“Won’t you tell me why I can make no one hear?” she repeated, still good-naturedly but frowning slightly at his silence.
“Mrs. Tallente is in London,” he announced. “She has taken most of the establishment with her.”
The visitor fumbled in her side pocket and produced a diminutive ivory case. She withdrew a card and handed it to Tallente, with a glance at his gloved hands.
“Will you give this to the butler?” she begged. “Tell him to tell his mistress that I was sorry not to find her at home.”
“The butler,” Tallente explained, “has gone for the milk. He shall have the card immediately on his return.”
She looked at him for a moment and then smiled.
“Do forgive me,” she said. “I believe you are Mr. Tallente?”
He drew off his gloves and shook hands.
“How did you guess that?” he asked.
“From the illustrated papers, of course,” she answered. “I have come to the conclusion that you must be a very vain man, I have seen so many pictures of you lately.”
“A matter of snapshots,” he replied, “for which, as a rule, the victim is not responsible. You should abjure such a journalistic vice as picture papers.”
“Why?” she laughed. “They lead to such pleasant surprises. I had been led to believe, for instance, by studying the Daily Mirror, that you were quite an elderly person with a squint.”
“I am becoming self-conscious,” he confessed. “Won’t you come in? There is a boy somewhere about the premises who can look after your horse, and I shall be able to give you some tea as soon as Robert gets back with the milk.”
He cooeed to the boy, who came up from one of the lower shelves of garden, and she followed him into the hall. He looked around him for a moment in some perplexity.
“I wonder whether you would mind coming into my study?” he suggested. “I am here quite alone for the present, and it is the only room I use.”
She followed him down a long passage into a small apartment at the extreme end of the house.
“You are like me,” she said. “I keep most of my rooms shut up and live in my den. A lonely person needs so much atmosphere.”
“Rather a pigsty, isn’t it?” he remarked, sweeping a heap of books from a chair. “I am without a secretary just now—in fact,” he went on, with a little burst of confidence engendered by her friendly attitude, “we are in a mess altogether.”
She laughed softly, leaning back amongst the cushions of the chair and looking around the room, her kindly eyes filled with interest.