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"All right. Give me five minutes' warning. You can twirl your thumbs, when it is time for me to start; but I am bound to see some of the fun."
"Now, children, you must be good," Beatrix implored them hurriedly.
"Bobby, do try to talk about something she can understand."
"If you want to condemn me to the conversational limits of a mummy, say so in plain Saxon," he retorted. "How can I talk about something that doesn't exist?"
"Bobby!" Sally's tone was full of warning, as Beatrix rose to meet her guest.
Mrs. Lloyd Avalons had gained one distinct point in her social training.
She had learned to cross a room as if she were doing her hostess a favor by appearing. Even Beatrix was impressed by the swift, dainty sweep with which she came forward, and she cast a hasty thought to the quality of her tea. Bobby, meanwhile, was taking mental stock of Mrs. Lloyd Avalons's tailor and deciding that he could give points to his own fellow. For a person who professed to ignore all such detail, Bobby Dane was singularly critical of feminine dress, as Beatrix had learned to her cost.
Seated by the tea-table, balancing a Sevres cup in her hand, Mrs. Lloyd Avalons appeared to be casting about in her mind for a subject of conversation. Bobby came to her relief.
"When you appeared, Mrs. Avalons, we were just speaking of mummies. Have you seen the latest importation at the Metropolitan?"
"Mr. Dane!" she remonstrated hastily. "Do you suppose I--"
"Certainly," Bobby a.s.sured her gravely. "I often spend an hour looking at them, and I always feel the better for the time pa.s.sed in their society. They remind me of the futility of earthly things, and inspire me to higher aims."
Mrs. Lloyd Avalons smiled faintly.
"You literary people have strange thoughts," she observed, addressing the room at large. "I have often thought I should like to write, if I only had the time."
"Why don't you?" Bobby inquired blandly. "The result would be sure to be interesting."
But Beatrix interposed.
"Are you as busy as ever, Mrs. Avalons?"
"Busier. It is such a bore to be in this perpetual rush; but I can't seem to help it. Lent didn't bring me any rest, this year; and, now that Easter is over, it seems to me that we are more gay than ever."
"That is the penalty of having an early Easter," Sally suggested. "We had to stop for Lent in the middle of the season, and now we are finis.h.i.+ng up the sins of which we have already repented."
"Oh--yes," Mrs. Lloyd Avalons responded blankly.
"Can you get all your arrears of penitence done up in six weeks, Sally?"
Bobby asked, as he pa.s.sed her the almonds.
"Yes, if I've not seen too much of you," she returned. "Mrs. Avalons, when are you going to give us another recital?"
Mrs. Lloyd Avalons rose to the cast.
"Wasn't that a success? Mr. Thayer quite covered himself with glory."
"His mantle fell over some of the rest of us, and we gained l.u.s.tre from his glory." Sally's tone was slightly malicious.
"He is certainly a great artist, and I am proud to have discovered him."
"But I thought Mrs. Stanley discovered him. He sang for her first."
Mrs. Lloyd Avalons straightened in her chair. She had no intention of allowing to Mrs. Stanley the prestige which belonged to herself. Mrs.
Stanley was several rounds farther up the social ladder than she was, herself; but Mrs. Stanley lacked initiative and was rapidly losing her start. In the seasons to come, she would find herself playing the part of understudy to Mrs. Lloyd Avalons.
"Oh, Mrs. Stanley heard he was to sing for me, and she cabled across to him to take an earlier steamer and sing for her first. It was a little tricky. What is it you call it in the business world, Mr. Dane?"
"A corner in Cotton," Bobby replied gravely.
Mrs. Lloyd Avalons thought she could see that the point of this joke was directed against Mrs. Stanley, and she laughed rather more heartily than good breeding required. In her mirth, she even bent forward in her chair, writhing slightly to and fro, while her silken linings hissed like angry snakes. Suddenly she realized that she had prolonged her mirth beyond the limits of the others, and she straightened her face abruptly.
"But I am so glad the subject has come up, Miss Dane," she went on. "I was meaning to ask you whether you thought I could get Mr. Thayer to sing for our Fresh Air Fund."
"Really, I have no idea of Mr. Thayer's engagements," Beatrix said drily.
"But I thought you knew him so well."
Beatrix's face expressed her surprise.
"I know him as I know any number of people, Mrs. Avalons. That doesn't mean that Mr. Thayer consults me in regard to his plans."
"Oh, no," Mrs. Lloyd Avalons responded vivaciously. "But couldn't you just say a good word for us?"
"I am afraid it wouldn't count for much."
Mrs. Lloyd Avalons raised her brows and made a delicate, pus.h.i.+ng gesture with her outspread palms.
"You are too modest, Miss Dane. We all know your powers of persuasion, and we are counting on you."
"Who are _we_?" Sally inquired, in flat curiosity.
"Mrs. Van Bleeker and Mrs. Knickerbocker and I. We are the committee, this year, and we are trying to have an uncommonly good concert."
"It must be very hard for you to work on a music committee with Mrs. Van Bleeker," Bobby suggested. "She doesn't know a fugue from a ba.s.s viol, and she never hesitates to say so."
"Therein she differs from most unmusical people," Sally responded, in a swift aside. "Even truthful people will fib valiantly, where music is concerned, and go into raptures, when they have hard work to suppress their yawns. It was a sorry day for music, when it became the fas.h.i.+on."
"How droll you are, Miss Van Osdel!" Mrs. Lloyd Avalons was nothing, if not direct, in her personal comments. Then she answered Bobby. "Even if Mrs. Van Bleeker isn't really musical, it is a delight to work with her, she is so very charming and so business-like. Strange as it may seem, I actually take pleasure in our committee meetings, Mr. Dane."
"I haven't the slightest doubt of it," Bobby responded, with unctuous emphasis.
"When is the concert to be, Mrs. Avalons?" Beatrix asked hastily, with a frown at her cousin who stared blandly back at her.
"The first week in May, if we can possibly be ready for it. There was so much, just before Lent, that we postponed it until after Easter. Now we are no better off, for every day is full, so we are delaying it again.
We want to make it a large affair, don't you know, something that will attract the swell set and the musical people, too."
If Bobby Dane hated one word in the language, that word was _swell_.
Accordingly, he glared haughtily across the table at Mrs. Lloyd Avalons, noting, as he did so, the scornful cadence of her voice over the final phrase.
"The two sets rarely mingle, Mrs. Avalons. Which is under your especial care?"