It was the cottage of a New York millionaire
which had fallen to Brewster. The owner had,
for the time, preferred Italy to St. Augustine, and
left his estate, which was well located and lavishly
equipped, in the hands of his friends. Brewster’s
lease covered three months, at a fabulous rate per
month. With Joe Bragdon installed as manager-in-chief,
his establishment was transferred bodily from New
York, and the rooms were soon as comfortable as their
grandeur would permit. Brewster was not allowed
to take advantage of his horses and the new automobile
which preceded him from New York, but to his guests
they offered unlimited opportunities. “Nopper”
Harrison had remained in the north to renew arrangements
for the now hated ball and to look after the advance
details of the yacht cruise. Dr. Lotless and his
sister, with “Subway” Smith and the Grays,
made up Brewster’s party. Lotless dampened
Monty’s spirits by relentlessly putting him on
rigid diet, with most discouraging restrictions upon
his conduct. The period of convalescence was
to be an exceedingly trying one for the invalid.
At first he was kept in-doors, and the hours were whiled
away by playing cards. But Monty considered “bridge”
the “pons asinorum,” and preferred to
play piquet with Peggy. It was one of these games
that the girl interrupted with a question that had
troubled her for many days. “Monty,”
she said, and she found it much more difficult than
when she had rehearsed the scene in the silence of
her walks; “I’ve heard a rumor that Miss
Drew and her mother have taken rooms at the hotel.
Wouldn’t it be pleasanter to have them here?”
A heavy gloom settled upon Brewster’s
face, and the girl’s heart dropped like lead.
She had puzzled over the estrangement, and wondered
if by any effort of her own things could be set right.
At times she had had flashing hopes that it did not
mean as much to Monty as she had thought. But
down underneath, the fear that he was unhappy seemed
the only certain thing in life. She felt that
she must make sure. And together with the very
human desire to know the worst, was the puritanical
impulse to bring it about.
“You forget that this is the
last place they would care to invade.” And
in Brewster’s face Peggy seemed to read that
for her martyrdom was the only wear. Bravely
she put it on.
“Monty, I forget nothing that
I really know. But this is a case in which you
are quite wrong. Where is your sporting blood?
You have never fought a losing fight before, and you
can’t do it now. You have lost your nerve,
Monty. Don’t you see that this is the time
for an aggressive campaign?” Somehow she was
not saying things at all as she had planned to say
them. And his gloom weighed heavily upon her.
“You don’t mind, do you, Monty,”
she added, more softly, “this sort of thing
from me? I know I ought not to interfere, but
I’ve known you so long. And I hate to see
things twisted by a very little mistake.”
But Monty did mind enormously.
He had no desire to talk about the thing anyway, and
Peggy’s anxiety to marry him off seemed a bit
unnecessary. Manifestly her own interest in him
was of the coldest. From out of the gloom he
looked at her somewhat sullenly. For the moment
she was thinking only of his pain, and her face said
nothing.
“Peggy,” he exclaimed,
finally, resenting the necessity of answering her,
“you don’t in the least know what you are
talking about. It is not a fit of anger on Barbara
Drew’s part. It is a serious conviction.”
“A conviction which can be changed,” the
girl broke in.
“Not at all.” Brewster
took it up. “She has no faith in me.
She thinks I’m an ass.”
“Perhaps she’s right,”
she exclaimed, a little hot. “Perhaps you
have never discovered that girls say many things to
hide their emotions. Perhaps you don’t
realize what feverish, exclamatory, foolish things
girls are. They don’t know how to be honest
with the men they love, and they wouldn’t if
they did. You are little short of an idiot, Monty
Brewster, if you believed the things she said rather
than the things she looked.”
And Peggy, fiery and determined and
defiantly unhappy, threw down her cards and escaped
so that she might not prove herself tearfully feminine.
She left Brewster still heavily enveloped in melancholy;
but she left him puzzled. He began to wonder
if Barbara Drew did have something in the back of
her mind. Then he found his thoughts wandering
off toward Peggy and her defiance. He had only
twice before seen her in that mood, and he liked it.
He remembered how she had lost her temper once when
she was fifteen, and hated a girl he admired.
Suddenly he laughed aloud at the thought of the fierce
little picture she had made, and the gloom, which
had been so sedulously cultivated, was dissipated
in a moment. The laugh surprised the man who brought
in some letters. One of them was from “Nopper”
Harrison, and gave him all the private news.
The ball was to be given at mid-Lent, which arrived
toward the end of March, and negotiations were well
under way for the chartering of the “Flitter,”
the steam-yacht belonging to Reginald Brown, late of
Brown & Brown.
The letter made Brewster chafe under
the bonds of inaction. His affairs were getting
into a discouraging state. The illness was certain
to entail a loss of more than $50,000 to his business.
His only consolation came through Harrison’s
synopsis of the reports from Gardner, who was managing
the brief American tour of the Viennese orchestra.
Quarrels and dissensions were becoming every-day embarrassments,
and the venture was an utter failure from a financial
point of view. Broken contracts and lawsuits were
turning the tour into one continuous round of losses,
and poor Gardner was on the point of despair.
From the beginning, apparently, the concerts had been
marked for disaster. Public indifference had
aroused the scorn of the irascible members of the
orchestra, and there was imminent danger of a collapse
in the organization. Gardner lived in constant
fear that his troop of quarrelsome Hungarians would
finish their tour suddenly in a pitched battle with
daggers and steins. Brewster smiled at the thought
of practical Gardner trying to smooth down the electric
emotions of these musicians.
