“I am sorry you don’t seem to feel your former faith in me, Nona,” she began unexpectedly. “Not that I blame you, for I do not know myself whether it is wise for me to have intruded into your life again. I would not have done so if there had not been a reason more important than you can appreciate.”
For a moment the girl’s attention had been wandering, engaged by the oddness of her surroundings, but now she tried to conceal her growing discomfort. Lady Dorian was appearing more mysterious than ever! If she desired to renew their acquaintance because they had formerly liked each other, that was a sufficient reason for her summons. It was scarcely worth while to try to produce other motives.
But Lady Dorian had gotten up and now stood facing her.
“What I am going to tell you is extraordinary, Nona, although life is too full of strange happenings to make us wonder at anything. In the first place, will you please cease to call me Lady Dorian, for that is not my name. Nor is it remarkable for you to discover me living in Russia, because I am a Russian by birth. I have not always made my home in my own country, but that makes no difference, since my love and sympathy have always been with my own people. Here I am only known as
‘Sonya.’ But I do not wish to speak of myself, but of you. I have a
strong reason for my interest in you, Nona, for although you may find it hard to believe, I once knew your mother.”
“Knew my mother?” The young American girl scarcely understood what was being said. She was so many thousands of miles both in fact and in thought from her own home and her own history. She could not believe that her companion was telling the truth. In any case she was merely mistaking her for some one else.
So Nona shook her head gravely. “I am sorry, but I don’t think that possible,” she explained. “My mother was a southern woman, who lived very quietly in an old-fashioned city. I can’t see how your lives could ever have touched.”
Until this instant Nona had remained seated with her former friend standing before her.
She did not realize how much she showed her resentment at this use of her mother’s name. Now she made an effort to rise from her chair.
“I am very happy to have seen you again,” she protested in the formal manner which Barbara Meade sometimes admired and at other times resented.
But her companion was not influenced and indeed paid no attention to the younger girl’s hauteur. She merely put a restraining hand on her shoulder, adding,