Part 43 (2/2)

”Do you really,” delightedly. ”It doesn't seem as if you could--”

”If you knew how much.”

She could not know. He hung up the receiver. The day stretched out before him, blank.

But it pa.s.sed, of course. And Hilda, having slept her allotted number of hours, was up in time to superintend the serving of the General's dinner. Later, Derry stopped at the door to say that he was going to the theater and might be called there. The General, propped against his pillows and clothed in a gorgeous mandarin coat, looked wrinkled and old. The ruddiness had faded from his cheeks, and he was much thinner.

Hilda, sitting by the little table, showed all the contrast of youth and bloom. Her long hands lay flat on the table. Derry had a fantastic feeling, as if a white cat watched him under the lamp.

”Are you going alone, son?” the General asked.

”Yes.”

”Why don't you take a girl?” craftily.

Derry smiled.

”The only girl I should care to take is out of town.”

The white cat purred. ”Lucky girl to be the only one.”

Derry's manner stiffened. ”You are good to think so.”

After Derry had gone, Hilda said, ”You see, it is Jean McKenzie. The Doctor said that he and Jean would be up in Maryland for a day or two.

She has a good time. She doesn't know what it means to be poor, not as I know it. She doesn't know what it means to go without the pretty things that women long for. You wouldn't believe it, General, but when I was a little girl, I used to stand in front of shop windows and wonder if other girls really wore the slippers and fans and parasols.

And when I went to Dr. McKenzie's, and saw Jean in her silk dressing gowns, and her pink slippers and her lace caps, she seemed to me like a lady in a play. I've worn my uniforms since I took my nurse's training, and before that I wore the uniform of an Orphans' Home. I--I don't know why I am telling you all this--only it doesn't seem quite fair, does it?”

He had all of an old man's sympathy for a lovely woman in distress. He had all of any man's desire to play Cophetua.

”Look here,” he said. ”You get yourself a pink parasol and a fan and a silk dress. I'd like to see you wear them.”

She shook her head. ”What should I do with things like that?” Her voice had a note of wistfulness. ”A woman in my position must be careful.”

”But I want you to have the things,” he persisted.

”I shouldn't have a place to wear them,” sadly. ”No, you are very good to offer them. But I mustn't.”

The General slept after that. Hilda read under the lamp--a white cat watched by a little old terrier on the stairs!

And now the big house was very still. There were lights in the halls of the first and second floors. Bronson crouching in the darkness of the third landing was glad of the company of the painted lady on the stairs. He knew she would approve of what he was doing. For years he had served her in such matters as this, saving her husband from himself. When Derry was too small, too ignorant of evil, too innocent, to be told things, it was to the old servant that she had come.

He remembered a certain night. She was young then and new to her task.

She and the General had been dining at one of the Legations. She was in pale blue and very appealing. When Bronson had opened the door, she had come in alone.

”Oh, the General, the General, Bronson,” she had said. ”We've got to go after him.”

She was shaking with the dread of it, and Bronson had said, ”Hadn't you better wait, ma'am?”

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