Part 2 (1/2)
”We have electric lights.”
Harley began to feel provoked. There were limits to perverseness, or should be.
”I am expected to dinner by Mr. and Mrs. Grayson,” he said. ”Will you kindly cease to keep me waiting and show me in? I shall not steal any of the furniture.”
The maid was annoyingly calm.
”Mr. and Mrs. Grayson have not yet returned from a little walk which they were afraid to undertake until it grew dark,” she said. ”But I think I'll risk it and show you in if you will hold up your hand and swear that you haven't a camera hidden under your overcoat.”
Harley's sense of humor came to his aid, and he held up his hand.
”I do solemnly swear,” he said.
He tried to see the face of this maid, who showed a perversity that was unequalled in an experience by no means limited, but she stood in the duskiest part of the dim hall, and he failed. He knew merely that she was tall and slender, and when she turned to lead the way he heard a faint sound like the light tinkle of a suppressed laugh. Harley started, and his face flushed with anger. He had encountered often those who tried to snub him, and usually he had been able to take care of himself, but to be laughed at by a housemaid was a new thing in his experience, and he was far from liking it.
She indicated a small parlor with a wave of her hand and said:
”You can go in there and wait. You have promised not to steal the furniture, and, as the room contains only a piano, a table, and some chairs, all of which are too big to be hidden under your overcoat, I think that you will keep your promise.”
She sped lightly away, leaving Harley trembling so much with amazement and anger that he forgot for at least two minutes to sit down. When he took off his overcoat he murmured: ”Before Mr. Grayson thinks of ruling the United States he should discipline his own household.”
The house was quiet; he heard no one stirring anywhere. The light from an electric lamp in the street shone into the parlor, and by its rays he saw Mr. and Mrs. Grayson coming up the street. Then the maid had told the truth about the ”little walk,” and he was early.
He leaned back in his chair and watched the pair as they approached their own house. Evidently they had stolen these few minutes in the dark to be alone with each other, and Harley sympathized with them, because it would be a long time before the wife could claim again that her husband was her own. They entered a side-gate, pa.s.sed through the lawn, and a minute later were welcoming Harley.
”We did not expect to be gone so long,” said Mrs. Grayson; ”but we see that you have found the right place.”
”Oh yes,” said Harley; ”a maid showed me in.” Then he added: ”I am very glad, indeed, to have been invited here, but if you want any more privacy I don't think you should have asked me; my kind will soon be down upon you like a swarm of locusts.”
Mr. Grayson laughed and took a stack of telegraph envelopes six inches thick from a table.
”You are right, Mr. Harley,” he said. ”They will be here to-morrow, ready for the start. There are more than twenty applications for s.p.a.ce on our train, and all of them shall have it. I don't think that the boys and I shall quarrel.”
Mrs. Grayson excused herself, and presently they were summoned to dinner. Stepping out of a dusky hall into a brilliantly lighted room, Harley was dazzled for a moment, but he found himself bowing when she introduced him to ”My niece, Miss Morgan, of Idaho.” Then he saw a tall, slender girl, with a singularly frank and open countenance, and a hand extended to him as familiarly as if she had known him all her life.
Harley, although he had not expected the offer of the hand, took it and gave it one little shake. He felt an unaccountable embarra.s.sment. He saw a faint twinkle in the girl's eye, as if she found something amusing in his appearance, and he feared that he had made a mistake in coming in evening-dress. He flushed a little and felt a slight resentment towards Mrs. Grayson, because she had not told him of this niece; but he was relieved for the moment by an introduction to the third guest, Mrs.
Boyle, an elderly lady, also a relative, but more distantly so.
Mrs. Boyle merely bowed, and at once returned Harley to the custody of the niece from Idaho, of whom he felt some fear, her singular freedom of manner and the faint twinkle that still lurked in her eye putting him on edge. Moreover, he was a.s.signed to a seat next to her, and, as obviously he was expected to entertain her, his fear increased. This girl was not only Western, but Far Western, and, in his opinion, there was none so wise who could tell what she would do or say. He repeated to himself the word ”Idaho,” and it sounded remote, rough, and wild.
”Uncle James tells me that you are a correspondent, the representative of the New York _Gazette_,” she said.
”Yes.”
”And that you are to go with him on the campaign and write brilliant accounts of the things that never happen.”
”I am sure that Mr. Grayson was not your authority for such a statement,” said Harley, with a smile, although he did not wholly relish her banter.
”Oh no, Uncle James is a very polite man, and very considerate of the feelings of others.”
”Then it is a supposition of your own?”