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PAGE 2

The Nonentity
by [?]

“Soldiers like anything noisy,” said Beryl Denvers scathingly.

And then–because he had no retort ready–her heart smote her.

“But it was kind of you to go,” she said. “I am sure you wouldn’t enjoy it.”

“Oh, but I did,” he said, “on the whole. I should have liked it better if Fletcher hadn’t been in the chair, and so, I think, would they. But it passed off very fairly well.”

“Why do you object to Major Fletcher?” Beryl’s tone was slightly aggressive.

Lord Ronald hesitated a little.

“He isn’t much liked,” he told her vaguely.

She frowned.

“But that is no answer. Are you afraid to answer me?”

He laughed at that, laughed easily and naturally, in the tolerant fashion that most exasperated her.

“Oh, no; I’m not afraid. But I don’t like hurting people’s feelings–especially yours.”

“I do not see how that is possible,” she rejoined, with dignity, “where my feelings are not concerned.”

“Ah, but that’s where it is,” he responded. “You like Fletcher well enough to be extremely indignant if anyone were to tell you that he is not a nice person for you to know.”

“I object to unpleasant insinuations regarding any one,” she said, with slightly heightened colour. “They always appear to me cowardly.”

“Yes; but you asked, you know,” Lord Ronald reminded her gently.

Her colour deepened. It was not often that he got the better of her; not often, indeed, that he exerted himself to do so. She began to wish ardently that he would go. Really, he was quite insufferable to-day.

Had he been a man of any perception whatever she would almost have thought that he fathomed her desire, for at this point he rose in a leisurely fashion as though upon the point of departure.

She rose also from behind the tea-table with a little inward pricking of conscience for wishing him gone. She wondered if he deemed her inhospitable, but if he did he disguised it very carefully, for his eyes held nothing but friendliness as they met her own.

“Has it never occurred to you,” he said, “that you lead a very unprotected existence here?”

Something in his expression checked her first impulse to resent the question. Her lip quivered unexpectedly.

“Now and then,” she said.

“Are you a man-hater?” he asked deliberately.

She laughed a little.

“Why do you ask such an absurd question?”

He seemed to hesitate momentarily.

“Because–forgive me–wouldn’t you be a good deal happier if you were to marry again?”

Again her colour rose hotly. What did the man mean by assuming this attitude? Was he about to plead his own cause, or that of another?

“I think it exceedingly doubtful,” she replied stiffly, meeting his steady eyes with a hint of defiance.

“You have never thought of such a thing perhaps?” he suggested.

She smiled a woman’s pitying smile.

“Of course I have thought of it.”

“Then you have not yet met the man to whom you would care to entrust yourself?” he asked.

She took fire at this. It was an act of presumption not to be borne.

“Even if I had,” she said, with burning cheeks, “I do not think I should make Lord Ronald Prior my confidant.”

“No?” he said. “Yet you might do worse.”

Her eyes shot scorn.

“Can a man be worse than inept?” she asked.

“Yes,” he answered. “Since you ask me, I think he can–a good deal worse.”

“I detest colourless people!” she broke in vehemently.

He smiled.

“In fact, you prefer black sheep to grey sheep. A good many women do. But it doesn’t follow that the preference is a wise one.”

The colour faded suddenly from her face. Did he know how ghastly a failure her first marriage had been? Most people knew. Could it be to this that he was referring? The bare suspicion made her wince.

“That,” she said icily, “is no one’s affair but my own. I am not wholly ignorant of the ways of the world. And I know whom I can trust.”

“You trust me, for instance?” said Lord Ronald.

She looked him up and down witheringly.

“I should say you are quite the most harmless man I know.”