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He found Mrs. Van Osten alone, bare-shouldered, in black and diamonds.
She was agitated and angry.
"You are late!" she cried.
"Forgive!" he said, kissing her hand.
She dragged it from him. "Did you meet my husband?"
"Yes," said Aldo.
"Did he see you?"
"Yes."
"Are you sure? Are you sure?" And she breathed quickly.
"Yes."
"He saw you? He saw you coming here and did not turn back----?" She stopped, and the narrow lips closed tightly. Aldo looked at her, and thought her positively ugly. She looked like a small, tight, thin, crumpled edition of Mrs. Doyle.
"Little young prairie-chicken," said Aldo to himself. But the butler came in with the coffee on a large silver tray, and the under-butler followed with the cream and sugar on another large silver tray. And the riches, the atmosphere of calm, powerful wealth, overcame Aldo's soul; his senses swam in satisfaction, and he felt that, however thin and small and crumpled she might be, he yet could return the prairie-chicken's love.
When the servants had left the room Aldo felt that he ought to speak.
After a while he remembered what, once or twice, he had done with acceptable success in Italy when alone with a comparatively unknown woman. In a low voice he said:
"What is your name?"
Mrs. Van Osten raised gla.s.sy eyes. He repeated: "I do not yet know your name."
She took a sip of coffee, and said, very slowly and very clearly:
"Mrs.--Van--Osten."
"No--not that name," he said. "Your own name--your little name----"
There was a slight noise in the hall, and the outer door closed. Mrs.
Van Osten heard it, and answered Aldo quickly with excited eyes.
"Marjory," she said.
Aldo bent forward over his coffee-cup. "Marjory?" he repeated softly.
It succeeded. It succeeded far better than he had expected, or than it usually did.
"Say it again!" she said quickly. "I like to hear it. Say it again.
Quick!"
"Marjory!" exclaimed Aldo, bending nearer, just as the door opened and her husband came in.
She turned to him at once. "Oh, Bertie! You have come back?" and she laughed. Aldo looked at her. There was something in her voice and in her laugh that he knew. He had heard it in women's voices before. It was love. And love was in her eyes as she raised them to her husband's frowning face.
Then Aldo understood what he was there for. And more than ever, as he looked at Mr. Van Osten's powerful frame, did he realize that twenty dollars was little.
He stayed only a short time, during which he was sad, and silent, and bitter. And Mrs. Van Osten was pleased with his att.i.tude. As he took his leave, he suddenly decided to show her that he had understood.
"Would you honour me by seeing 'Tannhauser' from my box at the opera to-morrow night?"
A gleam shot at him from Mrs. Van Osten's sly eye. Her husband laid his large hand on his wife's bare shoulder.
"We are engaged," he said.
Mrs. Van Osten put her head against his arm.
"Indeed, we are more than that, Bertie," she said, looking up at him with an enamoured and rapturous smile.
Aldo bowed and withdrew.
The next day was Sat.u.r.day. On his desk lay the mauve envelope, and in it was a hundred-dollar bill.
"I shall not need you now for a month or two, I believe," said Mrs. Van Osten wistfully. She had come over to his "office" early on the Monday morning. "But"--and she sighed deeply--"I do not suppose the effect you have had upon my husband will last for ever."
"Nothing does last for ever," said Aldo sententiously, seated before his desk.
"Then I shall send for you to come to the house again. Meanwhile, you might hang round a little in a general way," said Mrs. Van Osten. "You can send me flowers if you like. See that they are expensive ones. But don't come over often. If he once kicks you out, it will make everything impossible."
"Yes," said Aldo.
"Ah!" sighed Mrs. Van Osten; "why are such things necessary. Why are men such beasts?"
After a short pause Aldo spoke respectfully in a subdued voice: "May I ask who _she_ is?"
"You are impertinent," said Mrs. Van Osten, "but I may as well tell you.
Everyone knows. It is Madeline Archer, that dancing minx. She has made half the wives in New York miserable!"
Aldo made a little sympathizing, clucking sound with his tongue.
Meanwhile his thoughts were quick and definite.
"If," he said, as she rose to go, "any friend of yours, one of the wives you have just mentioned, wanted--er--would like--er--thought that I could a.s.sist...."
"Oh!" cried Mrs. Van Osten, clasping her hands with peals of laughter, "you _are_ a daisy! Oh, you take the pumpkin-pie! Upon my word! You are the greatest ever!" And she laughed and laughed, rocking to and fro.
Aldo laughed too, glad to think he was so funny.
"Before you know where you are, you'll be opening a bureau--'First Aid for Neglected Wives.' 'Perfect jealousy-arouser of the careless or the cooling husband. Diploma. References. Moderate tariff. Success guaranteed.'"
"Good idea!" said Aldo, laughing. And in a way he meant it.
She stopped laughing suddenly. "You won't turn out to be a blackmailer, will you?"