Hearts and Masks - Page 21/58

"What! Is your tailor here then?"

"Heaven forbid! Strange, isn't it, when a fellow starts in to pay up

his bills, that the tailor and the undertaker have to wait till the

last."

"The subject is outside my understanding."

"But you have dressmakers."

"I seldom pay dressmakers."

"Ah! Then you belong to the most exclusive set!"

"Or perhaps I make my own dresses--"

"Sh! Not so loud. Supposing some one should overhear you?"

"It was a slip of the tongue. And yet, you should be lenient to all."

"Kind heart! Ah, I wonder what all those interrogation points

mean--the black domino there?"

"Possibly she represents Scandal."

"Scandal, then, is symbolized by the interrogation point?"

"Yes. Whoever heard of scandal coming to a full stop, that is to say,

a period."

"I learn something every minute. A hundred years ago you would have

been a cousin to Mademoiselle de Necker."

"Or Madame de Staël."

"Oh, if you are married--"

"I shall have ceased to interest you?"

"On the contrary. Only, marriage would account for the bitterness of

your tone. What does the Blue Domino represent?"

"The needle of the compass." She stretched a sleeve out toward me and

I observed for the first time the miniature compasses woven in the

cloth. Surely, one does not rent a costume like this.

"I understand now why you attracted me. Whither will you guide

me?'"--sentimentally.

"Through dark channels and stormy seas, over tropic waters, 'into the

haven under the hill.'"

"Oh, if you go to quoting Tennyson, it's all up with me. Are you

married?"

"One can easily see that at any rate you are not."

"Explain."

"Your voice lacks the proper and requisite anxiety. It is always the

married woman who enjoys the mask with thoroughness. She knows her

husband will be watching her; and jealousy is a good sign."

"You are a philosopher. Certainly you must be married."

"Well, one does become philosophical--after marriage."

"But are you married?"

"I do not say so."

"Would you like to be?"

"I have my share of feminine curiosity. But I wonder,"--ruminating,

"why they do not give masquerades oftener."

"That is easily explained. Most of us live masquerades day by day, and

there might be too much of a good thing."