Page:The Relentless City.djvu/43

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THE RELENTLESS CITY
33

taking her.' She paused a moment. ' Do you know Bilton?' she asked.

' The impresario? No.'

' He is a splendid type,' she said, ' of what we are coming to.'

' Cad, I should think,' said Charlie.

' Cad—oh yes. Why not? But a cad with a head. So many cads haven't one. I met him the other night.'

' Where?' asked Charlie, with the vague jealousy of everybody characteristic of a man in love.

' I forget. At the house of some other cad. It is rather odd, Charlie; he is the image of you to look at. When I first saw him, I thought it was you. He is just about the same height, he has the same—don't blush—the same extremely handsome face. Also he moves like you, rather slowly; but he gets there.'

' You mean I don't,' said Charlie.

' I didn't mean it that moment. Your remark again was exactly like an Englishman. But I liked him; he has force. I respect that enormously.'

On the top of Charlie's tongue was ' You mean I have none,' but he was not English enough for that.

' s he going with her?' he asked.

' No; he has gone. He has three theatres in New York, and he is going to instal Dorothy Emsworth in one of them. Is it true, by the way——— '

She stopped in the middle of her sentence.

' Probably not,' said Charlie, rather too quickly.

' You mean it is,' she said—' about Bertie.'

Charlie made the noise usually written ' Pshaw!'

' Oh, my dear Sybil,' he said, ' Queen Anne is dead, the prophets are dead. There are heaps of old histories.'

Sybil Massington stopped.

' Now, I am going to ask you a question,' she said. ' You