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<h2> VII. </h2>
<p>Latter that day C�sar came in from the mill with the startling
intelligence that Philip was riding up on the highroad.</p>
<p>"Goodness mercy!" cried Nancy, and she fled away to wash her face. Grannie
with a turn of the hand settled her cap, and smoothed her grey hair under
it. Kate herself had disappeared like a flash of light; but as Philip
dismounted at the gate, looking taller, and older, and paler, and more
serious, but raising his cap from his fair head and smiling a smile like
sunshine, she was coming leisurely out of the porch with a bewitching hat
over her wavy black hair and a hand-basket over her arm.</p>
<p>Then there was a little start of surprise and recognition, a short catch
of quick breath and nervous salutations.</p>
<p>"I'm going round to the nests," she said. "I suppose you'll step in to see
mother."</p>
<p>"Time enough for that," said Philip. "May I help you with the eggs first?
Besides, I've something to tell you."</p>
<p>"Is it that you're 'admitted?'" said Kate.</p>
<p>"That's nothing," said Philip. "Only the A B C, you know. Getting ready to
begin, so to speak."</p>
<p>They walked round to the stackyard, and he tied up his horse and gave it
hay. Then, while they poked about for eggs on hands and knees among the
straw, under the stacks and between the bushes, she said she hoped he
would have success, and he answered that success was more than a hope to
him now—it was a sort of superstition. She did not understand this,
but looked up at him from all fours with brightening eyes, and said, "What
a glorious thing it is to be a man!"</p>
<p>"Is it?" said Philip. "And yet I remember somebody who said she wasn't
sorry to be a girl."</p>
<p>"Did I?" said Kate. "But that was long ago. And <i>I</i> remember somebody
else who pretended he was glad I was."</p>
<p>"That was long ago too," said Philip, and both laughed nervously.</p>
<p>"What strange things girls are—and boys!" said Kate with a matronly
sigh, burying her face in a nest where a hen was clucking and two downy
chicks were peeping from her wing.</p>
<p>They went through to the orchard, where the trees were breaking into eager
blossoms.</p>
<p>"I've another letter for you from Pete," said Philip.</p>
<p>"So?" said Kate.</p>
<p>"Here it is," said Philip.</p>
<p>"Won't you read it?" said Kate.</p>
<p>"But it's yours; surely a girl doesn't want anybody else——"</p>
<p>"Ah! but you're different, though; you know everything—and besides—read
it aloud, Philip."</p>
<p>With her basket of eggs on one arm, and the other hand on the outstretched
arm of an apple-tree, she waited while he read:</p>
<p>"Dearest Kitty,—How's yourself, darling, and how's Philip, and how's
Grannie? I'm getting on tremendous. They're calling me Captain now—Capt'n
Pete. Sort of overseer at the Diamond Mines outside Kimberley. Regular
gentleman's life and no mistake. Nothing to do but sit under a monstrous
big umbrella, with a paper in your fist, like a chairman, while twenty
Kaffirs do the work. Just a bit of a tussle now and then to keep you from
dropping off. When a Kaffir turns up a diamond, you grab it, and mark it
on the time-sheet against his name. They've got their own outlandish ones,
but we always christen them ourselves—Sixpence, Seven Waistcoats,
Shoulder-of-Mutton, Twopenny Trotter—anything you like. When a
Kaffir strikes a diamond, he gets a commission, and so does his overseer.
I'm afraid I'm going to be getting terrible rich soon. Tell the old man
I'll be buying that har-monia yet. They are a knowing lot, though, and if
they can get up a dust to smuggle a stone when you're not looking, they
will. Then they sell it to the blackleg Boers, and you've got to raise
your voice like an advocate to get it back somehow. But the Boers can't do
no harm to you with their fists at all—it's playing. They're a dirty
lot, wonderful straight like some of the lazy Manx ones, especially Black
Tom. When they see us down at the river washing, they say, 'What dirty
people the English must be if they have to wash themselves three times a
day—we only do it once a week.' When a Kaffir steals a stone we
usually court-martial him, but I don't hold with it, as the floggers on
the compound can't be trusted; so I always lick my own niggers, being more
kinder, and if anybody does anything against me, they lynch him."</p>
<p>Kate made a little patient sigh and turned away her head, while Philip, in
a halting voice, went on—</p>
<p>"Darling Kitty, I am longing mortal for a sight of your sweet face. When
the night comes, and I'll be lying in the huts—boards on the ground,
and good canvas, and everything comfortable—says I to the boys,
'Shut your faces, men, and let a poor chap sleep;' but they never twig the
darkness of my meaning. I'll only be wanting a bit of quiet for thinking
of.... with the stars atwinkling down.... She's looking at that one....
Shine on my angel...."</p>
<p>"Really, Kate," faltered Philip, "I can't——"</p>
<p>"Give it to me, then," said Kate.</p>
<p>She was tugging with her trembling hand at the arm of the apple-tree, and
the white blossom was raining over her from the rowels of the thin boughs
overhead, like silver fish falling from the herring-net. Taking the
letter, she glanced over the close—</p>
<p>"darlin Kirry how is the mackral this saison and is the millin doing
middling and I wonder is the hens all layin and is the grace gone out of
the mares leg yet and how is the owl man and is he still playin hang with
the texes. Theer is a big chap heer that is strait like him he hath
swallowed the owl Book and cant help bring it up agen but dear Kirry no
more at present i axpect to be Home sune bogh, to see u all tho I dont no
azactly With luv your luving swateart peat."</p>
<p>When she had finished the letter, she turned it over in her fingers, and
gave another patient little sigh. "You didn't read it as it was spelled,
Philip," she said.</p>
<p>"What odds if the spelling is uncertain when the love is as sure as that?"
said Philip.</p>
<p>"Did he write it himself, think you?" said Kate.</p>
<p>"He signed it, anyway, and no doubt indited it too; but perhaps one of the
Gills boys held the pen."</p>
<p>She coloured a little, slipped the letter down her dress into her pocket,
and looked ashamed.</p>
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