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She spoke chokingly through a storm of laughter as she rocked there against my shoulder.
"And say--the joke of it!" She banged me on the back with a clublike blow, incredible from that little hand. "The joke of it is, he thought I'd be so safe with you! Oh, mamma!"
And off she went again.
I s.h.i.+fted uneasily. I did not like it--her merriment over what was perfectly obvious and rational. Of course, Billings knew she would be safe. Why the deuce shouldn't he?
But the matter of the pajamas was another thing. Her receiving me in them was a contingency I could not possibly have antic.i.p.ated and avoided, and yet a withdrawal because of them or even because of her presence here had been shown to be a course inexplicable to her. She was too innocent, too ingenuous, too _ingenue_ to understand that I was invading the sanctuary of her privacy. Yet to have taken any course that would have appeared to make correction of her error come from me would have been appallingly caddish and cruel. No, the best course had seemed to be to go right on--take no notice--and then, as soon as she retired, slip away to the club. That seemed the gentlemanly thing.
Yet now her words implied a certain consciousness that her brother might frown upon her attire, might even visit me with reproach. I was troubled, and her next speech was not calculated to rea.s.sure me.
"But I'll--I'll never say a word, d.i.c.ky," she said, coming out of her laughter and panting breathlessly. "Never! And don't _you_, d.i.c.ky--don't you ever! Understand? Mum's the word!"
I looked up distressfully to protest, but her little head was shaking earnestly, the long, delicate hair wisps about her forehead wavering like tiny, curling wreaths of golden smoke.
"No, sir," she emphasized soberly; "if you ever let _that_ cat out of the bag, it'll be all up with _me_--I mean Jack will never let me come again. You must promise me."
"But--"
"Oh, but me no 'buts'--_promise_!"
"Why, then--er--of course, if you wish it."
"That's right, because I want to come again--that is, if you _want_ me.
But if Brother Jack was on to you, d.i.c.ky, as I am, he would sooner have me at a hotel, that's all."
"But my dear Frances--"
"I tell you I _know_, d.i.c.ky; he doesn't approve of young ladies in pajamas." She chuckled. "Not even black ones."
She stood up, looking at herself and performing a graceful pirouette before the long pier gla.s.s.
"Now, if they had been crimson," she proceeded, "he might have felt different. Old Jack's great on Harvard, and so am I."
Of course. All Radcliffe girls were, I knew.
By Jove, how I wished I could show her the lovely crimson pajamas Mastermann had sent me from China! But I would have to summon Jenkins to find them, and besides, it would be of questionable taste to present them to her attention.
"Great idea, this, having pajamas in your college colors," she said. I thought so, too, as I noted admiringly the rich effect of her golden head above the black silk. But I thought the color a devilish odd one--somber, you know--for colors of a young girl's school.
"My! my!" she murmured, "wouldn't I just love _to live_ in pajamas--just go about in 'em all the time, you know! Why can't we, I wonder?" Her face flashed me a ravis.h.i.+ng smile; and while I was blinking over her question, she went on: "Funny how the girls even are taking to 'em--even Sis wears 'em!" She chuckled: "Hers are gray flannellette. But the girl I'm telling you about--_she_ don't; Sis told the mater about it. It seems that before she left China, some high muck-a-muck gave her governor a swell pair of silk ones--something like these, I guess, but I don't know of what color. But, anyhow, they were too delicate and fine to be wasted on an old stiff like that, and he had sense enough to know it. So he pa.s.sed 'em down the line to her--Frances, you know. Well, sir--" Here she sidled to the table and half leaned, half perched, upon its edge; and I was so distracted watching her graceful poise and gestures, that I lost what she was saying, by Jove.
It was her trill of laughter at something she had said, and the question: "Wasn't that funny?" that brought me back to what she was telling me.
"Yes, sir--said she just scared her maid--oh, _batty_! Because she looked so ugly in 'em--that's what _she_ thinks, but of course--_shucks_! Anyhow, she never wore 'em any more, and a day or two later some coolie stole them--sold 'em probably."
Suddenly she yawned, stretched her arms above her head, and flashed me a dazzling smile. By Jove, in the loose-fitting garments she looked for all the world like an Oriental houri, or some jolly lovely thing like that.
"Gee, but I'm sleepy!" she said behind her little hand. "If you'll excuse me, d.i.c.ky, I believe it will be off to the springs--the bed springs, for little Frankie. Good night, then. See you in the morning."
And with another radiant smile, she moved toward her room.
"Good night," I said wistfully.
By Jove, somehow I had hoped she would offer to kiss me, now that we were engaged in a way. But then, of course, it wouldn't do--she knew that. So ought I. Perhaps in the morning at the boat!
And the door closed behind her. I stood blinking after her a moment; then I fixed my attention gloomily upon the cellarette. Poor little girl and her foolish--but adorably foolish--college bravado! Sorrowfully I locked the cellarette and dropped the key in my pocket.
Then I locked the outer doors of the hall and apartment, leaving the keys unmolested on the inside. On the whole I decided I would not have up the janitor's gossipy wife.
Next I sought Jenkins at the back.
"We will lock up back here, Jenkins, and go over to my rooms at the club for the night."
Jenkins stared fixedly over my head. "Certainly, sir."
"And Jenkins--h'm!" I crumpled a bill into his mechanical palm. "You will never allude to having seen that sweet--um--you understand, Jenkins? Never seem to remember, even to me, that you ever saw any one up here to-night."
"Certainly not, sir," indignantly. "I wouldn't, anyhow."
Yet his eyes, rolling back from the ceiling, seemed to hold me oddly for an instant. In them was a touch of sadness.
"But may I speak of that Mr. Billings, sir? You know, if he comes--"
"Jenkins!" sharply.
"Certainly, sir!" Jenkins' mouth closed, traplike.
But all in vain my early rise the next morning, my careful toilet and my dash in a taxi to a florist and then to Tiffany's for a ring. At the pier I dodged about in the crowd, the boy trailing behind me with the big purple box, but not a devilish thing could I see of Frances. By Jove, I almost broke my monocle straining! At last I was sure she must be left, for the last pa.s.sengers were pa.s.sing over the gang-plank.
"h.e.l.lo, d.i.c.ky!"
The voice, coa.r.s.e and hearty, came from an athletic young man in a hurrah suit. On his head, perched jauntily above a ma.s.s of yellow hair, was a straw hat with a crimson band.
I stared at him through my gla.s.s, but it was not any one I knew at all.
I looked at him coldly, for there's nothing so devilish annoying as familiarities from strangers. I thought I could freeze him off.
But he only grinned. "Looking for Miss Billings?"
"I--I haven't seen her," I answered stiffly. But his question alarmed me.
He chuckled in my face. "Guess you don't know her in her clothes, eh, d.i.c.ky?" And I did not need the punch he gave me in the side to make me stagger backward. "A thousand thanks, and good-by, old chap. I see they're hauling in the plank."
He lingered for one bearlike grab at my hand.
"And say, don't forget--for I know Jack Billings better than you do--don't ever let him know about all that Scotch last night."
He called over his shoulder with a grin: "Keep it dark--as dark as those black pajamas, d.i.c.ky!"