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urprise. The girl who sat laughing into Graham's face was not the Anna Klein he remembered, a shy, drab little thing, badly dressed, rather sallow and unsmiling. Here was a young woman undeniably attractive; slightly rouged, trim in her white blouse, and with an air of piquancy that was added, had he known it, by the large imitation pearl earrings she wore. "Get your hat and go to lunch, Graham," he said. "And you might try to remember that a slightly different standard of conduct is expected from my son, here, than may be the standard of some of the other men." "It doesn't mean anything, that sort of fooling." "You and I may know that. The girl may not." Then he went out, and Graham returned unhappily to the inner room. Anna was not crying; she was too frightened to cry. She had sat without moving, her hand still clutching her untouched sandwich. Graham looked at her and tried to smile. "I'm gone, I suppose?" "Don't you worry about that," he said, with boyish bravado. "Don't you worry about that, little girl." "Father will kill me," she whispered. "He's queer these days, and if I go home and have to tell him--" She shuddered. "I'll see you get something else, if the worst comes, you know." She glanced up at him with that look of dog-like fidelity that always touched him. "I'll find you something good," he promised. "Something good," she repeated, with sudden bitterness. "And you'll get another girl here, and flirt with her, and make her crazy about you, and--" "Honestly, do you like me like that?" "I'm just mad about you," she said miserably. Frightened though he was, her wretchedness appealed to him. The thought that she cared for him, too, was a salve to his outraged pride. A moment ago, in the other room, he had felt like a bad small boy. As with Marion, Anna made him feel every inch a man. But she gave him what Marion did not, the feeling of her complete surrender. Marion would take; this girl would give. He bent down and put his arms around her. "Poor little girl!" he said. "Poor little girl!" CHAPTER XV The gay and fashionable crowd of which Audrey had been the center played madly that winter. The short six weeks of the season were already close to an end. By mid-January the south and California would have claimed most of the women and some of the men. There were a few, of course, who saw the inevitable catastrophe: the Mackenzies had laid up their house-boat on the
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