"KATHLEEN CONROY
"P.S.--I began to take some lessons in nursing when I came across a most charming and delightful girl, called Dulcie Clay. Do you happen to know her at all? Her father married again and she was not happy at home, and, having no money, she went in for nursing, seriously (not as I did), but I"m afraid she is not strong enough for the profession. Remember me to Madame Frabelle."
Edith pa.s.sed the letter to Bruce.
"Isn"t this too delightful?" she said; "and exactly like her? She sends Madame Frabelle to me with a letter of introduction, and then asks me who she is!"
"Well," said Bruce, who saw nothing of the absurdity of the situation, "Lady Conroy is a most charming person. It looks almost as if she wanted to decline responsibility. I wouldn"t annoy her for the world. You must give her all the information she wants, of course."
"But all I know I only know from her."
"Exactly. Well, tell her what she told you. Madame Frabelle told us candidly she made her acquaintance at the hotel! But it"s absurd to tell Lady Conroy that back! We can"t!"
Edith found the original letter of introduction, after some searching, and wrote to Lady Conroy to say that she understood Madame Frabelle, who was no connection of hers, was a clever, interesting woman, who wished to study English life in her native land. She was "_of good family; she had been a Miss Eglantine Pollard, and was the widow of a well-to-do French wine merchant_." (This was word for word what Lady Conroy had told her.) She went on to say that she "_believed Madame Frabelle had several friends and connections in London_."
"The Mitch.e.l.ls, for instance," suggested Bruce.
"Yes, that"s a good idea. "_She knows the Mitch.e.l.ls very well_,"" Edith went on writing. ""_I think you know them also; they are very great friends of ours. Mr Mitch.e.l.l is in the Foreign Office_.""
"And the Conistons?" suggested Bruce.
"Yes. "_She knows the Conistons; the nice young brother and sister we are so fond of. She has other friends in London, I believe, but she has not troubled to look them up. The more one sees of her the more one likes her. She is most charming and amiable and makes friends wherever she goes. I don"t think I know anything more than this, dear Lady Conroy. Yours very sincerely, Edith Ottley. P.S.--I have not met Miss Dulcie Clay_.""
Bruce was satisfied with this letter. Edith herself thought it the most amusing letter she had ever written.
"The clergyman whom she met at lunch yesterday, by the way," said Bruce, "wouldn"t it sound well to mention him?"
Edith good-naturedly laughed, and added to the letter: ""_The Rev. Byrne Fraser knows our friend also, and seems to like her_.""
"The only thing is," said Bruce, after a moment"s pause, "perhaps that might do her harm with Lady Conroy, although he"s a clergyman. There have been some funny stories about the Rev. Byrne Fraser."
"He certainly liked her," said Edith. "He wrote her a long letter last night, after meeting her at lunch, to go on with their argument, or conversation, or whatever it was, and she"s going to hear him preach on Sunday."
"Do you feel she would wish Lady Conroy to know that she"s a friend of the Rev. Byrne Fraser?" asked Bruce.
"Oh, I think so; or I wouldn"t have said it."
Edith was really growing more and more loyal in her friendship. There certainly was something about Madame Frabelle that everybody, clever and stupid alike, seemed to be attracted by.
Later Edith received a telephone call from Landi. He told her that he had seen Aylmer, who was going on well, that he had begged to see her, and had been allowed by his doctor and nurse to receive a visit from her on Sat.u.r.day next. He said that Aylmer had been agitated because his boy was going almost immediately to the front. He seemed very pleased at the idea of seeing her again.
Edith looked forward with a certain excitement to Sat.u.r.day.
A day or two later Edith received a letter from Lady Conroy, saying:
"MY DEAR EDITH,
Thank you so much for your nice letter. I remember now, of course, Madame Frabelle was a friend of the Mitch.e.l.ls, whom I know so well, and like so much. What dears they are! Please remember me to them. I knew that she had a friend who was a clergyman, but I wasn"t quite sure who it was. I suppose it must have been this Mr Fraser. She was a Miss Pollard, you know, a very good family, and, as I always understood, the more one knows of her the better one likes her.
"Thanks again for your note. I am longing to see you, and shall call directly I come to London. Ever yours,
"KATHLEEN CONROY
"P.S.--Madame F"s husband was a French wine merchant, and a very charming man, I believe. By the way, also, she knows the Conistons, I believe, and no doubt several people we both know. Miss Clay has gone to London with one of her patients."
Bruce didn"t understand why Edith was so much amused by this letter, nor why she said that she should soon write and ask Lady Conroy who Madame Frabelle was, and that she would probably answer that she was a great friend of Edith"s and of the Mitch.e.l.ls, and the Rev. Byrne Fraser.
"She seems a little doubtful about Fraser, doesn"t she?" Bruce said.
"I mean Lady Conroy. Certainly she"s got rather a funny memory; she doesn"t seem to have the slightest idea that she sent her to you with a letter of introduction. Now we"ve taken all the responsibility on ourselves."
"Well, really I don"t mind," said Edith. "What does it matter? There"s obviously no harm in Madame Frabelle, and never could have been."
"She"s a very clever woman," said Bruce. "I"m always interested when I hear what she has to say about people. I don"t mind telling you that I"m nearly always guided by it."
"So am I," said Edith.
Indeed Edith did sincerely regard her opinion as very valuable. She found her so invariably wrong that she was quite a useful guide. She was never quite sure of her own judgement until Madame Frabelle had contradicted it.
When Edith went to call on Aylmer in the little brown house in Jermyn Street, she was shown first into the dining-room.
In a few minutes a young girl dressed as a nurse came in to speak to her.
She seemed very shy and spoke in a soft voice.
"I"m Miss Clay," she said. "I"ve been nursing for the last six months, but I"m not very strong and was afraid I would have to give it up when I met Mr Ross at Boulogne. He was getting on so well that I came back to look after him and I shall stay until he is quite well, I think."
Evidently this was the Dulcie Clay Lady Conroy had mentioned. Edith was much struck by her. She was a really beautiful girl, with but one slight defect, which some people perhaps, would have rather admired--her skin was rather too dark, and a curious contrast to her beautiful blue eyes.
As a rule the combination of blue eyes and dark hair goes with a fair complexion. Dulcie Clay had a brown skin, clear and pale, such as usually goes with the Spanish type of brunette. But for this curious darkness, which showed up her dazzling white teeth, she was quite lovely. It was a sweet, sensitive face, and her blue eyes, with long eyelashes like little feathers, were charming in their soft expression.
Her smile was very sweet, though she had a look of melancholy. There was something touching about her.
She was below the usual height, slight and graceful. Her hair, parted in the middle, was arranged in the Madonna style in two thick natural waves each side of her face.
She had none of the bustling self-confidence of the lady nurse, but was very gentle and diffident. Surely Aylmer must be in love with her, thought Edith.
Then Miss Clay said, in her low voice:
"You are Mrs Ottley, aren"t you? I knew you at once."
"Did you? How was that?"
A little colour came into the pale, dark face.
"Mr Ross has a little photograph of you," she said, "and once when he was very ill he gave me your name and address and asked me to send it to you if anything happened."