him long ago—just after she arrived in London—fresh out of the convent. It was so funny! He told me afterwards he never was so embarrassed in his life,—this baby making eyes at him! And now—oh no!"
"Why not now? Lady Kitty's very much the rage, and Mr. Cliffe likes notoriety."
"But a notoriety with—well, with some style—some distinction! Kitty's sort is so cheap and silly."
"Ah, well, she's not to be despised," said Lady Parham. "She's as clever as she can be. But her husband will have to keep her in order."
"Can he?" said Mary. "Won't she always be in his way?"
"Always, I should think. But he must have known what he was about. Why didn't his mother interfere? Such a family,—such a history!"
"She did interfere," said Mary. "We all did our best,"—she dropped her voice—"I know I did. But it was no use. If men like spoilt children, they must have them, I suppose. Let's hope he'll learn how to manage her. Shall we go on? I promised to meet my supper-partner in the library."
They moved away.
For some minutes Kitty stood looking out, motionless. But the beating of her heart choked her. Strange ancestral things,—things of evil—things of passion—had suddenly awoke as it were from sleep in the depths of her being and rushed upon the citadel of her life. A change had passed over her from head to foot. Her veins ran fire.
At that moment, turning round, she saw Geoffrey Cliffe enter the room in which she stood. With an impetuous movement she approached him.
"Take me down to supper, Mr. Cliffe. I can't wait for Lord Hubert any more, I'm so hungry!"
"Enchanted!" said Cliffe, the color leaping into his tanned face as he looked down upon the goddess,—"but I came to find—"
"Miss Lyster? Oh! she is gone in with Mr. Darrell. Come with me. I have a ticket for the reserved tent. We shall have a delicious corner to ourselves."
And she took from her glove the little coveted pasteboard, which—handed about in secret to a few intimates of the house—gave access to the sanctum sanctorum of the evening.
Cliffe wavered. Then his vanity succumbed. A few minutes later the supper guests in the tent of the elite saw the entrance of a darkly splendid Duke of Alva, with a little sandalled goddess, all compact, it seemed, of ivory and fire, on his arm.
[to be continued.]
August on the River
THE swooning heat of August
Swims along the valley's bed.
The tall reeds burn and blacken,
While the gray elm droops its head,
And the smoky sun above the hills is glaring hot and red.
Along the shrinking river,
Where salmon-nets hang brown,
Piles the driftwood of the freshets,
And the naked logs move down
To the clanking chains and shrieking saws of the mills above the town.
Outside the booms of cedar,
The fish-hawks drop at noon;
When night comes trailing up the stars,
We hear the ghostly loon;
And watch the herons swing their flight against the crimson moon.