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"Neither," said Keith.
"You know, Ferdy always was in love with her?" This with a glance to obtain Keith's views.
"No; I know nothing about it."
"Yes; always," she nodded oracularly. "Of course, he is making love to Alice Lancaster, too, and to the new governess at the Wentworths'."
"Who is that?" asked Keith, moved by some sudden instinct to inquire.
"That pretty country cousin of Norman's, whom they brought there to save appearances when Norman first left. Huntington is her name."
Keith suddenly grew hot.
"Yes, Ferdy is making love to her, too. Why, they say that is what they have quarrelled about. Louise is insanely jealous, and she is very pretty. Yes--you know, Ferdy is like some other men? Just gregarious!
Yes? But Louise Wentworth was always his _grande pa.s.sion_. He is just amusing himself with the governess, and she, poor little fool, supposes she has made a conquest. You know how it is?"
"I really know nothing about it," declared Keith, in a flame.
"Yes; and he was always her _grande pa.s.sion_? Don't you think so?"
"No, I do not," said Keith, firmly. "I know nothing about it; but I believe she and Norman were devoted,--as devoted a couple as I ever saw,--and I do not see why people cannot let them alone. I think none too well of Ferdy Wickersham, but I don't believe a word against her.
She may be silly; but she is a hundred times better than some who calumniate her."
"Oh, you dear boy! You were always so amiable. It's a pity the world is not like you; but it is not."
"It is a pity people do not let others alone and attend to their own affairs," remarked Keith, grimly. "I believe more than half the trouble is made by the meddlers who go around gossiping."
"Don't they! Why, every one is talking about it. I have not been in a drawing-room where it is not being discussed."
"I suppose not," said Mr. Keith.
"And, you know, they say Norman Wentworth has lost a lot of money, too.
But, then, he has a large account to fall back on. Alice Lancaster has a plenty."
"What's that?" Keith's voice had an unpleasant sharpness in it.
"Oh, you know, he is her trustee, and they are great friends. Good-by.
You must come and dine with us sometime--sometime soon, too."
And Mrs. Nailor floated away, and in the first drawing-room she visited told of Keith's return and of his taking the story of Louise Wentworth and Ferdy Wickersham very seriously; adding, "And you know, I think he is a great admirer of Louise himself--a very great admirer. Of course, he would like to marry Alice Lancaster, just as Ferdy would. They all want to marry her; but Louise Wentworth is the one that has their hearts. She knows how to capture them. You keep your eyes open. You ought to have seen the way he looked when I mentioned Ferdy Wickersham and her. My dear, a man doesn't look that way unless he feels something here." She tapped solemnly the spot where she imagined her heart to be, that dry and desiccated organ that had long ceased to know any real warmth.
A little time afterwards, Keith, to his great surprise, received an invitation to dine at Mrs. Wickersham's. He had never before received an invitation to her house, and when he had met her, she had always been stiff and repellent toward him. This he had regarded as perfectly natural; for he and Ferdy had never been friendly, and of late had not even kept up appearances.
He wondered why he should be invited now. Could it be true, as Stirling had said, laughing, that now he had the key and would find all doors open to him?
Keith had not yet written his reply when he called that evening at Mrs.
Lancaster's. She asked him if he had received such an invitation. Keith said yes, but he did not intend to go. He almost thought it must have been sent by mistake.
"Oh, no; now come. Ferdy won't be there, and Mrs. Wickersham wants to be friendly with you. You and Ferdy don't get along; but neither do she and Ferdy. You know they have fallen out? Poor old thing! She was talking about it the other day, and she burst out crying. She said he had been her idol."
"What is the matter?"
"Oh, Ferdy's selfishness."
"He is a brute! Think of a man quarrelling with his mother! Why--!" He went into a reverie in which his face grew very soft, while Mrs.
Lancaster watched him silently. Presently he started. "I have nothing against her except a sort of general animosity from boyhood, which I am sorry to have."
"Oh, well, then, come. As people grow older they outgrow their animosities and wish to make friends."
"You being so old as to have experienced it?" said Keith.
"I am nearly thirty years old," she said. "Isn't it dreadful?"
"Aurora is much older than that," said Keith.
"Ah, Sir Flatterer, I have a mirror." But her eyes filled with a pleasant light as Keith said:
"Then it will corroborate what needs no proof."
She knew it was flattery, but she enjoyed it and dimpled.
"Now, you will come? I want you to come." She looked at him with a soft glow in her face.
"Yes. On your invitation."
"Alice Lancaster, place one good deed to thy account: 'Blessed are the peacemakers,'" said Mrs. Lancaster.
When Keith arrived at Mrs. Wickersham's he found the company a.s.sembled in her great drawing-room--the usual sort to be found in great drawing-rooms of large new chateau-like mansions in a great and commercial city.
"Mr. Keats!" called out the prim servant. They always took this poetical view of his name.
Mrs. Wickersham greeted him civilly and solemnly. She had aged much since Keith saw her last, and had also grown quite deaf. Her face showed traces of the desperate struggle she was making to keep up appearances.
It was apparent that she had not the least idea who he was; but she shook hands with him much as she might have done at a funeral had he called to pay his respects. Among the late arrivals was Mrs. Wentworth.
She was the richest-dressed woman in the room, and her jewels were the finest, but she had an expression on her face, as she entered, which Keith had never seen there. Her head was high, and there was an air of defiance about her which challenged the eye at once.
"I don't think I shall speak to her," said a voice near Keith.
"Well, I have known her all my life, and until it becomes a public scandal I don't feel authorized to cut her--"
The speaker was Mrs. Nailor, who was in her most charitable mood.
"Oh, of course, I shall speak to her here, but I mean--I certainly shall not visit her."
"You know she has quarrelled with her friend, Mrs. Lancaster? About her husband." This was behind her fan.
"Oh, yes. She is to be here to-night. Quite brazen, isn't it? We shall see how they meet. I met a remarkably pretty girl down in the dressing-room," she continued; "one of the guests. She has such pretty manners, too. Really, I thought, from her politeness to me in arranging my dress, she must be one of the maids until Mrs. Wentworth spoke to her. Young girls nowadays are so rude! They take up the mirror the whole time, and never think of letting you see yourself. I wonder who she can be?"
"Possibly Mrs. Wentworth's companion. I think she is here. She has to have some one to do the proprieties, you know?" said Mrs. Nailor.