When Angela had read the letter twice she let it fall, and again took up the bottle of perfume. Untying the bow of pink ribbon, she pulled out the heart-shaped glass stopper, and breathed the fragrance of “Parfait d’Amour, made from California flowers.”
The name might be laughable, but the fragrance was exquisite as the sweet air among the orange groves.
Angela sighed, without knowing that she sighed, as she put the bottle down and pushed it away.
She did not even look at it again until she was ready to switch off the electric light, and try to sleep, after Kate had finished her ministrations. Then, once more, Mrs. May sniffed daintily at the “Parfait d’Amour,” as a bird hovers near a tempting crumb thrown by a hand it fears. She wondered what flowers made up this sweetness, so different from any perfume she had known.
“It’s California,” she said to herself. “Essence of California.”
Long after she had gone to bed, Angela lay awake, not restless, but vaguely excited, as she listened to a mouse in the hinterland of the wall, and thought her own thoughts, that floated from subject to subject. But always she could smell the perfume which—or she imagined it—filled the room with its sweetness. It was a pity that the scent had been given such a silly name!
“If the people of this country can be unconventional when they like, why shouldn’t I be unconventional, if I like?” she asked of the darkness. “It’s so gay and amusing to make believe, and so—beautiful.” It occurred to her that she had just begun to live. Now a door had opened before her eyes, and she saw a new world that was big and glorious, ready to give her a welcome.
“There’s something in being a married woman, and going about as I choose,” she thought, “even if it is only in the country of make-believe. Why shouldn’t I do what he asks me to do? I’m only Mrs. May, whom nobody knows! And it would be fun. I haven’t had any fun since I was a little, little girl.”
* * * * *
Perhaps Nick had been right to trust his luck to her dreams; or perhaps it was the influence of the letter. In any case, at eight o’clock next morning, Angela, with her hair hanging over her shoulders, and dreams still in her eyes, was ringing up Mr. Hilliard by telephone at the Alexandria Hotel.
“It’s only to say that you may take me—and Kate—and the cat—and some luggage—to Santa Barbara this morning. That is, if you still want to? Oh, thanks! You’re very kind. It’s settled only about to-day, you know! Yes. Ten o’clock will suit me.”