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"Oh, Heaven only knows! Why ask her at all? I should certainly upset her into the ca.n.a.l from sheer irritation if she came with me."
"Such nonsense." He knit his forehead into a decided frown. "You are so unfair to Doris. You used to complain that I was unfair to Lorraine. I was never as unfair as you are now. You don't really know Doris at all; and she has never done anything to hurt you."
"It doesn't follow that she wouldn't if she had the chance. You're so awfully dense about women, Dudley. Why didn't you invite Ethel instead? She is worth a hundred Dorises. Then we could have taken her to the theatre."
His voice and manner grew very cold.
"I don't agree with you, but it is not a subject I care to discuss. Is there any reason why Doris should not be invited to the theatre?"
"None whatever, except that I don't propose to ask her."
They faced each other a moment almost angrily, except that whereas Dudley was distinctly vexed, Hal was a little scornful, and half-laughing.
"Then I cannot come either, and" - he paused a moment, to add with decision - "I object to your going unchaperoned."
"Do you mean that you wish me to give up the box?"
"You know what I mean."
Hal was thoughtful a moment, and then remarked with sudden glee:
"I know what I'll do. I'll take the Three Graces, and persuade Quin's aunt to come as chaperone. Then we'll all have supper with Lorraine afterwards. You shall have a nice, quiet, interesting evening with Doris, and I'll get two stalls for you for another night."
She moved about, gathering up her things.
"You don't know Quin's aunt, Lady Bounce, do you? She's the dearest old soul, and she loves a theatre. Night-night, old boy; don't keep Doris too long near the ca.n.a.l, in case you are taken with my inclination"; and she went gaily off, humming a popular air.
Dudley read through his letters without grasping any of their contents.
For the first time Hal's att.i.tude to Doris seriously worried him, and he felt vaguely there was trouble ahead.
But when Thursday came, and they were together, she again had the same pleasing effect upon his senses, and he let himself be persuaded that if Hal grew to know her better, she could not choose but grow fond of her.
In the meantime a group in the royal box at the Greenway Theatre was causing no small interest to a crowded house.
There was Hal, with her smart, well-groomed air, gleaming white neck and arms, and her white, even teeth that looked so attractive even in the distance when she smiled.
d.i.c.k Bruce, spruce and scholarly, hugely pleased with himself, because he had an article in _The National Review_, on the strenght of the colonies in war time; and some lines ent.i.tled "Baby's Boredom" in _Fireside Chat_, concerning which he had already announced his intention of standing the champagne for their supper with the cheque.
Of the other two occupants it would be difficult to say which attracted the most attention. Alymer Hermon, with his immense stature and splendid head, or Quin's aunt, Lady Bounce, who presented so striking a resemblance to another well-known little old lady sometimes seen at the theatre, that friends of the last-mentioned were utterly puzzled.
Surely only one little lady in London wore that early Victorian dress, with the ringlets and "grande dame" air, and sat with such genuine delight and enjoyment through a play? And yet why did she not look out for her numerous friends, down there in the stalls, and recognise them?
And who in the world was she with? If that were indeed Lady Phyllis Fenton - and it seemed incredible it should not be - who was the splendid young giant, and who the white-faced girl with the brilliant smile?
And all the time, absorbed in the play and her companions, the little old lady smiled and talked, calmly indifferent to the many eyes below waiting for the expected bow of recognition.
Quin, apparently, had not been willing to desert his slummers for a gay West-end theatre; so Hal was only escorted by two Graces instead of three, but the light in her eyes, for any one near enough to see, suggested she was enjoying herself to the utmost in spite of it.
Then came the final sensation, of the little old lady in her strange costume and ringlets, pa.s.sing through the vestibule, on the arm of the young giant, followed by the sleek-looking, well-groomed pair of cousins, who chatted to each other with an air of the utmost unconcern towards the curious glances now levelled at them upon all sides.
"It _must_ be Lady Phyllis Fenton," said some. "It _can't_ be," said others. "Then who the devil is it?" asked the men.
