<h3> IV </h3>
<p>The next evening when he arrived at the club he found Mr. Dinwiddie
fuming.</p>
<p>"What do you think!" he exclaimed as he led his guest to his favorite
table in the corner. "That old rascal bluffed me! Bluffed me. Said
there was no relative of Countess Zattiany in the country that he knew
of. Looked blank as a post when I told him of the extraordinary
resemblance of that girl to Mary Ogden. Said he never heard of her.
Laughed at the idea of a sub-rosa daughter. Pretended to be angry at
such an aspersion on Mary's fair fame—was in love with her himself
like the rest of us. But he was lying and he knew that I knew he was
lying. What'll you have?"</p>
<p>"Anything. Go ahead. I know by the glitter of your eye that you
haven't finished."</p>
<p>"You're right, I haven't." He gave his order and leaned forward.
"I've done a little prospecting on my own account. Mary inherited the
old Ogden house over on Murray Hill. I happen to know that the lease
ran out last year and that it hasn't been rented since. Well, I walked
past there today, and some one is living in it. Boarding off. Windows
open. Fresh curtains. A servant receiving a parcel at the area door.
She's there, mark my words."</p>
<p>"Not a doubt of it. Why didn't you walk boldly up and send in your
card?"</p>
<p>"Hadn't the courage. Besides, that girl never heard of me. I hadn't
the ghost of an excuse."</p>
<p>"Why not put Mrs. Oglethorpe on the scent? She could call. Women are
always fertile in excuses."</p>
<p>"I can't see what pretext she could trump up. She'd be keen enough,
all right, but she hardly could tell this haughty creature with the
unmistakable stamp of the great world on her that she knows she must be
the left-handed daughter of Mary Ogden. Even Jane hasn't assurance
enough for that."</p>
<p>"She might assume that this young woman is a member of the Countess
Zattiany's family—daughter of a cousin or something—those
extraordinary resemblances do recur in families.… That indeed may
be the explanation."</p>
<p>"Not a bit of it. That girl is Mary's daughter."</p>
<p>"I'm inclined to agree with you. But it is understood that you can't
hurl it at her. Mrs. Oglethorpe, however, could invent a pretty
pretence—saw her at the theatre—struck by her likeness to her old
friend—discovered she was living in the family mansion—felt that she
must seek her out——"</p>
<p>"Um. That's not quite the sort of thing the New York woman does, and
you know it. True, the war has upset them as it has every one else.
They are still restless. I have met two opera singers, two actresses,
three of these juvenile editors and columnists at dinners and musical
evenings during the last month alone. I believe they'd lionize Charley
Chaplin if he'd let them, but I understand he's more exclusive than we
are. God! What is New York Society coming to?"</p>
<p>"You like straying outside the sacred preserves yourself occasionally."</p>
<p>"I do. But I'm a man. We always did stray a bit. But when I think of
the exclusiveness of only a few years ago! Why, New York Society was a
Club. The most exclusive club in the world. London Society was
Bohemia compared to it. It's the democratic flu, that's what!
Aristocracy's done for."</p>
<p>"I'm not so sure. The reaction may be devastating. But it's a sign of
grace that they've at last discovered sufficient intelligence to be
bored with their somewhat monotonous selves. And Mrs. Oglethorpe
always does exactly as she pleases. Better drop her a hint."</p>
<p>"Well, I'll try it. But while Jane may be high-handed, she has certain
rigid ideas when it comes to Society and who shall enter its gates. So
far she's made no concessions. She and a few others still keep a tight
rein. Their daughters though! And granddaughters! Jane's girls are
replicas of herself with every atom of her personality left out—but
Jim's daughter, Janet, is her grandmother over again plus modern bad
manners, bad habits, and a defiance of every known convention.
Wretched little flapper. Gad! What are we coming to!"</p>
<p>"Never mind Janet——"</p>
<p>"Why don't you suggest it to Jane? She thinks more of you than of any
one else. I doubt if you could ask her anything——"</p>
<p>"Not much. She'd twig at once. I've had several hints lately that she
has her eye on somebody she wants me to marry. You must do it
yourself—and you <i>must</i>!"</p>
<p>"Well! If she won't, Mrs. Jim might. The younger women would know
this girl like a shot if they thought there was any fun in it—then
drop her if she didn't measure up. I don't know that I care to place
her in such a position."</p>
<p>"I've an idea the fair unknown can take care of herself. I don't see
her picked up and dropped. Probably it would be the deuce and all to
meet her. I think my plan is best. You can rouse any woman's
curiosity, and no one has more than Mrs. Oglethorpe. That would be the
wedge. You'd meet her and then you could give her a dinner and invite
me."</p>
<p>"All right. I'll try it. Something must happen soon. My arteries
won't stand the strain."</p>
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