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The head-waiter was bowing before him and murmuring, "How many, sir?"
"How many what?" mumbled Harvey, with a start.
"In your party?" asked the man, not half so politely and with a degree of distance in his att.i.tude. It did not look profitable.
"Oh! Only one, sir. Just a sandwich and a cup of coffee, I think."
There was a little table away over in the corner sandwiched between the doors of entrance and egress for laden waiters and 'bus boys.
Toward this a hastily summoned second or third a.s.sistant conducted the newcomer. Twice during the process of traversing this illimitable s.p.a.ce Harvey b.u.mped against chairs occupied by merry persons who suddenly became crabbed and asked him who the devil he was stumbling over.
A blonde, flushed woman who sat opposite Nellie at the table in the corner caught sight of him as he pa.s.sed. She stared hard for a moment and then allowed a queer expression to come into her eyes.
"For Heaven's sake!" she exclaimed, with considerable force.
"What's the matter? Your husband?" demanded Nellie Duluth, with a laugh.
"No," she said, staring harder. "Why, I can't be mistaken. Yes, as I live, it's Mr.--Mr. What's-His-Name, your husband, Nellie."
"Don't turn 'round, Nellie," whispered Fairfax, who sat beside her.
"I don't believe it!" cried Nellie, readily. "It isn't possible for Harvey to be here. Where is he?" she demanded in the same breath, looking over her shoulder.
Harvey was getting out of the way of a 'bus boy and a stack of chinaware and in the way of a waiter with a tray of peach Melbas when she espied him.
"For the land's sake!" she gasped, going clear back to Blakeville for the expression. "I don't dare look, Carrie. Tell me, has he got a--a fairy with him? Break it gently."
"Fairy?" sneered Fairfax, suddenly uncomfortable. "Why, he's lost in the wood. He's alone on a desert isle. What the deuce is he doing here?"
Harvey gave his order to the disdainful waiter and then settled back in his chair for the first deliberate look around the room in quest of his wife.
Their eyes met. She had turned halfway round in her chair and was looking at him with wide-open, unbelieving eyes. He felt himself suddenly tied hand and foot to the chair. Now that he had found her he could do no more than stare at her in utter bewilderment. He had come tilting at windmills.
The flush deepened in her cheek as she turned her attention to the dessert that had just been set down before her. She was very quiet, in marked contrast to her mood of the moment before.
Fairfax made a remark which set the others to laughing. She did not smile, but toyed nervously with the dessert fork. Under cover of the laughter he leaned over and whispered, an anxious, troubled note in his voice:--
"I'll call the head waiter and have him put out before he does anything crazy."
"Put out?" she repeated. "Why, what do you think he'd try to do?"
"He's got an ugly look in his eye. I tell you, he'll create a scene.
That's what he's here for. You remember what happened----"
She laughed shrilly. "He won't shoot any one," she said in his ear.
"Harvey create a scene! Oh, that's rich!"
"He hasn't forgotten the thras.h.i.+ng I gave him. He has been brooding over it, Nellie." Fairfax was livid about the eyes.
"Well, I respect him for trying to thrash you, even though he got the worst of it." She looked again in Harvey's direction. He was still staring steadily at her. "He's all alone over there and he's miserable. I can't stand it. I'm going over to sit with him."
As she arose Fairfax reached out and grasped her arm.
"Don't be a fool," he said, in dismay.
"I won't," she replied, sweetly. "Trust me. So long, people. I'm going over to have coffee with my husband."
If the occupants of the big cafe were surprised to see Nellie Duluth make her way over to the table and sit down with the queer little person in checks, not so Harvey. He arose to greet her and would have kissed her if she had not restrained him. He was gratified, overjoyed, but not surprised.
"h.e.l.lo!" she said, sharply, to cover the inward disquiet that possessed her. She was looking intently into his eyes as if searching for something she dreaded.
"h.e.l.lo!" was his response. He was still a trifle dazed.
She sat down opposite him. Before she could think of anything further to say the head waiter rushed up to inquire if Miss Duluth and her friend wouldn't prefer a table at one of the windows.
"No, this will do," she said, thankful for the interruption.
"We are doing very nicely," said Harvey, rather pompously, adding in a loud voice of authority:--"Tell that fellow to hustle my luncheon along, will you?" Then, turning to Nellie, he said:--"You don't look as though you'd ever been sick a day in your life, Nellie."
She laughed uncomfortably. "How are you, Harvey? And Phoebe?"
"Fine. Never better. Why don't you come out and see us occasionally?"
"May I order a cup of black coffee?" she asked, ignoring the question.
She was sorely puzzled.
"Have a big one," he urged, signalling a waiter.
Her curiosity conquered. "What in Heaven's name brought you here, Harvey?"
He told her of the word Rachel had given him. Nellie made a mental note of the intention to speak plainly to Rachel.
"Who are your friends?" he asked. Just then he caught a glimpse of Fairfax's face. He turned very cold.
"Mr. Fairfax is giving a luncheon for two of the grand-opera people,"
she explained.
He forced his courage. "I don't want you to have anything more to do with that man," he said. "He's a scoundrel."
"Now, don't be silly," she cried. "What train are you going out on?"
"I don't know. Maybe I'll stay in. I'll go up to your flat, I guess, for a couple of days. Phoebe's all right. She's over the diphtheria now----"
"Diphtheria?" gasped Nellie, wide-eyed, overlooking his other declaration, which, by the way, was of small moment.
"Almost died, poor kiddie."
She flared up in an instant. "Why wasn't I told? What were you thinking of, you little fool?"