He fell asleep,
and lay still on the grass, in the midst of the thicket.
He
found out afterwards that he must have slept for nearly an hour. The shadows
had changed when he awoke; his senses came to him with a sudden shock, and he
sat up and stared at his bare limbs in stupid amazement. He huddled on his
clothes and laced his boots, wondering what folly had beset him. Then, while he
stood indecisive, hesitating, his brain a whirl of puzzled thought, his body
trembling, his hands shaking; as with electric heat, sudden remembrance
possessed him. A flaming blush shone red on his cheeks, and glowed and thrilled
through his limbs. As he awoke, a brief and slight breeze had stirred in a nook
of the matted boughs, and there was a glinting that might have been the flash
of sudden sunlight across shadow, and the branches rustled and murmured for a
moment, perhaps at the wind's passage.
He
stretched out his hands, and cried to his visitant to return; he entreated the
dark eyes that had shone over him, and the scarlet lips that had kissed him.
And then panic fear rushed into his heart, and he ran blindly, dashing through
the wood. He climbed the vallum,
and looked out, crouching, lest anybody should see him. Only the shadows were
changed, and a breath of cooler air mounted from the brook; the fields were
still and peaceful, the black figures moved, far away, amidst the corn, and the
faint echo of the high-pitched voices sang thin and distant on the evening
wind. Across the stream, in the cleft on the hill, opposite to the fort, the
blue wood smoke stole up a spiral pillar from the chimney of old Mrs. Gibbon's
cottage. He began to run full tilt down the steep surge of the hill, and never
stopped till he was over the gate and in the lane again. As he looked back,
down the valley to the south, and saw the violent ascent, the green swelling
bulwarks, and the dark ring of oaks; the sunlight seemed to play about the fort
with an aureole of flame.
"Where
on earth have you been all this time, Lucian?" said his cousin when he got
home. "Why, you look quite ill. It is really madness of you to go walking
in such weather as this. I wonder you haven't got a sunstroke.
And the tea must be nearly cold. I couldn't keep your father waiting, you
know."
He
muttered something about being rather tired, and sat down to his tea. It was
not cold, for the "cozy" had been put over the pot, but it was black
and bitter strong, as his cousin expressed it. The draught was unpalatable, but
it did him good, and the thought came with great consolation that he had only
been asleep and dreaming queer, nightmarish dreams. He shook off all his
fancies with resolution, and thought the loneliness of the camp, and the
burning sunlight, and possibly the nettle sting, which still tingled most
abominably, must have been the only factors in his farrago of impossible
recollections. He remembered that when he had felt the sting, he had seized a
nettle with thick folds of his handkerchief, and having twisted off a good
length, and put it in his pocket to show his father. Mr. Taylor was almost
interested when he came in from his evening stroll about the garden and saw the
specimen.
"Where
did you manage to come across that, Lucian?" he said. "You haven't
been to Caermaen, have you?"
"No.
I got it in the Roman fort by the common."
"Oh, the twyn. You must have
been trespassing then. Do you know what it is?"
"No.
I thought it looked different from the common nettles."
"Yes;
it's a Roman nettle—arctic pilulifera. It's a rare plant. Burrows
says it's to be found at Caermaen, but I was
never able to come across it. I must add it to the flora of the parish."
Mr.
Taylor had begun to compile a flora
accompanied by a hortus siccus, but
both stayed on high shelves dusty and fragmentary. He put the specimen on his
desk, intending to fasten it in the book, but the maid swept it away, dry and
withered, in a day or two.
Lucian
tossed and cried out in his sleep that night, and the awakening in the morning
was, in a measure, a renewal of the awakening in the fort. But the impression
was not so strong, and in a plain room it seemed all delirium, a
phantasmagoria. He had to go down to Caermaen in the
afternoon, for Mrs.
1 comment