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"I have your promise, haven't I?" she said, her hand in mine.
"You have," said I n.o.bly.
But how in the name of Astaroth I'm going to keep it I haven't the remotest conception.
CHAPTER III
Some letters in Dale's round handwriting lay on the library table awaiting my signature. Dale himself had gone. A lady had called for him, said Rogers, in an electric brougham. As my chambers are on the second floor and the staircase half-way down the arcade, Rogers's detailed information surprised me. I asked him how he knew.
"A chauffeur in livery, sir, came to the door and said that the brougham was waiting for Mr. Kynnersley."
"I don't see how the lady came in," I remarked.
"She didn't, sir. She remained in the brougham," said Rogers.
So Lola Brandt keeps an electric brougham.
I lunched at the club, and turned up the article "Lola Brandt" in the living encyclopaedia--that was my friend Renniker. The wonderful man gave me her history from the cradle to Cadogan Gardens, where she now resides. I must say that his details were rather vague. She rode in a circus or had a talking horse--he was not quite sure; and concerning her conjugal or extra-conjugal heart affairs he admitted that his information was either unauthenticated or conjectural. At any rate, she had not a shred of reputation. And she didn't want it, said Renniker; it would be as much use to her as a diving suit.
"She has young Dale Kynnersley in tow," he remarked.
"So I gather," said I. "And now can you tell me something else? What is the present state of political parties in Guatemala?"
I was not in the least interested in Guatemala; but I did not care to discuss Dale with Renniker. When he had completed his sketch of affairs in that obscure republic, I thanked him politely and ordered coffee.
Feeling in a gregarious, companionable humour--I have had enough solitude at Murglebed to last me the rest of my short lifetime--I went later in the afternoon to Suss.e.x Gardens to call on Mrs. Ellerton. It was her day at home, and the drawing-room was filled with chattering people. I stayed until most of them were gone, and then Maisie dragged me to the inner room, where a table was strewn with the wreckage of tea.
"I haven't had any," she said, grasping the teapot and pouring a treacly liquid into a cup. "You must have some more. Do you like it black, or with milk?"
She is a dainty slip of a girl, with deep grey eyes and wavy brown hair and a sea-sh.e.l.l complexion. I absently swallowed the abomination she handed me, for I was looking at her over the teacup and wondering how an exquisite-minded gentleman like Dale could forsake her for a Lola Brandt. It was not as if Maisie were an empty-headed, empty-natured little girl. She is a young person of sense, education, and character.
She also adores musical comedy and a band at dinner: an excellent thing in woman--when she is very young.
"Why are you looking at me like that?" she asked.
"Because, my dear Maisie," said I, "you are good to look upon. You are also dropping a hairpin."
She hastily secured the dangling thing. "I did my hair anyhow to-day,"
she explained.
Again I thought of Dale's tie and socks. The signs of a lover's "careless desolation," described by Rosalind so minutely, can still be detected in modern youth of both s.e.xes. I did not pursue the question, but alluded to autumn gaieties. She spoke of them without enthusiasm.
Miss Somebody's wedding was very dull, and Mrs. Somebody Else's dance manned with vile and vacuous dancers. At the Opera the greatest of German sopranos sang false. All human inst.i.tutions had taken a crooked turn, and her cat could not be persuaded to pay the commonest attention to its kittens. Then she asked me nonchalantly:
"Have you seen anything of Dale lately?"
"He was working with me this morning. I've been away, you know."
"I forgot."
"When did you last see him?" I asked.
"Oh, ages ago! He has not been near us for weeks. We used to be such friends. I don't think it's very polite of him, do you?"
"I'll order him to call forthwith," said I.
"Oh, please don't! If he won't come of his own accord--I don't want to see him particularly."
She tossed her shapely head and looked at me bravely.
"You are quite right," said I. "Dale's a selfish, ill-mannered young cub."
"He isn't!" she flashed. "How dare you say such things about him!"
I smiled and took both her hands--one of them held a piece of brown bread-and-b.u.t.ter.
"My dear," said I, "model yourself on Little Bo-Peep. I don't know who gave her the famous bit of advice, but I think it was I myself in a pastoral incarnation. I had a woolly cloak and a crook, and she was like a Dresden china figure--the image of you."
Her eyes swam, but she laughed and said I was good to her. I said:
"The man who wouldn't be good to you is an unhung villain."
Then her mother joined us, and our little confidential talk came to an end. It was enough, however, to convince me that my poor little Ariadne was shedding many desperate tears in secret over her desertion.
On my way home I looked in on my doctor. His name is Hunnington. He grasped me by the hand and eagerly inquired whether my pain was worse. I said it was not. He professed delight, but looked disappointed. I ought to have replied in the affirmative. It is so easy to make others happy.
I dined, read a novel, and went to sleep in the cheerful frame of mind induced by the consciousness of having made some little progress on the path of eumoiriety.
The next morning Dale made his customary appearance. He wore a morning coat, a dark tie, and patent-leather boots.
"Well," said I, "have you dressed more carefully today?"
He looked himself anxiously over and inquired whether there was anything wrong. I a.s.sured him of the impeccability of his attire, and commented on its splendour.
"Are you going to take Maisie out to lunch?"
He started and reddened beneath his dark skin. Before he could speak I laid my hand on his shoulder.
"I'm an old friend, Dale. You mustn't be angry with me. But don't you think you're treating Maisie rather badly?"
"You've no right to say so," he burst out hotly. "No one has the right to say so. There was never a question of an engagement between Maisie and myself."
"Then there ought to have been," I said judicially. "No decent man plays fast and loose with a girl and throws her over just at the moment when he ought to be asking her to marry him."
"I suppose my mother's been at you. That's what she wanted to see you about yesterday. I wish to G.o.d she would mind her own business."
"And that I would mind mine?"