"I hope mademoiselle," Marie corrected herself, "has not caught a fever."
"I should hope not," exclaimed Marjory. "What put that into your head?"
"Mademoiselle"s cheeks are very hot."
Marjory brought her hand to her face. It did not feel hot, because her hands were equally hot.
"It is nothing but the excitement that brings the color," she informed Marie. "I have been living almost like a nun; and now--to get out all at once takes away one"s breath.
"Also being a bride."
"Marie!"
"Eh bien, madame--mademoiselle was married only this morning."
"You do not seem to understand," Marjory explained; "but it is necessary that you should understand. Monsieur Covington is to me only like--like a big brother. It is in order that he might be with me as a big brother we went through the ceremony. People about here talk a great deal, and I have taken his name to prevent that. That is all.
And you are to remain with me and everything is to go on exactly as before, he in his apartments and we in ours. You understand now?"
At least, Marie heard.
"It is rather an amusing situation, is it not?" demanded Marjory.
"I--I do not know," replied Marie.
"Then in time you shall see. In the mean while, you might smile. Why do you not smile?"
"I--I do not know," Marie replied honestly.
"You must learn how. It is necessary. It is necessary even to laugh.
Monsieur Covington laughed a great deal this afternoon."
"He--he is a man," observed Marie, as if that were some explanation.
"Eh bien--is it men alone who have the privilege of laughing?"
"I do not know," answered Marie; "but I have noticed that men laugh a great deal more about some things than women."
"Then that is because women are fools," affirmed Marjory petulantly.
Though Marie was by no means convinced, she was ready to drop the matter in her admiration of the picture her mistress made when properly gowned. Whether she wished or not, madame, when she was done with her this evening, looked as a bride should look. And monsieur, waiting below, was worthy of her.
In his evening clothes he looked at least a foot taller than usual.
Marie saw his eyes warm as he slipped over madame"s beautiful white shoulders her evening wrap.
[Ill.u.s.tration: Monsieur"s eyes warmed as he slipped the wrap over madame"s shoulders]
Before madame left she turned and whispered in Marie"s ear.
"I may be late," she said; "but you will be here when I return."
"Yes, mademoiselle."
"Without fail?"
"Yes, mademoiselle."
Marie watched monsieur take his bride"s arm as they went out the door, and the thing she whispered to herself had nothing to do with madame at all.
"Poor monsieur!" she said.
CHAPTER X
THE AFFAIR AT MAXIM"S
It was all new to Marjory. In the year and a half she had lived in Paris with her aunt she had dined mostly in her room. Such cafes as this she had seen only occasionally from a cab on her way to the opera.
As she stood at the entrance to the big room, which sparkled like a diamond beneath a light, she was as dazed as a debutante entering her first ballroom. The head waiter, after one glance at Monte, was bent upon securing the best available table. Here was an American prince, if ever he had seen one.
Had monsieur any choice?
Decidedly. He desired a quiet table in a corner, not too near the music.
Such a table was immediately secured, and as Covington crossed the room with Marjory by his side he was conscious of being more observed than ever he had been when entering the Riche alone. His bandaged arm lent him a touch of distinction, to be sure; but this served only to turn eyes back again to Marjory, as if seeking in her the cause for it. She moved like a princess, with her head well up and her dark eyes brilliant.
"All eyes are upon you," he smiled, when he had given his order.
"If they are it"s very absurd," she returned.
Also, if they were, it did not matter. That was the fact she most appreciated. Ever since she had been old enough to observe that men had eyes, it had been her duty to avoid those eyes. That had been especially true in Paris, and still more especially true in the few weeks she had been there alone.
Now, with Monte opposite her, she was at liberty to meet men"s eyes and study them with interest. There was no danger. It was they who turned away from her--after a glance at Monte. It amused her to watch them turn away; it gave her a new sense of power. But of one thing she was certain: there was not a man in the lot with whom she would have felt comfortable to be here as she felt comfortable with Monte.
Monte was having a very pleasant time of it. The thing that surprised him was the way Marjory quickened his zest in old things that had become stale. Here, for instance, she took him back to the days when he had responded with a piquant tingle to the lights and the music and the gay Parisian chatter, to the quick glance of smiling eyes where adventure lurked. He had been content to observe without accepting the challenges, princ.i.p.ally because he lived mostly in the sunshine.
To-night, in a clean, decent way, he felt again the old tingle. But this time it came from a different source. When Marjory raised her eyes to his, the lights blazed as brilliantly as if a hundred new ones had been lighted; the music mixed with his blood until his thoughts danced.
With the coffee he lighted a cigarette and leaned back contentedly until it was time to go.
As they went out of the room, he was aware that once again all eyes were turned toward her, so that he threw back his shoulders a little farther than usual and looked about with some scorn at those who had with them only ordinary women.
The comedy at the Gymnase was sufficiently amusing to hold her attention, and that was the best she could ask for; but Monte watched it indifferently, resenting the fact that it did hold her attention.
Besides, there were too many people all about her here. For two hours and a half it was as if she had gone back into the crowd. He was glad when the final curtain rang down and he was able to take her arm and guide her out.
"Maxim"s next?" he inquired.
"Do you want to go?" she asked.