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"I hope we shall see him during the evening," I said.
"Oh, yes," she answered, "he is sure to come for me."
There was a portrait of Lady Adeline in the library, and she noticed it at once.
"Do you know the Hamilton-Wellses?" she asked, brightening out of her former manner instantly.
"We are very old friends," I answered. "Their place is next to mine, you know."
"I did not know," she said. "I have never been there. Lady Adeline knows my people, and used to come to our house a good deal at one time; that is where I met her, I like her very much--and trust her."
"That everybody does."
"Do you know her widowed sister, Lady Claudia Beaumont?"
"Yes,"
"And their brother, Lord Dawne?"
"Yes--well. He and I were 'chums' at Harrow and Oxford, and a common devotion to the same social subjects has kept us together since."
"He is a man of most charming manners," she said thoughtfully.
"He is," I answered cordially. "I know no one else so fastidiously refined, without being a prig."
She was sitting on the arm of a chair with Adeline's photograph in her hand, and was silent a moment, looking at it meditatively.
"You must know that eccentric 'Ideala,' as they call her, also?" she said at last, glancing up at me gravely.
"We do not consider her eccentric," I said.
"Well, you must confess that she moves in an orbit of her own," she rejoined.
"Not alone, then," I answered, "so many luminaries circle round her."
"Lady Adeline criticises her severely," she ventured, with a touch of asperity.
"_Les absents out toujours torts_," I answered. "But, at the same time, when Lady Adeline criticises Ideala severely, I am sure she deserves it. Her faults are patent enough, and most provoking, because she could correct them if she would. You don't know her well?"
"No."
"Ah! Then I understand why you do not like her. She is not a person who shows to advantage on a slight acquaintance, and in that she is just the reverse of most people; her faults are all on the surface and appear at once, her good qualities only come out by degrees."
"I feel reproved," Evadne answered, smiling. "But it is really hard to believe that the main fabric of a character is beautiful when one only sees the spoilt bits of it. You must be quite one of that clique," she added, in a tone which expressed "What a pity!" quite clearly.
"You are not interested in social questions?" I ventured.
"On the contrary," she answered decidedly, "I hate them all."
She put the photograph down, and looked round the room.
"Where does that door lead to?" she asked, indicating one opposite.
"Into my study."
"Then you do not study in the library?"
"No. I read here for relaxation. When I want to work I go in there."
"Let me see where you work?"
I hesitated, for I kept my tools there, and I did not know what might be about.
"It is professional work I do there," I said.
She was quick to see my meaning: "Oh, in that case," she began apologetically. "I am indiscreet, forgive me. I have not realized your position yet, you see. It is so anomalous being both a doctor and a country gentleman. But what a dear old place this is! I cannot think how you can mix up medical pursuits with the names of your ancestors. Were I you I should belong to the Psychical Society only. The material for that kind of research lingers long in these deep recesses. It is built up in thick walls, and concealed behind oak panels. Oh, how _can_ you be a doctor here!"
"I am not a doctor, here," I a.s.sured her, "at least only in the morning when I make this my consulting room."
"I am glad," she said. "This is a place in which to be human."
"Is a doctor not human, then?" I asked, a trifle piqued.
"No," she answered, laughing. "A doctor is not a man to his lady patients; but an abstraction--a kindly abstraction for whom one sends when a man's presence would be altogether inconvenient. If I am ever ill I will send for you in the abstract confidently."
"Well, I hope I may more than answer your expectations in that character,"
I replied, "should anything so unfortunate as sickness or sorrow induce you to do me the favour of accepting my services."
She gave me one quick grave glance. "I know you mean it," she said; "and I know you mean more. You will befriend me if I ever want a friend."
"I will," I answered.
"Thank you," she said.
It was exactly what I had intended with regard to her since I had received Lady Adeline's letter, but a compact entered into on the occasion of our fourth meeting struck me as sudden. I had no time to think of it, however, at the moment, for Evadne followed up her thanks with a question.
"How do you come to have an abode of this kind and be a doctor also?" she asked.
"The house came to me from an uncle, who died suddenly, just after I had become a fully qualified pract.i.tioner," I told her; "but there is not income enough attached to it to keep it up properly, and I wanted to live here; and I wanted besides to continue my professional career, so I thought I would try and make the one wish help the other."
"And the experiment has succeeded?"
"Yes."
"Are you very fond of your profession?"
"It is the finest profession in the world."
"All medical men say that," she remarked, smiling.