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"Quite," said Bobby.
Their way to the track lay along the famous Bubbling Well Road, and as they bowled along in a somewhat imposing victoria, with a couple of liveried Chinamen on the box, Bobby sat bolt upright, her cheeks flushed, and her eager eyes drinking in the sights.
It was a scene sufficiently gay to hold the interest of a much more sophisticated person than the untraveled young lady from Wyoming. The whole of society, it appeared, was on route to the races. The road was thronged with smart traps full of brilliantly dressed people of every nationality. There were gay parties from the various legations, French, Russian, j.a.panese, German, English, American. In and out among the whirling wheels of the foreigners poured the unending procession of native life, unperturbed, unconcerned. A Chinese lady in black satin trousers and gorgeous embroidered coat, wearing a magnificent head-dress of jade and pearls, rode side by side with a coolie who trundled a wheelbarrow which carried his wife on one side and his week's provisions on the other. Water-carriers, street vendors, jinrikisha-runners, women with bound feet, children on foot, and children strapped on the backs of their mothers, crossed and recrossed, surged in and out.
But the Honorable Percival concerned himself little with these petty details. To him China was only a pleasing background for Miss Roberta Boynton; he saw no further than her eager, smiling eyes, and heard nothing more distant than the ripple of her laughter.
At the races they found an absorbing bond of interest. The love of horse-flesh was ingrained in both, and the merits of the various ponies provoked endless discussion. Lights were beginning to twinkle on the bund when they drove back to the hotel.
"Where shall we go to-night!" asked Percival, as eager at the end of this eight hours' tete-a-tete as he had been at the start.
"To the ball, of course," said Bobby. "The hotel is giving it in honor of the _Saluria_."
"Heavens! what a bore! Can't we dodge it?"
"You can if you want to. Andy'll take me. He's just waiting to see if you renig."
"Renig?" repeated Percival.
"Yes," said Bobby--"fluke, back out; you know what I mean."
That settled it with Percival. Five minutes before the hour appointed he was waiting impatiently in one of the small reception-rooms to conduct Miss Boynton to that most abhorred of all functions, a public ball. What possible pleasure he was going to get out of standing against the wall and watching her dance with other men he could not conceive. He a.s.sured himself that he was acting like a fool, and that if he kept on at the pace he was going, Heaven only knew what folly he might commit in the four days that must pa.s.s before he reached Hong-Kong.
Hong-Kong! The word had but one a.s.sociation for him. It was the home of his eldest and most conservative sister, a lady of uncompromising social standards, who recognized only two circles of society, the one over which her mother presided in London, and the smaller one over which she reigned as the wife of the British diplomatic official in the land of her adoption.
At the mere thought of presenting Bobby to this paragon of social perfection, Percival shuddered. He could imagine Sister Cordelia's pitiless survey of the girl through her lorgnette, the lifting of her brows over some mortal sin against taste or some deadly transgression in her manner of speech. Of course, he a.s.sured himself it would never do; the idea of bringing them together was wholly preposterous. And yet--
A Chinese youth, with a handful of trinkets, slipped into the room, and furtively proffered his wares.
"Very good, number-one jade-stone. Make missy velly plitty. Can buy?"
Percival motioned him away, only to have him return.
"Jade-stone velly nice! Plitty young missy wanchee jade-stone."
"Did she say she wanted it?" demanded Percival, with sudden interest.
The boy grinned. "Oh, yes. Wanchee heap! No have got fifty dollar'.
Master have got. Wanchee buy?"
Percival tossed him the money and lay the pendant on the table. Then he resumed his pacing and his disturbed meditations. If he could only keep himself firmly in hand during those next four days, all would be well.
Once safely anch.o.r.ed in the harbor of his sister's eminently proper English circle, the song of the siren would doubtless fade away, and he would thank Heaven fervently for his miraculous escape. Meanwhile he listened with increasing impatience for the first flutter of the siren's wings,
"Wanchee Manchu coatt?" whispered an insidious voice at his elbow, and, looking down, he saw the enterprising lad with a pile of gorgeous silks over his arm and cupidity writ large in his narrow eyes.
"No, no; go away!" commanded Percival.
"Velly fine dragon coat. Him all same b'long mandarin. How much?"
Percival turned away, but at every step was presented with another garment for inspection. Despite himself, his artistic eye was caught and held by the beauty of the fabrics.
"How much?" he asked, picking up a marvelous affair of silver and gray, lined with the faintest of sh.e.l.l pinks. It was the exact tone and sheen to set Bobby's beauty off to the greatest advantage. The argument over the price was short and fierce, and Percival laid the coat beside the pendant on the table.
He promised himself to offset the effect of these gifts by a more detached and impersonal manner than he had shown Bobby during the day.
So far, he congratulated himself, he had given her no occasion for false hopes. On the contrary, he had gone out of his way on several occasions to express his bitter disapproval of international marriages. When the hour came for them to part, his heart might be mortally wounded, but his conscience, save for a few scratches, would be uninjured.
A quick step in the corridor made him look up. Standing in the doorway was a vision of girlish beauty that had the acrobatic effect of sending his blood into his head and his heart into his eyes. She wore the diaphanous gown of white that he liked best, her hair was coiled at the exact angle he had prescribed, and at her belt were the orchids he had sent up half an hour before. No rhinestones in her hair, no gold beads on her slippers, nothing to mar the simplicity that her all too vivid beauty required. Percival's eyes appraised her at her full value. Even Sister Cordelia would have been propitiated by the sight.
"What's this lovely thing?" cried Bobby, pouncing upon the coat.
"Something I bought to be rid of a troublesome lad. Don't know what I shall do with it, exactly."
"Take it to your sister, of course,"
"She probably has heaps of them."
Bobby slipped her round, bare arms into the loose sleeves, and surveyed herself in the long mirror.
"Isn't that the prettiest thing you ever saw?" she asked, glancing at him over her shoulder.
[Ill.u.s.tration: "Isn't that the prettiest thing you ever saw?" she asked, glancing at him over her shoulder]
"It is," said Percival, emphatically. His judgment about the becomingness of the color had, us usual, been unerring.
"I should be no end grateful," he said, "if you'd take it off my hands.
My trunks are fearfully stuffed now."
"But I haven't any money," said Bobby, with characteristic frankness; "besides, we don't need things like that in Cheyenne."
"Silly girl! Do you think I have turned merchant, and have got wares for sale? The coat is for you."
Bobby gave a cry of delight, then she looked up dubiously.
"But is it all right for me to take a present like this? I never had anything so big given me--yes, I did, too!" She laughed. "A fellow from Medicine Bow sent me a barrel of mixed fruit once, with nuts and raisins in between, and ten pounds of candy on top!"
"Then why scruple at my gift?"
Her brow clouded. "But you said girls oughtn't to take things from men they weren't engaged to. You remember that day on deck you got me to give back Andy's scarf-pin?"
Percival cleared his throat.
"Quite a different matter," he said; "now, between you and me--"
Bobby shook her head as she took off the coat.
"No, I guess not. I want it so bad I can taste it, but I think you'd better keep it for somebody in the family."
Percival slipped the jade pendant into his waistcoat pocket, and tossed the coat on a chair.