“I didn’t suggest any wine because you seem so young,” he said.
“How old do I seem?”
“Sixteen perhaps.”
“I am twenty-one.”
“Then you’ve had no troubles.”
“I don’t know what you call trouble,” she remarked, indifferently, watching the arriving throngs.
The orchestra, too, had taken its place.
“Well,” she said, “now that you’ve picked me up, what do you really want of me?” There was no mitigating smile to soften what she said. She dropped her elbows on the table, rested her chin between her palms and looked at him with the same searching, undisturbed expression that is so disconcerting in children. As he made no reply: “May I have a cocktail?” she inquired.
He gave the order. And his mind registered pessimism. “There is nothing doing with this girl,” he thought. “She’s already on the toboggan.” But he said aloud: “That was beautiful work you did down in the theatre, Miss Norne.”
“Did you think so?”