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An Idyl Of Pelham Bay Park
by
She took off her hat mechanically, washed her face and the hand that had not been bandaged, and “did” her hair. She looked wonderfully pretty in the big mirror over the dressing-table. The heavy ivory brushes looked enormous in her delicate hands. Her eyes were great and round like those of a startled deer.
She heard his voice calling to her from the terrace: “Hello, up there! Got everything you want? Dinner’s ready when you are.”
She hesitated a long time with her hand on the door-key. But what was a locked door in an isolated house to a bad man? She drew a deep breath, turned the key, waited a little longer, and then, as a person steps into a very cold bath, pushed the door open and went out.
He was waiting for her at the foot of the stairs. She went down slowly, her hand on the rail. She had no idea that she was making an exquisite picture. She knew only that she was frightened.
“It’s turned cool,” said the young man. He caught up a light scarf of Chinese embroidery and laid it lightly about her shoulders. She looked him for the first time squarely in the face. She saw chiefly a pair of rather small, deep-set blue eyes; at the outer corners were multitudinous little wrinkles, dug by smiling. The eyes were clear as a child’s, full of compassionate laughter.
A feeling of perfect security came over her. She thanked Heaven that she had not made a ridiculous scene. The chimes of a tall clock broke the silence with music.
He offered her his arm, and she laid her fingers on it.
“I think we are served,” he said, and led her to the terrace. He was solicitous about placing cushions to the best advantage for her. He took one from his own chair, and, on one knee, put it under her feet. He smiled at her across the bowl of roses.
“How old are you?” he said. “You look like a man’s kid sister.”
She told him that she was seventeen and that she had worked for two years in a department store.
“My father was a farmer,” she said, “but he lost one arm, and couldn’t make it pay. So we had to come to the city.”
“Is your father living?”
“Yes. But he says he is dead. He can’t find any work to do. Mother works like a horse, though, and so does Bert, and so do I. The others are at school.”
“Do you like your work?”
“Only for what it brings in.”
“What does it bring in?”
“Six dollars a week.”
The young man smiled. “Never mind,” he said; “eat your soup.”
It did her good, that soup. It was strong and very hot. It put heart into her. When she had finished, he laughed gleefully.
“It’s all very well to talk about rice-powder, and cucumber-cream, and beauty-sleeps, but all you needed to make you look perfectly lovely was a cup of soup. That scarf’s becoming to you, too.”
She blushed happily. She had lost all fear of him.
“What are you pinching yourself for?” he asked.
“To see if I’m awake.”
“You are,” he said, “wide awake. Take my word for it, and I hope you’re having a good time.”
The Chinaman poured something light and sparkling into her glass from a bottle dressed in a napkin. Misgivings returned to her. She had heard of girls being drugged.
“You don’t have to drink it,” said the young man. “I had some served because dinner doesn’t look like dinner without champagne. Still, after the thoroughly unhappy day you’ve put in, I think a mouthful or two would do you good.”
She lifted the glass of champagne, smiled, drank, and choked. He laughed at her merrily.
All through dinner he kept lighting cigarettes and throwing them away. Between times he ate with great relish and heartiness.
Lila was in heaven. All her doubts and fears had vanished. She felt thoroughly at home, as if she had always been used to service and linen and silver and courtesy.