Part 30 (1/2)
”Spring fever,” he announced. He was plainly out of sorts. ”I'll stand, if you don't mind. Beastly tiresome, sitting in a hot, stuffy train.”
He took a couple of turns across the porch, his eyes s.h.i.+fting in the eager, annoyed manner of one who seeks for something that, in the correct order of things, ought to be plainly visible.
”Please sit down, Leslie. You make me nervous, tramping about like that. We can't go in for half an hour or more.”
”Can't go in?” he demanded, stopping before her. He began to pull at his little moustache.
”No. Hetty's posing. They won't permit even me to disturb them.”
He glared. With a final, almost dramatic twist he gave over jerking at his moustache, and grabbed up a chair, which he put down beside her with a vehemence that spoke plainer than words.
”I say,” he began, scowling in the direction of the doorway, ”how long is he going to be at this silly job?”
”Silly job? Why, it is to be a masterpiece,” she cried.
”I asked you how long?”
”Oh, how can I tell? Weeks, perhaps. One can't prod a genius.”
”It's all tommy-rot,” he growled. ”I suppose I'd better take the next train back to town.”
”Don't you like talking with me?” she inquired, with a pout.
”Of course I do,” he made haste to say. ”But do you mean to say they won't let anybody in where--Oh, I say! This is rich!”
”Spectators upset the muse, or words to that effect.”
He stared gloomily at his cigarette case for a moment. Then he carefully selected a cigarette and tapped it on the back of his hand.
”See here, Sara, I'm going to get this off my chest,” he said bluntly. ”I've been thinking it over all week. I don't like this portrait painting nonsense.”
”Dear me! Didn't you suggest it?” she inquired innocently, but all the time her heart was beating violent time to the song of triumph.
He was jealous. It was what she wanted, what she had hoped for all along. Her purpose now was to encourage the ugly flame that tortured him, to fan it into fury, to make it unendurable. She knew him well: his supreme egoism could not withstand an attack upon its complacency. Like all the Wrandalls, he had the habit of thinking too well of himself. He possessed a clearly-defined sense of humour, but it did not begin to include self-sacrifice among its endowments. He had never been able to laugh at himself for the excellent reason that some things were truly sacred to him.
She realised this, and promptly laughed at him. He stiffened.
”Don't snicker, Sara,” he growled. He took time to light his cigarette, and at the same time to consider his answer to her question. ”In a way, yes. I suggested a sort of portrait, of course. A sketchy thing, something like that, you know. But not an all-summer operation.”
”But she doesn't mind,” explained Sara. ”In fact, she is enjoying it. She and Mr. Booth get on famously together.”
”She likes him, eh?”
”Certainly. Why shouldn't she like him? He is adorable.”
He threw his cigarette over the railing. ”Comes here every day, I suppose?”
”My dear Leslie, he is to do me as soon as he has finished with her. I don't like your manner.”
”Oh,” he said in a dull sort of wonder. No one had ever cut him short in just that way before. ”What's up, Sara? Have I done anything out of the way?”
”You are very touchy, it seems to me.”