Craven looked down. He realized that something had been said, that Miss Van Tuyn had perhaps talked injudiciously. But even if she had, why should Lady Sellingworth mind? His relation with her was so utterly different from his relation with the lovely American. It never occurred to him that this wonderful elderly woman, for whom he had such a peculiar feeling, could care for him at all as a girl might, could think of him as a woman thinks of a man with whom she might have an affair of the heart. She fascinated him. Yes! But she did not fascinate that part of him which instinctively responded to Beryl Van Tuyn. And that he fascinated her in any physical way simply did not enter his mind. Nevertheless, at that moment he felt uncomfortable and, absurdly enough, almost guilty.
“Have you seen Beryl since her father’s death?” said Lady Sellingworth.
“No,” he said. “At least—yes, I suppose I have.”
“You suppose?”
Her eyes had not lost their mocking expression.
“I happened to see her in Glebe Place with that fellow they are all chattering about, but I didn’t speak to her. I believe her father was dead then. But I didn’t know it at the time.”
“Oh! Is he so very handsome, as they say?”
She could not help saying this, and watching him as she said it.
“I should say he was a good-looking chap,” answered Craven frigidly. “But he looks like a wrong ‘un.”
“It is difficult to tell what people are at a glance.”