Part 48 (1/2)
”Oh, no,” Mallory amended, ”I mean I haven't had breakfast.”
But Kathleen scowled with a jealousy of her own: ”You seem to be getting along famously for mere train-acquaintances.”
”Oh, that's all we are, and hardly that,” Mallory hastened to say with too much truth. ”Sit down here a moment, won't you?”
”No, no, I haven't time,” she said, and sat down. ”Mamma will be waiting for me. You haven't been in to see her yet?”
”No. You see----”
”She cried all night.”
”For me?”
”No, for papa. He's such a good traveler--and he had such a good start. She really kept the whole car awake.”
”Too bad,” Mallory condoled, perfunctorily, then with sudden eagerness, and a trial at indifference: ”I see you have that bracelet still.”
”Of course, you dear fellow. I wouldn't be parted from it for worlds.”
Marjorie gnashed her teeth, but Kathleen could not hear that. She gushed on: ”And now we have met again! It looks like Fate, doesn't it?”
”It certainly does,” Mallory a.s.sented, bitterly; then again, with zest: ”Let me see that old bracelet, will you?”
He tried to lay hold of it, but Kathleen giggled coyly: ”It's just an excuse to hold my hand.” She swung her arm over the back of the seat coquettishly, and Marjorie made a desperate lunge at it, but missed, since Kathleen, finding that Mallory did not pursue the fugitive hand, brought it back at once and yielded it up:
”There--be careful, someone might look.”
Mallory took her by the wrist in a gingerly manner, and said, ”So that's the bracelet? Take it off, won't you?”
”Never!--it's wished on,” Kathleen protested, sentimentally. ”Don't you remember that evening in the moonlight?”
Mallory caught Marjorie's accusing eye and lost his head. He made a ferocious effort to s.n.a.t.c.h the bracelet off. When this onset failed, he had recourse to entreaty: ”Just slip it off.” Kathleen shook her head tantalizingly. Mallory urged more strenuously: ”Please let me see it.”
Kathleen shook her head with sophistication: ”You'd never give it back. You'd pa.s.s it along to that--train-acquaintance.”
”How can you think such a thing?” Mallory demurred, and once more made his appeal: ”Please please, slip it off.”
”What on earth makes you so anxious?” Kathleen demanded, with sudden suspicion. Mallory was stumped, till an inspiration came to him: ”I'd like to--to get you a nicer one. That one isn't good enough for you.”
Here was an argument that Kathleen could appreciate. ”Oh, how sweet of you, Harry,” she gurgled, and had the bracelet down to her knuckles, when a sudden instinct checked her: ”When you bring the other, you can have this.”
She pushed the circlet back, and Mallory's hopes sank at the gesture.
He grew frantic at being eternally frustrated in his plans. He caught Kathleen's arm and, while his words pleaded, his hands tugged: ”Please--please let me take it--for the measure--you know!”
Kathleen read the determination in his fierce eyes, and she struggled furiously: ”Why, Richard--Chauncey!--er--Billy! I'm amazed at you! Let go or I'll scream!”
[Ill.u.s.tration: ”WHY, RICHARD--CHAUNCEY!--ER--BILLY! I'M AMAZED AT YOU!
LET GO, OR I'LL SCREAM!”]