wouldnât touch him with a barge pole. I know of him.â
âDavid, that little idiotâs gone up to meet him. Sheâs been having a silly flirtation with him just out of sheer contradictoriness and because George for once in his life said âNo.â Thatâs why I was so anxious to get her down here.â
âWell, I donât quite see what we can do about it,â said David. âI expect sheâs pretty well able to look after herself, you know.â
âShe isnât . Girls arenâtâthey think they know everything, and they donâtâYes, another three minutes, please.â
âAll the same, my dear girlââ
âNo, Davidâ listen . I want to tell you. I got on to the little wretch. And sheâs dining with him, and then theyâre going to a revue, and then on to a night-club to dance. Thatâs all bad enough; but sheâs proposing to sleep at my flat.â
âWell?â
âShe mustnât .â
âWhy not?â
âThereâs nobody there. Thatâs what I wanted to tell you. The cookâs motherâs ill, and I said she could sleep at home; and the other girlâs having a holiday. She simply mustnât come home with that man to an empty flat.â
David whistled again.
âPerhaps the cook will have stayed.â
âNoâsheâd just gone. Folly told me so and rang off before I could say anything. I couldnât get on again. If the last train hadnât gone, Iâd come up myself. Of course I could get a car and come. Only then Betty would have to know, and I donât want her to. Sheâd tell one of the Aunts, and theyâd tell Grandmamma, and the Familyâd go on talking about it for the next hundred years or so.â
âNo,â said David. âYou canât come up. What do you want me to do?â
âWell, if you could be there when they get back. The little wretch has got my key. It was in my bag, and she simply helped herself to it. What did you say?â
âNever mind.â
âNo, donât cut us offâI want three minutes more. David, are you there?â
âYesâgo on. What am I to do with her?â
âI thought perhaps Julieâsheâs such a little dear, she wonât talkâI donât want the Family to know.â
âGood Lordâno! Look here, Eleanor, donât worry. And donât dream of coming up. Iâll fix something. Julieâs only got one spare room; but I can sleep at the officeâI do sometimes. Now, is that all?â
âYes. Davidâdonât be very angry with her.â
David fairly snorted.
âShe wants a good leathering!â
He hung up the receiver and came back to the table.
âWho are we taking in instead of you?â said Frank with a laugh. âIs it Eleanor?â
âNoâFolly March. Sheâs got herself stuck in town, and Eleanorâs fussed.â
âI like Folly,â said Julie.
David was surprised to find himself liking Julie the better for it. He couldnât imagine why. He finished a rather tepid helping of beef-steak pie, and as soon as the maid had left the room, he told Julie pretty nearly everything that Eleanor had told him.
Julie was deeply interested.
âOf course Iâll have her. But how are you going to get hold of her? Oh! Iâve got a lovely plan! Letâs go to all the night-clubs.â
âUs!â said Frank with vehemence.
âYou and me and David, Franko. I think it would be tremendous fun.â
âNothing doing,â said Frank. âLook here, David, Julieâs not on in this. Weâll take Folly in, though, if you can collect her. What did you say the manâs name was?â
âI didnât sayâbut itâs St. Inigo.â
Frankâs eyebrows went up, and he exclaimed sharply:
âSt. Inigo! Sheâs rather going the limit, isnât
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