Part 33 (1/2)
”Haven't you even the excuse of caring for her?”
”Who?”
”A neighbour's wife--who comes drifting into your hospitable haven!”
”I don't pretend to love her, if that is what you mean,” he said pleasantly.
”Then you make her believe it--and that's dastardly!”
”Oh, no. Women don't love unless made love to. You've only read that in books.”
She said a little breathlessly: ”You are right. I know men and women only through books. It's time I learned for myself.”
CHAPTER VII
TOGETHER
The end of June and of the house party at Roya-Neh was now near at hand, and both were to close with a moonlight fete and dance in the forest, invitations having been sent to distant neighbours who had been entertaining similar gatherings at Iron Hill and Cloudy Mountain--the Grays, Beekmans, Ellises, and Grandcourts.
Silks and satins, shoe buckles and powdered hair usually mark the high tide of imaginative originality among this sort of people. So it was to be the inevitable Louis XVI fete--or as near to it as attenuated, artistic intelligence could manage, and they altered Duane's very clever and correct sketches to suit themselves, careless of anachronism, and sent the dainty water-colour drawings to town in order that those who sweat and sew in the perfumed ateliers of Fifth Avenue might use them as models.
”The fun--if there's any in dressing up--ought to lie in making your own costumes,” observed Duane. But n.o.body displayed any inclination to do so. And now, on hurry orders, the sewers in the hot Fifth Avenue ateliers sewed faster. Silken and satin costumes, paste jewelry and property small-swords were arriving by express; maids flew about the house at Roya-Neh, trying on, fussing with lace and ribbon, bodice and flowered pannier, altering, retr.i.m.m.i.n.g, adjusting. Their mistresses met in one another's bedrooms for mysterious confabs over head-dress and coiffure, lace scarf, and petticoat.
As for the men, they surrept.i.tiously tried on their embroidered coats and breeches, admired themselves in secrecy, and let it go at that, returning with embarra.s.sed relief to cards, tennis, and the various forms of amiable idleness to which they were accustomed. Only Englishmen can masquerade seriously.
Later, however, the men were compelled to pay some semblance of attention to the general preparations, a.s.semble their foot-gear, head-gear, stars, orders, sashes, swords, and try them on for Duane Mallett--to that young man's unconcealed dissatisfaction.
”You certainly resemble a scratch opera chorus,” he observed after pa.s.sing in review the sheepish line-up in his room. ”Delancy, you're the limit as a Black Mousquetier--and, by the way, there weren't any in the reign of Louis XVI, so perhaps that evens up matters. Dysart is the only man who looks the real thing--or would if he'd remove that monocle. As for Bunny and the Pink 'un, they ought to be in vaudeville singing la-la-la.”
”That's really a compliment to our legs,” observed Reggie Wye to Bunbury Gray, flouris.h.i.+ng his property sword and gracefully performing a _pas seul a la Genee_.
Dysart, who had been sullen all day, regarded them morosely.
Scott Seagrave, in his conventional abbe's costume of black and white, excessively bored, stood by the window trying to catch a glimpse of the lake to see whether any decent fish were breaking, while Scott walked around him critically, not much edified by his costume or the way he wore it.
”You're a sad and self-conscious-looking bunch,” he concluded. ”Scott, I suppose you'll insist on wearing your mustache and eyegla.s.ses.”
”You bet,” said Scott simply.
”All right. And kindly beat it. I want to try on my own plumage in peace.”
So the costumed ones trooped off to their own quarters with the half-ashamed smirk usually worn by the American male who has persuaded himself to frivolity. Delancy Grandcourt tramped away down the hall banging his big sword, jingling his spurs, and flapping his loose boots.
The Pink 'un and Bunbury Gray slunk off into obscurity, and Scott wandered back through the long hall until a black-and-red tiger moth attracted his attention, and he forgot his annoying appearance in frantic efforts to capture the brilliant moth.
Dysart, who had been left alone with Duane in the latter's room, contemplated himself sullenly in the mirror while Duane, seated on the window sill, waited for him to go.
”You think I ought to eliminate my eye-gla.s.s?” asked Dysart, still inspecting himself.