The Firing Line. Robert W. Chambers

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The Firing Line - Robert W. Chambers

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call last time—"

      "There was no danger."

      "I think there was danger enough; you were apparently headed straight out to sea—"

      "I heard a ship's bell and swam toward it, and when the fog lifted I found you."

      "Why didn't you swim toward the shore? You could hear the surf—and a dog barking."

      "I"—she turned pink with annoyance—"I suppose I was a trifle tired—if you insist. I realised that I had lost my bearings; that was all. Then I heard a ship's bell. … Then the mist lifted and I saw you—but I've explained all that before. Look at that exasperating fog!"

      Vexation silenced her; she sat restless for a few seconds, then:

      "What do you think I had better do?"

      "I think you had better try to endure me for a few minutes longer. I'm safer than the fog."

      But his amusement left her unresponsive, plainly occupied with her own ideas.

      Again the tent of vapour stretched its magic folds above the boat and around it; again the shoreward shapes faded to phantoms and disappeared.

      He spoke again once or twice, but her brief replies did not encourage him. At first, he concluded that her inattention and indifference must be due to self-consciousness; then, slightly annoyed, he decided they were not. And, very gradually, he began to realise that the unconventional, always so attractive to the casual young man, did not interest her at all, even enough to be aware of it or of him.

      This cool unconsciousness of self, of him, of a situation which to any wholesome masculine mind contained the germs of humour, romance, and all sorts of amusing possibilities, began to be a little irksome to him. And still her aloofness amused him, too.

      "Do you know of any decorous reason why we should not talk to each other occasionally during this fog?" he asked.

      She turned her head, considered him inattentively, then turned it away again.

      "No," she said indifferently; "what did you desire to say?"

      Resting on his oars, the unrequited smile still forlornly edging his lips, he looked at his visitor, who was staring into the fog, lost in her own reflections; and never a glimmer in her eyes, never a quiver of lid or lash betrayed any consciousness of his gaze or even of his presence. And he continued to inspect her with increasing annoyance.

      The smooth skin, the vivid lips slightly upcurled, the straight delicate nose, the cheeks so smoothly rounded where the dark thick lashes swept their bloom as she looked downward at the water—all this was abstractly beautiful; very lovely, too, the full column of the neck, and the rounded arms guiltless of sunburn or tan.

      So unusually white were both neck and arms that Hamil ventured to speak of it, politely, asking her if this was not her first swim that season.

      Voice and question roused her from abstraction; she turned toward him, then glanced down at her unstained skin.

      "My first swim?" she repeated; "oh, you mean my arms? No, I never burn; they change very little." Straightening up she sat looking across the boat at him without visible interest at first, then doubtfully, as though in an effort to say something polite.

      "I am really very grateful to you for letting me sit here. Please don't feel obliged to amuse me during this annoying fog."

      "Thank you; you are rather difficult to talk to. But I don't mind trying at judicious intervals," he said, laughing.

      She considered him askance. "If you wish to row in, do so. I did not mean to keep you here at sea—"

      "Oh, I belong out here; I'm from the Ariani yonder; you heard her bell in the fog. We came from Nassau last night. … Have you ever been to Nassau?"

      The girl nodded listlessly and glanced at the white yacht, now becoming visible through the thinning mist. Somewhere above in the viewless void an aura grew and spread into a blinding glory; and all around, once more, the fog turned into floating golden vapour shot with rain.

      The girl placed both hands on the gunwales as though preparing to rise.

      "Not yet!" said Hamil sharply.

      "I beg your pardon?"—looking up surprised, still poised lightly on both palms as though checked at the instant of rising into swift aërial flight—so light, so buoyant she appeared.

      "Don't go overboard," he repeated.

      "Why not?"

      "Because I'm going to row you in."

      "I wish to swim; I prefer it."

      "I am only going to take you to the float—"

      "But I don't care to have you. I am perfectly able to swim in—"

      "I know you are," he said, swinging clear around in his seat to face her, "but I put it in the form of a request; will you be kind enough to let me row you part way to the float? This fog is not ended."

      She opened her lips to protest; indeed, for a moment it looked as if she were going overboard without further argument; then perhaps some belated idea of civility due him for the hospitality of his boat restrained her.

      "You understand, of course, that I am quite able to swim in," she said.

      "Yes; may I now row you part way? The fog is closing in again."

      She yielded with a pretty indifference, none the less charming because there was no flattery in it for him. He now sat facing her, pushing his oars through the water; and she stole a curious glance at his features—slightly sullen for the moment—noticing his well-set, well-shaped head and good shoulders.

      That fugitive glance confirmed the impression of recognition in her mind. He was what she had expected in breeding and physique—the type usually to be met with where the world can afford to take its leisure.

      As he was not looking at her she ventured to continue her inspection, leaning back, and dropping her bare arm alongside, to trail her fingers through the sunlit water.

      "Have we not rowed far enough?" she asked presently. "This fog is apparently going to last forever."

      "Like your silence," he said gaily.

      Raising her eyes in displeasure she met his own frankly amused.

      "Shall I tell you," he asked, "exactly why I insisted on rowing you in? I'm afraid"—he glanced at her with the quick smile breaking again on his lips—"I'm afraid you don't care whether I tell you or not. Do you?"

      "If you ask me—I really don't," she said. "And, by the way, do you know that if you turned around properly and faced the stern you could make better progress with your oars?"

      "By 'better' do you mean quicker progress?" he asked, so naïvely that she concluded he was a trifle stupid. The best-looking ones were usually stupid.

      "Yes, of course," she said, impatient. "It's all very well to push

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