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She indicated that it was perfect, like everything he did.
Wayne looked at his future mother-in-law in surprise. His pride had been unforgetably stung by some of her sentences, but he could have forgiven those more easily than the easy smile with which she now nodded at her husband's invitation, as if a pleasant intention on her part could wipe out everything that had gone before. That, it seemed to him, was the very essence of insolence.
Appreciating that some sort of doubt was disturbing him, Adelaide said most graciously:
"Yes, you really must come, Mr. Wayne."
At this moment Farron's own stenographer, Chandler, approached him with an unsigned letter in his hand.
Chandler took the routine of the office more seriously than Farron did, and acquired thereby a certain power over his employer. He had something of the att.i.tude of a child's nurse, who, knowing that her charge has almost pa.s.sed beyond her care, recognizes that she has no authority except that bestowed by devotion.
"I think you meant to sign this letter, Mr. Farron," he said, just as a nurse might say before strangers, "You weren't going to the party without washing your hands?"
"Oh." Farron fished in his waistcoat for his pen, and while he was writing, and Chandler just keeping an eye on him to see that it was done right, Adelaide said:
"And how is Mrs. Chandler?"
Chandler's face lit up as he received the letter back.
"Oh, much better, thank you, Mrs. Farron--out of all danger."
Wayne saw, what Chandler did not, that Adelaide had never even heard of Mrs. Chandler's ill health; but she murmured as she turned away:
"I'm so glad. You must have been very anxious."
When they were gone, Wayne and Chandler were left a minute alone.
"What a personality!" Chandler exclaimed. "Imagine her remembering my troubles, when you think what she has had to worry about! A remarkable couple, Mr. Wayne. I have been up to the house a number of times since Mr. Farron's illness, and she is always there, so brave, so attentive. A queenly woman, and," he added, as if the two did not always go together, "a good wife."
Wayne could think of no answer to this eulogy, and as they stood in silence the office door opened and Mr. Lanley came in. He nodded to each of the two, and moved to Vincent's room.
"Mr. Farron has just gone," said Chandler, firmly. He could not bear to have people running in and out of Farron's room.
"Gone?" said Lanley, as if it were somebody's fault.
"Mrs. Farron came down for him in the motor. He appeared to stand his first day very well."
Mr. Lanley glanced quickly from one to the other. This did not sound as if any final break had occurred between the Farrons, yet on this subject he could hardly question his son-in-law's secretaries. He made one further effort.
"I suppose Mr. Farron thought he was good for a whole day's work."
Chandler smiled.
"Mr. Farron, like all wise men, sir, does what his wife tells him." And then, as he loved his own work far more than conversation, Chandler hurried back to his desk.
"I understand," said Lanley to Wayne, "that you are here regularly now."
"Yes."
"Like your work?" Lanley was obviously delaying, hoping that some information would turn up unexpectedly.
"Very much."
"Humph! What does your mother think about it?"
"About my new job?" Wayne smiled. "You know those aren't the kind of facts--jobs and salaries--that my mother scrutinizes very closely."
Lanley stared at him with brows slightly contracted.
"What does she scrutinize?" he asked.
"Oh, motives--spiritual things."
"I see." Mr. Lanley couldn't go a step further, couldn't take this young man into his confidence an inch further. He stuck his stick into his overcoat-pocket so that it stood upright, and wheeled sharply.
"Good-by," he said, and added at the door, "I suppose you think this makes a difference in your prospects."
"Mrs. Farron has asked me to come to dinner to-night."
Lanley wheeled back again.
"What?" he said.
"Yes, she almost urged me, though I didn't need urging."
Lanley didn't answer, but presently went out in silence. He was experiencing the extreme loneliness that follows being more royalist than the king.
CHAPTER XVII
On Mondays and Thursdays, the only days Mr. Lanley went down-town, he expected to have the corner table at the restaurant where he always lunched and where, on leaving Farron's office, he went. He had barely finished ordering luncheon--oyster stew, cold tongue, salad, and a bottle of Rhine wine--when, looking up, he saw Wilsey was approaching him, beaming.
"Haryer, Wilsey?" he said, without cordiality.
Wilsey, it fortunately appeared, had already had his midday meal, and had only a moment or two to give to sociability.
"Haven't seen you since that delightful evening," he murmured. "I hope Mrs. Baxter got my card." He mentioned his card as if it had been a gift, not munificent, but not negligible, either.
"Suppose she got it if you left it," said Mr. Lanley, who had heard her comment on it. "My man's pretty good at that sort of thing."
"Ah, how rare they are getting!" said Wilsey, with a sigh--"good servants. Upon my word, Lanley, I'm almost ready to go."
"Because you can't get good servants?" said his friend, who was drumming on the table and looking blankly about.
"Because all the old order is pa.s.sing, all the standards and backgrounds that I value. I don't think I'm a sn.o.b--"