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Then she added in a tone of triumph, "And I've done it exactly the same ever since; it's done like it now!"
"Something must have upset me, for it looks perfectly ripping," said the duke with warm conviction.
The d.u.c.h.ess felt herself blushing under his admiring eyes, and disliked herself very much for doing so.
She rose hastily and said:
"I think I'll go into the garden."
This time the duke let her go. He finished his cigar before he followed her. He found her walking up and down the cedar lawn; and when the moonlight fell on her face, he saw that it was troubled.
He fell into step beside her and said with enthusiasm:
"It's a ripping night."
She said nothing; and they crossed the lawn and turned.
He said, again with enthusiasm:
"I do like this lawn. I first kissed you under that old tree."
The d.u.c.h.ess started to leave the lawn with some speed.
The duke kept pace with her.
Half-way across the lawn he said in an affectionate tone:
"There's no need for you to fret about Marion, old girl. You can arrange it just as you like."
Then deftly, he slipped his arm round her waist.
"How dare you, Archie?" she cried, and made to thrust him away with some vigour.
It was not enough vigour. The duke's arm did not slip; indeed he tightened his clasp as he said:
"I could do much better with a complete family--a wife and a daughter."
"After the way you've behaved!" cried the d.u.c.h.ess.
"Oh, well, one doesn't always behave the same. One changes," said the duke.
Three days later Pollyooly and Ronald stood by a gate at the end of the home wood, awaiting the coming of the motor car, in which the Honourable John Ruffin was bringing the real Lady Marion Ricksborough to slip quietly into the place which Pollyooly had occupied with such signal success. The Lump, in the care of Emily Gibbs, was already speeding in the train to London, to be met at Waterloo and conveyed to the Temple by Mrs. Brown.
Ronald looked gloomy; and an air of sadness marred Pollyooly's serenity.
"It's perfectly rotten your going off like this--before we've done half the things we were going to. Why on earth couldn't uncle have waited till the end of the holidays to make the change?" said Ronald in a bitterly aggrieved tone.
"Well, you'll have Marion to go about with you," said Pollyooly.
"Nothing doing!" snapped Ronald.
His vehemence pleased her.
"It's a pity," she said sadly. "It's been splendid; and I'm awfully sorry to have to go."
Then her face cleared and brightened into an angel smile; she crinkled in her pocket the five ten-pound notes which the grateful duke had given her; and added:
"But it's splendid to think that with what I've got in the Savings Bank and this, I can keep the Lump out of the workhouse for years and years!"