I have often smiled myself at the recollection of Luke de Mountford walking that selfsame afternoon with Louisa Harris up and down the long avenue of the Ladies' Mile: the selfsame Luke de Mountford who had knelt at his Lou's feet in humble gratitude for the love she gave him: the selfsame Luke de Mountford who stood under suspicion of having committed a dastardly and premeditated murder.
The puppets were once more dangling on the string of Convention. They had readjusted their masks and sunk individuality as well as sentiment in the whirlpool of their world's opinion.
Louisa had desired that Luke should come with her to the park, since convention forbade their looking at chrysanthemums in the Temple Gardens, on the day that Philip de Mountford lay dead in the mortuary chamber of a London police court: but everybody belonging to their own world would be in the park on this fine afternoon. And yet, the open air, the fragrance of spring flowers in the formal beds, would give freedom to the breath: there would not reign the oppressive atmosphere of tea-table gossip; the early tulips bowing their stately heads would suggest aloofness and peace.
And so they went together for a walk in the park, for she had wished it, and he would have followed her anywhere where she had bidden him to go.
He walked beside her absolutely unconscious of whisperings and gossip which accompanied them at every step.
"I call it bad form," was a very usual phrase enunciated by many a rouged lip curled up in disdain.
This was hurled at Louisa Harris. The woman, in such cases, always contrives to get the lion's share of contempt.
"Showing herself about with that man now! I call it vulgar."
"They say he'll be arrested directly after the inquest to-morrow. I have it on unimpeachable authority."
"Oh! I understand that he has been arrested already," asserted a lady whose information was always a delightful mixture of irresponsible vagueness and firm conviction.