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"I shouldn't know what to do with it."
"To have the one you love best on earth love you?"
"I should have to stop and think which one it is."
"Then I wish that you may love the one who loves you best on earth and more than all the world."
Just as I was looking up, surprised at his tone more than his words, there came a burst of music, and part of the wall, with the platform on which the Genie and his Lamp had been standing, rolled away. The other big room of the cellar was revealed, with quant.i.ties of little tables all laid out for supper, and the walls covered with smilax and roses.
In the middle of this new room was a huge illuminated s.h.i.+p of ice, in a green sea.
Everybody exclaimed and laughed in their surprise at such an unexpected transformation. Now was the time for unmasking, of course, and there were shrieks of surprise and amus.e.m.e.nt as people discovered who their companions really were. For a minute--I'm sure it couldn't have been more--I forgot Mr. Brett, to stare at the great glittering ice s.h.i.+p.
When I turned to speak to him, he was gone. And whether he vanished on purpose, because he didn't want to unmask in a company of strange people, or whether he was separated from me by the sudden press of the crowd, I don't know. I suppose I shall never know. I only know that I lost him, and that I was immediately surrounded by other men, saying nice things about my costume, wanting me to have supper with them, and asking me for dances afterwards.
[Ill.u.s.tration: "_When I turned to speak to him he was gone ... and I was immediately surrounded by other men asking me for dances_"]
The rest of the night went by with a wild rush. We didn't stop dancing till four, we young people; and I believe the older ones played bridge.
We had a second supper served upstairs towards dawn, and when the last people went away, it was broad and glorious daylight.
"Well, deah," said Sally, cosily, when everyone had gone, and she had come into my room to help me undress. "Had you a good time?"
"Splendid!" said I, sighing with joy. "I'm dancing still--in my head.
My first ball!"
"Katherine doesn't call it a ball. But that's a detail. Had you any proposals?"
"Oh, Sally, how came you to think of such a thing? But isn't it _too_ extraordinary? I had three."
"Why extraordinary?"
"Because I hardly knew the men!"
"Americans make up their minds quickly about what they want."
"So Mr. P--So I've been told."
"Accept anyone?"
"Not I."
"Didn't even give them a wee mite of hope?"
"Dear me, no."
"Poor Potter--for one."
"Sally, I do wish he _wouldn't_--do that sort of thing, since you speak of it. It makes it so embarra.s.sing. And somehow, I don't feel he really means it. I've always the impression that--that he does it because he thinks he ought."
"He'd like to marry you, Betty. There's no doubt of that. And one can't blame him for it."
"Well, if he keeps on, I shall be driven away," I said. "Although they don't _want_ me to go home yet, for--for several reasons. I don't want to go, either. I'm having a wonderful experience. But----"
"Haven't you met any man you could imagine yourself caring for, deah?
Or, perhaps, you don't fancy Americans."
"Oh, I do," I exclaimed. "They're all great fun. And one--one man I've met I think superior to any other I ever knew. But then, I've known so few, and I don't know him well. You needn't look at me like that. It isn't a romance, you dear. I'm most unlikely to know him any better, ever. He--isn't like the rest. He isn't like anybody else I ever saw."
"Now," said Sally, coaxingly, "you might tell me if he's one of the three who proposed?"
"Indeed, he isn't, and he never will. Why, Sally, I don't mind telling you I mean that Mr. Brett, who was on the s.h.i.+p, and whom we met afterwards accidentally in the Park. He is rather wonderful--considering his station--isn't he?"
"He'd be rather wonderful in any station. That's my theory about him."
"I think it's mine, too. He was here to-night--as a newspaper reporter, he hinted, though he didn't exactly say he was, in so many words. Did he talk to you?"
"Yes," said Sally. "Indirectly, I got him his chance to come."
"I gave him good advice," said I, laughing. "All about his future, and ambition, and things like that. I hope he'll take it."
"He'll probably try all he knows. Did he thank you prettily?"
"I'm not sure whether he thanked me at all. But he gave me this ring, and wished me luck with it. It was the Genie's present to him in Aladdin's Cave. I changed with him, for the one I had. But this is much prettier. Look."
"D-E-A-R-E-S-T, Dearest," Sally spelt out, as she held the third finger of my right hand, on which I'd slipped the ring.
"Where do you find that?" I asked quickly.
"Don't you know? Why, the stones spell it. Diamond, emerald, amethyst, ruby, emerald, sapphire, topaz."
I felt my cheeks burn when she gave me this explanation.
I wonder if Mr. Brett knew?
XII
ABOUT A WEDDING AND A DISASTER
It's more than a fortnight since I've been able to write about any of the things that have happened to me. The last I did was on the morning after the Great Affair, when we were looking forward to the Pink Ball in the evening. Mrs. Ess Kay didn't quite have her wish, for the ball was a moderate success; but it did seem a pale pink after the gorgeousness of the night before, and it might have been still paler (as everyone felt rather washed out) if it hadn't been for one special excitement. Mohunsleigh's engagement to Carolyn Pitchley was announced, and we were told that the wedding would have to be soon, as Mohunsleigh had had news which called him back to England, and he wanted to take his bride with him.
Before I stopped to think, I'd promised Carolyn to be one of her bridesmaids; but five minutes later I would almost have liked to change my mind, because of Potter. He was asked to be an usher. (I didn't know at the time what that meant, but I had a vague impression it was something of importance at American weddings) so that I was sure to see a lot of him if I were bridesmaid, and in any case, I was beginning to feel he might make it too awkward for me to visit much longer with Mrs.
Ess Kay.
However, when on second thoughts, I tried to get out of my promise, by hinting that I might have to go home, Carolyn seemed ready to cry and said that if I threw her over it would spoil everything. The wedding would be in ten days, and surely, I hadn't been thinking of going back to England as soon as that?
It was quite true, I hadn't. And more than that, I knew I shouldn't be welcome at home. I made up my mind to get through somehow, and told Carolyn I had only been joking.