Julia laughed gaily, and as they both made a capital tea, they talked of all manner of trivial things. They were absurdly glad to see one another again, and each was ready to be amused at everything the other said. But the conversation would have been unintelligible to a listener, since they mostly talked together, and every now and then made a little scene when one insisted that the other should listen to what he was saying.
Suddenly Mrs. Crowley threw up her hands with a gesture of dismay.
"Oh, how stupid of me!" she cried. "I quite forgot to tell you why I telegraphed to you the other day."
"I know," he retorted.
"Do you? Why?"
"Because you"re the most disgraceful flirt I ever saw in my life," he answered promptly.
She opened her eyes wide with a very good imitation of complete amazement.
"My dear Mr. Lomas, have you never contemplated yourself in a looking-gla.s.s?"
"You"re not a bit repentant of the havoc you have wrought," he cried dramatically.
She did not answer, but looked at him with a smile so entirely delightful that he cried out irritably:
"I wish you wouldn"t look like that."
"How am I looking?" she smiled.
"To my innocent and inexperienced gaze very much as if you wanted to be kissed."
"You brute!" she cried. "I"ll never speak to you again."
"Why do you make such rash statements? You know you couldn"t hold you tongue for two minutes together."
"What a libel! I never can get a word in edgeways when I"m with you,"
she returned. "You"re such a chatterbox."
"I don"t know why you put on that aggrieved air. You seem to forget that it"s I who ought to be furious."
"On the contrary, you behaved very unkindly to me a month ago, and I"m only here to-day because I have a Christian disposition."
"You forget that for the last four weeks I"ve been laboriously piecing together the fragments of a broken heart," he answered.
"It was entirely your fault," she laughed. "If you hadn"t been so certain I was going to accept you, I should never have refused. I couldn"t resist the temptation of saying no, just to see how you took it."
"I flatter myself I took it very well."
"You didn"t," she answered. "You showed an entire lack of humour. You might have known that a nice woman doesn"t accept a man the first time he asks her. It was very silly of you to go to Homburg as if you didn"t care. How was I to know that you meant to wait a month before asking me again?"
He looked at her for a moment calmly.
"I haven"t the least intention of asking you again."
But it required much more than this to put Julia Crowley out of countenance.
"Then why on earth did you invite me to tea?"
"May I respectfully remind you that you invited yourself?" he protested.
"That"s just like a man. He will go into irrelevant details," she answered.
"Now, don"t be cross," he smiled.
"I shall be cross if I want to," she exclaimed, with a little stamp of her foot. "You"re not being at all nice to me."
He looked at her thoughtfully for a moment, and his eyes twinkled.
"Do you know what I"d do if I were you?"
"No, what?"
"Well, _I_ can"t suffer the humiliation of another refusal. Why don"t you propose to me?"
"What cheek!" she cried.
Their eyes met, and she smiled.
"What will you say if I do?"
"That entirely depends on how you do it."
"I don"t know how," she murmured plaintively.
"Yes, you do," he insisted. "You gave me an admirable lesson. First you go on your bended knees, and then you say you"re quite unworthy of me."
"You are the most spiteful creature I"ve ever known," she laughed.
"You"re just the sort of man who"d beat his wife."
"Every Sat.u.r.day night regularly," he agreed.
She hesitated, looking at him.
"Well?" he said.
"I shan"t," she answered.
"Then I shall continue to be a brother to you."
She got up and curtsied.
"Mr. Lomas, I am a widow, twenty-nine years of age, and extremely eligible. My maid is a treasure, and my dressmaker is charming. I"m clever enough to laugh at your jokes and not so learned as to know where they come from."
"Really you"re very long winded. I said it all in four words."