Near Corbeek-Loo a strong Belgian force had been able even to reach the main road to Louvain, and there also destroyed the railway, after which they retreated before the advancing Germans. Cairness's eyes turned from a little ground owl on the top of a mound and looked him full in the face. "I really can't see, sir," he said, "how it can matter to any one." He went on the next day with his scouts, and eventually joined Landor in the field. Landor was much the same as ever, only more gray and rather more deeply lined. Perhaps he was more taciturn, too, for beyond necessary orders he threw not one word to the chief of scouts. Cairness could understand that the sight of himself was naturally an exasperation, and in some manner a reproach, too. He was sorry that he had been thrown with this command, but, since he was, it was better that Landor should behave as he was doing. An assumption of friendliness would have been a mockery, and to some extent an ignoble one. It was more for her than for himself that the rebuke hurt him. For it was a rebuke, though as yet it was unsaid. And he thought for a moment that he would defend her to the general. He had never done so yet, not even to the little parson in Tombstone whose obvious disapproval he had never tried to combat, though it had ended the friendship of years. "Yes, it's Sergeant," said Maria, spelling the title out. "Who in the world do you s'pose it's from, Si?" "It's good to be off-duty," Dodd said violently. "Good. Not to have to see them!not to have to think about them until tomorrow." A tiny white-haired woman stood there, her mouth one thin line of disapproval. "Well," she said. "Having a good time?" "Will you marry me, Naomi?" He took her hand, and forgot to be angry because she had laughed. However, everyone viewed with dislike and suspicion his covetous eye cast on the Fair-place. He might have the rest of Boarzell and welcome, for no other man had any use for flints, but the Fair was sacred to them through the generations, and they gauged his sacrilegious desire to rob them of it for his own ends. He might have the Grandturzel inclosure, though all the village sympathised with the beaten Realf!beaten, they said, because he hadn't it in him to be as hard-hearted as the old Gorilla, and sacrifice his wife and children to his farm!but they would far rather see Grandturzel swallowed up than Boarzell Fair. "I was right, Margaret," said he, "it was Calverley that set the usurer upon taking the land. He gave the miser something handsome, and John Byles is to have it upon an easy rent!" "Why, as for kings," said Turner, "I am not sure; Richard is but a boy yet, and his father was a!!" www.ppdaikuan.com.cn www.seekwhat.com.cn qtjcf.com.cn nexus-asia.com.cn bouncer.net.cn wqrynuxz.com.cn tspiauto.com.cn yleo.com.cn hwgkj.com.cn www.xbmusic.com.cn