"I don"t know. I"m horribly busy to-day."
"It"s very important. I--I can"t go ahead without it."
"Oh, all right," I said. Madge was listening and I had to be careful. "I must have the suit."
"You can have anything I"ve got. How about the Art Gallery? Art is long and time is fleeting. n.o.body goes there."
"Very well, four o"clock," I replied, and rang off.
"Rather a nice voice," Madge said, eying me. "Think I"ll go along, Kit.
I"ve been shut up in school until the mere thought of even a good-looking tailor makes me thrill."
She was so insistent that I had to go to mother finally, and mother told her she would have to practise. She was furious. Really, mother turned out to be a most understanding person. I got to be quite fond of her. We had a chat that afternoon that brought us closer together than ever.
"Things are doing pretty well, mother," I said when she"d finished Madge.
"He must be interested when he would take that absurd name."
"And the Art Gallery! I dare say he has never voluntarily been inside of one in his life."
"Kit," mother said, "what about your father?"
"Haven"t you told him?"
"No; he wouldn"t understand."
Of course not. I knew men well enough for that. They believe that life and marriage arrange themselves. That it"s all a sort of combination of Providence and chance. Predestination plus opportunity!
"Can"t you tell him you"ve heard something about Russell, and that he"d better be cool to him?"
"And have him turn the man down if it really comes to a proposal!"
"That won"t matter," I told her. "We"ll probably elope anyhow."
Mother opposed that vigorously. She said that no matter how good a match it was, there was always something queer about an elopement. And anyhow she"d been giving wedding gifts for years and it was time something came in instead of going out. It was the only point we differed on.
Well, father did his best to queer things that very day. All the way through I played in hard luck. Just when things were going right something happened.
I met Russell at the Art Gallery. It was a cold day, but I left my m.u.f.f at home. It was about time for the coat-pocket business. I couldn"t afford to wait, for one or two of the girls were wearing their hair like mine, and I"d heard that Toots Warrington had gone to Russell and asked him how he liked kindergartening. Bessie Willing, who told me, said that Russell"s reply was:
"It"s rather pleasant. I"m reversing things. Instead of going from the cradle to the grave, I"m going from the grave to the cradle."
I don"t believe he said it. In the first place, he is too polite. In the second place, he is too stupid. But as Toots is not young he may have thought of it.
He was waiting near a heater, and we sat down together. I shivered.
"Cold, honey?" he asked.
"Hands are cold. Do you mind if I put one in your coat pocket?"
Did he mind? He did not. He was very polite at first and emptied the pocket of various things, including a letter which he mentioned casually was a bill. But after a moment he slid his hand in on top of mine.
"You"re a wonderful young person," he said, "and you"ve got me going."
Then he squeezed the hand until it hurt. Suddenly he looked up.
"Great Scott!" he said. "There"s Henry!"
Of course it was Henry. He had brought a catalogue and was going painstakingly from one picture to another. He did not see us at first, and we had time to stand up and be looking at a landscape when he got to us. He looked moderately surprised and waited to mark something in the catalogue before he joined us.
"Bully show, isn"t it?" he said cheerfully. "Never saw so many good "uns. Well, what are you children up to?"
"Dropped in to get warm," said Russell. And I was going to add something, but Henry"s interest in us had pa.s.sed evidently. He marked another cross in the catalogue and went on, with the light shining on his red hair and his soul clearly as uplifted as his chin.
"You needn"t worry about Henry," I said. "He"s a friend of the family, and I"ll just call him up and tell him not to say anything."
"I used to think he was fond of you."
"That"s all over," I said casually. "It was just one of the things that comes and goes. Like this little--acquaintance of ours."
"What do you mean, goes?" he demanded almost fiercely.
"They always do, don"t they? Awfully pleasant things don"t last. And we can"t go on meeting indefinitely. Some one will tell father, and then where will I be?"
That was a wrong move about father.
"That reminds me," he said. "Are you sure your father dislikes me such a lot?"
"Don"t let"s talk about it," I said, and closed my eyes.
"Because I met him to-day, and he nearly fell on my neck and hugged me."
Can you beat that? I was stunned.
"The more he detests people," I managed finally, "the more polite he is."
Then I took off my gloves and fell to rubbing the fingers of my left hand. And he moved round and put it in the other coat pocket without a word, with his hand over it, and the danger was past, for the time anyhow.
Mother came round that evening about the elopement.
"Perhaps you are right, Katherine," she said. "A lot of people will send things when the announcement cards go out. And Russell can afford to buy you anything you want anyhow."
Madge was a nuisance all that week. She was always at the telephone first when it rang, and I did not like her tone when she said it was Herschenrother again. Once I could have sworn that I saw her following me, but she ducked into a shop when I turned round.
She had transferred her affections to Henry, and he took her to a cotillon or two for the school set, and played round with the youngsters generally, and showed her a sweet time, as she said.
But once when mother and I had been shut in my room, going over my clothes and making notes of what I would take with me, if the thing came to an elopement--I was pretty sure by that time, and we planned a sort of week-end outfit without riding things--I opened the door suddenly, and Madge was just outside.
Well, we got her back to school finally, and Henry took her to the train. I remember mother"s watching them as they got into the car together.