The fact that Chetwode was returning
more than a week sooner than she had expected, seemed
to Felicity a hopeful sign. She hesitated for
about half an hour as to whether or not she should
go and meet him at the station. Doubt and dignity
suggested remaining at home, but impatience carried
the day.
As she was waiting on the platform,
the prophecy of Madame Zero occurred to her, and she
thought to herself, with a smile-
“She doesn’t seem so bad
at prophesying what one’s going to do.
It’s when she prophesies what one ought
to have done that the poor dear gets out of her depth.”
When he had arrived, and they were
driving off together, she thought he looked neither
more nor less serene and casual than usual; his actual
presence seemed to radiate calm and dispose of anxiety;
her suspicions began to melt away.
They had dined together, and talked
on generalities, and neither had mentioned the subject.
Chetwode’s intense dislike to any disturbing
topic infected Felicity; she now felt a desire to let
him off even an explanation. She wished she had
never seen the velvet case, or, at any rate, that
she had never mentioned it to any one. He didn’t,
she fancied, look as if he were deceiving her in any
way. His affection was not more marked than usual,
nor less so. She observed there was no tinge
in his manner of an attempt to make up for anything.
Yet the question had to be asked.
“What did you do most of the time there?”
began Felicity.
“Nothing. Played bridge.”
“By the way,” said Felicity,
“you’ve never told me what Mrs.
Tregelly’s like.”
“Of course I haven’t. She isn’t
like anything.”
“Isn’t she very pretty?”
“Oh, I suppose she’s all right-for
Tregelly,” said Chetwode.
“Then if you don’t admire
her at all, would you mind telling me why you have
her portrait locked up in a velvet case?” demanded
Felicity in a soft, sweet voice.
“I wonder!” said Chetwode.
“Oh, don’t be so irritating. Don’t
you know you have it?”
“I haven’t known it long.”
His coolness roused her, and she said angrily-
“Then you ought to have known.
I’ve been fearing that your casual ways are
a very convenient screen for -”
“For what?” he asked,
smiling. He was disposed to tease her for having
doubted him.
She did not answer. He came and sat next to her.
“And so you would have cared?”
“Cared? I should think so. I’ve
been miserable!”
“What a shame! I’m
very sorry-I mean, very glad. But you
might have spared yourself all this worry, dear, if
you’d thought two minutes.”
“How? How do you prove that what I imagined
isn’t true?”
“My dear girl, could you seriously
suspect me of wanting to possess a coloured portrait
on porcelain taken from a photograph? Did you
think I’d have such a thing in the house-except
inadvertently?”
“It’s a pretty face,” she said.
“But it’s an appalling
picture! Don’t I care about things?
I hope I haven’t got any silly vanity about
it, but I don’t think I ever have anything wrong-I
mean, artistically.”
He looked round the room with the uncontrollable pride
of the collector.
“No, my dear,” he went
on, “you’ve done me an injustice.
From you I’m really surprised.”
“But anything, as a souvenir
of a person you like very much ...” she said
hesitatingly.
“Oh, all right!” he answered.
“Do you suppose if I’d an awful oleograph
of you, even-that I’d keep
it as a souvenir? Good heavens, Felicity, one
doesn’t bring sentiment into that sort
of thing! You ought to have known me better.”
She waited a moment.
“Then on those grounds alone I’m to consider
I’m utterly wrong?”
“Rather! Suppose you’d
found a wonderful early sketch by Whistler or Burne-Jones,
say, of a pretty woman-even then I should
never have believed you’d be such a Philistine
as to suppose that the person who sat for it
had any interest for me. But a thing like that!”
He laughed and shrugged his shoulders.
“How did it get there?”
“How did it get there?”
he answered. “Last time I stayed with them,
Tregelly sent it up to me for my critical opinion on
it as a work of art.” He laughed.
“It made me so sick that I locked it up, and
dropped or lost the key, or else I told the man to
put it away. As he’s an ass, I suppose
he packed it among my things. I suppose Tregelly
thought I gave it to his wife, and she thought I gave
it back to him, as I heard no more about the thing
then. But this time, as soon as I arrived,”
he smiled, “it was passionately reclaimed by
both-and I promised to have a look.”
Felicity clapped her hands.
“Then I’ll send it back at once, and-will
you have a look?”
“Good God, no! Never let
me see the thing again.” He took up a paper
as if tired of the subject.
“Did you come back to look for it?” she
asked.
“I came back because I received
a three-volume novel wire from Savile, explaining
what he called the situation.”
“Fancy! Isn’t he wonderful?”
“He’s the limit,” said Chetwode,
laughing.
“But you might tell me, dear
Chetwode; it isn’t really for her that you go
there?”
“Really, Felicity! I hardly
ever see her! She’s always busy with her
children or rattling her house-keeping keys. Oh,
she’s all right-suits Tregelly,
poor chap! Are we through now?” he asked,
with patience.
“No. Won’t you kiss me and forgive
me?”
“Presently,” he said, turning a page of
the paper.
“May I just say that nothing
of this sort could ever have happened if-if
you didn’t go away just a little too much?
From the very first you know you were always absolutely
free. I’ve the greatest horror of bothering
you, or tyrannising in any way, but don’t you
think it’s gone a little too far? If we
hadn’t been rather separated, I couldn’t
have made such a mistake about you. Suppose you’d
found, privately locked up, a similar portrait of
Bertie Wilton, say, wouldn’t you have
thought things?”
“Wilton’s an ass,”
said Chetwode. “But he does know.
To give him his due, I couldn’t have found a
similar portrait of him. He isn’t capable
of allowing such a thing to exist.”
“Well, say a good portrait,”
said Felicity. “Do let us be perfectly
frank with each other.”
“We will,” said Chetwode. “I
am rather sick of Wilton.”
“He’s really an awfully good boy,”
said Felicity.
“Then let him be a good boy somewhere else.
I’m tired of him.”
“I’ll see less of him,” she answered.
“Good!” said Chetwode.
“And-I know it was
a very long speech I made just now, but don’t
you think I’m right?”
“I didn’t hear,” he answered.
“I was listening to your voice.”
“Then must I say it all over
again? I really want you to take it in,
Chetwode,” she said pleadingly.
“Say it all over again, and as much more as
you like, dear.”
“And then will you tell me you haven’t
heard?”
He threw down the newspaper.
“Very likely. I shall have been looking
at your lips.”