“Oh, I do hope he likes us,” she said. “He is so likable himself.”

Barbara nodded

“And you’ve had the good sense to find that out,” she said. “It’s astonishing how few people knew it. But then, as I said, Michael hadn’t flowered. No one understood him, or was interested. Then he suddenly made up his mind last summer what he wanted to do and be, and immediately did and was it.”

“I think he told Hermann,” said she. “His father didn’t approve, did he?”

“Approve? My dear, if you knew my brother you would know that the only things he approves of are those which Michael isn’t.”

Sylvia spread her fine hands out to the blaze, warming them and shading her face.

“Michael always seems to us—” she began. “Ah, I called him Michael by mistake.”

“Then do it on purpose next time,” remarked Barbara. “What does Michael seem?”

“Ah, but don’t let him know I called him Michael,” said Sylvia in some horror. “There is nothing so awful as to speak of people formally to their faces, and intimately behind their backs. But Hermann is always talking of him as Michael.”

“And Michael always seems—”