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'Why?' said Mr. Freddy, sticking in his eyegla.s.s.
'Don't, Freddy. Don't look at her. Oh, I wish I were dead!'
'What _have_ you been doing? She looks as if she wished _she_ were dead.'
'That's nothing. She always looks like that,' Lady Whyteleafe a.s.sured the pair.
'Yes, and she makes it a great favour to come. "I seldom go into society," she writes in her stiff little notes; and you're reminded that way, without her actually setting it down, that she devotes herself to good works.'
'Perhaps she doesn't know what else to do with all that money,' said the lady of the pearls.
'_She_ hasn't got a penny piece.'
'Oh, is it all his? I thought the Leverings were rather well off.'
'Yes, but the money came through the second wife, Vida's mother. Oh, I hate that Fox-Moore woman!' Mrs. Freddy laughed ruefully. 'And I'm sure her husband is a great deal too good for her. But how _could_ I have done it!'
'You haven't told us yet.'
'They asked me who was late, and I said d.i.c.k Farnborough, and that I hoped he hadn't forgotten, for I had Hermione Heriot here on purpose to meet him. And I told Vida about the Heriots trying to marry Hermione to that old Colonel Redding.'
'Oh, can't they bring it off?' said Lady Whyteleafe.
'I've been afraid they would. "It's so dreadful," I said, "to see a fresh young girl tied to a worn-out old man."'
'_Oh!_' remarked Lady Whyteleafe, genuinely shocked. 'And you said that to----'
Mrs. Freddy nodded with melancholy significance. 'Even when Vida said, "It seems to do well enough sometimes," _still_ I never never remembered the Fox-Moore story! And I went on about it being a miracle when it turned out even tolerably--and, oh, Heaven forgive me! I grew eloquent!'
'It's your pa.s.sion for making speeches,' said Mr. Freddy.
At which, accountably to Lady Whyteleafe, Mrs. Freddy blushed and stumbled in this particular 'speech.'
'I know, I know,' she said, carrying it off with an air of comic contrition. 'I even said, "There's a modesty in nature that it isn't wise to overstep" (I'd forgotten some people think speech-making comes under that head). "It's been realized," I said--yes, rus.h.i.+ng on my doom!--"it's been realized up to now only in the usual one-sided way--discouraging boys from marrying women old enough to be their mothers. But dear, blundering, fatuous man"'--she smiled into her husband's pleasantly mocking face--'"_he_ thinks," I said, "at _any_ age he's a fit mate for a fresh young creature in her teens. If they only knew--the dreadful old ogres!" Yes, I said that. I piled it on--oh, I stuck at nothing! "The men think an ugly old woman monopolizes all the opportunities humanity offers for repulsiveness. But there's nothing on the face of the earth as hideous," I said, "as an ugly old man. Doesn't it stand to reason? He's bound to go greater lengths than any woman can aspire to. There's more of him to _be_ ugly, isn't there? I appealed to them--everything about him is bigger, coa.r.s.er--he's much less human,"
says I, "and _much_ more like a dreadful old monkey." I raised my wretched eyes, and there, not three feet away, was the aged husband of the Fox-Moore woman ogling Hermione Heriot! Oh, let me die!' Mrs. Freddy leaned against the blue-grey sofa for a moment and half closed her pretty eyes. The next instant she was running gaily across the room to welcome Richard Farnborough and Captain Beeching.
'I always know,' said Lord Borrodaile, glancing over the banisters as he and Vida went down--'I always know the kind of party it's going to be when I see--certain people. Don't you?'
'I know who you mean,' Vida whispered back, her eyes on Mrs. Graham Townley's aggressively high-piled hair towering over the bald pate of the minister, as, side by side, they disappeared through the dining-room door. 'Why _does_ Laura have her?'
'Well, she's immensely intelligent, they _say_,' he sighed.
'That's why I wonder,' laughed Vida. '_We_ are rather frivolous, I'm afraid.'
'To tell the truth, I wondered, too. I even sounded my sister-in-law.'
'Well?'
'She said it was her Day of Reckoning. "I never ask the woman," she said, "except to a scratch party like this."'
'"Scratch party"--with you and me here!'
'Ah, we are the leaven. We make the compound possible.'
'Still, I don't think she ought to call it "scratch" when she's got an Amba.s.sador and a Cabinet Minister----'
'Just the party to ask a scratch Cabinet Minister to,' he insisted, stopping between the two cards inscribed respectively with their names.
