About lunch time on the next day she received a note from Jacks. His attention had been drawn—he wrote—to an absurd bit of gossip connecting his name with that of a lady whose friend he was, and absolutely nothing more. Would Miss Derwent, if occasion arose, do him the kindness to contradict this story in her circle? He would be greatly obliged to her.
Irene was something more than surprised. It struck her as odd that Arnold Jacks should request her services in such a matter as this. In an obscure way she half resented the brief, off-hand missive. And she paid no further attention to it.
A month later, she, her father and brother, were on their way to Switzerland. Stepping into the boat at Dover, she saw in front of her Arnold Jacks. It was a perfectly smooth passage, and they talked all the way; for part of the time, alone.
“I think,” said Arnold, at the first opportunity, looking her in the face, “you never replied to a letter of mine last month about a certain private affair?”
“A letter? Oh, yes. I didn’t think it required an answer.”
“Don’t you generally answer letters from your friends?”
Irene, in turn, gave him a steady look.
“Generally, yes. But not when I have the choice between silence and being disagreeable.”
“You were both silent and disagreeable,” said Arnold, smiling. “Do you mind being disagreeable again, and telling me what your answer would have been?”
“Simply that I never, if I can help it, talk about weddings and rumours of weddings, and that I couldn’t make an exception in your case.”
Arnold laughed in the old way.
“A most original rule, Miss Derwent, and admirable. If all kept to it I shouldn’t have been annoyed by that silly chatter. It occurs to me that I perhaps ought not to have sent you that note. I did it in a moment of irritation—wanting to have the stupid thing contradicted right and left, as fast as possible. I won’t do it again.”