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[Ill.u.s.tration: "Why do you talk about my heart?"]
"Because, if I may say so, it's what I like most in you."
"Anybody can like _that_."
"Can they?"
"Yes. For ten people who care for me there isn't one capable of caring for George Tanqueray."
"How very unfortunate for him."
"Unfortunate for me, you mean."
He smiled. He was not in the least offended. It was as if her perverse shafts never penetrated his superb solidity.
And yet he was not obtuse, not insensitive. He might fall, she judged, through pride, but not through vanity.
"I admit," said he, "that he is our greatest living novelist."
"Then," said she, "you are forgiven."
"And I may continue to adore your tenderness?"
"You may adore anything--after that admission."
He smiled again, like one satisfied, appeased.
"What," he said presently, "is Miss Lempriere's work like? Has she anything of your breadth, your solidity, your fire?"
"There's more fire in Nina Lempriere's little finger than in my whole body."
Brodrick took out his pocket-book and made a note of Nina.
"And the little lady? What does she do?"
"Little things. Charming, delicious, funny, pathetic things. Everything she does is like herself."
"I must put her down too." And he made another note of Laura.
They had turned on to the lawn. Their host was visible, gathering great bunches of roses for his guests.
"What a lovable person he is," said Brodrick.
"Isn't he?" said Jane.
They faced the house, the little house roofed with moss, walled with roses, where, thought Jane, poor Nicky nested like the nightingale he wasn't and would never be.
"I wonder," said Brodrick, "how he gets the perfection, the peace, the finish of it, the little feminine touches, the flowers on the table----"
"Yes, Mr. Nicholson and his house always look as if they were expecting a lady."
"But," said Brodrick, "it's so pathetic, for the lady never comes."
"Perhaps if she did it wouldn't be so peaceful."
"Perhaps. But it must be sad for him--living alone like this."
"I don't know. I live alone and I'm not sad."
"You? You live alone?"
"Of course I do. So does Mr. Tanqueray."
"Tanqueray. He's a man, and it doesn't matter. But you, a woman----It's horrible."
He was almost animated.
"There's your friend, Miss Bickersteth. She lives alone."
"Miss Bickersteth--is Miss Bickersteth."
"There's Nina Lempriere."
"The fiery lady?" He paused, meditating. "Why do her people let her?"
"She hasn't got any. Her people are all dead."
"How awful. And your small friend, Miss Gunning? Don't say she lives alone, too."
"She doesn't. She lives with her father. He's worse than a family----"
"Worse than a----?" He stared aghast.
"Worse than a family of seven children."
"And that's a misfortune, is it?" He frowned.
"Yes, when you have to keep it--on nothing but what you earn by writing, and when it leaves you neither time nor s.p.a.ce to write in."
"I see. She oughtn't to have to do it."
"But she has, and it's killing her. She'd be better if she lived alone."
"Well--I don't know anything about Miss Gunning. But for you----"
"You don't know anything about me."
"I do. I've seen you. And I stick to it. It's horrible."