When a Man Marries - Page 98/121

On a chain around her neck! Bella, who is decollete whenever it is

allowable, and more than is proper!

That was the limit of Aunt Selina's endurance. Still holding me, she

stepped through the doorway and into the firelight, a fearful figure.

Jim saw her first. He went quite white and struggled to get up,

smiling a sickly smile. Bella, after her first surprise, was superbly

indifferent. She glanced at us, raised her eyebrows, and then looked at

the clock.

"More victims of insomnia!" she said. "Won't you come in? Jim, pull up a

chair by the fire for your aunt."

Aunt Selina opened her mouth twice, like a fish, before she could speak.

Then-"James, I demand that that woman leave the house!" she said hoarsely.

Bella leaned back and yawned.

"James, shall I go?" she asked amiably.

"Nonsense," Jim said, pulling himself together as best he could. "Look

here, Aunt Selina, you know she can't go out, and what's more, I--don't

want her to go."

"You--what?" Aunt Selina screeched, taking a step forward. "You have the

audacity to say such a thing to me!"

Bella leaned over and gave the fire log a punch.

"I was just saying that he shouldn't say such things to me, either,"

she remarked pleasantly. "I'm afraid you'll take cold, Miss Caruthers.

Wouldn't you like a hot sherry flip?"

Aunt Selina gasped. Then she sat down heavily on one of the carved

teakwood chairs.

"He said he loved you; I heard him," she said weakly. "He--he was going

to put his arm around you!"

"Habit!" Jim put in, trying to smile. "You see, Aunt Selina, it's--well,

it's a habit I got into some time ago, and I--my arm does it without my

thinking about it."

"Habit!" Aunt Selina repeated, her voice thick with passion. Then she

turned to me. "Go to your room at once!" she said in her most awful

tone. "Go to your room and leave this--this shocking affair to me."

But if she had reached her limit, so had I. If Jim chose to ruin

himself, it was not my fault. Any one with common sense would have known

at least to close the door before he went down on his knees, no matter

to whom. So when Aunt Selina turned on me and pointed in the direction

of the staircase, I did not move.

"I am perfectly wide awake," I said coldly. "I shall go to bed when I am

entirely ready, and not before. And as for Jim's conduct, I do not know

much about the conventions in such cases, but if he wishes to embrace

Miss Knowles, and she wants him to, the situation is interesting, but

hardly novel."

Aunt Selina rose slowly and drew the folds of her dressing gown around

her, away from the contamination of my touch.