traveling all over the world and doing something useful all the time." She leaned forward a little, and unconsciously made herself more comfortable. "You must have been to some marvelous places."
"Well ..." The pink spots in his cheeks grew deeper. "Well, I had not thought of it quite like that, but yes, I suppose I have. India, you know?"
"No, I don't know," she said frankly. "I wish I did."
"Do you really?" He looked surprised and hopeful.
"Of course!" She regarded him as if he had asked a truly odd question. "Where in India have you been? What is it like?"
"Oh it was all the usual thing, you know," he said modestly. "Scores of other people have been there too - officers' wives, and so on, and written letters home, full of descriptions. It isn't very new, I'm afraid." He hesitated, looking down at the blanket over his knees, and his rather bony hands spread across them."But I did go to Africa a couple of times."
"Africa! How marvelous!" She was not being polite; eagerness rang in her voice like music. "Where in Africa? To the south?"
He watched her face keenly to make sure he was not saying too much.
"At first. Then I went north to Matabeleland, and Mash-onaland..."
"Did you?" Her eyes were wide. "What is it like? Is that where Dr. Livingstone is?"
"No - the missionary there is a Dr. Robert Moffatt, a most remarkable person, as is his wife, Mary." His face lit with memory, as if the vividness of it were but a day or two since. "Indeed I think perhaps she is one of the most admirable of women. Such courage to travel with the word of God and to carry it to a savage people in an unknown land."
Edith leaned towards him eagerly. "What is the land like, Major Tiplady? Is it very hot? Is it quite different from England? What are the animals like, and the flowers?"
"You have never seen so many different kinds of beasts in all your life," he said expressively, still watching her. "Elephants, lions, giraffes, rhinos, and so many species of deer and antelope you cannot imagine it, and zebras and buffalo. Why, I have seen herds so vast they darkened the ground." He leaned towards her unconsciously, and she moved a fraction closer.
"And when something frightens them," he went on,"like a grass fire, and they stampede, then the earth shakes and roars under tens of thousands of hooves, and the little creatures dart in every direction before them, as before a tidal wave. Which reminds me, most of the ground there is red - a rich, brilliant soil. Oh, and the trees." He shrugged his shoulders. "Of course most of the veldt is just grassland and acacia trees, with flat tops - but there are flowering trees to dazzle the eyes so you scarcely can believe what they see. And - " He stopped suddenly as Hester came back into the room. "Oh dear - I am afraid I am monopolizing the conversation. You are too generous, Mrs. Sobell."
Hester stopped abruptly, then a slow smile spread over her face and she continued in.
"Not at all," Edith denied immediately."Hester, has Major Tiplady ever told you about his adventures in Mashona-land and Matabeleland?"
"No," Hester said with some surprise, looking at the major. "I thought you served in India."
"Oh yes. But he has been to Africa too," Edith said quickly. "Major" - she faced him again eagerly - "you should write down everything about all these places you have been to, so we all may hear about them. Most of us don't even leave our miserable little parts of London, let alone see wild and exotic places such as you describe. Think how many people could while away a winter afternoon with imagination on fire with what you could tell them."
He looked profoundly abashed, and yet there was an eagerness in him he could not hide.
"Do you really think so, Mrs. Sobell?"
"Oh yes! Indeed I do," Edith said urgently. "It is quite apparent that you can recall it most clearly, and you recount it so extraordinarily well."
Major Tiplady colored with pleasure, and opened his mouth to deny it, as modesty required. Then apparently he could think of nothing that did not sound ungracious, and so remained silent.
"An excellent idea," Hester agreed, delighted for the major and for Edith, and able to endorse it with some honesty as well. "There is so much rubbish written, it would be marvelous that true adventures should be recorded