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Her Ladyship cast up her eyes. "My dear Mordryn, your unsophistication pains me! Who ever heard of a Duke of fifty-three, well preserved, good-looking, unmarried and distinguished--known to be generous as a lover and full of charm--being allowed to take the initiative with women--Fie!"
The Duke laughed, and by some curious turn of fancy he seemed to see the white, perfectly composed face of the stately, slender secretary, who had treated him as naught that night at Gerard's, and then looked almost mockingly respectful when she called him "Your Grace!" in the station.
Would she be in the drawing-room after dinner?--Perhaps.
Yes, she was, over by the piano at the far end; but Lily Trevelyan and Blanche Montague and Julia Scarrisbrooke had surrounded him before he could get half-way down the long room, and escape was out of the question. No manoeuvring enabled him to break free of them. So he had to sit and be purred at, and see with the tail of his eye a graceful creature in black talking quietly (and intelligently he felt sure) to some less important guest--and then playing accompaniments--and then slipping away through a door at that end, presumably to bed.
He cursed civilisation, he profoundly cursed beautiful ladies, and he became sarcastic and caused Julia and Lily who were for the moment bosom friends to confide to each other, over the latter's bedroom fire, that Mordryn was "too darling for words" but spiteful as Her Ladyship's black cat.
"I do hate men to be so clever--don't you, Lil? One never knows where one is, with them."
"Oh! but Ju, dearest, he isn't deformed or deadly dull or diseased, or tipsy, he is awfully good looking and very rich and _a Duke_--Really you can't have everything. I thought Blanche Montague was shockingly open in her desire to secure him, did not you? I wonder why Sarah asked her here with us!"
Meanwhile Katherine Bush did not permit herself to wonder at His Grace's possible feelings or his future actions at all. She had seen the eager look in his dark blue eyes once or twice across the room and being a wise woman left things to fate.
"I wish G. were here," the hostess said to herself as she, too, stood by a bedroom fire--her own. "I have no one to exchange unspoken confidence with. He would have understood and appreciated the enchanting comedy of female purpose, male instinct to flee, and one young woman's supreme intelligence!"
The next day the Duke, who knew the house well, and in what wing Miss Arnott had worked, took it into his head to walk before breakfast in the rose garden. Miss Bush saw him from the window and allowed herself to bow gravely when he deliberately looked up; then she moved away. He felt a distinct sensation of tantalization. After breakfast everyone would play tennis. He played an extraordinarily good game himself, and was in flannels ready. Katherine thought he had a very fine figure and looked much younger in those clothes. She wanted to ask him about the emerald ring--she wanted to ask him about a number of things. She had work to do all the morning, but came out to the tennis lawn with a message to her mistress just before luncheon, during an exciting single match between the Duke and an agile young man--the last game was at 30 all--and Katherine paused to watch the strokes--40-30--And then Mordryn won--amidst shouts of applause.
Katherine had remarked that he ran about very little and won by sheer style and skill and hard hitting.
She did not loiter a second when he was free to move, but flitted back to the house before he could get near her.
She lunched alone in her schoolroom.
By the afternoon, when she did appear at tea, the Duke was thoroughly ill-tempered, he knew not why or for what reason, merely that his mood was so. Katherine, busy with the teapot, only raised her head to give a polite, respectful bow in answer to his greeting. He was infinitely too much a man of the world to single out the humble secretary and draw upon her the wrath of these lovely guests. So he contented himself by watching her, and noting her unconcerned air and easy grace. Some of the people seemed to know her well and be very friendly with her.
She showed not the slightest sign of a desire to speak to him--Could it be possible that this was the girl who only that night week had talked with him upon the enthralling subject of love!
Those utterances of hers which had sounded so cryptic at the time were intelligible now. How subtle had been her comprehension of the situation. He remembered her face when he had asked her if she knew Blissington! And again when she had told him that that night week he would know how altogether unprofitable any investigations regarding her would be! And now in the character of humble secretary she was just as complete as she had been when apparently a fellow guest and social equal. It was all annoyingly disturbing. It placed him in a false position and her in one in which she held all the advantages! And there she sat serene and dignified, hedged round with that barrier of ice of which she had spoken. He had not experienced such perplexing emotions for many years.
He wanted to talk to her. He wanted to ask her what it all meant--He would like to know her history, and whence she had come. Gwendoline d'Estaire had treated her, he had noticed, not as a dependent, but as a friend. He felt himself rather awkward--he, a man of the world accustomed to homage from women!
He did manage to say that it was a bore that the rain had come on, and it looked as though to-morrow would be wet. And he felt humiliated at the fine, instantly suppressed smile which flickered round her mouth at this brilliant remark from an acknowledged wit!
Then he became angry with himself--what matter to him whether she smiled or did not smile? It was obvious that he could not be on terms of familiar friendship with Seraphim's secretary, at his age and with his position. So he had strength of mind to move away from the table, and to allow himself to be purred over by one of the trio of charmers who had been asked for his benefit--but rage mounted in his breast. He was not enjoying himself at all, and if he did not see more of his old friend herself, he really would not stay over Monday as he had intended, but would go back to town on Sunday night!
Lady Garribardine knew the signs of the times and took him off to her sitting-room after tea when most of the others began to play bridge.
