ll never give up,
for common, and indeed very vulgar, sinfulness."
"Confusing the pastel with the oleograph," dropped out Mrs. Chetwinde,
looking abstractedly at an old red woman in a turret of ostrich plumes,
who was spread out on the other side of the room before a plate of
cakes.
"You are sure Lady Ermyntrude didn't understand?" said Daventry, with a
certain sharp legality of manner.
"You mean that she might be wicked instead of only stupid?"
"Well, yes. I suppose it does come to that."
"Believe me, Mr. Daventry, she's a quite honest stupid woman. She
honestly thinks that I'm a horrible creature."
And Mrs. Clarke began to bite the crisp toast with her lovely teeth.
Mrs. Chetwinde's eyes dwelt on her for a brief instant with, Dion
thought, a rather peculiar look which he could not quite understand. It
had, perhaps, a hint of hardness, or of cold admiration, something of
that kind, in it.
"Tell me some more about the baby," was Mrs. Clarke's next remark,
addressed to Dion. "I want to get away for a minute into a happy
domestic life. And yours is that, I know."
How peculiarly haggard, and yet how young she looked as she said that!
She added:
"If the case ends as I feel sure it will, I hope your wife and I shall
get to know each other. I hear she's the most delightful woman in
London, and extraordinarily beautiful. Isn't she?"
"I think she is beautiful," Dion said simply.
And then they talked about Robin, while Mrs. Chetwinde and Daventry
discussed some question of the day. Before they parted Dion could not
help saying:
"I want to ask you something."
"Yes?"
"Why do you feel sure that the trial will end as it ought to end? Surely
the lack of the psychological instinct is peculiarly abundant--if a
lack can be abundant!"--he smiled, almost laughed, a little
deprecatingly--"in a British jury?"
"And so you think they're likely to go wrong in their verdict?"
"Doesn't it rather follow?"
She stared at him, and her eyes were, or looked, even more widely opened
than usual. After a long pause she said;
"You wish to frighten me."
She got up, and began to draw on her dove-colored Swedish kid gloves.
"Tippie," she said to Mrs. Chetwinde, "I must go home now and have a
little rest."
Only then did Dion realize how marvelously she was bearing a tremendous
strain. He began to admire her prodigiously.
When he said good-by to her under the great porch he couldn't help
asking:
"Are your
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