'As for the Amba.s.sador, he's an old friend of ours--knows his London well--knows we are the most tolerant society on the face of the earth.'
In spite of her companion's affectation of a smiling quarrelsomeness, Vida unfolded her table-napkin with the air of one looking forward to her _tete-a-tete_ with the man who had brought her down. But Lord Borrodaile was a person most women liked talking to, and hardly had she begun to relish that combination in the man of careless pleasantry and pungent criticism, when Vida caught an agonized glance from her hostess, which said plainly, 'Rescue the man on your right,'--and lo! Miss Levering became aware that already, before the poor jaded politician had swallowed his soup, Mrs. Townley had fallen to catechising him about the new Bill--a theme talked threadbare by newspaperdom and all political England. But Mrs. Townley, albeit not exactly old, was one of those old-fas.h.i.+oned women who take what used to be called 'an intelligent interest in politics.' You may pick her out in any drawing-room from the fact that politicians shun her like the plague. Rich, childless, lonely, with more wits than occupation, practically shelved at a time when her intellectual life is most alert--the Mrs. Townleys of the world do, it must be admitted, labour under the delusion that men fighting the battle of public life, go out to dine for the express purpose of telling the intelligent female 'all about it.' She is a staunch believer not so much in women's influence as in woman's. And there is no doubt in her mind which woman's. If among her smart relations who ask her to their houses and go to hers (from that sentiment of the solidarity of the family so powerful in English life), if amongst these she succeeds from time to time in inducing two or three public officials, or even private members, to prove how good a cook she keeps, she thinks she is exercising an influence on the politics of her time. Her form of conversation consists in plying her victim with questions. Not here one there one, to keep the ball rolling, but a steady and pitiless fire of 'Do you think?' and '_Why_ do you?'
Obedient to her hostess's wireless telegram, Miss Levering bent her head, and said to Mrs. Townley's neighbour--
'I know I ought not to talk to you till after the _entree_.'
'Pray do!' said Sir William, with a sudden glint in his little eyes; and then with a burnt-child air of caution, 'Unless----' he began.
'Oh, you make conditions!' said Miss Levering, laughing.
'Only one. Promise not'--he lowered his voice--'promise not to say "Bill."'
'I won't even go so far as to say "William."'
He laughed as obligingly as though the jest had been a good one. A little ashamed, its maker hastened to leave it behind.
'There's nothing I should quite so much hate talking about as politics--saving your presence.'
'Ah!'
'I was thinking of something _much_ more important.'
Even her rallying tone did not wholly rea.s.sure the poor man.
'More important?' he repeated.
'Yes; I long to know (and I long to be forgiven for asking), what Order that is you are wearing, and what you did to get it.'
Haycroft breathed freely. He talked for the next ten minutes about the bauble, making a humorous translation of its Latin 'posy,' and describing in the same vein the service to a foreign state that had won him the recognition. He wouldn't have worn the thing to-night except out of compliment to the amba.s.sador from the Power in question. They were going on together to the reception at the Foreign Office. As to the Order, Haycroft seemed to feel he owed it to himself to smile at all such toys, but he did not disdain to amuse the pretty lady with the one in question, any more than being humane (and even genial sitting before Mrs. Freddy's menu), he would have refused to show the whirring wheels of his watch to a nice child. The two got on so well that the anxious look quite faded out of Mrs. Freddy's face, and she devoted herself gaily to the distinguished foreigner at her side. But Haycroft at a party was, like so many Englishmen, as the lilies of the field. They toil not, neither do they spin. The man Vida had rescued from Mrs.
Graham Townley was, when in the society of women, so accustomed to seeing them take on themselves the onus of entertainment, was himself so unused to being at the smallest trouble, that when the 'Order' was exhausted, had Vida not invented another topic, there would have been an absolute cessation of all converse till Mrs. Graham Townley had again caught him up like a big reluctant fish on the hook of interrogation. At a reproachful aside from Lord Borrodaile, Miss Levering broke off in the middle of her second subject to subst.i.tute, 'But I am monopolizing you disgracefully,' and she half turned away from the eminent politician into whose slightly flushed face and humid eyes had come something like animation.
'Not at all. Not at all. Go on.'
'No, I've gone far enough. Do you realize that we left "Orders" and "Honours" half an hour ago, and ever since we've been talking scandal?'
'Criticizing life,' he amended--'a pursuit worthy of two philosophers.'
'I did it--' said the lady, with an air of half-amused discontent with herself; 'you know why I did it.'