“Friday night!” Harriet smiled. For Friday night was the night for a men’s dinner and poker game at the country club, and Richard usually liked to be there.
“I can come back!” he persisted, suddenly caring more for this concession than anything else in the world. Without another word she agreed, bade her Frenchman what seemed to Richard a voluble good-bye, and when the bowing officer disappeared turned with a reminiscent smile.
“And now what?”
“Where did you learn to chatter French that way?” Richard said, leading the way to the line of parked motors.
“Oh, we lived in Paris—old Mrs. Rogers and I,” Harriet reminded him carelessly. And reaching the little rise of ground that lay between the clubhouse and the parking field, she stood still, looking off across the exquisite spread of fields and valleys, banded by great strips of woods, and flooded now by the streaming shadows and golden lights of the late afternoon. “What a day!” she said, filling her lungs with great breaths of the sweet air. “What an hour!”
“What I meant to say to you up there on the porch,” Richard said, “when that—that woman interrupted—”
Harriet herself interrupted with a laugh.
“You say ‘that woman’ as if it was a bitter, deadly curse!” she said.
“Well—” They had reached the car now, and Richard was investigating the oil gauge and spark plugs under the hood. “Well, a woman like that breaks in—nothing to her!” he said with scorn, straightening up.
“Yes, but at a country club?” Harriet offered, placatingly, as she got into the front seat, and tucked the pongee robe snugly about the saffron-coloured gown.
“I suppose so!” He got in beside her; there was a moment of backing and wrenching before they glided out smoothly on the white driveway. “What I meant to say was this,” he added, suddenly, with a sidewise glance from his wheel. “I—I want you to realize that I appreciate the injustice—the crudeness of my rushing to you in New Jersey that Christmas Day. I realize that we all have imposed on you—we’ve taken you too much for granted! I was in trouble, and I couldn’t think of any other way out of it. But for any man to put a proposition like that to any woman—”
They were driving very slowly. He looked at her again, and met a wondering look in her beautiful eyes that still further confused him. He had been uncomfortably conscious of an odd confusion in touching upon this subject at all. Yet his mind had been full of it all day.
“I never felt it so, I assure you!” Harriet said with her lucid, friendly look. Richard felt that there was more to say, but realized that he had selected an unfortunate time for these confidences.
“I’m afraid I’ve been extremely stupid in the matter,” he said, feeling for his words. “I’ve gone about it clumsily. To tell you the truth—What does that boy want?”
It was Ward who was coming toward them across the green, with great springs and leaps, like some mountain animal.