Love in a Cloud: A Comedy in Filigree. Bates Arlo
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Love in a Cloud: A Comedy in Filigree
I
THE MISCHIEF OF A MAID
"No, my dear May, I positively will not hear another word about 'Love in a Cloud.' I am tired to death of the very sound of its stupid name."
"Oh, Mrs. Harbinger," May Calthorpe responded, eagerly defensive, "it isn't a stupid name."
Mrs. Harbinger settled herself back into the pile of gay cushions in the corner of the sofa, and went on without heeding the interruption: —
"I have heard nothing but 'Love in a Cloud,' 'Love in a Cloud,' until it gives me a feeling of nausea. Nobody talks of anything else."
May nodded her head triumphantly, a bright sparkle in her brown eyes.
"That only shows what a perfectly lovely book it is," she declared.
Mrs. Harbinger laughed, and bent forward to arrange a ribbon at May's throat.
"I don't care if it is the loveliest book ever written," she responded; "I won't have it stuffed down my throat morning, noon, and night. Why, if you'll believe it, my husband, who never reads novels, not only read it, but actually kept awake over it, and after that feat he'll talk of it for months."
Pretty May Calthorpe leaned forward with more animation than the mere discussion of an anonymous novel seemed to call for, and caught one of her hostess's hands in both her own.
"Oh, did Mr. Harbinger like it?" she asked. "I am so interested to know what he thinks of it."
"You never will know from me, my dear," was the cool response. "I've forbidden him to speak of it. I tell you that I am bored to death with the old thing."
May started up suddenly from the sofa where she had been sitting beside Mrs. Harbinger. With rather an offended air she crossed to the fireplace, and began to arrange her hat before the mirror over the mantel. Mrs. Harbinger, smiling to herself, gave her attention to setting in order the cups on the tea-table before her. The sun of the April afternoon came in through the window, and from the polished floor of the drawing-room was reflected in bright patches on the ceiling; the brightness seemed to gather about the young, girlish face which looked out from the glass, with red lips and willful brown hair in tendrils over the white forehead. Yet as she faced her reflection, May pouted and put on the look of one aggrieved.
"I am sorry I mentioned the book if you are so dreadfully against it," she observed stiffly. "I was only going to tell you a secret about the author."
Mrs. Harbinger laughed lightly, flashing a comical grimace at her visitor's back.
"There you go again, like everybody else! Do you suppose, May, that there is anybody I know who hasn't told me a secret about the author? Why, I'm in the confidence of at least six persons who cannot deny that they wrote it."
May whirled around swiftly, leaving her reflection so suddenly that it, offended, as quickly turned its back on her.
"Who are they?" she demanded.
"Well," the other answered quizzically, "Mrs. Croydon, for one."
"Mrs. Croydon! Why, nobody could dream that she wrote it!"
"But they do. It must have been written by some one that is inside the social ring; and there is a good deal in the style that is like her other books. I do wish," she went on, with a note of vexation in her voice, "that Graham would ever forget to mix up my two tea-services. He is a perfect genius for forgetting anything he ought to remember."
She walked, as she spoke, to the bell, and as she passed May the girl sprang impulsively toward her, catching both her hands.
"Oh, Mrs. Harbinger!" she cried breathlessly. "I must tell you something before anybody comes."
"Good gracious, May, what is it now? You are as impulsive as a pair of bellows that could blow themselves."
The butler came ponderously in, in reply to her ring as she spoke, and the two women for the moment suspended all sign of emotion.
"Graham," Mrs. Harbinger said, with the air of one long suffering and well-nigh at the end of her patience, "you have mixed the teacups again. Take out the tray, and bring in the cups with the broad gold band."
Graham took up the tray and departed, his back radiating protest until the portière dropped behind him. When he was gone Mrs. Harbinger drew May down to a seat on the sofa, and looked at her steadily.
"You evidently have really something to tell," she said; "and I have an idea that it's mischief. Out with it."
May drew back with heightened color.
"Oh, I don't dare to tell you!" she exclaimed.
"Is it so bad as that?"
"Oh, it isn't bad, only – Oh, I don't know what in the world you will think!"
"No matter what I think. I shan't tell you, my dear. No woman ever does that."
May regarded her with a mixture of curiosity and wistfulness in her look.
"You are talking that way just to give me courage," she said.
"Well, then," the other returned, laughing, "take courage, and tell me. What have you been doing?"
"Only writing letters."
"Only! Good gracious, May! writing letters may be worse than firing dynamite bombs. Women's letters are apt to be double-back-action infernal-machines; and girls' letters are a hundred times worse. Whom did you write to?"
"To the author of 'Love in a Cloud.'"
"To the author of 'Love in a Cloud'? How did you know him?"
Miss Calthorpe cast down her eyes, swallowed as if she were choking, and then murmured faintly: "I don't know him."
"What? Don't know him?" her friend demanded explosively.
"Only the name he puts on his book: Christopher Calumus."
"Which of course isn't his name at all. How in the world came you to write to him?"
The air of Mrs. Harbinger became each moment more judicially moral, while that of May was correspondingly humble and deprecatory. In the interval during which the forgetful Graham returned with the teacups they sat silent. The culprit was twisting nervously a fold of her frock, creasing it in a manner which would have broken the heart of the tailor who made it. The judge regarded her with a look which was half impatient, but full, too, of disapproving sternness.
"How could you write to a man you don't know," insisted Mrs. Harbinger, – "a man of whom you don't even know the name? How could you do such a thing?"
"Why, you see," stammered May, "I thought – that is – Well, I read the book, and – Oh, you know, Mrs. Harbinger, the book is so perfectly lovely, and I was just wild over it, and I – I – "
"You thought that being wild over it wasn't enough," interpolated the hostess in a pause; "but you must make a fool of yourself over it."
"Why, the book was so evidently written by a gentleman, and a man that had fine feelings," the other responded, apparently plucking up courage, "that I – You see, I wanted to know some things that the book didn't tell, and I – "
"You wrote to ask!" her friend concluded, jumping up, and standing before her companion. "Oh, for sheer infernal mischief commend me to one of you demure girls that look as if butter wouldn't melt in your mouths! If your father had known enough to have you educated at home instead of abroad, you'd have more sense."
"Oh, a girl abroad never would dare to do such a thing," May put in naïvely.
"But you thought that in America a girl might do what she pleases. Why, do you mean to tell me that you didn't understand perfectly well that you had no business to write to a man that you don't know? I don't believe any such nonsense."
May blushed very much, and hung her head.
"But I wanted so much to know him," she murmured almost inaudibly.
Mrs. Harbinger regarded her a moment with the expression of a mother who has reached that stage of exasperation which