Then it happened.
Neither Donna nor Peter knew at first just what HAD happened. They only knew SOMETHING had. Peter continued to stare at Donna as if mesmerized. Who was this creature of strange dark loveliness? She must be one of the clan or she wouldn't be here, but he couldn't place her at all. Wait... wait... what old memory flickered tantalizingly before him... now approaching... now receding? He MUST grasp it... the old church at Rose River... himself, a boy of twelve sitting in his father's pew... across the aisle a little girl of eight... blue-eyed, black-haired, wing-browed... a little girl, SITTING IN DROWNED JOHN'S PEW! He knew he must hate her because she sat in Drowned John's pew. So he made an impudent face at her. And the little girl had laughed... LAUGHED. She was amused at him. Peter, who had hated her before impersonally, hated her now personally. He had kept on hating her although he had never seen her again... never again till now. Now he was looking at her across Aunt Becky's parlour. At that moment Peter understood what had happened to him. He was no longer a free man... forevermore he must be in the power of this pale girl. He had fallen in love fathoms deep with Drowned John's daughter and Barry Dark's detested widow. Since he never did anything by halves he did not fall in love by halves either.
Peter felt a bit dizzy. It is a staggering thing to look in at a casual window and see the woman you now realize you have been subconsciously waiting for all your life. It is a still more staggering thing to have your hate suddenly dissolve into love, as though your very bones had melted to water. It rather lets you down. Peter was actually afraid to try to walk back to the veranda railing for fear his legs would give way. He knew, without stopping to argue with himself about it, that he would take no train from Three Hills that night and the lure of Amazon jungles had ceased... temporarily at least... to exist. Mystery and magic enfolded Peter as a garment. What he wanted to do was to vault over the window-sill, hurl aside those absurd men and women sitting between them, snatch up Donna Dark, strip off those ridiculous weeds she was wearing for another man, and carry her off bodily. It was quite on the cards that he would have done it... Peter had such a habit of doing everything he wanted to do... but at that moment the ten-minute silence was over and Aunt Becky opened her eyes. Everybody sighed with relief, and Peter, finding that all eyes were directed towards him, dragged himself back to the railing and sat on it, trying to collect his scattered wits and able only to see that subtle, deep-eyed face with its skin as delicate as a white night moth, under its cap of flat dark hair. Well, he had fallen in love with Donna Dark. He realized that he had been sent there by the powers that govern to fall in love with her. It was predestined in the councils of eternity that he should look through that particular window at that particular moment. Good heavens, the years he had wasted insensately hating her! Hopeless idiot! Blind bat! Now the only thing to do was to marry her as quickly as possible. Everything else could wait, but that could not. Even finding out what Donna thought about it could wait.
Donna could hardly be said to be thinking at all. She was not quite so quick as Peter was at finding out what had happened to her. She had recognized Peter the moment she had seen him... partly from that same old memory of an impudent boy across the aisle, partly from his photographs in the papers. Though they weren't good of him... not half as fascinating. Peter hated being photographed and always glared at the camera as if it were a foe. Still, Donna knew him for her enemy... and for something else.
She was trembling with the extraordinary excitement that tingled over her at the sight of him... she, who, a few seconds before, had been so bored... so tired... so disgusted that she wished she had the courage to poison herself.
She was sure Virginia noticed it. Oh, if he would only go away and not stand there at the window staring at her. She knew he was leaving for South America that night... she had heard Nancy Penhallow telling it to Mrs Homer. Donna put her hand up to her throat, as if she were choking. What was the matter with her? Who cared if Peter Penhallow went to the Amazon or the Congo? It was not she, not Donna Dark, Barry's inconsolable widow, who cared. Certainly not. It was this queer, wild, primitive creature who had, without any warning, somehow usurped her body and only wanted to spring to the window and feel Peter's arms around her. There is no saying but that this perfectly crazy impulse might have mastered Donna if Aunt Becky had not opened her eyes and Peter had not vanished from the window.
Donna gave a gasp, which, coming after the universal sigh, escaped the notice of everybody but Virginia, who laid her hand over Donna's and squeezed it sympathetically.
"Darling, I saw it all. It must have been frightfully hard for you. You bore it splendidly."
"What... what did I bear?" stammered Donna idiotically.
"Why, seeing that dreadful Peter Penhallow staring at you like that... with his hate fairly sticking out of his eyes."
"Hate... hate... oh, do you think he hates me... really?" gasped Donna.
"Of course he does. He always has, ever since you married Barry. But you won't run the risk of meeting him again, darling. He's off to-night on some of his horrid explorations, so don't worry over it."
Donna was not worrying exactly. She only felt that she would die if Peter Penhallow did go away... like that... without a word or another glance. It was not to be borne. She would dare unchartered seas with him... she would face African cooking-pots... she would... oh, what mad things was she thinking? And WHAT was Aunt Becky saying.
"Every one over forty who would be willing to live his or her life over again exactly as it has been lived, put up your hand."
Tempest Dark was the only one who put up his hand.
"Brave man! Or fortunate man... which?" inquired Aunt Becky satirically.
"Fortunate," said Tempest laconically. He HAD been fortunate. He had fifteen exquisite years with Winnifred Penhallow. He would face anything to have them again.
"Would YOU live your life over again, Donna?" whispered Virginia sentimentally.
"No... NO!!" Donna felt that to live over again the years that Peter Penhallow had hated her would be unendurable. Virginia looked grieved and amazed. She had not expected such an answer. She felt that something had come between her and Donna... something that clouded the sweet, perfect understanding that had always existed between them. She had been wont to say that words were really unnecessary for them... they could read each other's thoughts. But Virginia could not read Donna's thoughts just now... which was perhaps quite as well. She wondered uneasily if the curse of Aunt Becky's opal was beginning to work already.
"Well, let's get down to business," Aunt Becky was saying.
"Thank the pigs," thought Drowned John fervently.
Aunt Becky looked over the room gloatingly. She had prolonged her sport as long as it was possible. She had got them just where she wanted them... all keyed up and furious... all except a few who were beyond the power of her venom and whom for that reason she did not despise. But look at the rest of them... squatting there on their ham-bones, pop-eyed, coveting the jug, ready to tear in pieces the one who got it. In a few minutes the lucky one would be known, they thought. Ah, would he? Aunt Becky chuckled. She still had a bomb to throw.