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"To tell you the truth I have n't been inside yet, except the front hall. But I met the rest of the family at a very friendly little luncheon given in my honour at the Criterion on the following Sat.u.r.day afternoon."
"And what are the rest of the family like?"
d.i.c.ky pondered.
"Now I come to think it over," he confessed at length, "I'm not very clear about the rest of the family. Collectively they struck me as being the most charming people I had ever met, but I don't seem to have noticed them individually, if you know what I mean. You see, Tilly was there."
"How many are there?" pursued his mother, with exemplary patience.
"Four or five, I should think, but I have never counted them," replied the exasperating Richard. "Tilly--"
Mr. Mainwaring came timidly to his wife's aid.
"Is there a mother, my boy?" he asked.
"Yes, there is a mother," replied d.i.c.ky hastily. "Oh, yes," he repeated with more confidence, "certainly there is a mother."
"Any sisters?"
"There is a small girl--a dear. And I have a kind of notion there are some twins somewhere. Tilly--"
"Any brothers?"
d.i.c.ky smiled, apparently at some amusing thought.
"Yes," he said, "there is Percy. A sterling fellow, Perce! I wonder where he is, by the way. If he were here he might be able to do something with the goat. Any one would respect Percy--even a goat."
Lady Adela sighed despairingly. Mr. Mainwaring, taking the goat by the horns, so to speak, asked his son to elucidate the mystery once and for all.
"Did n't I tell you about the goat?" asked d.i.c.k in surprise. "Well, it was like this. When Tilly and I were hunting for a cab in the rain at the station just now, we met a woman with a goat, in tears."
"The goat?" said Lady Adela incredulously.
"No, its mother--I mean, its proprietress. She had missed the market, or something, owing, to her pony breaking down, and she had come to the station as a forlorn hope, to see if she could catch a departing goat-merchant and unload Maximilian on him."
"Maximilian?" interjected Lady Adela giddily.
"Yes--the goat. We had to call him _something_, you know. Her husband was very ill in bed, and Maximilian had to be sold to defray expenses, it seemed."
"And so you--er--purchased Maximilian?" said Mr. Mainwaring.
"We did," replied The Freak gravely. "That was why we had to walk. The cabman would not allow us to take Maximilian inside with us, and Max absolutely declined to sit on the box beside the cabman--which did n't altogether surprise me--so we all three had to come here on our arched insteps. I wonder where Tilly is."
"Where is the animal now?" enquired Lady Adela apprehensively. She was quite prepared to hear that Maximilian was already in the best bedroom.
"We left him on the lawn, tethered to the rain-gauge," replied d.i.c.ky.
"Ah, there she is!"
Forgetting the goat and all other impediments to the course of true love, he hurried to the foot of the staircase.
III
Miss Welwyn and Mrs. Carmyle descended the stairs together, Sylvia stalking majestically in the rear. Tilly wore a short navy-blue skirt and a soft silk s.h.i.+rt belonging to Connie--garments which, owing to the mysterious readiness with which the female form accommodates itself to the wardrobe of its neighbour, fitted her to perfection. In this case, however, the miracle was less noticeable than usual, for the two girls were of much the same height and build, their chief points of difference being their hair and eyes.
In reply to her swain's tender enquiries, Miss Welwyn intimated that she was now warm and dry.
"In that case," replied d.i.c.ky, "come and sit up to the tea-table and take some nourishment."
On her way to her tea Tilly was met by Mr. Mainwaring senior, with outstretched hands.
"My dear young lady," he said, with shy cordiality, "we owe you a most humble apology."
Tilly, flus.h.i.+ng prettily, asked why.
"For our extremely vague greeting to you just now," explained her host.
"You see"--he clapped d.i.c.ky fondly on the shoulder--"this intellectual son of ours forgot to post the letter announcing your--telling us about you. We have only just heard the news. Now that we have you, my dear"--the old gentleman's eyes beamed affectionately--"we are going to make much of you!"
"Oh, thank you! You _are_ kind!" cried Tilly impulsively; and smiled gratefully upon her future father-in-law. His were the first official words of welcome that she had received.
"Good old Dad!" said d.i.c.ky.
Meanwhile Lady Adela had come to the conclusion that her male belongings were overdoing it.
"Do you take sugar, Miss Welwyn?" she enquired loudly.
"Yes, please," said Tilly, still engaged in smiling affectionately upon the Mainwarings, _pere et fils_.
"I wonder now," continued Mr. Mainwaring, "if you are in any way related to an old friend of mine--or perhaps I should say acquaintance, for he moved on a higher plane than I--Lucius Welwyn? I was at school with him more than forty years ago, and also at Cambridge."
"Lucius Welwyn?" cried Tilly, her eyes glowing. "He is my Daddy--my father!"
"You don't say so? Capital!" Abel Mainwaring turned to his wife.
"Adela, do you hear that? Miss Welwyn and I have established a bond of union already. Her father was actually at school with me."
Lady Adela flatly declined to join in the general enthusiasm.
"Are you sure, dear?" was all she said. "There might be two."
Mr. Mainwaring pointed out, with truth, that Lucius Welwyn was an uncommon name. "But we can easily make sure," he said. "The Lucius Welwyn whom I remember was a Fellow of his College. Did your father--"
"Yes, Dad was a Fellow of his College for some years," said Tilly. "I think I will come a little farther from the fire now, if you don't mind.
I am quite warm."
"Come and sit here by me, dear Miss Welwyn," said Lady Adela with sudden affability. "I want to have a cosy little chat with you. d.i.c.k, you are very wet and muddy. Go and change."