The Honorable Louis Wesson, meanwhile, having left the water side, lit a cigarette, and proceeded to make a tour of the grounds. He felt with the world. One is never at one's best and sunniest when a rival has performed a brilliant and successful piece of cutting-out work beneath one's very eyes. Something of a jaundiced stains one's outlook on life in such circumstances. Mr. Wesson did not pretend to himself that he was violently in love with Molly. But he certainly admired her, and intended, unless he changed his mind later on, to marry her.
He walked, drawing thoughtfully at his cigarette. The more he reviewed the late episode, the less he liked it. He had not seen Jimmy put Molly in the canoe, and her departure seemed to him a deliberate desertion. She had promised to play tennis with him, and at the last moment she had gone off with this fellow Pitt. Who was Pitt? He was always in the way—shoving himself in.
At this moment, a large, warm raindrop fell on his hand. From the bushes all round came an ever-increasing patter. The sky was leaden.
He looked round him for shelter. He had reached the rose garden in the course of his perambulations. At the far end was a summerhouse. He turned up his coat collar and ran.
As he drew near, he heard a slow and dirgelike whistling from the interior. in out of breath, just as the began, he found Spennie seated at the little wooden table with an earnest expression on his face. The table was covered with cards.
"How Jim took exercise," said Spennie, glancing up. "Hello, Wesson. By
Jove, isn't it coming down!"
With which greeting he turned his attention to his cards once more. He took one from the pack in his left hand, looked at it, hesitated for a moment, as if doubtful whereabouts on the table it would produce the most effect; and finally put it down, face upward.
Then he moved another card from the table, and put it on top of the other one. Throughout the performance he whistled painfully.
Wesson regarded him with disfavor. "That looks damned exciting," he said. He reserved his more polished periods for use in public. "What are you playing at?"
"Wha-a-a'?" said Spennie abstractedly, another card.
"Oh, don't sit there looking like a frog," said Wesson . "Talk, man."
"What's the matter? What do you want? Hello, I've done it. No, I haven't. No luck at all. Haven't brought up a all day."
He gathered up the cards, and began to . "Ah, lov'," he sang , with a vacant eye on the roof of the summerhouse, "could I bot tell thee how moch——"
"Oh, stop it!" said Wesson.
"You seem , laddie. What's the matter? Ah, lov', could I bot tell thee——"
"Spennie, who's this fellow Pitt?"
"Jimmy Pitt? of mine. One of the absolute. Ay, nutty to the core, good my lord. Ah, lov', could I bot tell——"
"Where did you meet him?"
"London. Why?"
"He and your sister seem pretty good friends."
"I shouldn't wonder. Knew each other out in America. Bridge, bridge, ber-ridge, a capital game for two. Shuffle and cut and deal away, and let the lo-oser pay-ah. Ber-ridge——"
"Well, let's have a game, then. Anything for something to do. Curse this rain! We shall be cooped up here till dinner at this rate."
"Double dummy's a frightfully rotten game," said Spennie. "Ever played picquet? I could teach it to you in five minutes."
A look of almost came into Wesson's face, the look of one who sees a miracle performed before his eyes. For years he had been using all the large stock of at his command to induce callow youths to play picquet with him and here was thi............