"You darling boy!" she said, her lips back tight against her teeth. "You darling, darling boy!"
"Please, Hester! We'll forget what has been."
"Let me go," she said, rising and pinning on her hat; "let me go—or—or
I'll cry, and—and I don't want to cry."
"Hester," he called, rushing after her and wanting to fold her back into his arms, "let me prove my trust—my love—"
"Don't! Let me go! Let me go!"
At slightly after six the ultra cavalcade drew up at the court-house steps. She was greeted with the pleasantries and the gibes.
"Have a good time, sweetness?" asked Wheeler, arranging her rugs.
"Yes," she said, lying back and letting her lids droop; "but tired—very, very tired."
At the hotel, she stopped a moment to write a telegram before going up for the vapor bath, nap, and massage that were to precede dinner.
"Meyerbloom & Co., Furriers. Fifth Avenue, New York," it was addressed.