Betty did not knock. She opened the studio door softly. She would like to see him before he saw her.
She had her wish.
A big canvas stood on the easel, a stool in front of it. The table was in the middle of the room, a yellow embroidered cloth on it. There was food on the cloth--little breads, pretty cakes and strawberries and cherries, and wine in tall, beautiful, topaz-coloured glasses.
Vernon sat in his big chair. Betty could see his profile. He sat there, laughing. On the further arm of the chair sat, laughing also, a very pretty young woman. Her black hair was piled high on her head and fastened with a jewelled pin. The sunlight played in the jewels. She wore a pink silk garment. She held cherries in her hand.
"V'la cheri!" she said, and put one of the twin cherries in her mouth; then she leant over him laughing, and Vernon reached his head forward to take in his mouth the second cherry that dangled below her chin. His mouth was on the cherry, and his eyes in the black eyes of the girl in pink.
Betty banged the door.
"Come away!" she said to Miss Desmond. And she, who had seen, too, the pink picture, came away, holding Betty's arm tight.
"I wonder," she said as they reached the bottom of the staircase, "I wonder he didn't come after us to--to--try to explain."
"I locked the door," said Betty. "Don't speak to me, please."
They were in the train before either broke silence. Betty's face was white and she looked old--thirty almost her aunt thought.
[Illustration: "On the further arm of the chair sat, laughing also, a very pretty young woman"] It was Miss Desmond who spoke.
"Betty," she said, "I know how you feel. But you're very young. I think I ought to say that that girl--"
"Don't!" said Betty.
"I mean what we saw doesn't necessarily mean that he doesn't love you."
"Perhaps not," said Betty, fierce as a white flame. "Anyhow, it means that I don't love him."
Miss Desmond's tact, worn by three days of anxiety and agitation, broke suddenly, and she said what she regretted for some months: "Oh, you don't love him now? Well, the other man will console you."
"I hate you," said Betty, "and I hate him; and I hope I shall never see a man again as long as I live!"