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"I'll make it for you," said Belinda. She glanced at Sophy. "If _you_ don't mind?" she said.
"Of course not. Thanks!" said Sophy.
Belinda busied herself with the tea service. She had well-shaped, very white, very deft hands. The White Cat in the fairy tale must have had hands like Belinda's--just so velvety and agile.
Morris watched them curiously. It was odd--but Belinda's hands had "grown up," too. He remembered them tanned and scratched--regular "paws." Now they were white-cat paws, soft as velvet even to look at.
"How funny!" he said suddenly.
Belinda lifted an eyebrow.
"What's 'funny'?"
"Your sitting there so demurely making tea for me."
"Why shouldn't I sit demurely and make tea for you?"
"Oh, I don't know! You see ... I remember you shinning up trees and ...
and that sort of thing."
This speech rather halted at the end.
Belinda thought correctly that the memory of that kiss had interfered with the memory of her tree-climbing. Her spirit purred within her.
"I daresay I could 'shin up' a tree quite well nowadays," she remarked.
"It doesn't at all prevent one from making good tea."
As she spoke, she nipped a lump of sugar in two between her strong little fingers, and dropped one half into the cup she was preparing for him.
"I say!" exclaimed Morris. "How you do remember things!"
Then he flushed.
"Oh, yes ... I remember things," said Belinda easily.
She poured cream into the cup and pushed it towards him.
"There...." she said. "If you haven't changed ... entirely ... that's the way you like it."
Sophy and Mrs. Horton were deeply absorbed. Sophy had just told Belinda's mother about the plan of having Belinda stop with her at Newport. Mrs. Horton was delighted. They were now discussing the question of dates. Sophy thought that perhaps she had better arrange a coming-out ball for Belinda before the girl appeared in society. In that case, she had better go first to Newport, and Belinda could join her in, say, ten days. Mrs. Horton called over to her daughter, happily excited: "Linda, you are certainly the luckiest girl! Just listen to what Sophy's going to do for you...."
And she explained with enthusiasm.
For some reason, Belinda, who did not colour easily, grew suddenly red.
Then she tossed back her head and looked at Sophy.
"It's _awfully_ good of you...." she said. "I think it's most _awfully_ kind of you...." she repeated. Her voice had real feeling in it, and yet, queerly enough, Sophy sensed that this feeling included resentment also. The girl was certainly a very peculiar character. Was it that she did not like receiving favours which she could not return? She looked a haughty creature. Yes--doubtless that was it.
"It will be a great pleasure for me to have you," Sophy said. "I shall love bringing out the beauty of the season."
She said it nicely without a hint of patronage. But now this odd girl grew quite pale.
"Thanks! That's awfully kind of you," she murmured again. What had turned her pale was the thought that Sophy should take pleasure in her own undoing. She was quite relentless, but she had the sort of qualm that might have stirred a very young Nemesis, when precipitating the first tragedy on her appointed path.
After this, the talk again became general for a few moments; then Sophy took Mrs. Horton to see her sister, and the others went to dress for dinner.
XXV
At dinner-time Loring had another shock. This was the sight of Belinda in evening dress. It was the full glare of her beauty that now smote him, together with the sense of her having become suddenly some one else. This was another person altogether--a new Linda. And yet Belinda had sought to temper the effect of her first appearance thus attired.
She had a superst.i.tious feeling that her coming-out ball at Newport was to mark an important crisis in her life. Her gown for that occasion had been carefully selected in Paris (by her--not by her mother). That is, she had selected the gown as the one in which she meant to burst upon Loring in the full splendour of her new womanhood. The ball would furnish this opportunity.
She was sorry to have to lessen that cherished effect, even by this one appearance in demi-toilette. So she had chosen the soberest gown in her wardrobe. It was of dark purple chiffon. The long, _mousquetaire_ sleeves veiled her glinting arms. Her white breast was also veiled. But nothing could subdue the flame of her ruddy coronal of hair. An oval mole, black as her eyebrows, lay in the hollow of her white throat--one of those outrageously perfect imperfections with which Nature loves sometimes to seal her masterpieces. This mole was the final touch on the heady lure of Belinda's beauty.
