Part 36 (1/2)

”By all means!” he said.

Just then his glance happened to meet Helen's, and hers seemed to convey a repressed irony, which melted into that blankness of expression with its self-effacement that always puzzled him. Always the artist--always changing, he thought, while Henriette's charm was unvarying.

”And you will stay on here?” he said to Henriette.

”No. I, too, am going to do my bit,” she replied.

She was to take a course in nursing and go to France with Lady Truckleford's hospital unit.

”You were so good at binding up the wounded soldier's arm in the gully that I foresee a great success,” said Phil.

She flushed slightly, averting her glance. Always her blushes were accompanied by the appropriate manner and gesture. When she looked back at him her face was in repose, her lips parted faintly, her eyes deep wells of grateful recollection--the Henriette whom he had carried from the roadside to the gully.

”We shall both be in France,” she said; ”you fighting and I nursing--both doing our bit.”

In that deliciously pregnant second before she took a last sip of coffee her smile implied more than her words.

When they went out on the lawn Madame Ribot asked Helen to fetch a shawl, and after she had placed its silken folds around her mother's shoulders she slipped away into the darkness, the others in their preoccupation not missing her. Madame Ribot at ease in a long chair, the others walked up and down until again came a motor's purr to the gateway and Lady Truckleford appeared to talk of war relief. She was bubblingly talkative, was Lady Truckleford, delightfully fussed over her hospital project, and demonstrative over Henriette, who seemed to have won her affections completely. It was quite late when she departed.

”We'll renew that walk to-morrow, shall we?” Henriette said to Phil as they parted on the stairs. While she was undressing her mother came into the room.

”You were very beautiful to-night, dearie,” said Madame Ribot, taking her daughter's hands in hers. ”And it's settled between you and Cousin Phil?”

Henriette smiled.

”That means that it is?”

Again Henriette smiled, in a confident way.

”It is!” said Madame Ribot. ”Well----” and she kissed Henriette good-night, closing the scene without further inquiry, as became a wise woman who knew or thought she knew her daughter. ”It's splendid about Helen,” she added, pausing in the doorway.

”Very!” Henriette replied. ”Yes, she's found her place drawing for the press.”

Helen, who had thought that she had conquered happiness, was far from it. She had cried out to her mirror: ”Oh, if it weren't for that nose I wouldn't be such a fright!” only to call herself a fool. The result of her conflicting emotions was to hurry downstairs and look up the railroad timetables. Then she went to her mother's room, a pale, distrait figure of impatience, with face drawn.

”I'm going to take the seven-o'clock train in the morning,” she said.

”It's my work, you see.”

She had come quite close to her mother's side so abruptly that it was disturbing to her mother's composure.

”You know best about that,” said Madame Ribot, looking up at Helen's features with a return of the old wonder that Helen should be her child.

”Please explain and say good-bye to the others, won't you?”

”Yes. And, Helen, it's all settled between Henriette and Cousin Phil, isn't it?”

”If she wishes.”

”If she wishes! What do you mean by that?” Madame Ribot had turned in her chair with a penetrating glance from her little eyes.