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"Did she dance well?" asks Stephen, waking up suddenly from a lengthened examination of the unconscious Dulce's fair features. An examination, however, overseen by Roger, and bitterly resented by him.
"She didn't dance at all, she only galumphed," says d.i.c.ky, wrathfully.
"She regularly took the curl out of me; I was never so fatigued in my life. And she is so keen about it, too; she will dance, and keeps on saying, 'Isn't it a pity to lose this lovely music?'--and so on. I wished myself in the silent grave many times."
"Well, as bad as she is, I'd make an even bet she will be married before her sister," says Stephen.
"I don't think either of them will be married before the other," says Mr. Browne, gloomily; "one might go much farther than them without faring worse. I laughed aloud when at last I got rid of the elder one; I gave way to appropriate quotation; I fell back on my Wordsworth; I said:
'Nor am I loth, but pleased at heart, Sweet (?) Highland girl, from thee to part.'"
The query represents the expression of Mr. Browne's face as he mentions the word that goes before it.
"Well done, d.i.c.ky!" says Sir Mark.
"What has d.i.c.ky been saying now?" asks Fabian, who has been wandering in a very sad dreamland, and just come back to a sadder earth at this moment. "Has he been excelling himself?"
"I'll say it all over again for you, if you like," says d.i.c.ky, kindly; "but for n.o.body else."
"Thanks, but later on," says Fabian, smiling.
He is sitting near Portia, but not very near. Now d.i.c.ky, filled with a desire to converse with Miss Vibart, gets off his seat and flings himself on a rug at her feet. Sir Mark, who is always kindly, though a trifle cynical at times, and thoughtful towards those he likes, is displeased at this change that d.i.c.ky has made. Fabian he likes--nay, if there be one friend in the world he _loves_, it is Fabian Blount.
Portia, too, is a favorite of his, so great a favorite that he would gladly see her throw some suns.h.i.+ne into Fabian's life. To make these two come together, and by Portia's influence to induce Fabian to fling away from him and to conquer the terrible depression that has desolated his life ever since the fatal affair of the forged check, has become one of Sir Mark's dearest dreams.
Now it seems to him that when Fabian has so far overcome his settled determination to avoid society as to find a seat beside Portia, and to keep it for at least an hour, it is a vile thing in the thoughtless d.i.c.ky to intrude his person where so plainly it is not wanted.
Making some idle excuse, he brings the reluctant d.i.c.ky to his side.
"Can't you keep away from them?" says Sir Mark, in an angry whisper.
"Away from whom?" asks d.i.c.ky, resentfully.
"From them," with a gentle motion of the hand in the direction of Portia and Fabian.
"What on earth for?" says d.i.c.ky Browne, still more resentfully.
"Don't you see he _likes_ her?" says Sir Mark, meaningly.
"I suppose he does," says d.i.c.ky Browne, obtusely. "I like her too. We all like her."
"Of course, my dear fellow, one can quite understand that she is about as likeable a person as I know; but--er--don't you see--he wants to be _alone_ with her."
"I don't doubt him," says d.i.c.ky Browne. "So should I, if I got the chance."
Sir Mark shrugs his shoulders; there isn't much to be got out of d.i.c.ky.
"That goes without telling," he says; "you are always prowling around after her, for no reason that I can see. But you haven't grasped my idea, he--he's _in love_ with her, and _you_ aren't, I suppose?"
"I don't see why you should suppose anything of the kind," says d.i.c.ky, bitterly aggrieved because of the word "prowling." "I can be as much in love with her as another, can't I, if I like? In fact," valiantly, "I think I _am_ in love with her."
"Oh, you be hanged!" says Sir Mark, forcibly, if vulgarly, turning away from him in high disgust.
"Well, you needn't cut up so rough about nothing," says d.i.c.ky, following him. "He has had his chance of being alone with her, now, hasn't he? and see the result."
And when Sir Mark turns his eyes in the direction where Portia sits, lo!
he finds Fabian gone, and Miss Vibart sitting silent and motionless as a statue, and as pale and cold as one, with a look of fixed determination in her beautiful eyes, that yet hardly hides the touch of anguish that lies beneath.
Meantime Dulce and Roger are sparring covertly, but decidedly, while Julia, who never sees anything, is fostering the dispute by unmeant, but most ill judging remarks. Stephen Gower has gone away from them to have a cigarette in the shrubberies.
Sir Mark and d.i.c.ky Browne are carrying on an argument, that in all human probability will last their time.
"I can't bear Mrs. Mildmay," says Dulce, _apropos_ of nothing. Mrs.
Mildmay is the Rector's wife, and a great friend of Roger's.
"But why?" says Julia, "she is a nice little woman enough, isn't she?"
"Is she? I don't know. To me she is utterly distasteful; such a voice, and such--"
"She is at least gentle and well-mannered," interrupts Roger, unpleasantly.
"Well, yes, there is a great deal in that," says Julia, which innocent remark incenses Dulce to the last degree, as it gives her the impression that Julia is taking Roger's part against her.
"I daresay she is an angel," she says, fractiously; "but I am not sufficiently heavenly-minded myself to admire her inanities. Do you know," looking broadly at Roger, "there are some people one hates without exactly knowing why? It is, I suppose, a Doctor Fell sort of dislike, 'the reason why I cannot tell,' and all that sort of thing."
"I don't believe you can, indeed," says Roger, indignantly.
"Don't you?" says Dulce.
"My dear Roger, if you eat any more sugar, you will ruin your teeth,"
says Julia. Roger, who has the sugar bowl near him, and is helping himself from it generously, laughs a little. Julia is a person who, if you wore a smoking cap even once in your life, would tell you it would make you bald; or if you went out without a veil, you would have freckles for the rest of your life--and so on.
"_Don't_ eat any more," says Julia, imploringly; "you can't like that nasty white stuff."
"Oh! doesn't he?" says Dulce, sarcastically. "He'd eat anything sweet.
It isn't three days ago since he stole all my chocolate creams, and ate them every one."
"I did not," says Roger.
"Yes, he did," declares Dulce, ignoring Roger, and addressing herself solely to Julia. "He did, indeed, and _denied_ it afterwards, which just shows what he is capable of."
"I repeat that I did not," says Roger, indignantly. "I found them certainly in your room up-stairs--your sitting-room--but I gave them to the Boodie."
"Oh! _say_ so," says Miss Blount, ironically.
"Chocolate creams!" says the small Boodie, emerging from an obscure and unexpected corner. "What about them? Where are they? Have you any, mamma?"
"_You_ ought to know where they are," says Dare, flus.h.i.+ng; "you ate them."
"When?" asks the Boodie, in a searching tone.