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Philip Meade was much in love. He had money, family, good looks and infinite patience. Some day he meant to marry Eve. But he was aware that she was not yet in love with him.
She came down gowned for the street. And thus kept him waiting. "It was Aunt Maude's fault. She made me dress. Pip, where shall we walk?"
He did not care. He cared only to be with her. He told her so, and she smiled up at him wistfully. "You're such a dear--I wish----"
She stopped.
"What do you wish?" he asked eagerly.
"For the--sun. You are the moon. May I call you my moon-man, Pip?"
He knew what she meant "Yes. But you must remember that some day I shall not be content to take second place--I shall fight for the head of your line of lovers."
"Line of lovers--_Pip_. I don't like the sound of it."
"Why not? It's true."
Again she was wistful. "I wonder how many of them really--care? Pip, it is the one-proposal girl who is lucky. She has no problems. She simply takes the man she can get!"
They were swinging along Fifth Avenue. He stopped at a flower shop and bought her a tight little knot of yellow roses which matched her hair.
She was in brown velvet with brown boots and brown furs. Her skin showed pink and white in the clear cold. She and the big man by her side were a pair good to look upon, and people turned to look.
Coming to a famous jewel shop she turned in. "I am going to have all of Aunt Maude's opals set in platinum to make a long chain. She gave them to me; and there'll be diamonds at intervals. I want to wear smoke-colored tulle at Winifred Ames' dinner dance--and the opals will light it."
Philip Meade's mind was not poetic, yet as his eyes followed Evelyn, he was aware that this was an atmosphere which belonged to her. Her beauty was opulent, needing richness to set it off, needing the shine of jewels, the shimmer of silk----
If he married her he could give her--a tiara of diamonds--a necklace of pearls--a pendant--a ring. His eyes swept the store adorning her.
When they came out he said, "I think I am showing a greatness of mind which should win your admiration."
"Why?"
"In taking you to Crossroads."
"Why?"
"You know why. Shall you write to Brooks that we are coming?"
"No. I want it to be a surprise. That's half the fun."
But there was nothing funny about it, as it proved, for it was on that very Friday morning that Richard had found Peggy much better, and Anne very pale with circles under her eyes.
He went away, and later his mother called Anne up. She asked her to spend the day at Crossroads. Richard would come for her and would bring her home after dinner.
Anne, with a fluttering sense of excitement, packed her ruffled white frock in a little bag, and was ready when Richard arrived.
At the gate they met Geoffrey Fox. The young doctor stopped his horse.
"Come and have lunch with us, Fox?"
"I'm sorry. But I must get to work. How long are you going to keep Miss Warfield?"
"As late as we can."
"To-night?"
"Yes."
"I have a chapter ready to read to her, and you ask her to eat with you as if she were any every-day sort of person. Did you know that she is to play Beatrice to my Dante?"
"Don't be silly," Anne said; "you mustn't listen to him, Dr. Brooks."
Richard's eyes went from one to the other. "What do you know of Fox?" he asked, as they drove on.
"Nothing, except that he is writing a book."
"I'll ask Eve about him; she's a lion-hunter and she's in with a lot of literary lights."
Even as he spoke Evelyn was speeding toward him in Philip's car. He had forgotten her and his invitation for the week-end. But she had not forgotten, and she sparkled and glowed as she thought of Richard's royal welcome. For how could she know, as she drew near and nearer, that he was welcoming another guest, taking off the little teacher's old brown coat, noting the flush on her young cheeks, the pretty appeal of her manner to his mother.
"You are sure I won't be in the way, Mrs. Brooks?"
"My dear, my dear, of course not. Richard has been telling me that your grandmother was Cynthia Warfield. Did you know that my father was in love with Cynthia before he married my mother?"
"The letters said so."
"I shall want to see them. And to hear about your Great-uncle Rodman. We thought at one time that he was going to be famous, and then came that dreadful accident."
They had her in a big chair now, with a high back which peaked over her head and Nancy had another high-backed chair, and Richard standing on the hearth-rug surveyed the two of them contentedly.
"Mother, I am going to give myself fifteen minutes right here and a half hour for lunch, and then I'll go out and make calls, and you and Miss Warfield can take a nap and be ready to talk to me to-night."
Anne smiled up at him. "Do you always make everybody mind?"
"I try to boss mother a bit--but I am not sure that I succeed."
Before luncheon was served Cynthia Warfield's picture, which hung in the library, was pointed out to Anne. She was made to stand under it, so that they might see that her hair was the same color--and her eyes. Cynthia was painted in pink silk with a petticoat of fine lace, and with pearls in her hair.
"Some day," Anne said, "when my ship comes in, I am going to wear stiff pink silk and pearls and buckled slippers and yards and yards of old lace."
"No, you're not," Richard told her; "you are going to wear white with more than a million ruffles, and little flat black shoes. Mother, you should have seen her at Beulah Bower's party."
"White is always nice for a young girl," said pleasant Nancy Brooks.
The dining-room looked out upon the river, with an old-fashioned bay window curving out. The table was placed near the window. Anne's eyes brightened as she looked at the table. It was just as she had pictured it, all twinkling gla.s.s and silver, and with Richard at the head of it.
But what she had not pictured was the moment in which he stood to say the simple and beautiful grace which his grandfather had said years before in that room of many memories.
The act seemed to set him apart from other men. It added dignity and strength to his youth and radiance. He was master of a house, and he felt that his house should have a soul!
Anne, writing of it the next night to her Uncle Rod, spoke of that simple grace: