He brought his eyes around to hers—cold, malignant, menacing.
“This hell upon earth has been heaven for you. It has given you wings, anyway! Don’t go back to London, Stella, not for a week or two. Get to know this girl. You’ve got opportunities that nobody else has. Kid her along—you’re not going to lose anything by it. Speak about me; tell her what a good fellow I am; and tell her what a chance she has. You needn’t mention marriage, but you can if it helps any. Show her some of your jewels—that big pendant I gave you——”
He rambled on, and she listened, her bewilderment giving place to an uncontrollable fury.
“You brute!” she said at last. “To dare suggest that I should bring this girl to Griff! I don’t like her—naturally. But I’d go down on my knees to her to beg her not to come. You think I’m jealous?” Her lips curled at the sight of the smile on his face. “That’s where you’re wrong, Gregory. I’m jealous of the position she’s taken at the studio, but, so far as you’re concerned”—she shrugged her shoulders—“you mean nothing to me. I doubt very much if you’ve ever meant more than a steady source of income. That’s candid, isn’t it?”
She got up from the divan and began putting on her gloves.
“As you don’t seem to want to help me,” she said, “I’ll have to find a way of making you keep your promise. And you did promise me a company, Gregory; I suppose you’ve forgotten that?”
“I was more interested in you then,” he said. “Where are you going?”
“I’m going back to my cottage, and to-morrow I’m returning to town,” she said.
He looked first at one end of the room and then at the other, and then at her.
“You’re not going back to your cottage; you’re staying here, my dear,” he said.