The Amazing Interlude - Page 31/173

And she recalled his final words, his arms so close about her that she

could hardly breathe, his voice husky with emotion.

"Just let me hear of any of those foreigners bothering you," he said,

"and I'll go over and wipe out the whole damned nation."

It had not sounded funny then. It was not funny now.

"Please come," said Sara Lee in a small voice.

The other gentlemen bowed profoundly. Sara Lee, rather at a loss, gave

them a friendly smile that included them all. And then she and Henri

were walking up the stairs and to the entrance, Henri's tall figure the

target for many women's eyes. He, however, saw no one but Sara Lee.

Henri, too, called a taxicab. Every one in London seemed to ride in

taxis. And he bent over her hand, once she was in the car, but he did

not kiss it.

"It is very kind of you, what you are doing," he said. "But, then, you

Americans are all kind. And wonderful."

Back at Morley's Hotel Sara Lee had a short conversation with Harvey's

picture.

"You are entirely wrong, dear," she said. She was brushing her hair at

the time, and it is rather a pity that it was a profile picture and that

Harvey's pictured eyes were looking off into space--that is, a piece

of white canvas on a frame, used by photographers to reflect the light

into the eyes. For Sara Lee with her hair down was even lovelier than

with it up. "You were wrong. They are different, but they are kind and

polite. And very, very respectful. And he is coming on business."

She intended at first to make no change in her frock. After all, it was

not a social call, and if she did not dress it would put things on the

right footing.

But slipping along the corridor after her bath, clad in a kimono and

slippers and extremely nervous, she encountered a young woman on her

way to dinner, and she was dressed in that combination of street skirt

and evening blouse that some Englishwomen from the outlying districts

still affect. And Sara Lee thereupon decided to dress. She called in

the elderly maid, who was already her slave, and together they went over

her clothes.

It was the maid, perhaps, then who brought into Sara Lee's life the

strange and mad infatuation for her that was gradually to become a

dominant issue in the next few months. For the maid chose a white dress,

a soft and young affair in which Sara Lee looked like the heart of a rose.