Loring's eyes were drawn to it unwillingly again and again. He marvelled that he did not remember it. He even wondered if that "little devil!"
had not painted it herself upon the snow of her throat.
And whenever he looked at the soft, jet-black mole on the white throat, that kiss of two years ago flamed in his blood as it had not flamed at the time of its bestowal. But he was decent enough to be ashamed of this feeling. He answered Belinda rather briefly on the few occasions that she spoke to him. Somehow he did not trust her. Somehow (though this he did not acknowledge to himself) he dreaded her. And he glanced from her to Sophy--telling himself how much more really beautiful Sophy was in her soft grey and pearls than Belinda in her pansy purple and rococo necklace of amethysts and stra.s.s. But for the first time, against his will, Sophy's beauty struck him as cold. And yet it was not cold, though, within it, Sophy herself felt chill and numb. She, too, was obsessed by Belinda. It was not so much the girl's flaring good looks that obsessed her, but the thrilling, imperial youth of her. Sophy felt as a wilting, cut rose might feel, looking from its crystal vase upon a vigorous sister-blossom still rooted in the warm earth. It was a wretched sensation. Sophy hated herself for feeling it, and yet each time that she glanced at Belinda it swept over her afresh.
The dinner was rather flat. Only Mrs. Horton was in really good spirits.
She was quite elated and happy over the idea of Belinda's going to stop with Sophy at Newport. Her "coming out" would be much "smarter" and more brilliant under Sophy's chaperonage than under poor, dear Grace's.
Belinda, for her part, was rather depressed by Sophy's appearance in the grey gown that filmed like smoke about her beautiful bare shoulders.
Belinda had not taken in quite how lovely her rival was when she had first seen her that afternoon in plain white linen. And just as her youth troubled Sophy, so the mystery of experience in Sophy's dark-grey eyes troubled Belinda. She had a moment--one bitter, stinging moment--of feeling not _quite_ so c.o.c.k-sure about the future.
And Harold Grey, nervously eating far more than he wanted in his effort not to look too often at Belinda, was thinking how sure he was that his mother would p.r.o.nounce her "not quite a lady," and yet how much more she attracted him than any of the most genuine "ladies" that he had ever seen. "Don't be an abandoned a.s.s," he kept telling himself. "You're an infant's tutor with a fat salary paid you to keep your place. Now keep it--confound you!"
Loring knew that his mother had some old-fashioned prejudice against having champagne served every day for dinner, and as a rule he submitted, though grumblingly, while he was at Nahant. But to-night he felt that he must have the cheering beverage at all costs. Besides, his mother was ill in bed upstairs. Old Biggs looked like a disapproving, Methodistic owl when the order was given. It violated his principles as Mrs. Loring's butler of twenty years' standing, to serve champagne to a family party of five.
"I'm afraid it will hurt your mother's feelings, Morris," Sophy ventured, as Biggs left the room with a very rigid gait.
"Pooh! Why need she know? Such a silly notion, at any rate! And we ought to drink Linda's health--after her two years in foreign parts. You like champagne, don't you, Linda?"
"You bet!" said Belinda. She flashed both rows of teeth in pleased antic.i.p.ation.
"Linda!" expostulated her mother, just as in old days. She turned appealingly to Sophy:
"Now I ask you _what_ was the use of my sending her to an expensive Pension school in Paris for two years, if she comes back talking like this?"
"Oh, for G.o.d's sake, let her be natural, Aunt Nelly!" put in Loring. "If you only knew how refreshing it is to hear one's own lingo after six weeks or so of England!"
"Didn't you like England, Morry?" asked Belinda.
Loring grinned in the direction of Harold Grey.