if—You know what I should do if I were you?” She shook her head, her eyes fixed on his face. “I’d make a clean breast of it,” said Tom.
“I did think of doing so, but when I remember what I wrote—” She broke off with a shudder.
“Devilish difficult thing to do,” he agreed. “All the same—”
“I don’t think I could,” she confessed. “If he were to be angry—! It makes me sick only to imagine it! And my grandmother says on no account must I tell him.”
“Well, I daresay she knows best,” responded Tom somewhat dubiously. “What will you do if he charges you with it? Deny it?”
“Oh, don’t, Tom!” begged Phoebe.
“Yes, but you’d best make up your mind,” he insisted. “I shouldn’t think, myself, that he’ll believe you: you never could tell a bouncer without looking guilty!”
“If he asks me,” said Phoebe despairingly, “I must tell the truth.”
“Well, perhaps he won’t ask you,” said Tom, perceiving that she was looking rather sickly already. “But take care you don’t mention it to anyone else, that’s all! Ten to one you’ll blurt it out to somebody!
“Blurt it out! No, indeed!” she assured him.
She thought there could be little fear of it, but some severe trials had to be undergone, when she found herself obliged to endure in silence such discussions about her book as made her long to cry out:
“
That lurid fancy had almost proved to be Phoebe’s breaking-point. But for her grandmother’s quelling eye she believed she must have spoken. It caught hers in the very nick of time, and she remained silent. That eye was absent when she heard the same lurid fancy on Ianthe’s lips.
“Whoever it was who wrote the book,” said Ianthe impressively, “knows a great deal about the Raynes! That much is certain! Everyone says it is a female: do
“Yes—and a shockingly silly female!” said Phoebe. “It is the most absurd thing I ever read!”
“But it isn’t!” insisted Ianthe. “Chance is not a castle, of course, and Sylvester couldn’t possibly keep poor little Edmund
“A warning?” echoed Phoebe blankly.
“To me,” nodded Ianthe. “A warning that danger threatens my child. There can be no doubt that Matilda is meant to be me, after all.”
These naive words struck Phoebe dumb for several moments. It had not previously occurred to her that Ianthe might identify herself with
“Though Florian is not Fotherby, of course,” added Ianthe, unconsciously answering the startled question in Phoebe’s mind. “I think he is just a made-up character. Poor Nugent wouldn’t
The unruffled complaisance in her face and voice provided Phoebe with the second shock of the day. This one was not of long duration, however, a bare minute’s reflection sufficing to inform her that the grossest of libels could be pardoned in an author who painted Lady Henry herself in roseate hues.
“And Harry was Sylvester’s twin-brother,” pursued Ianthe.
“Count Ugolino’s brother was not his twin!” Phoebe managed to say.
“No, but I daresay the author was afraid to make it all precisely the same. The thing is, Ugolino was a usurper.”
“Lady Henry!” said Phoebe, speaking in a voice of careful control. “You cannot seriously suppose that Salford is a usurper!”
“No, except that there
“Oh, hush!” Phoebe exclaimed. “Pray, pray do not say so, Lady Henry! You are funning, I know, but indeed you should not!”
An obstinate look came into Ianthe’s lovely face. “No, I am not. I don’t say it
“Lady Henry, you must not indulge your fancy in this way!” Phoebe cried, quite appalled. “How can you suppose that a foolish romance bears the least relation to real life?”
“
Phoebe said: “I know—I have reason to know—that the author of the book was wholly ignorant of any of the circumstances attaching to Salford, or to any member of his family!”
“Nonsense! How can you know anything of the sort?”
Phoebe moistened her lips, and said in a shaking voice: “It so happens that I am acquainted with the author. I mustn’t tell you, and you won’t ask me, I am persuaded, or—or mention it!”
“Acquainted with the author?” Ianthe gasped. “Oh,
“No, I must not. I should not have spoken at all, only that I felt myself obliged, when I found you had taken such a fantastic notion into your head! Lady Henry, my friend had never seen Salford but once in her life: knew nothing more of him than his name! She was struck by his strange eyebrows, and when she came to write that tale she remembered them, and thought she would give Ugolino brows like that, never dreaming that anyone would think—”
“But she must have known more!” objected Ianthe, staring rather hard at Phoebe. “She knew he was Edmund’s guardian!”
“She did not. It was—she told me—nothing but the unhappiest of coincidences!”
“I don’t believe it! It could not have been so!”
“But it was, it
There was a momentary silence. As she stared, a look of comprehension stole into Ianthe’s eyes. “Miss Marlow!
“No!”
“You are! I know you are! Oh, you sly thing!” cried Ianthe.
“I tell you,
“Oh, you won’t take me in, I promise you! I see it all now! What a rage Sylvester would be in if he knew— when he has been so condescending as to make you the latest object of his gallantry, too! I only wish he may discover it.” She saw the widening look of horror in Phoebe’s eyes, and said: “
“Indeed, I hope you won’t tell anyone, for it is untrue, and absurd as well!” replied Phoebe, trying to speak as