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reached the hall when he encountered the one member of the order whom he would most gladly have avoided.

Lord Belpher was not in genial mood. Late hours always made his head ache, and he was not a dancing man; so that he was by now fully as weary of the fairylike tout ensemble as was George. But, being the centre and cause of the nightโ€™s proceedings, he was compelled to be present to the finish. He was in the position of captains who must be last to leave their ships, and of boys who stand on burning decks whence all but they had fled. He had spent several hours shaking hands with total strangers and receiving with a frozen smile their felicitations on the attainment of his majority, and he could not have been called upon to meet a larger horde of relations than had surged round him that night if he had been a rabbit. The Belpher connection was wide, straggling over most of England; and first cousins, second cousins and even third and fourth cousins had debouched from practically every county on the map and marched upon the home of their ancestors. The effort of having to be civil to all of these had told upon Percy. Like the heroine of his sister Maudโ€™s favourite poem he was โ€œaweary, aweary,โ€ and he wanted a drink. He regarded Georgeโ€™s appearance as exceedingly opportune.

โ€œGet me a small bottle of champagne, and bring it to the library.โ€

โ€œYes, sir.โ€

The two words sound innocent enough, but, wishing as he did to efface himself and avoid publicity, they were the most unfortunate which George could have chosen. If he had merely bowed acquiescence and departed, it is probable that Lord Belpher would not have taken a second look at him. Percy was in no condition to subject everyone he met to a minute scrutiny. But, when you have been addressed for an entire lifetime as โ€œyour lordship,โ€ it startles you when a waiter calls you โ€œSir.โ€ Lord Belpher gave George a glance in which reproof and pain were nicely mingled emotions quickly supplanted by amazement. A gurgle escaped him.

โ€œStop!โ€ he cried as George turned away.

Percy was rattled. The crisis found him in two minds. On the one hand, he would have been prepared to take oath that this man before him was the man who had knocked off his hat in Piccadilly. The likeness had struck him like a blow the moment he had taken a good look at the fellow. On the other hand, there is nothing which is more likely to lead one astray than a resemblance. He had never forgotten the horror and humiliation of the occasion, which had happened in his fourteenth year, when a motherly woman at Paddington Station had called him โ€œdearieโ€ and publicly embraced him, on the erroneous supposition that he was her nephew, Philip. He must proceed cautiously. A brawl with an innocent waiter, coming on the heels of that infernal episode with the policeman, would give people the impression that assailing the lower orders had become a hobby of his.

โ€œSir?โ€ said George politely.

His brazen front shook Lord Belpherโ€™s confidence.

โ€œI havenโ€™t seen you before here, have I?โ€ was all he could find to say.

โ€œNo, sir,โ€ replied George smoothly. โ€œI am only temporarily attached to the castle staff.โ€

โ€œWhere do you come from?โ€

โ€œAmerica, sir.โ€

Lord Belpher started. โ€œAmerica!โ€

โ€œYes, sir. I am in England on a vacation. My cousin, Albert, is page boy at the castle, and he told me there were a few vacancies for extra help tonight, so I applied and was given the job.โ€

Lord Belpher frowned perplexedly. It all sounded entirely plausible. And, what was satisfactory, the statement could be checked by application to Keggs, the butler. And yet there was a lingering doubt. However, there seemed nothing to be gained by continuing the conversation.

โ€œI see,โ€ he said at last. โ€œWell, bring that champagne to the library as quick as you can.โ€

โ€œVery good, sir.โ€

Lord Belpher remained where he stood, brooding. Reason told him he ought to be satisfied, but he was not satisfied. It would have been different had he not known that this fellow with whom Maud had become entangled was in the neighbourhood. And if that scoundrel had had the audacity to come and take a cottage at the castle gates, why not the audacity to invade the castle itself?

The appearance of one of the footmen, on his way through the hall with a tray, gave him the opportunity for further investigation.

โ€œSend Keggs to me!โ€

โ€œVery good, your lordship.โ€

An interval and the butler arrived. Unlike Lord Belpher late hours were no hardship to Keggs. He was essentially a night-blooming flower. His brow was as free from wrinkles as his shirtfront. He bore himself with the conscious dignity of one who, while he would have freely admitted he did not actually own the castle, was nevertheless aware that he was one of its most conspicuous ornaments.

โ€œYou wished to see me, your lordship?โ€

โ€œYes. Keggs, there are a number of outside men helping here tonight, arenโ€™t there?โ€

โ€œIndubitably, your lordship. The unprecedented scale of the entertainment necessitated the engagement of a certain number of supernumeraries,โ€ replied Keggs with an easy fluency which Reggie Byng, now cooling his head on the lower terrace, would have bitterly envied. โ€œIn the circumstances, such an arrangement was inevitable.โ€

โ€œYou engaged all these men yourself?โ€

โ€œIn a manner of speaking, your lordship, and for all practical purposes, yes. Mrs. Digby, the โ€™ouse-keeper conducted the actual negotiations in many cases, but the arrangement was in no instance considered complete until I had passed each applicant.โ€

โ€œDo you know anything of an American who says he is the cousin of the pageboy?โ€

โ€œThe boy Albert did introduce a nominee whom he stated to be โ€™is cousin โ€™ome from New York on a visit and anxious to oblige. I trust he โ€™as given no dissatisfaction, your lordship? He seemed a respectable young man.โ€

โ€œNo, no, not at all. I merely wished to know if you knew him. One canโ€™t be too careful.โ€

โ€œNo,

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