It was a quiet evening, but Rachael liked it. She liked their simple, affectionate talk, their reminiscences, the serenity of the large, plainly furnished rooms, the glowing of coal fires in the old-fashioned steel-barred grates. She liked Alice Valentine’s placidity, the sureness of herself that marked this woman as more highly civilized than so many of the other women Rachael knew. There was none of Judy’s and Gertrude’s and Vera’s excitability and restlessness here. Alice was concerned neither with her own appearance nor her own wants; she was free to comment with amusement or wonder or admiration upon larger affairs. Rachael wondered, as beautiful women have wondered since time began, what held this man so tightly to this mild, plain woman, and by what special gift of the gods Alice Valentine might know herself secure beyond all question in a world of beauty and charm and youth.
“Well, what d’you think of her, Alice?” Doctor Gregory had asked proudly when his wife was on his arm and leave-taking was in order.
“Think you’re lucky, Greg,” Mrs. Valentine answered earnestly. “You’ve got a dear, good, lovely wife!”
“And you are going to let me come and make friends with the boy and the girls some afternoon?” Rachael asked.
“If you will,” their mother said, and she and Rachael kissed each other. Gregory chuckled, in high feather, all the way home.
“You’re a wonder, Ladybird! I have never seen you sweeter nor prettier than you were to-night!”
Rachael leaned back in the car with a long, contented sigh.
“One can see that she was all ready to hate me, Greg; a woman who had been married, and who snapped up her favorite bachelor—”
He laughed triumphantly. “She doesn’t hate you now!”
“No, and I’ll see to it that she never does. She’s my sort of woman, and the children are absolute loves! I like that sort of old-fashioned prejudice—honestly I do—that honor-thy-father-and-thy-mother-and-keep holy-the-sabbath-day sort of person. Don’t you, Greg?”
“We—ll, I don’t like narrowness, sweet.”
“No.” Rachael pondered in the dark. “Yet if you’re not narrow you seem to be—really the only word for it is—loose,” she submitted. “Somehow lately, a great many persons—the girls I know—do seem to be a little bit that way.”
“You don’t find them judging you!” her husband said. Rachael answered only by a rather faint negative; she would not elucidate further. This was one of the things she could never tell Warren, a thing indeed that she would hardly admit to her own soul.