coming back I looked again; he wasn’t there, but just as I got to the turn I heard somebody holloaing, and I stopped. A man ran up and says to me, ‘There’s a lady hurt herself, can’t you give her a lift?’ ‘Where?’ says I. ‘Down there,’ he says, ‘back of Hazard’s; she’s been thrown.’ So I turned round, and sure enough there she was, by the fence, sort of dazed like. I says, ‘Are you hurt, miss?’ and she says, ‘No,’ but could I bring her here, and then I see’d that her dress was torn. She got in, and I asked her where her hat was, and she said it was back there, but it didn’t make no difference, she wanted to get home. And