A few days later Mrs. Prentiss Drew
and Miss Drew registered at the Ponce de Leon, and
there was much speculation upon the chances for a
reconciliation. Monty, however, maintained a strict
silence on the subject, and refused to satisfy the
curiosity of his friends. Mrs. Drew had brought
down a small crowd, including two pretty Kentucky girls
and a young Chicago millionaire. She lived well
and sensibly, with none of the extravagance that characterized
the cottage. Yet it was inevitable that Brewster’s
guests should see hers and join some of their riding
parties. Monty pleaded that he was not well enough
to be in these excursions, but neither he nor Barbara
cared to over-emphasize their estrangement.
Peggy Gray was in despair over Monty’s
attitude. She had become convinced that behind
his pride he was cherishing a secret longing for Barbara.
Yet she could not see how the walls were to be broken
down if he maintained this icy reserve. She was
sure that the masterful tone was the one to win with
a girl like that, but evidently Monty would not accept
advice. That he was mistaken about Barbara’s
feeling she did not doubt for a moment, and she saw
things going hopelessly wrong for want of a word.
There were times when she let herself dream of possibilities,
but they always ended by seeming too impossible.
She cared too much to make the attainment of her vision
seem simple. She cared too much to be sure of
anything.
At moments she fancied that she might
say a word to Miss Drew which would straighten things
out. But there was something about her which
held her off. Even now that they were thrown together
more or less she could not get beyond a certain barrier.
It was not until a sunny day when she had accepted
Barbara’s invitation to drive that things seemed
to go more easily. For the first time she felt
the charm of the girl, and for the first time Barbara
seemed unreservedly friendly. It was a quiet
drive they were taking through the woods and out along
the beach, and somehow in the open air things simplified
themselves. Finally, in the softness and the
idle warmth, even an allusion to Monty, whose name
usually meant an embarrassing change of subject, began
to seem possible. It was inevitable that Peggy
should bring it in; for with her a question of tact
was never allowed to dominate when things of moment
were at stake. She cowered before the plunge,
but she took it unafraid.
“The doctor says Monty may go
out driving to-morrow,” she began. “Isn’t
that fine?”
Barbara’s only response was
to touch her pony a little too sharply with the whip.
Peggy went on as if unconscious of the challenge.
“He has been bored to death,
poor fellow, in the house all this time, and ”
“Miss Gray, please do not mention
Mr. Brewster’s name to me again,” interrupted
Barbara, with a contraction of the eyebrows. But
Peggy was seized with a spirit of defiance and plunged
recklessly on.
“What is the use, Miss Drew,
of taking an attitude like that? I know the situation
pretty well, and I can’t believe that either
Monty or you has lost in a week a feeling that was
so deep-seated. I know Monty much too well to
think that he would change so easily.” Peggy
still lived largely in her ideals. “And
you are too fine a thing not to have suffered under
this misunderstanding. It seems as if a very small
word would set you both straight.”
Barbara drew herself up and kept her
eyes on the road which lay white and gleaming in the
sun. “I have not the least desire to be
set straight.” And she was never more serious.
“But it was only a few weeks ago that you were
engaged.”
“I am sorry,” answered
Barbara, “that it should have been talked about
so much. Mr. Brewster did ask me to marry him,
but I never accepted. In fact, it was only his
persistence that made me consider the matter at all.
I did think about it. I confess that I rather
liked him. But it was not long before I found
him out.”
“What do you mean?” And
there was a flash in Peggy’s eyes. “What
has he done?”
“To my certain knowledge he
has spent more than four hundred thousand dollars
since last September. That is something, is it
not?” Miss Drew said, in her slow, cool voice,
and even Peggy’s loyalty admitted some justification
in the criticism.
“Generosity has ceased to be
a virtue, then?” she asked coldly.
“Generosity!” exclaimed
Barbara, sharply. “It’s sheer idiocy.
Haven’t you heard the things people are saying?
They are calling him a fool, and in the clubs they
are betting that he will be a pauper within a year.”
“Yet they charitably help him
to spend his money. And I have noticed that even
worldly mammas find him eligible.” The comment
was not without its caustic side.
“That was months ago, my dear,”
protested Barbara, calmly. “When he spoke
to me he told me it would be impossible
for him to marry within a year. And don’t
you see that a year may make him an abject beggar?”
“Naturally anything is preferable
to a beggar,” came in Peggy’s clear, soft
voice.
Barbara hesitated only a moment.
“Well, you must admit, Miss
Gray, that it shows a shameful lack of character.
How could any girl be happy with a man like that?
And, after all, one must look out for one’s
own fate.”
“Undoubtedly,” replied
Peggy, but many thoughts were dashing through her
brain.
“Shall we turn back to the cottage?”
she said, after an awkward silence.
“You certainly don’t approve
of Mr. Brewster’s conduct?” Barbara did
not like to be placed in the wrong, and felt that she
must endeavor to justify herself. “He is
the most reckless of spend-thrifts, we know, and he
probably indulges in even less respectable excitement.”
Peggy was not tall, but she carried
her head at this moment as though she were in the
habit of looking down on the world.
“Aren’t you going a little
too far, Miss Drew?” she asked placidly.
“It is not only New York that
laughs at his Quixotic transactions,” Barbara
persisted. “Mr. Hampton, our guest from
Chicago, says the stories are worse out there than
they are in the east.”
“It is a pity that Monty’s
illness should have made him so weak,” said
Peggy quietly, as they turned in through the great
iron gates, and Barbara was not slow to see the point.