“Certainly not with depression. He's an extraordinary creature. One would think he would perish from lack of the air he is used to breathing—New York air.”

“He is not perishing. He's too shrewd,” returned Palliser. “He mayn't exactly like all this, but he's getting something out of it.”

“He is not getting much of what he evidently wants most. I am out of all patience,” said Lady Mallowe.

Her acquaintance with Palliser had lasted through a number of years. They argued most matters from the same basis of reasoning. They were at times almost candid with each other. It may be acknowledged, however, that of the two Lady Mallowe was the more inclined to verge on self-revelation. This was of course because she was the less clever and had more temper. Her temper, she had, now and then, owned bitterly to herself, had played her tricks. Captain Palliser's temper never did this. It was Lady Mallowe's temper which spoke now, but she did not in the least mind his knowing that Joan was exasperating her beyond endurance. He knew the whole situation well enough to be aware of it without speech on her part. He had watched similar situations several times before.

“Her manner toward him is, to resort to New York colloquialisms, `the limit,'” Palliser said quietly. “Is it your idea that his less good spirits have been due to Lady Joan's ingenuities? They are ingenious, you know.”

“They are devilish,” exclaimed her mother. “She treads him in the mire and sails about professing to be conducting herself flawlessly. She is too clever for me,” she added with bitterness.

Palliser laughed softly.

“But very often you have been too clever for her,” he suggested. “For my part, I don't quite see how you got her here.”

Lady Mallowe became not almost, but entirely, candid.

“Upon the whole, I don't quite know myself. I believe she really came for some mysterious reason of her own.”