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At the Milan Court, the hall-porter received his inquiry for Elizabeth with an air of faint but well-bred surprise. Tavernake, in those days, was a person exceedingly difficult to place. His clothes so obviously denoted the station in life which he really occupied, while the slight imperiousness of his manner, his absolute freedom from any sort of nervousness or awkwardness, seemed to bespeak a consideration which those who had to deal with him as a stranger found sometimes a little puzzling.
"Mrs. Wenham Gardner is in her rooms, I believe, sir," the man said. "If you will wait for a moment, I will inquire."
He disappeared into his office, thrusting his head out, a moment or two later, with the telephone receiver still in his hand.
"Mrs. Gardner would like the name again, sir, please," he remarked.
Tavernake repeated it firmly.
"You might say," he added, "that I shall not detain her for more than a few minutes."
The man disappeared once more. When he returned, he indicated the lift to Tavernake.
"If you will go up to the fifth floor, sir," he said, "Mrs. Gardner will see you."
Tavernake found his courage almost leaving him as he knocked at the door of her rooms. Her French maid ushered him into the little sitting-room, where, to his dismay, he found three men, one sitting on the table, the other two in easy-chairs. Elizabeth, in a dress of pale blue satin, was standing before the mirror. She turned round as Tavernake entered.
"Mr. Tavernake shall decide!" she exclaimed, waving her hand to him.
"Mr. Tavernake, there is a difference of opinion about my earrings. Major Post here,"--she indicated a distinguished-looking elderly gentleman, with carefully trimmed beard and moustache, and an eyegla.s.s attached to a thin band of black ribbon--"Major Post wants me to wear turquoises. I prefer my pearls. Mr. Crease half agrees with me, but as he never agrees with any one, on principle, he hates to say so. Mr. Faulkes is wavering.
You shall decide; you, I know, are one of those people who never waver."
"I should wear the pearls," Tavernake said.
Elizabeth made them a little courtesy.
"You see, my dear friends," she declared, "you have to come to England, after all, to find a man who knows his own mind and speaks it without fear. The pearls it shall be."
"It may be decision," Crease drawled, speaking with a slight American accent, "or it may be gallantry. Mr. Tavernake knew your own choice."
"The last word, as usual," she sighed. "Now, if you good people will kindly go on downstairs, I will join you in a few minutes. Mr. Tavernake is my man of business and I am sure he has something to say to me."
She dismissed them all pleasantly. As soon as the door was closed she turned to Tavernake. Her manner seemed to become a shade less gracious.
"Well?"
"I don't know why I came," Tavernake confessed bluntly. "I was restless and I wanted to see you."
She looked at him for a moment and then she laughed. Tavernake felt a sense of relief; at least she was not angry.
"Oh, you strangest of mortals!" she exclaimed, holding out her hands.
"Well, you see me--in one of my most becoming gowns, too. What do you think of the fit?"
She swept round and faced him again with an expectant look. Tavernake, who knew nothing of women's fas.h.i.+ons, still realized the superbness of that one unbroken line.
"I can't think how you can move a step in it," he said, "but you look--"
He paused. It was as though he had lost his breath. Then he set his teeth and finished.
"You look beautiful," he declared. "I suppose you know that. I suppose they've all been telling you so."
She shook her head.
"They haven't all your courage, dear Briton," she remarked, "and if they did tell me so, I am not sure that I should be convinced. You see, most of my friends have lived so long and lived so quickly that they have learned to play with words until one never knows whether the things they speak come from their hearts. With you it is different."
"Yes," Tavernake admitted, "with me it is different!"
She glanced at the clock.
"Well," she said, "you have seen me and I am glad to have seen you, and you may kiss my fingers if you like, and then you must run away. I am engaged to have supper with my friends downstairs."
He raised her fingers clumsily enough to his lips and kept them there for a moment. When he let them go, she wrung them as though in pain, and looked at him. She turned abruptly away. In a sense she was disappointed. After all, he was an easy victim!
"Elise," she called out, "my cloak."
Her maid came hurrying from the next room. Elizabeth turned towards her, holding out her shoulders. She nodded to Tavernake.
"You know the way down, Mr. Tavernake? I shall see you again soon, sha'n't I? Good-night!"
She scarcely glanced at him as she sent him away, yet Tavernake walked on air.
CHAPTER XIV. A WARNING FROM Mr. PRITCHARD
Tavernake hesitated for a moment under the portico of the Milan Court, looking out at the rain which had suddenly commenced to descend. He scarcely noticed that he had a companion until the man who was standing by his side addressed him.
"Say, your name is Tavernake, isn't it?"
Tavernake, who had been on the point of striding away, turned sharply around. The man who had spoken to him was wearing morning clothes of dark gray tweed and a soft Homburg hat. His complexion was a little sallow and he was clean-shaven except for a slight black moustache. He was smoking a black cigar and his accent was transatlantic. Something about his appearance struck Tavernake as being vaguely familiar, but he could not at first recall where he had seen him before.
"That is my name, certainly," Tavernake admitted.
"I am going to ask you a somewhat impertinent question," his neighbor remarked.
"I suppose you can ask it," Tavernake rejoined. "I am not obliged to answer, am I?"
The man smiled.
"Come," he said, "that's honest, at any rate. Are you in a hurry for a few minutes?"
"I am in no particular hurry," Tavernake answered. "What do you want?"
"A few nights ago," the stranger continued, lowering his voice a little, "I met you with a young lady whose appearance, for some reason which we needn't go into, interested me. To-night I happened to overhear you inquiring, only a few minutes ago, for the sister of the same young lady."
"What you heard doesn't concern me in the least," Tavernake retorted. "I should say that you had no business to listen."
His companion smiled.