“It is the most important night that ever happened,” said Phyllis slowly. “It’s now.” There was a queer frightened tremble in her voice.
“There’ll be a moon a little later,” said George. He said it rather as though this would be creditable to him, as host.
“No, George, don’t let there be a moon. Not everything at once, it’s too much.”
Something in George’s outline showed that he thought Phyllis was merely chaffing him; but Joyce was more clairvoyant. For the first time she became aware of some reality in Phyllis: saw that she was more than just George’s wife. There was in her some buried treasure that no one had ever taken the trouble to hunt for. Why, she’s lovely, Joyce thought. In a sudden impulse she wanted to take Phyllis’s hand; her own fluttered liftingly in her lap; she restrained it, for she felt that she would want to kiss George before very long and it didn’t seem quite square to be in love with a man and his wife simultaneously. It would be extravagant, she supposed sadly.
“We don’t need a moon,” she said, “with Mrs. Granville wearing that lovely silver dress.”
“It makes me feel as though we ought to do something special,” said Martin.
“We can have a game of Truth,” suggested George.
No one showed much enthusiasm except Martin, who wanted to know how it was played.
“Everyone must tell some thought he has had but didn’t say.”
Ben and Ruth felt more certain than ever that the evening was going to be a failure.