“Such things are better left to the imagination,” I answered!”
“I ought to write and tell her,” murmured Lisbeth.
“But you won’t do that, of course?”
“No, I won’t do that if - “
“Well?”
“If you will give me - them,”
“One,” I demurred.
“Both!”
0n one condition then-just once, Lisbeth?”
Her lips were very near, her lashes drooped, and for one delicious moment she hesitated. Then I felt a little tug at my coat pocket and springing to he feet she was away with “them” clutched in her hand.
“Trickery!” I cried, and started in pursuit.
There is a path through the woods leading to the Shrubbery at Pane Court!” Down this she fled, and her laughter came to me on the wind. I was close upon her when she reached the gate, and darting through, turned, flushed but triumphant.
“I’ve won!” she mocked, nodding her head at me.
“Who can cope with the duplicity of a woman?” I retorted! “But, Lisbeth, you will give me one - just one?”
“It would spoil the pair.”
“Oh, very well,” I sighed, “good night, Lisbeth,” and lifting my cap I turned away.
There came a ripple of laughter be hind me, something struck me softly upon the cheek, and stooping, I picked up that which lay half unrolled at my feet, but when I looked round Lisbeth was gone.
“So presently I thrust “them” into my pocket and walked back slowly along the river path toward the hospitable shelter of the Three Jolly Anglers.
II
THE SHERIFF OF NOTTINGHAM
To sit beside a river on a golden afternoon listening to its whispered melody, while the air about one is fragrant with summer, and heavy with the drone of unseen wings! - What ordinary mortal could wish for more? And yet, though conscious of this fair world about me, I was still uncontent, for my world was incomplete - nay, lacked its most essential charm, and I sat with my ears on the stretch, waiting for Lisbeth’s chance footstep on the path and the soft whisper of her skirts.
The French are indeed a great people, for among many other things they alone have caught that magic sound a woman’s garments make as she walks, and given it to the world in the one word “frou-frou.”
0 wondrous word! 0 word sublime! How full art thou of delicate suggestion! Truly, there can be no sweeter sound to ears masculine upon a golden summer afternoon - or any other time, for that matter - than the soft “frou-frou” that tells him SHE is coming.
At this point my thoughts were interrupted by something which hurtled through the air and splashed into the water at my feet!” Glancing at this object, I recognised the loud-toned cricket cap affected by the Imp, and reaching for it, I fished it out on the end of my rod!” It was a hideous thing of red, white, blue, and green - a really horrible affair, and therefore much prized by its owner, as I knew.
Behind me the bank rose some four or five feet, crowned with willows and underbrush, from the other side of which there now came a prodigious rustling and panting!” Rising to my feet therefore, I parted the leaves with extreme care, and beheld the Imp himself.
He was armed to the teeth - that is to say, a wooden sword swung at his thigh, a tin bugle depended from his belt, and he carried a bow and arrow. Opposite him was another boy, particularly ragged at knee and elbow, who stood with hands thrust into his pockets and grinned.
“Base caitiff, hold!” cried the Imp, fitting an arrow to the string: “stand an’ deliver!” Give me my cap, thou varlet, thou!” The boy’s grin expanded.
“Give me my cap, base slave, or I’ll shoot you - by my troth!” As he spoke the Imp aimed his arrow, whereupon the boy ducked promptly.
“I ain’t got yer cap,” he grinned from the shelter of his arm. “It’s been an’ gone an’ throwed itself into the river!” The Imp let fly his arrow, which was answered by a yell from the Base Varlet.
“Yah!” he cried derisively as the Imp drew his sword with a melodramatic flourish. “Yah! put down that stick an’ I’ll fight yer.”
The Imp indignantly repudiated his trusty weapon being called “a stick” - “an’ I don’t think,” he went on, “that Robin Hood ever fought without his sword!” Let’s see what the book says,” and he drew a very crumpled papercovered volume from his pocket, which he consulted with knitted brows, while the Base Varlet watched him, open-mouthed.
“Oh, yes,” nodded the Imp; “it’s all right!” Listen to this!” and he read as follows in a stern, deep voice:
“‘Then Robin tossed aside his trusty blade, an’ laying bare his knotted arm, approached the dastardly ruffian with many a merry quip and jest, prepared for the fierce death-grip.’”
Hereupon the Imp laid aside his book and weapons and proceeded to roll up his sleeve, having done which to his satisfaction, he faced round upon the Base Varlet.
“Have at ye, dastardly ruffian!” he cried, and therewith ensued a battle, fierce and fell.
If his antagonist had it in height, the Imp made up for it in weight - he is a particularly solid Imp - and thus the struggle lasted for some five minutes without any appreciable advantage to either, when, in eluding one of the enemy’s desperate rushes, the Imp stumbled, lost his balance, and next moment I had caught him in my arms. For a space “the enemy” remained panting on the bank above, and then with another yell turned and darted off among the bushes.
“Hallo, Imp!” I said.
“Hallo, Uncle Dick!” he returned.
“Hurt?” I inquired.
“Wounded a bit in the nose, you know,” he answered, mopping that organ with his handkerchief; “but did you see me punch ‘yon varlet’ in the eye?”
“Did you, Imp?”
“I think so, Uncle Dick; only I do wish I’d made him surrender!” The book says that Robin Hood always made his enemies ‘surrender an’ beg their life on trembling knee!’ Oh, it must be fine to see your enemies on their knee!”
“Especially if they tremble,” I added.
“Do you s’pose that boy - I mean ‘yon base varlet’ would have surrendered?”
“Not a doubt of it - if he hadn’t happened to push you over the bank first”
“Oh!” murmured the Imp rather dubiously.
“By the way,” I said as I filled my pipe, “where is your Auntie Lisbeth?”
“Well, I chased her up the big apple-tree with my bow an’ arrow.”
“Of course,” I nodded!” “Very right and proper!”
“You see,” he explained, “I wanted her to be a wild elephant an’ she wouldn’t.”
“Extremely disobliging of her!”
“Yes, wasn’t it? So when she was right up I took away the ladder an’ hid it.”
“Highly strategic, my Imp.”
“So then I turned into Robin Hood. I hung my cap on a bush to shoot at, you know, an’ ‘the Base Varlet’ came up an’ ran off with it.”
“And there it is,” I said, pointing to where it lay!” The Imp received it with profuse thanks, and having wrung out the water, clapped it upon his curls and sat down beside me.
“I found another man who wants to be me uncle,” he began.
“Oh, indeed?”
“Yes; but I don’t want any more, you know.”
“Of course not!” One like me suffices for your everyday needs - eh, my Imp?”
The Imp nodded. “It was yesterday,” he continued. “He came to see Auntie Lisbeth, an’ I found them in the summer-house in the orchard. An’ I heard him say, ‘Miss Elizbeth, you’re prettier than ever!”
“Did he though, confound him!”
Yes, an then Auntie Lisbeth looked silly, an’ then he saw me behind a tree an’ he looked silly, too, Then he said, ‘Come here, little man!’ An’ I went, you know, though I do hate to be called ‘little man.’ Then he said he’d give me a shilling if I’d call him Uncle Frank.”
“And what did you answer?”
“‘Fraid I’m awfull’ wicked,” sighed the Imp, shaking his head, “‘cause I told him a great big lie.”