Dangerous Days - Page 51/297

"Well?" he demanded, after an excellent putt. "Was that good or wasn't

it?"

"Very good," she said gravely. "I am only surprised when you do a thing

badly. Not when you do it well."

He thought that over.

"Have you anything in mind that I do badly? I mean, particularly in

mind."

"Not very much." But after a moment: "Why don't you make Natalie play

golf?"

"She hates it."

He rather wondered if she thought Natalie was one of the things he

managed badly.

The sense of companionship warmed him. Although neither of them realized

it, their mutual loneliness and dissatisfaction had brought them

together, and mentally at least they were clinging, each desperately to

the other. But their talk was disjointed: "I'll return that hundred soon. I've sold the house."

"I wish you wouldn't worry about it. It's ridiculous, Audrey."

And, a hundred yards or so further on, "They wouldn't have Chris in

Canada. His heart. He's going into the French Ambulance service."

"Good for Chris."

But she came out very frankly, when they started back to the clubhouse.

"It's done me a lot of good, meeting you, Clay. There's something so big

and solid and dependable about you. I wonder--I suppose you don't mind

my using you as a sort of anchor to windward?"

"Good heavens, Audrey! If I could only do something."

"You don't have to do a thing." She smiled up at him, and her old

audacity was quite gone. "You've just got to be. And--you don't have to

send me flowers, you know. I mean, I understand that you're sorry for

me, without that. You're the only person in the world I'd allow to be

sorry for me."

He was touched. There was no coquetry in her manner. She paid her little

tribute quite sincerely and frankly.

"I've been taking stock to-day," she went on, "and I put you among my

assets. One reliable gentleman, six feet tall, weight about a hundred

and seventy, in good condition. Heavens, what a lot of liabilities you

had to off-set!"

He stopped and looked down at her.

"Audrey dear," he said, "what am I to say to all that? What can I do?

How can I help?"

"You might tell me--No, that's silly."

"What is silly?"

But she did not answer. She called "Joey!" and gave him her clubs.

"Joey wants to be a soldier," she observed.