IV
As the Burgesses were reviewing the incidents of the day at dinner that evening, Mrs. Burgess remarked suddenly,
“Now that it’s all over, Web, do you think it was quite fair, really right?”
“You mean,” asked Webster, huskily, “that you’re not satisfied with the way it was handled?”
“Oh, not that! But it was almost too complete; and poor Mrs. Gurley must be horribly humiliated.”
“Crushed, I should say,” remarked Webster cheerfully. “This ought to hold her for a while.”
“But that fake delegation you had at the station to deceive Mrs. Gurley——”
“I beg your pardon,” Webster interrupted, “I assure you I had nothing to do with it.”
“Well, all I know is that just before dinner Mrs. Eastman called me up and said the Governor had just telephoned her that Mrs. Gurley tried to kiss the hand of some man she took for the Illyrian Minister of Foreign Affairs as he went through the station gates. And the man is nothing but a rubber in a Turkish bath. You wouldn’t have done that, Web, would you?”
“No, dear, I would not! For one thing, I wouldn’t have been smart enough to think it up.”
“And you know, Web, I shouldn’t want you to think me mean and envious and jealous. I’m not really that way; you know I’m not! And of course if I’d thought you’d really bring the Illyrians here, I should never have mentioned it at all.”
Webster passed his hand across his brow in bewilderment. At moments when he thought he was meeting the most exacting requirements of the marital relationship it was enormously disturbing to find himself defeated.
“Your luncheon was a great success; the talk at the table was wonderful; and the girls you brought in made a big hit. It’s the best party you ever pulled off,” he declared warmly.
“I’m glad you think so,” she said slowly, giving him her direct gaze across the table, “but there were one or two things I didn’t quite like, Web. It seemed to me your young friend Tibbotts was a little too conspicuous. I’m surprised that you let him come to the house. You couldn’t—you wouldn’t have let him know how the Illyrians came here? He really seemed to assume full charge of the party, and in the drawing room he was flirting outrageously with pretty Lois Hubbard, and kept her giggling when I’d asked her specially to be nice to the Fourth Assistant Secretary, who’s a bachelor, you know. And if Mrs. Hubbard knew we had introduced Lois to a boy from the racetrack——”
“It would be awful,” said Webster with one of the elusive grins that always baffled her.
“What would be awful?” she demanded.
“Oh, nothing! I was thinking of Wrong Number and what a blow it would be if I should lose him. I must remember to raise his salary in the morning.”
THE END.
TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:
Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.
Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.