“Ah, I’m glad you’ve got a good fire. They tell me it’s very cold this evening. So delighted you’ve come, my dear; you must need a change and a rest after a series of those big Longlands parties. I’ve always wondered how your mother-in-law stood the strain... Here you’ll find only the family; we don’t go in for any ceremony at Champions — but I hope you’ll like being with my girls... By the way, dinner may be a trifle late; you won’t mind? The fact is, Sir Helmsley Thwarte sent a note this morning to ask if he might come and dine, and bring his son, who’s at Honourslove. You know Sir Helmsley, of course? And Guy — he’s been with you at Longlands, hasn’t he? We must all drive over to Honourslove... Sir Helmsley’s a most friendly neighbour; we see him here very often, don’t we, Miss Testvalley?”
The governess’s head was bent to the grate, from which a coal had fallen. “When Mr. Thwarte’s there, Sir Helmsley naturally likes to take him about, I suppose,” she murmured to the tongs.
“Ah, just so! — Guy ought to marry,” Lady Glenloe announced. “I must get some young people to meet him the next time he comes... You know there was an unfortunate marriage at Rio — but luckily the young woman died... leaving him a fortune, I believe. Ah, I must send word at once to the cook that Sir Helmsley likes his beef rather underdone... Sir Helmsley’s very particular about his food... But now I’ll leave you to rest, my dear. And don’t make yourself too fine. We’re used to pot-luck at Champions.”
Annabel, left alone, stood pondering before her glass. She was to see Guy Thwarte that evening — and Miss Testvalley had reproached her for not thinking enough about the details of her dress and hair. Hair-dressing had always been a much-discussed affair among the St George ladies, but something winged and impatient in Nan resisted the slow torture of adjusting puffs and curls. Regarding herself as the least noticeable in a group where youthful beauty carried its torch so high, and convinced that, wherever they went, the other girls would always be the centre of attention, Nan had never thought it worth while to waste much time on her inconspicuous person. The Duke had not married her for her beauty — how could she imagine it, when he might have chosen Virginia? Indeed, he had mentioned, in the course of his odd wooing, that beautiful women always frightened him, and that the qualities he especially valued in Nan were her gentleness and her inexperience— “And certainly I was inexperienced enough,” she meditated, as she stood before the mirror; “but I’m afraid he hasn’t found me particularly gentle.”
She continued to study her reflection critically, wondering whether Miss Testvalley was right, and she owed it to herself to dres