" he teased, "full of forethought and arriere
pensees. Isn't the moment the capture of the divine?"
She sighed a little--wise with the wisdom of frustrated dreams, and she
thought how happy he was--happy with the happiness of iridescent,
ever-changing whimsies.
"Virginia, does that young man love you?"
"Which one?"
"The one in spectacles."
"I don't think so."
"Are you sure?"
"One can never be sure."
"Of course if he doesn't, it proves that I am right in saying that
spectacles are fatal. They prevent people from using either their eyes
or their imagination. Shall I go up to him and ask him?"
"He would answer: 'I don't understand.'"
"And I would explain: 'Virginia is the only lady in orange,' and he
would look at you for a moment or two and, holding out his hand in an
ecstasy of gratitude, he would say: 'Thank you. Yes, I love her.'"
"Matthew," she murmured, "what an unsuitable name."
They sat in silence, interfered with only by the necessity of
convincing passers-by that they did not want to be interrupted.
"Matthew," she said, "do you see that tall fair man?"
"The blond beast?"
"With a very tall woman."
"With gold hair and eyes like cows in pictures of Christ in a manger?"
"Yes. He loves her."
"How suitable."
"But it isn't. He has a red-haired wife."
"How unsuitable."
"Matthew, do be serious. I like him."
"How complicated."
"I told him I hated his air of perfunctory but restrained passion, and
he laughed."
"Any one would have."
"And we made friends."
"You always make friends with everybody."
"You are unsympathetic."
"I am, I confess, a little bewildered by the situation. Do I understand
that you are suffering from an unrequited passion for a man who is
illegitimately attached to a magnificent cow and legitimately bound to a
bewitching squirrel?"
"Matthew, you really are provoking. What I mean is that he is making a
fool of himself."
"Why not?"
"Because he might do something irrevocable."
"Lucky man."
She looked at him in desperation--a desperation half exasperation and
half enchantment. If only Matthew would sometimes appear serious--there
is something so restful about appearances. Instead of which he always
remained superlatively unsatisfactory and superlatively irresistible.
"Virginia," he said, "let us leave all this and drive round the park and
I will talk to you like a lover in a bad book and I will mean every word
I say."
"We can
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