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"I am rather good at it," Norvin confessed, whereat Papa La Branche seemed about to embrace him.
"You are sent from heaven!" he declared. "You deliver me from darkness. Thirty-seven games of Napoleon to-day! Think of it! I was dealing the thirty-eighth when you came. But piquet! Ah, that is a game, even though my angel wife abominates it. We have still five days of this hideous imprisonment, so let us agree to an hour before lunch, an hour before dinner, then--um-,--perhaps two hours in the evening at a few cents a game, eh? You agree, my friend?" The little man peered up timidly. "Perhaps--but no, I dare say you are sleepy, and it _is_ late."
"I should enjoy a game or two right now," Norvin falsified. "But first, don't you think we'd better rehea.r.s.e our explanation of my presence?"
"A good idea. You came to see me upon business. I telephoned, and you came like a good friend, then--let me see, I was so overjoyed to see a new face that I rushed forth to greet you, and behold! that scorpion, that loathsome reptile outside p.r.o.nounced you infected. He forced you to enter, even against my protestations. It was all my fault. I am desolated with regrets. Eh? How is that? You see nature designed me for a rogue."
"Excellent! But what is our important business?"
"True. Since I retired from active affairs I have no business. That is awkward, is it not? May I ask in what line you are engaged?"
"I am a cotton factor."
"Then I shall open an account with you. I shall give you money to invest. Come, there need be no deceit about that; I shall write you a check at once."
"That's hardly necessary, so long as we understand each other."
But Mr. La Branche insisted, saying:
"One lie is all that I dare undertake. I have told two at the same time, but invariably they clashed and disaster resulted. There! I trust you to make use of the money as you think best. But enough! What do women know of business? It is a mysterious word to them. Now-- piquet!" He dragged Norvin to a seat at a table, then trotted away in search of cards, his slippers clap-clapping at every step as if in gleeful applause. "Shall we cut for deal, M'sieu? Ah!" He sighed gratefully as he won, and began to shuffle. "With four hours of piquet every day, and a lie upon my conscience, I feel that I shall be happy in spite of this execrable smallpox."
Myra Nell's emotions may be imagined when, on the following morning, she learned who had broken through the cordon while she slept.
"Lordy! Lordy!" she exclaimed, with round eyes. "He said he'd do it; but I didn't think he really would."
She had flounced into Vittoria's room to gossip while she combed her hair.
"Mr. La Branche says it's all his fault, and he's terribly grieved,"
Miss Fabrizi told her. "Now, now! Your eyes are fairly popping out."
"Wouldn't your eyes pop out if the handsomest, the richest, the bravest man in New Orleans deliberately took his life in his hands to see you and be near you?"
"But he says it was important business which brought him." Vittoria smiled guiltily.
"Tell that to your granny! You don't know men as I do. Have you really seen him? I'm not _dreaming_?"
"I have seen him, with these very eyes, and if you were not such a lazy little pig you'd have seen him, too. Shall you take your breakfast in your room, as usual?" Vittoria's eyes twinkled.
"Don't tease me!" Miss Warren exclaimed, with a furious blush. "I--I love to tease other people, but I can't stand it myself. Breakfast in my room, indeed! But of course I shall treat him with freezing politeness."
"Why should you pretend to be offended?"
"Don't you understand? This is bound to cause gossip. Why, the idea of Norvin Blake, the handsomest, the richest--"
"Yes, yes."
"The idea of his getting himself quarantined in the same house with _me_, and our being here together for days--maybe for _months!_ Why, it will create the loveliest scandal. I'll never dare hold up my head again in public, _never_. You see how it must make me feel. I'm compromised." Myra Nell undertook to show horror in her features, but burst into a gale of laughter.
"Do you care for him very much?"
"I'm crazy about him! Why, dearie, after _this_--we're--we're almost married! Now watch me show him how deeply I'm offended."
But when she appeared in the dining-room, late as usual, her frigidity was not especially marked. On the contrary, her face rippled into one smile after another, and seizing Blake by both hands, she danced around him, singing:
"You did it! You did it! You did it! Hurrah for a jolly life in the pest-house!"
Madame La Branche was inclined to be shocked at this behavior, but inasmuch as Papa Montegut was beaming angelically upon the two young people, she allowed herself to be mollified.
"I couldn't believe Vittoria," Myra Nell told Norvin. "Don't you know the danger you run?"
Mr. La Branche exclaimed: "I am desolated at the consequences of my selfishness! I did not sleep a wink. I can never atone."
"Quite right," his wife agreed." You must have been mad, Montegut. It was criminal of you to rush forth and embrace him in that manner."
"But, delight of my soul, the news he bore! The joy of seeing him! It unmanned me." The Creole waved his hands wildly, as if at a loss for words.
"Oh, you fibber! Norvin told me he'd never met you," said Myra Nell.
"Eh! Impossible! We are a.s.sociates in business; business of a most important--But what does that term signify to you, my precious ladybird? Nothing! Enough, then, to say that he saved me from disaster. Naturally I was overjoyed and forgot myself."
His wife inquired, timidly, "Have your affairs gone disastrously?"
"Worse than that! Ruin stared us in the face until _he_ came. Our deliverer!"
Blake flushed at this fulsome extravagance, particularly as he saw Myra Nell making faces at him.
"Fortunately everything is arranged now," he a.s.sured his hostess. But this did not satisfy Miss Warren, who, with apparent innocence, questioned the two men until Papa La Branche began to bog and flounder in his explanations. Fortunately for the men, she was diverted for the moment by discovering that the table was set for only four.
"Oh, we need another place," she exclaimed, "for Vittoria!"
The old lady said, quietly: "No, dear. While we were alone it was permissible, but it is better now in this way."
Myra Nell's ready acquiescence was a shock to Norvin, arguing, as it did, that these people regarded the Countess Margherita as an employee. Could it be that they were so utterly blind?
He was allowed little time for such thoughts, however, since Myra Nell set herself to the agreeable task of unmasking her lover and confounding Montegut La Branche. But Cousin Althea was not of a suspicious nature, and continued to beam upon her husband, albeit a trifle vaguely. Then when breakfast was out of the way the girl added to Norvin's embarra.s.sment by flirting with him so outrageously that he was glad to flee to Papa Montegut's piquet game.
At the first opportunity he said to Vittoria: "I feel dreadfully about this. Why, they seem to think you're a--a--servant! It's unbearable!"
"That is part of my work; I am accustomed to it." She smiled.
"Then you _have_ changed. But if they knew the truth, how differently they'd act!"
"They must never suspect; more depends upon it than you know."
"I feel horribly guilty, all the same."
"It can make no difference what they think of me. I'm afraid, however, that you have--made it--difficult for Myra Nell."