"It sounded as though you were just telling me to give you all those
dances."
"Well, I want 'em!" George insisted.
"What about all the other girls it's your duty to dance with?"
"They'll have to go without," he said heartlessly; and then, with
surprising vehemence: "Here! I want to know: Are you going to give me
those--?
"Good gracious!" she laughed. "Yes!"
The applicants flocked round her, urging contracts for what remained, but
they did not dislodge George from her side, though he made it evident that they
succeeded in annoying him; and presently he extricated her from an accumulating
siege--she must have connived in the extrication--and bore her off to sit
beside him upon the stairway that led to the musicians' gallery, where they
were sufficiently retired, yet had a view of the room.
"How'd all those ducks get to know you so quick?" George inquired,
with little enthusiasm.
"Oh, I've been here a week."
"Looks as if you'd been pretty busy!" he said. "Most of those
ducks, I don't know what my mother wanted to invite 'em here for."
"Don't you like them?"
"Oh, I used to see something of a few of 'em. I was president of a club
we had here, and some of 'em belonged to it, but I don't care much for that sort
of thing any more. I really don't see why my mother invited 'em."
"Perhaps it was on account of their parents," Miss Morgan
suggested mildly. "Maybe she didn't want to offend their fathers and
mothers."
"Oh, hardly! I don't think my mother need worry much about offending
anybody in this old town."
"It must be wonderful," said Miss Morgan, "It must be
wonderful, Mr. Amberson--Mr. Minafer, I mean."
"What must be wonderful?"
"To be so important as that!"
"That isn't 'important,'" George assured her. "Anybody that
really is anybody ought to be able to do about as they like in their own town,
I should think!"
She looked at him critically from under her shading lashes--but her eyes
grew gentler almost at once. In truth, they became more appreciative than
critical. George's imperious good looks were altogether manly, yet approached
actual beauty as closely as a boy's good looks should dare; and dance-music and
flowers have some effect upon nineteen-year-old girls as well as upon
eighteen-year-old boys. Miss Morgan turned her eyes slowly from George, and
pressed her face among the lilies-of-the-valley and violets of the pretty
bouquet she curried, while, from the gallery above, the music of the next dance
carolled out merrily in a new two-step. The musicians made the melody gay for
the Christmastime with chimes of sleighbells, and the entrance to the shadowed
stairway framed the passing flushed and lively dancers, but neither George nor
Miss Morgan suggested moving to join the dance.
The stairway was draughty: the steps were narrow and uncomfortable; no older
person would have remained in such a place. Moreover, these two young people
were strangers to each other; neither had said anything in which the other had
discovered the slightest intrinsic interest; there had not arisen between them
the beginnings of congeniality, or even of friendliness--but stairways near
ballrooms have more to answer for than have moonlit lakes and mountain sunsets.
Some day the laws of glamour must be discovered, because they are so important
that the world would be wiser now if Sir Isaac Newton had been hit on the head,
not by an apple, but by a young lady.
Age, confused by its own long accumulation of follies, is everlastingly
inquiring, "What does she see in him?" as if young love came about
through thinking--or through conduct. Age wants to know: "What on earth
can they talk about?" as if talking had anything to do with April rains!
At seventy, one gets up in the morning, finds the air sweet under a bright sun,
feels lively; thinks, "I am hearty, to-day," and plans to go for a
drive. At eighteen, one goes to a dance, sits with a stranger on a stairway,
feels peculiar, thinks nothing, and becomes incapable of any plan whatever.
Miss Morgan and George stayed where they were.
They had agreed to this in silence and without knowing it; certainly without
exchanging glances of intelligence--they had exchanged no glances at all. Both
sat staring vaguely out into the ballroom, and, for a time, they did not speak.
Over their heads the music reached a climax of vivacity: drums, cymbals,
triangle, and sleighbells, beating, clashing, tinkling. Here and there were to
be seen couples so carried away that, ceasing to move at the decorous, even
glide, considered most knowing, they pranced and whirled through the throng,
from wall to wall, galloping bounteously in abandon. George suffered a shock of
vague surprise when he perceived that his aunt, Fanny Minafer, was the
lady-half of one of these wild couples.
