"I"m feeling a little uneasy about Dorothy. I got a letter this morning from Aunt Carrie, saying she was not feeling so well. The doctor was going to see her to-day, and, if she got worse, they said they"d telegraph."
Ray looked at her sister in consternation.
"What would you do then?"
"I would have to go at once to Philadelphia."
"And Kenneth just come home--oh, Helen!"
"I couldn"t help it. Kenneth couldn"t go. Somebody must go. The child could not be left alone. Who should go better than its mother?"
Ray made a gesture of protest.
"Well, don"t let"s imagine the worst. Dorothy won"t get worse.
To-morrow you"ll get a rea.s.suring letter, and your worries will be over."
"I hope so," smiled Helen.
Leaving the task of sorting the knives and forks Ray came over to where Helen was standing. The young girl pointed to all the vases filled with the crimson roses.
"How do you like that?" she exclaimed.
"Beautiful!"
There was a brief silence, both women being preoccupied by their thoughts, when Ray, in her usual vivacious, impulsive way, burst out:
"Sis, I have something to tell you."
Helen looked up quickly.
"Something to tell me--something good?"
"I"m so happy! I"m engaged at last."
"To Wilbur, of course?"
"Yes."
Helen gave an exclamation of joy.
"Oh, I"m so glad. When did it happen? Tell me all about it--quick."
"He proposed to-day, and I said yes. We"re to be married in two months."
The next moment the two women were in each other"s arms.
"I"m so glad--so glad," murmured Helen. "I hope you"ll both be very, very happy."
"We certainly shall if we are like you and Kenneth. Wilbur says that your example is the one thing that decided him to make the plunge."
Helen smiled.
"You"ll have one advantage I don"t enjoy. Your husband, being a lawyer, won"t be taking trips to South Africa all the time."
"Oh, I don"t know," laughed the girl; "it"s sometimes nice to lose sight of each other for a time. The lovemaking is all the more furious when your husband gets back."
"Yes--unless he happens to meet some other charmer on his travels."
"Oh, nonsense, Helen--men don"t really have such adventures. That only happens in novels."
"I hope so," murmured her sister.
"Oh, by the bye," exclaimed Ray, "who do you suppose we saw on the dock?"
"Who?"
"That horrid creature--Signor Keralio."
Helen looked up in surprise.
"Keralio? What was he doing there? Did he speak to you?"
"No--he seemed to avoid us. Once I got lost for a moment in the crush, and, as I turned, I thought I saw him talking earnestly to Kenneth and Francois. Of course I must have been mistaken, for, when I finally rejoined them, both denied having seen him!"
"Keralio!" murmured Helen. "How strange! That man seems to pursue us like some evil genius. No matter where we go, he follows like a shadow. Oh, I forgot all about Francois. Where is he?"
"Downstairs."
Helen touched a bell.
"Why do you need him?"
"Kenneth wants him. I forgot all about it. All his things need putting away. The litter upstairs is simply terrible."
"There won"t be much time for unpacking," objected Ray. "It"s half-past five already. We"ll soon have to think of dressing for dinner."
Suddenly the door opened and Francois appeared. He entered quietly, stealthily, and, advancing to where his mistress was, stood in silence, awaiting her orders.
"Your master wants you upstairs, Francois."
The man bowed.
"_Bien_, madame!"
"Tell Mr. Traynor not to keep you too long, because there"s a lot of work to be done downstairs before dinner."
"_Bien_, madame."