And still the little group pa.s.sed on, smiling and unconcerned, though a red spot burned in the giant's smooth cheeks, and he carefully avoided any possibility of meeting Hal's gleaming eyes.
A roomy electric brougham was awaiting them, and then the watchers said it glided away: "Surely that is Lady Phyllis's car and liveries?"
But what they would have made of the scene inside the car it is difficult to say, for the dear little old lady suddenly collapsed backwards on her seat, with a howl of laughter, and shot into the air a pair of trousered legs.
"Oh my conscience!" gasped Quin, amid choking laughter. "It will be the sensation of the season; and when Aunt Phyllis gets to hear about it she'll first have a fit with wrath and then laugh until she's ill."
"I'd no idea you were such an actor, Quin," Hal exclaimed admiringly when she could speak; "you ought be holding crowded houses enthralled, instead of slumming."
"Heaven preserve me. Theatres are mostly mummies looking at mummies.
Down east I get in touch with flesh and blood - the real thing; and I prefer it. But I wouldn't have missed to-night for something. Oh, lord!... just think of the people who know Aunt Phyllis that I must have cut; and all the fuss there will be when aunt is admonished for supping at the Savoy with an actress! We aren't half through the fun yet."
With which they all went off into fresh peals of laughter, at various reminiscences, and were bordering upon a condition of imbecility when Lorraine at last joined them with the latest news.
""It's positively immense," she said. "The manager told me Lady Phyllis Fenton had come with Miss Pritchard, and to-morrow every paper will announce it, and the mystery will grow. I 'phoned for a private room at the Savoy, to keep the puzzle up. She must only be seen pa.s.sing through on Mr. Hermon's arm. How splendid they must look. I almost wish I wasn't in the secret."
"Oh, they do!" Hal cried. "Alymer ought to have had knee breeches and silk stockings, and they would look just perfect. I have to talk fast to d.i.c.k, or I should give it all away in my face."
"You'll have to settle with your aunt," Lorraine laughed to Quin. "I hope she won't cut you off with a s.h.i.+lling."
"She will be furiously angry and terrifically interested," he said. "I expect I shall have to take you all to dinner to show her what the party looked like. Of course, Bonne, her maid, will give it away, because I borrowed the garments from her, and said they were for a play I was getting up in the East End."
"You'll have a bad half-hour with Dudley," d.i.c.k remarked to Hal, with enjoyment. "He is sure to hear of it somewhere."
"Quite sure," resignedly; "but if it were a bad two hours it would still have been worth it. It reminds me of the old days at school, Lorraine, when we used to get into sc.r.a.pes on purpose, if the fun made it worth while."
There was no gayer supper party in the Savoy that night, and the champagne paid for with the proceeds of "Baby's Boredom" proved none the less vivifying for the insipidity of its source. d.i.c.k insisted upon reciting his doggerel, and Quin was not only much toasted as "Lady Bounce", but carried kicking round the room by the giant, because in a moment of forgetfulness he used a swear-word, which they all insisted was a reflecton upon the conversation of his ill.u.s.trious aunt.
Lorraine, in most amusing form herself, laughed until she was tired out, and wondered why she was not bored. She asked the question of Alymer Hermon, who was privileged to see her home, while d.i.c.k returned with Hal, and Quin beat a hasty retreat to get rid of his disguise.
"After all, you are only boys," she said, with a little smile, "and I'm... well, I'm Lorraine Vivian."
The giant gazed thoughtfully out of the brougham window a moment, and from her corner Lorraine looked long, and a little sadly, at the finely modelled head and profile.
"Perhaps," he said at length, "a great many people you meet make a special effort to please you, and try to make an impression on you. We being all so young, and just n.o.bodies, realise the uselessness of wasting our efforts, and are merely natural."
She smiled in the shadow, and glanced away from him with the sadness deepening.
"I feel to-night I should like to be one of you - so young and just n.o.body. It would be a pleasant change."
"I don't think you would like it at all."
He looked at her with a slightly puzzled air.
"Only the other day you were speaking to me of achievement and ambition. You seemed to care so much. You must be glad."