"I think modern women have less charm than they had, Seraphim," the Duke said from the depths of an armchair, rather acidly. "They are almost as illiterate as ladies of the ballet used to be when I was young; they are quite as slangy and noisy, and they are full of affectations. If one does not know the last word of their fashionable jargon and cannot keep up a constant flow of 'back talk'--which, incidentally, it would require the wit of the St. James Street cabmen of twenty years ago to be able to do--one is asphyxiated by them. I shall have to become acclimated, I feel. I have been too long away and have lost touch with the movement--I sigh for repose and peace."
"Nonsense, Mordryn--it will do you a great deal of good to be shaken up, you must move with the times."
"But I entirely decline to do so. To what end?"
"You must certainly marry again now that you are at last free."
"Undoubtedly it is my obvious duty, as otherwise the t.i.tle will die out--but surely you do not suggest that I should convert any of these charming creatures who were good enough to try to lighten my mood last night and to-day, into my wife! I had hoped they were at least safely married, and now you make me tremble in case you are going to announce to me that some are widows!"
"Blanche Montague is; I merely asked the others to accustom you to the modern type. They are to break in your sensibilities, so to speak, and next time you come, if you don't fancy Blanche I will have a selection of suitable prospective d.u.c.h.esses."
"Will they make as much noise as these '_ballons d'essai_'?"
"More--nothing modern can be dignified or quiet, so get the idea out of your head. They are all so out of door and so hearty, such delightful, fresh, knowing, supremely uninnocent, jolly good fellows, they can't be silent or keep still. There are too many new _revues_ to be talked about, and too much golf to be played, and new American n.i.g.g.e.r dances to be learned.--Come, come, Mordryn! You do not want to be ridiculously old-fashioned--and really Blanche Montague is most suitable. Montague left her well provided for--and she was only thirty-two last birthday."
"But I don't like her voice, and what should we converse about in the _entr'actes_?"
"Blanche is famous for her small talk, she will start upon any subject under the sun you please--and change it before you can answer the first question. No fear of stagnation there!"
"Even the description tires me. I prefer the lady who you a.s.sured me was all simulated pa.s.sion. I adore pa.s.sion, though I confess I prefer it to be real."
"How captious of you! The thing is unknown in these days, it has to be reconstructed, like the modern rubies--lots of little ground-up fragments pressed into a whole by scientific chemistry.--A good imitation is all you will get, Mordryn."
"I loathe imitations," and His Grace shuddered.
"I think you had better give me an exact description of what you do want, for, my poor old friend, you seem to be out to court disappointment. I earnestly desire to help you into a second noose more satisfactory than the one I originally placed around your neck--so out with it! A full description!"
The Duke deliberately lit a cigarette, and a gleam of firelight caught his emerald ring.
"Your famous talisman is flashing, Mordryn, the lyre shows that it approves of your thoughts!"
"The woman I should like to marry must be, and look--supremely well-bred--but healthy and normal, not overbred like poor Laura, and Gerard's wife, Beatrice.--She must be able to talk upon the subjects which interest one--a person of cultivation in short. She must have a sense of humour and fine ideals and a strong feeling about the responsibilities of the position, and be above all things dignified and quiet and composed.--And I should like--" and here a faint deprecatory smile flickered about his mouth for a moment, "I should like her to love me, and take a little interest in the human, tangible side of the affair--if you do not think I am asking too much of fate at my age?"
"It is a large order--I only know of one woman who answers to your requirements and she of course is entirely out of the question."
"Who is she--and why is she out of the question?"
"Useless to answer either query, since, as I say, she is altogether out of the running. It was only an idea of mine, but I will diligently seek for your paragon--for, Mordryn, I shall never feel my conscience clear until I see you happily told off--and the father of at least six st.u.r.dy boys."
The Duke raised his hands in deprecation.
"Heavens, Seraphim! You would overwhelm me with a litter, then! My wants in that direction are modest. The 'quiver full' has never appealed to me. I want my wife to be my loved companion--my darling if you will--but not, not a rabbit."
When he was dressing for dinner he thought over his friend's words--He had not insisted upon knowing who the "one woman" could be--He himself had lately seen a creature who seemingly, as far as he could judge from one evening's acquaintance, possessed quite a number of the necessary qualifications--but as in the case of Seraphim's specimen, his was also completely out of the running, and not to be thought of in any capacity--Alas!
It was strange, with this resolution so firmly fixed in his mind, that after dinner he should have broken loose from the bevy of ladies waiting to entrap him, and have deliberately gone to the piano to talk to that dull little Lady Flamborough who was leaning upon the lid, chatting with Miss Bush!
Katherine kept her eyes fixed upon the keyboard with that meek, deferential demureness suitable to her station when amidst such exalted company; but her red mouth had an indefinable expression about it which was exasperating.
Mordryn seized the first second in which Lady Flamborough's attention was diverted by a remark from someone else, to bend down a little and say softly,
"Are you not even going to say good evening to me, Miss Bush?--It is 'this night week.'"
She looked up with perfect composure.
"Good evening, Your Grace."
He frowned. "Is that all?"
"As Your Grace very truly remarked, it is 'this night week.'"