“Oh, it wasn’t primping that kept me. I stopped for a few minutes at the schoolroom door. Poor Lena! She seemed to be feeling the responsibilities of erudition terribly this morning. She showed me her botany slides with such an air! Do you know what genus has the rostellum, Anna?”
“No, I don’t,” said Anna, shortly. “And Lena’s growing up a perfect young prig. I’ll have to change governesses. Heaven knows what I’ll draw next time! The last one had charm, but no learning, and mighty little intelligence. This one has no manner at all, and is of encyclopaedic information. A daughter’s a terrible responsibility.”
“Isn’t she?” Millicent’s tone was one of affectionate raillery as she gathered her draperies about her in the automobile. The notion of Anna’s responsibilities amused her; Anna was so untouched by them—as smooth-skinned, as slim and vivacious, as the forty-year-old mother of two boys entering college, a girl in the schoolroom and another in the nursery, as she had been as a debutante.
“Oh, you may make fun,” said Anna, snapping open the frothy thing she called a sunshade, “but you don’t know how I lie awake nights, shuddering lest Lena grow up a near-sighted girl with no color and serious views.”
Millicent only smiled as the great machine moved off. The sunshine, the rare and ordered beauty of the place, the fragrance of the soft winds, all lapped her in indolence. As they neared the gate that gave upon the open road, a turn brought them in sight of the front of the house. It was very beautiful. She breathed deeply in the content of the sight—the delicate lines, the soft color, the perfection of detail. In the gardens were stained, mellow columns and balustrades which Anna had brought from the dismantled palace in the Italian hills where she had found them. Everywhere wealth made its subtlest, most delicate appeal to her eyes.
“My house,” thought Millicent, as they shot out of the grounds, “shall be different, but as beautiful. The Tudor style, I think, and for my out-of-door glory a vast rose-garden,—acres, if I please!” Then she called sternly to her straying imagination. She was picturing what she might have as the wife of the man before her—the man whose first proposal she had unhesitatingly refused, whose appearance at Lakeholm she had regarded as proof of disloyalty on Anna’s part—the man who at the best represented to her only the artistic possibilities of riches. She dismissed her reverie with a frown and joined in the talk.
“Do you know,” she confessed, “I forget where it is that we are going?”
“We’re coming back to the Monroes’ for luncheon,” Mrs. Dinsmore reminded her. “But Mr. Brockton is going to skim over most of the Berkshires first. I think you said you hadn’t been in this part of the country before, Mr. Brockton?”
“No,” said Brockton, “I haven’t had much chance to get acquainted with the playgrounds of the country. I’ve been too busy earning a holiday. But I’ve earned it all right.” He turned to emphasize his boast with a nod toward Millicent. She blushed. His very chauffeur must redden at his braggart air, she thought. The Tudor castle grew dim in her vision.
“What do you think of the bubble, Miss Harned?” he went on. “Goes like a bird, don’t she?”