say⁠—that she can’t help making a rival out of her, and tormenting her morning, noon, and night. I tell you, Sir Wilfrid, what that poor girl has gone through no one can imagine but we who have watched it. Lady Henry owes her everything this last three years. Where would she have been without Julie? She talks of Julie’s separating her from her friends, cutting her out, imposing upon her, and nonsense of that kind! How would she have kept up that salon alone, I should like to know⁠—a blind old woman who can’t write a note for herself or recognize a face? First of all she throws everything upon Julie, is proud of her cleverness, puts her forward in every way, tells most unnecessary falsehoods about her⁠—Julie has felt that very much⁠—and then when Julie has a great success, when people begin to come to Bruton Street, for her sake as well as Lady Henry’s, then Lady Henry turns against her, complains of her to everybody, talks about treachery and disloyalty and Heaven knows what, and begins to treat her like the dirt under her feet! How can Julie help being clever and agreeable⁠—she is clever and agreeable! As Mr. Montresor said to me yesterday, ‘As soon as that woman comes into a room, my spirits go up!’ And why? Because she never thinks of herself, she always makes other people show at their best. And then Lady Henry behaves like this!” The Duchess threw out her hands in scornful reprobation. “And the question is, of course, Can it go on?”

“I don’t gather,” said Sir Wilfrid, hesitating, “that Lady Henry wants immediately to put an end to it.”

Delafield gave an angry laugh.

“The point is whether Mademoiselle Julie and Mademoiselle Julie’s friends can put up with it much longer.”

“You see,” said the Duchess, eagerly, “Julie is such a loyal, affectionate creature. She knows Lady Henry was kind to her, to begin with, that she gave her great chances, and that she’s getting old and infirm. Julie’s awfully sorry for her. She doesn’t want to leave her all alone⁠—to the mercy of her servants⁠—”

“I understand the servants, too, are devoted to Mademoiselle Julie?” said Sir Wilfrid.

“Yes, that’s another grievance,” said Delafield, contemptuously. “Why shouldn’t they be? When the butler had a child very ill, it was Mademoiselle Julie who went to see it in the mews, who took it flowers and grapes⁠—”

“Lady Henry’s grapes?” threw in Sir Wilfrid.

“What does it matter!” said Delafield, impatiently. “Lady Henry has more of everything than she knows what to do with. But it wasn’t grapes only! It was time and thought and consideration. Then when the younger footman wanted to emigrate to the States, it was Mademoiselle Julie who found a situation for him, who got Mr. Montresor to write to some American friends, and finally sent the lad off, devoted to her, of course, for life. I should like to know when Lady Henry would have done that kind of thing! Naturally the servants like her⁠—she deserves it.”

“I see⁠—I see,” said Sir Wilfrid, nodding gently, his eyes on the carpet. “A very competent young lady.”

Delafield looked at the older man, half in annoyance, half in perplexity.

“Is there anything to complain of in that?” he said, rather shortly.

“Oh, nothing, nothing!” said Sir Wilfrid, hastily. “And this word intrigue that Lady Henry uses? Has mademoiselle always steered a straightforward course with her employer?”

“Oh, well,” said the Duchess, shrugging her shoulders, “how can you always be perfectly straightforward with such a tyrannical old person! She has to be managed. Lately, in order to be sure of every minute of Julie’s time, she has taken to heaping work upon her to such a ridiculous extent that unless I come to the rescue the poor thing gets no rest and no amusement. And last summer there was an explosion, because Julie, who was supposed to be in Paris for her holiday with a schoolfriend, really spent a week of it with the Buncombes, Lady Henry’s married niece, who has a place in Kent. The Buncombes knew her at Lady Henry’s parties, of course. Then they met her in the Louvre, took her about a little, were delighted with her, and begged her to come and stay with them⁠—they have a place near Canterbury⁠—on the way home. They and Julie agreed that it would be best to say nothing to Lady Henry about it⁠—she is too absurdly jealous⁠—but then it leaked out, unluckily, and Lady Henry was furious.”

“I must say,” said Delafield, hurriedly, “I always thought frankness would have been best there.”

“Well, perhaps,” said the Duchess, unwillingly, with another shrug. “But now what is to be done? Lady Henry really must behave better, or Julie can’t and shan’t stay with her. Julie has a great following⁠—hasn’t she, Jacob? They won’t see her harassed to death.”

“Certainly not,” said Delafield. “At the same time we all see”⁠—he turned to Sir Wilfrid⁠—“what the advantages of the present combination are. Where would Lady Henry find another lady of Mademoiselle Le Breton’s sort to help her with her house and her salon? For the last two years the Wednesday evenings have been the most brilliant and successful things of their kind in London. And, of course, for Mademoiselle Le Breton it is a great thing to have the protection of Lady Henry’s name⁠—”

“A great thing?” cried Sir Wilfrid. “Everything, my dear Jacob!”

“I don’t know,” said Delafield, slowly. “It may be bought too dear.”

Sir Wilfrid looked at the speaker with curiosity. It had been at all times possible to rouse Jacob Delafield⁠—as child, as schoolboy, as undergraduate⁠—from an habitual carelessness and idleness by an act or a tale of injustice or oppression. Had the Duchess pressed him into her service, and was he merely taking sides for the weaker out of a natural bent towards that way of looking at things? Or⁠—

“Well, certainly we must do our best to patch it up,” said Sir Wilfrid, after a pause. “Perhaps Mademoiselle Le Breton will allow me a

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