Part 31 (2/2)

”Would you dine with me at the _Bella Napoli_?”

Lady Sellingworth thought of the shop girls again, but now how differently!

”I would come and call for you just before eight. It's a fine night.

It's dry, and it will be clear and starry.”

”You want me to walk?”

He slightly reddened.

”Or shall we dress and go in a taxi?” he said.

”No, no. But I haven't said I can come.”

His face fell.

”I will come,” she said. ”And we will walk. But what would Mr.

Braybrooke say?”

”Have you seen him? Has he told you?”

”What?”

”About our conversation in the club?”

”I have seen him, and I don't think he is quite pleased about Shaftesbury Avenue. But never mind. I cannot live to please Mr.

Braybrooke. _Au revoir_. Just before eight.”

When he had gone Lady Sellingworth again looked in the gla.s.s.

”But it's impossible!” she said to herself. ”It's impossible!”

She hated her face at that moment, and could not help bitterly regretting the fierce impulse of ten years ago. If she had not yielded to that impulse she might now have been looking, not at a young woman certainly, but a woman well preserved. Now she was frankly a wreck.

She would surely look almost grotesque dining alone with young Craven.

People would think she was his grandmother. Perhaps it would be better not to go. She was filled with a sense of painful hesitation. She came away from the gla.s.s. No doubt Craven was ”on the telephone.” She might communicate with him, tell him not to come, that she had changed her mind, did not feel very well. He would not believe her excuse whatever it was, but that could not be helped. Anything was better than to make a spectacle of herself in a restaurant. She had not put Craven's address and telephone number in her address book, but she might perhaps have kept the note he had written to her before their first meeting. She did not remember having torn it up. She went to her writing-table, but could not find the note. She found his card, but it had only his club address on it. Then she went downstairs to a morning room she had on the ground floor. There was another big writing-table there. The telephone was there too. After searching for several minutes she discovered Craven's note, the only note he had ever written to her. Stamped in the left-hand corner of the notepaper was a telephone number.

She was about to take down the receiver when she remembered that Craven had not yet had time to walk back to his flat from her house, even if he were going straight home. She must wait a few minutes. She came away from the writing-table, sat down in an armchair, and waited.

Night had closed in. Heavy curtains were drawn across the tall windows.

One electric lamp, which she had just turned on, threw a strong light on the writing-table, on pens, stationery, an address book, a telephone book, a big blue-and-gold inkstand, some photographs which stood on a ledge protected by a tiny gilded rail. The rest of the room was in shadow. A low fire burned in the grate.

Lady Sellingworth did not take up a book or occupy herself in any way.

She just sat still in the armchair and waited. Now and then she heard a faint footfall, the hoot of a motor horn, the slight noise of a pa.s.sing car. And loneliness crept upon her like something gathering her into a cold and terrible embrace.

It occurred to her that she might ask Craven presently through the telephone to come and dine in Berkeley Square. No one would see her with him if she did that, except her own servants.

<script>