Andrew the Glad - Page 58/110

"Dear," said Phoebe with a quiet though intensely sad smile, "this is

just an afterglow of what they must have felt in those awful times. Let's

get them started at the game."

For just a moment longer Phoebe watched them in their heated discussion,

then chose her time and her strong quiet voice commanded immediate

attention.

"Girls," she said, and as she spoke she held out her hand to Mrs. Peyton

Kendrick with an audacious little smile. Any woman from two to sixty

likes to be called girl--audaciously as Phoebe did it. "Let's leave it

all to the men. I think we can trust them to compel the judge to dine off

his yesterday's remarks in tomorrow's papers. And then if we don't like

the way they have settled with him we can have a gorgeous time telling

them how much better they might have done it. Let's all play--everybody

for the game!"

"And Phoebe!" called Mrs. Payt as she sat down at the table farthest in

the corner. She spoke in a clear high-pitched voice that carried well

over the rustle of settling gowns and shuffling cards: "We all intend

after this to _see_ that David Kildare gets what he wants--you

understand?" A laugh rippled from every table but Phoebe was equal to the

occasion.

"Why not, Mrs. Payt," she answered with the utmost cordiality. "And let's

be sure and find something he really wants to present to him as a

testimony of our esteem."

"Oh, Phoebe," trilled Polly, her emotions getting the better of her as

she stood with score-card in hand waiting for the game to begin, "_I_

can't keep from loving him myself and _you_ treat him so mean!"

But a gale of merriment interrupted her outburst and a flutter of cards

on the felts marked the first rounds of the hands. In a few minutes they

were as absorbed as if nothing had happened to ruffle the depths; but in

the pool of every woman's nature the deepest spot shelters the lost

causes of life, and from it wells a tidal wave if stirred.

After a little while Caroline Darrah rose from a dummy and spoke in a low

pleading tone to Polly, who had been watching her game, standing ready to

score. Polly demurred, then consented and sat down while Caroline Darrah

took her departure, quietly but fleetly, down the side steps.

She was muffled in her long furs and she swung her sable toque with

its one drooping plume in her hand as she walked rapidly across the

tennis-courts, cut through the beeches and came out on the bank of the

brawling little Silver Fork Creek, that wound itself from over the ridge

down through the club lands to the river. She stood by the sycamore for a

moment listening delightedly to its chatter over the rocks, then climbed

out on the huge old rock that jutted out from the bank and was entwined

by the bleached roots of the tall tree. The strong winter sun had warmed

the flat slab on the south side and, sinking down with a sigh of delight,

she embraced her knees and bent over to gaze into the sparkling little

waterfall that gushed across the foot of the boulder.