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was uncovered, and the breeze stirred her dark hair. She made a graceful picture in the morning sunshine, and Reggie Byng, sighting her from the terrace, wobbled in his tracks, turned pink, and lost the thread of his remarks.

The sudden appearance of Alice Faraday always affected him like that.

โ€œI have copied out the notes you made last night, Lord Marshmoreton. I typed two copies.โ€

Alice Faraday spoke in a quiet, respectful, yet subtly authoritative voice. She was a girl of great character. Previous employers of her services as secretary had found her a jewel. To Lord Marshmoreton she was rapidly becoming a perfect incubus. Their views on the relative importance of gardening and family histories did not coincide. To him the history of the Marshmoreton family was the occupation of the idle hour: she seemed to think that he ought to regard it as a lifework. She was always coming and digging him out of the garden and dragging him back to what should have been a purely after-dinner task. It was Lord Marshmoretonโ€™s habit, when he awoke after one of his naps too late to resume work, to throw out some vague promise of โ€œattending to it tomorrowโ€; but, he reflected bitterly, the girl ought to have tact and sense to understand that this was only polite persiflage, and not to be taken literally.

โ€œThey are very rough,โ€ continued Alice, addressing her conversation to the seat of his lordshipโ€™s corduroy trousers. Lord Marshmoreton always assumed a stooping attitude when he saw Miss Faraday approaching with papers in her hand; for he laboured under a pathetic delusion, of which no amount of failures could rid him, that if she did not see his face she would withdraw. โ€œYou remember last night you promised you would attend to them this morning.โ€ She paused long enough to receive a noncommittal grunt by way of answer. โ€œOf course, if youโ€™re busyโ โ€”โ€ she said placidly, with a half-glance at Lady Caroline. That masterful woman could always be counted on as an ally in these little encounters.

โ€œNothing of the kind!โ€ said Lady Caroline crisply. She was still ruffled by the lack of attention which her recent utterances had received, and welcomed the chance of administering discipline. โ€œGet up at once, John, and go in and work.โ€

โ€œI am working,โ€ pleaded Lord Marshmoreton.

Despite his forty-eight years his sister Caroline still had the power at times to make him feel like a small boy. She had been a great martinet in the days of their mutual nursery.

โ€œThe Family History is more important than grubbing about in the dirt. I cannot understand why you do not leave this sort of thing to MacPherson. Why you should pay him liberal wages and then do his work for him, I cannot see. You know the publishers are waiting for the History. Go and attend to these notes at once.โ€

โ€œYou promised you would attend to them this morning, Lord Marshmoreton,โ€ said Alice invitingly.

Lord Marshmoreton clung to his can of whale-oil solution with the clutch of a drowning man. None knew better than he that these interviews, especially when Caroline was present to lend the weight of her dominating personality, always ended in the same way.

โ€œYes, yes, yes!โ€ he said. โ€œTonight, perhaps. After dinner, eh? Yes, after dinner. That will be capital.โ€

โ€œI think you ought to attend to them this morning,โ€ said Alice, gently persistent. It really perturbed this girl to feel that she was not doing work enough to merit her generous salary. And on the subject of the history of the Marshmoreton family she was an enthusiast. It had a glamour for her.

Lord Marshmoretonโ€™s fingers relaxed their hold. Throughout the rose-garden hundreds of spared thrips went on with their morning meal, unwitting of doom averted.

โ€œOh, all right, all right, all right! Come into the library.โ€

โ€œVery well, Lord Marshmoreton.โ€ Miss Faraday turned to Lady Caroline. โ€œI have been looking up the trains, Lady Caroline. The best is the twelve-fifteen. It has a dining-car, and stops at Belpher if signalled.โ€

โ€œAre you going away, Caroline?โ€ inquired Lord Marshmoreton hopefully.

โ€œI am giving a short talk to the Social Progress League at Lewisham. I shall return tomorrow.โ€

โ€œOh!โ€ said Marshmoreton, hope fading from his voice.

โ€œThank you, Miss Faraday,โ€ said Lady Caroline. โ€œThe twelve-fifteen.โ€

โ€œThe motor will be round at a quarter to twelve.โ€

โ€œThank you. Oh, by the way, Miss Faraday, will you call to Reggie as you pass, and tell him I wish to speak to him.โ€

Maud had left Reggie by the time Alice Faraday reached him, and that ardent youth was sitting on a stone seat, smoking a cigarette and entertaining himself with meditations in which thoughts of Alice competed for precedence with graver reflections connected with the subject of the correct stance for his approach-shots. Reggieโ€™s was a troubled spirit these days. He was in love, and he had developed a bad slice with his midiron. He was practically a soul in torment.

โ€œLady Caroline asked me to tell you that she wishes to speak to you, Mr. Byng.โ€

Reggie leaped from his seat.

โ€œHullo-ullo-ullo! There you are! I mean to say, what?โ€

He was conscious, as was his custom in her presence, of a warm, prickly sensation in the small of the back. Some kind of elephantiasis seemed to have attacked his hands and feet, swelling them to enormous proportions. He wished profoundly that he could get rid of his habit of yelping with nervous laughter whenever he encountered the girl of his dreams. It was calculated to give her a wrong impression of a chapโ โ€”make her think him a fearful chump and whatnot!

โ€œLady Caroline is leaving by the twelve-fifteen.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s good! What I mean to say isโ โ€”oh, she is, is she? I see what you mean.โ€ The absolute necessity of saying something at least moderately coherent gripped him. He rallied his forces. โ€œYou wouldnโ€™t care to come for a stroll, after Iโ€™ve seen the mater, or a row on the lake, or any rot like that, would you?โ€

โ€œThank you very much, but I must go in and help Lord Marshmoreton with his

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