Fanny Minafer, who rouged a little, was like fruit which in some climates
dries with the bloom on. Her features had remained prettily childlike; so had
her figure, and there were times when strangers, seeing her across the street,
took her to be about twenty; they were other times when at the same distance
they took her to be about sixty, instead of forty, as she was. She had old days
and young days; old hours and young hours; old minutes and young minutes; for
the change might be that quick. An alteration in her expression, or a
difference in the attitude of her head, would cause astonishing indentations to
appear--and behold, Fanny was an old lady! But she had been never more
childlike than she was to-night as she flew over the floor in the capable arms
of the queer-looking duck; for this person was her partner.
The queer-looking duck had been a real dancer in his day, it appeared; and
evidently his day was not yet over. In spite of the headlong, gay rapidity with
which he bore Miss Fanny about the big room, he danced authoritatively,
avoiding without effort the lightest collision with other couples, maintaining
sufficient grace throughout his wildest moments, and all the while laughing and
talking with his partner. What was most remarkable to George, and a little
irritating, this stranger in the Amberson Mansion had no vestige of the air of
deference proper to a stranger in such a place: he seemed thoroughly at home.
He seemed offensively so, indeed, when, passing the entrance to the gallery
stairway, he disengaged his hand from Miss Fanny's for an instant, and not
pausing in the dance, waved a laughing salutation more than cordial, then
capered lightly out of sight.
George gazed stonily at this manifestation, responding neither by word nor
sign. "How's that for a bit of freshness?" he murmured.
"What was?" Miss Morgan asked.
"That queer-looking duck waving his hand at me like that. Except he's
the Sharon girls' uncle I don't know him from Adam."
"You don't need to," she said. "He wasn't waving his hand to
you: he meant me."
"Oh, he did?" George was not mollified by the explanation.
"Everybody seems to mean you! You certainly do seem to've been pretty busy
this week you've been here!"
She pressed her bouquet to her face again, and laughed into it, not
displeased. She made no other comment, and for another period neither spoke.
Meanwhile the music stopped; loud applause insisted upon its renewal; an encore
was danced; there was an interlude of voices; and the changing of partners
began.
"Well," said George finally, "I must say you don't seem to be
much of a prattler. They say it's a great way to get a reputation for being
wise, never saying much. Don't you ever talk any?"
"When people can understand," she answered.
He had been looking moodily out at the ballroom but he turned to her
quickly, at this, saw that her eyes were sunny and content, over the top of her
bouquet; and he consented to smile.
"Girls are usually pretty fresh!" he said. "They ought to go
to a man's college about a year: they'd get taught a few things about
freshness! What you got to do after two o'clock to-morrow afternoon?"
"A whole lot of things. Every minute filled up."
"All right," said George. "The snow's fine for sleighing:
I'll come for you in a cutter at ten minutes after two."
"I can't possibly go."
"If you don't," he said, "I'm going to sit in the cutter in
front of the gate, wherever you're visiting, all afternoon, and if you try to
go out with anybody else he's got to whip me before he gets you." And as
she laughed--though she blushed a little, too--he continued, seriously:
"If you think I'm not in earnest you're at liberty to make quite a big
experiment!"
She laughed again. "I don't think I've often had so large a compliment
as that," she said, "especially on such short notice--and yet, I
don't think I'll go with you."
"You be ready at ten minutes after two."
"No, I won't."
"Yes, you will!"
"Yes," she said, "I will!" And her partner for the next
dance arrived, breathless with searching.
"Don't forget I've got the third from now," George called after
her.
"I won't."
"And every third one after that."
"I know!" she called, over her partner's shoulder, and her voice
was amused--but meek.
When "the third from now" came, George presented himself before
her without any greeting, like a brother, or a mannerless old friend. Neither
did she greet him, but moved away with him, concluding, as she went, an
exchange of badinage with the preceding partner: she had been talkative enough
with him, it appeared. In fact, both George and Miss Morgan talked much more to
every one else that evening, than to each other; and they said nothing at all
at this time. Both looked preoccupied, as they began to dance, and preserved a
gravity of expression to the end of the number. And when "the third one
after that" came, they did not dance, but went back to the gallery
stairway, seeming to have reached an understanding without any verbal
consultation, that this suburb was again the place for them.
"Well," said George, coolly, when they were seated, "what did
you say your name was?"
"Morgan."
"Funny name!"
"Everybody else's name always is."
"I didn't mean it was really funny," George explained.
"That's just one of my crowd's bits of horsing at college. We always say
'funny name' no matter what it is. I guess we're pretty fresh sometimes; but I
knew your name was Morgan because my mother said so downstairs. I meant: what's
the rest of it?"
"Lucy."
He was silent.
"Is 'Lucy' a funny name, too?" she inquired.
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