Part 7 (1/2)
”Oh, I suppose we all have our fastnesses,” he said with a laugh which politely waived any claim to superiority without expressly abandoning it.
”Doesn't one give up the key of the gates by marrying?”
”My dear Kate, read your Bluebeard again!”
Mrs. Raymore relapsed into the silence that was almost habitual to her, but it pa.s.sed through her mind that the conversation had soon turned from Sibylla to Grantley himself, or at least had dealt with Sibylla purely in her bearing on Grantley; it had not increased her knowledge of Mrs. Imason as an independent individual.
”Well, with business what it is,” said Fanshaw in his loud voice--a voice that had a way of stopping other people's voices--”we must cut it down somewhere.”
”Oh, you're as rich as Crsus, Fanshaw!” objected young Blake.
”I'm losing money every day! Christine and I were discussing it as we drove here.”
”I like your idea of discussion, John,” remarked Christine in her delicate tones, generally touched with sarcasm. ”I couldn't open my lips.”
”He closured you, and then threw out your Budget?” asked Grantley.
”He almost stripped my gown from my back, and made an absolute clutch at my diamonds.”
”I put forward the reasonable view,” Fanshaw insisted rather heatedly.
”What I said was, begin with superfluities----”
”Are clothes superfluities?” interjected Christine, watching the gradual flus.h.i.+ng of her husband's face with mischievous pleasure.
”Nothing is superfluous that is beautiful,” said Selford; he lisped slightly, and spoke with an affected air. ”We should retrench in the grosser pleasures--eating and drinking, display, large houses----”
”Peculiar dogs!” suggested Blake, chaffing Mrs. Selford.
”Oh, but they are beautiful!” she cried.
”Horses!” said Christine, with sharp-pointed emphasis. ”You should really be guided by Mr. Selford, John.”
”Every husband should be guided by another husband. That's axiomatic,”
said Grantley.
”I'm quite content with my own,” smiled Mrs. Selford. ”d.i.c.k and I always agree.”
”They must be fresh from a row,” Tom Courtland whispered surlily to Mrs.
Raymore.
”About money matters the man's voice must in the nature of things be final,” Fanshaw insisted. ”It's obvious. He knows about it; he makes it----”
”Quite enough for him to do,” Christine interrupted. ”At that point we step in--and spend it.”
”Division of labour? Quite right, Mrs. Fanshaw,” laughed Blake. ”And if any of you can't manage your department, I'm ready to help.”
”They can manage that department right enough,” Fanshaw grumbled. ”If we could manage them as well as they manage that----” He took a great gulp of champagne, and grew still redder when he heard Christine's scornful little chuckle.
Raymore turned to Sibylla with a kind fatherly smile.