Howard’s eyes grew sharp; but he smiled languidly, as he said:
“You ought to edit a riddle book, Bertie, my son. I think we should get across the room now. I should be greatly obliged if you would introduce me to Miss Heron.”
“All right,” said Bertie, “come along! But I warn you, you’ll only meet with a cold reception; just a smile and a word and then she’ll look away as if she’d forgotten your existence, and had not the least desire to remember it.”
“Oh, I’m used to that,” said Howard. “Lead on.”
As they crossed the room, Howard’s acute brain was hard at work. There was something in Stafford’s conduct, a tone in his letters which Howard could never understand; but now, in the light of Bertie’s mysterious communication, he thought he discerned a solution of the problem over which he had pondered for many an hour. Stafford had been unhappy during the whole of his engagement to poor Maude; he had exiled himself again immediately after her death, though, as Howard knew, he was well enough off now to return to England and to live, at any rate, in a quiet way. If there was anything in Bertie’s suggestion—Howard pursed his lips with an air of determination. If there was anything, then he would find it out and act accordingly. Stafford’s happiness was very precious to Howard, and in the quiet, resolute, cynical way characteristic to him, he resolved that if that happiness lay in the hands of this beautiful girl with the sad eyes and lips, he, Howard, would do his best to persuade her to yield it up.
His reception was certainly not encouraging. Ida glanced at him, and returned his bow with a slight inclination of her head, and then looked away as if she had done all that could be demanded of her; and it was with a faint surprise, perceptible in her face, that she heard Howard say, in his slow, and rather drawling voice:
“There is a conservatory behind that glass door, Miss Heron; it is not very far from the madding crowd, but it must be cooler than here. Will you let me take you to it?”
She hesitated for a moment, but something in the steady regard of Howard’s calm and sleepy eyes impressed her.
“Very well,” she said; “but I think I’m engaged for this next dance, and I must not go far away. I have already broken two or three engagements.”
“In that case you can come without hesitation,” he said. “It is the first crime that costs a pang, having passed that the downward course is easy and painless.”
He led her to a seat, and with the cool determination which Stafford always admired in him, began at once; for he did not wish to give her time to slip on her woman’s armour; he intended to strike quickly, unexpectedly, so that she should not be able to conceal the effect of the blow.
“Almost as hot as in Australia,” he said, languidly, but watching her out of the tail of his eye. “I suppose you were never there, Miss Heron? Nor have I been; but I’ve got a letter in my pocket from a very great friend of mine who is roughing it on a cattle-run, and he has so often described the country to me, that I almost feel as if I knew it. By the way, I think you know him. He is my dearest and closest friend— Stafford Orme, as I always call him and think of him; of course I am speaking of Lord Highcliffe.”