Part 8 (1/2)
The sight of Ca.s.sy issuing from Lennox' rooms had surprised her, as the unexpected will surprise. But in saying that she was going in, it was not at all for explanations. Explanations are for strangers. Love understands--or should understand, and Margaret divined that Ca.s.sy had come on some errand from her father, of whose waylaying and rescue Lennox had long since told her.
”Will you please move a little?” she added.
Mrs. Austen, after routing the boy, had lowered her gla.s.ses. She raised them again. ”Look there!”
At the entrance were two women with a child between them. On the stair was a man. The door marked ”Dr. Wins.h.i.+p” had opened. The wide hall was suddenly full of people.
Mrs. Austen lowered her lorgnette. ”Don't make a scene, my dear. At least, don't make one over my dead body.”
Resistance was easy, but to what end? Margaret felt that she could persist, insist, ring and go in, but now only to be accompanied by her mother's mocking and stilted sneers. The consciousness of that subtracted the brightness from the day, the pleasure from the visit.
Then, too, that evening he would come. Then they would be alone.
She turned. A moment more and both were in the street, where Mrs. Austen forgot about the taxi. Other matters occupied the good woman and occupied her very agreeably. She had been playing a game, and a rare game it is, with destiny. The stakes were extravagant, but her cards were poor. Then abruptly, in one of the prodigious shuffles that fate contrives, a hand, issuing from nowhere, had dealt her a flush. She purred at it, at the avenue, at the world, at her daughter.
”I am so glad we are not going anywhere to-night.” A car flew by, a gloved hand waved and the purr continued. ”Wasn't that Sarah Amsterdam?
By the way, what did the medium tell you? Anything about a dark man crossing your path? If not, it was very careless of her. But what was I talking about? Oh, yes, I am so glad we are to be at home. You can have a nice, quiet evening with your young man. Only, do you know, I wouldn't say anything about that little vestal. He might not like it. Men are so queer. They hate to be misunderstood and to be understood makes them furious. No, I wouldn't mention it. But now isn't he as full of surprises as a grab-bag? I thought him a model of the most perfect propriety, and that only shows how wrong it is to judge by appearances.
Model young men always remind me of floor-walkers. Who was that that just bowed? Dear me, so it was, and he looked so down in the mouth he might have been a dentist. On Monday I really must go to my dentist. He does hurt terribly and that is so rea.s.suring. You feel that you are getting your money's worth. Don't your teeth need attending to? Ah, here we are at last! G.o.d bless our home!”
Entering the hall, she looked at a little room to the right in which the manager awed prospecting tenants. Usually it was empty. It was empty then. Mrs. Austen looked, pa.s.sed on and, preceding Margaret, entered a lift that floated them to the home on which she had asked a blessing.
VIII
The Italians have a proverb about waiting for some one who does not come. They call it deadly. Among the lapping shadows Lennox felt the force of it. But concluding that visitors had detained his guests, he dressed and went around a corner or two to the Athenaeum Club where usually he dined.
In the main room which gives on Fifth Avenue, he found Ten Eyck Jones talking war. Jones was a novelist, but he did not look like one. There was nothing commercial in his appearance, which was that of a man half-asleep, except when he talked and then he seemed very much awake.
He was not fat and though an inkbeast, he dressed after the manner of those who put themselves in the best hands and then forget all about it.
But for Lennox he had a superior quality, he was a friend. With him was Harry Cantillon, who, the night before, had danced away with Kate Schermerhorn. Straddling an arm of Cantillon's chair was Fred Ogston, a young man of a type that, even before the war, was vanis.h.i.+ng and which was known as about town. Adjacently sat Peter Verelst. Servants brought little decanters and removed others. In a corner an old man glared with envious venom at the liquors of which he had consumed too many and of which, at the price of his eyesight, he could consume no more.
Jones waved at Lennox. ”I have been telling these chaps that before they are much older they will be in khaki.”
”Houp!” cried Cantillon. He sprang up, ran to the arched entrance, where, lightly, without effort, he turned a somersault and was gone.
The old man in the corner raised himself, shuffled to a table, sat down and wrote to the house committee. Such conduct could not be tolerated!
Having said it, he raised himself again and shuffled over with the letter to Dunwoodie, a lawyer with the battered face of a bulldog and a ruffian's rumpled clothes.
Dunwoodie, instead of taking the letter, gave the old man a look, one look, his famous look, the look with which--it was said--he reversed the Bench. Angrily the old man turned tail, collided with Paliser, apologised furiously, d.a.m.ning him beneath his breath, d.a.m.ning Dunwoodie, d.a.m.ning the house committee, d.a.m.ning the club.
”Are you to dine here?” Jones asked Ogston, who swore gently, declaring that, worse luck, he was due at his aunt's.
”But you are,” Jones told Lennox. ”Come on and I'll make your hair stand on end.” He turned: ”And yours, too.”
Peter Verelst smoothed the back of his head. ”Thank you, Ten Eyck. But such hair as I have I prefer should remain as it is.”
The two men went on and up into another room, s.p.a.cious, high-ceiled, set with tables, where a captain got them seated, took their orders, carefully transmitted them to a careful waiter, an omnibus meanwhile producing ice-water which Jones had promptly removed.
He smiled at Lennox. ”Who was the jeunesse you and Paliser were talking to last night? She had been singing.”