“Why did you sup alone with Austen Abbott last night?”
She shrank a little away.
“Why should I not?” she asked.
“You have been on the stage, my dear Miss Shaw,” Peter Ruff continued, “for between four and five years. During the whole of that time, it has been your very wise habit to join supper parties, of course, when the company was agreeable to you, but to sup alone with no man! Am I not right?”
“You seem to know a great deal about me,” she faltered.
“Am I not right?” he repeated.
“Yes!”
“You break your rule for the first time,” Peter Ruff continued, “in favour of a man of notoriously bad character, a few weeks after the announcement of your engagement to an honourable young English gentleman. You know very well the construction likely to be put upon your behaviour—you, of all people, would be the most likely to appreciate the risk you ran. Why did you run it? In other words, I repeat my question. Why did you sup alone with Austen Abbott last night?”
All this time she had been standing. She came a little forward now, and threw herself into an easy-chair.
“It doesn’t help!” she exclaimed. “All this doesn’t help!”