The Happiest Time of Their Lives eBook

Alice Duer Miller
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 246 pages of information about The Happiest Time of Their Lives.

The Happiest Time of Their Lives eBook

Alice Duer Miller
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 246 pages of information about The Happiest Time of Their Lives.

“Those?” Adelaide lifted her eyebrows.  “Ah, you’re in fun!  A collector like you!  Surely you know what those are.”

“No,” answered Mrs. Baxter, firmly, though she wished she had selected something else to comment on.

“Oh, they are the Villanelli embroideries,” said Adelaide, carelessly, very much as if she had said they were the Raphael cartoons, so that Mrs. Baxter was forced to reply in an awestruck tone: 

“You don’t tell me!  Are they, really?”

Adelaide nodded brightly.  She had not actually made up the name.  It was that of an obscure little palace where she had bought the hangings, and if Mrs. Baxter had had the courage to acknowledge ignorance, Adelaide would have told the truth.  As it was, she recognized that by methods such as this she could retain absolute control over people like Mrs. Baxter.

The lady from Baltimore decided on a more general scope.

“Ah, your room!” she said.  “Do you know whose it always reminds me of—­that lovely salon of Madame de Liantour’s?”

“What, of poor little Henrietta’s!” cried Adelaide, and she laid her hand appealingly for an instant on Mrs. Baxter’s knee.  “That’s a cruel thing to say.  All her good things, you know, were sold years ago.  Everything she has is a reproduction.  Am I really like her?”

Getting out of this as best she could on a vague statement about atmosphere and sunshine and charm, Mrs. Baxter took refuge in inquiries about Vincent’s health, “your charming child,” and “your dear father.”

“You know more about my dear father than I do,” returned Adelaide, sweetly.  It was Mrs. Baxter’s cue.

“I did not feel last evening that I knew anything about him at all.  He is in a new phase, almost a new personality.  Tell me, who is this Mrs. Wayne?”

“Mrs. Wayne?” Mrs. Baxter must have felt herself revenged by the complete surprise of Adelaide’s tone.

“Yes, she dined at the house last evening.  Apparently it was to have been a tete-a-tete dinner, but my arrival changed it to a partie carree.”  She talked on about Wilsey and the conversation of the evening, but it made little difference what she said, for her full idea had reached Adelaide from the start, and had gathered to itself in an instant a hundred confirmatory memories.  Like a picture, she saw before her Mrs. Wayne’s sitting-room, with the ink-spots on the rug.  Who would not wish to exchange that for Mr. Lanley’s series of fresh, beautiful rooms?  Suddenly she gave her attention back to Mrs. Baxter, who was saying: 

“I assure you, when we were alone I was prepared for a formal announcement.”

It was not safe to be the bearer of ill tidings to Adelaide.

“An announcement?” she said wonderingly.  “Oh, no, Mrs. Baxter, my father will never marry again.  There have always been rumors, and you can’t imagine how he and I have laughed over them together.”

As the indisputable subject of such rumors in past times, Mrs. Baxter fitted a little arrow in her bow.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Happiest Time of Their Lives from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.