“How was the dance?” she asked. “I was too tired to go. Hugh Chiltern offered to take me.”

“I saw Mr. Chiltern there. I met him last winter at the Graingers'.”

“He's staying with us,” said Mrs. Shorter; “you know he's a sort of cousin of Jerry's, and devoted to him. He turned up yesterday morning on Dicky Farnham's yacht, in the midst of all that storm. It appears that Dicky met him in New York, and Hugh said he was coming up here, and Dicky offered to sail him up. When the storm broke they were just outside, and all on board lost their heads, and Hugh took charge and sailed in. Dicky told me that himself.”

“Then it wasn't—recklessness,” said Honora, involuntarily. But Mrs. Shorter did not appear to be surprised by the remark.

“That's what everybody thinks, of course,” she answered. “They say that he had a chance to run in somewhere, and browbeat Dicky into keeping on for Newport at the risk of their lives. They do Hugh an injustice. He might have done that some years ago, but he's changed.”

Curiosity got the better of Honora.

“Changed?” she repeated.

“Of course you didn't know him in the old days, Honora,” said Mrs. Shorter. “You wouldn't recognize him now. I've seen a good deal of men, but he is the most interesting and astounding transformation I've ever known.”

“How?” asked Honora. She was sitting before the glass, with her hand raised to her hair.

Mrs. Shorter appeared puzzled.