<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XII </h2>
<p>Two days before Christmas Delight came out. There was an afternoon
reception at the rectory, and the plain old house blossomed with the
debutante's bouquets and baskets of flowers.</p>
<p>For weeks before the house had been getting ready. The rector, looking
about for his accustomed chair, had been told it was at the upholsterer's,
or had found his beloved and ragged old books relegated to dark corners of
the bookcases. There were always stepladders on the landings, and
paper-hangers waiting until a man got out of bed in the morning. And once
he put his ecclesiastical heel in a pail of varnish, and slid down an
entire staircase, to the great imperilment of his kindly old soul.</p>
<p>But he had consented without demur to the coming-out party, and he had
taken, during all the morning of the great day, a most mundane interest in
the boxes of flowers that came in every few minutes. He stood inside a
window, under pretense of having no place to sit down, and called out
regularly,</p>
<p>"Six more coming, mother! And a boy with three ringing across the street.
I think he's made a mistake. Yes, he has. He's coming over!"</p>
<p>When all the stands and tables were overflowing, the bouquets were hung to
the curtains in the windows. And Delight, taking a last survey, from the
doorway, expressed her satisfaction.</p>
<p>"It's heavenly," she said. "Imagine all those flowers for me. It looks"—she
squinted up her eyes critically—"it looks precisely like a highly
successful funeral."</p>
<p>But a part of her satisfaction was pure pose, for the benefit of that
kindly pair who loved her so. Alone in her room, dressed to go
down-stairs, Delight drew a long breath and picked up her flowers which
Clayton Spencer had sent. It had been his kindly custom for years to send
to each little debutante, as she made her bow, a great armful of white
lilacs and trailing tiny white rosebuds.</p>
<p>"Fifty dollars, probably," Delight reflected. "And the Belgians needing
flannels. It's dreadful."</p>
<p>Her resentment against Graham was dying. After all, he was only a child in
Toots Hayden's hands. And she made one of those curious
"He-loves-me-he-loves-me-not" arrangements in her own mind. If Graham came
that afternoon, she would take it as a sign that there was still some good
in him, and she would try to save him from himself. She had been rather
nasty to him. If he did not come—</p>
<p>A great many came, mostly women, with a sprinkling of men. The rector, who
loved people, was in his element. He was proud of Delight, proud of his
home; he had never ceased being proud of his wife. He knew who exactly had
sent each basket of flowers, each hanging bunch. "Your exquisite orchids,"
he would say; or, "that perfectly charming basket. It is there, just
beside Mrs. Haverford."</p>
<p>But when Natalie Spencer came in alone, splendid in Russian sables, he
happened to be looking at Delight, and he saw the light die out of her
eyes.</p>
<p>Natalie had tried to bring Graham with her. She had gone into his room
that morning while he was dressing and asked him. To tell the truth, she
was uneasy about Marion Hayden and his growing intimacy there.</p>
<p>"You will, won't you, Graham, dear?"</p>
<p>"Sorry, mother. I just can't. I'm taking a girl out."</p>
<p>"I suppose it's Marion."</p>
<p>Her tone caused him to turn and look at her.</p>
<p>"Yes, it's Marion. What's wrong with that?"</p>
<p>"It's so silly, Graham. She's older than you are. And she's not really
nice, Graham. I don't mean anything horrid, but she's designing. She knows
you are young and—well, she's just playing with you. I know girls,
Graham. I—"</p>
<p>She stopped, before his angry gaze.</p>
<p>"She is nice enough for you to ask here," he said hastily.</p>
<p>"She wants your money. That's all."</p>
<p>He had laughed then, an ugly laugh.</p>
<p>"There's a lot of it for her to want."</p>
<p>And Natalie had gone away to shed tears of fury and resentment in her own
room.</p>
<p>She was really frightened. Bills for flowers sent to Marion were coming
in, to lie unpaid on Graham's writing table. She had over-drawn once again
to pay them, and other bills, for theater tickets, checks signed at
restaurants, over-due club accounts.</p>
<p>So she went to the Haverfords alone, and managed very effectually to snub
Mrs. Hayden before the rector's very eyes.</p>
<p>Mrs. Hayden thereupon followed an impulse.</p>
<p>"If it were not for Natalie Spencer," she said, following that lady's
sables with malevolent eyes, "I should be very happy in something I want
to tell you. Can we find a corner somewhere?"</p>
<p>And Doctor Haverford had followed her uneasily, behind some palms. She was
a thin little woman with a maddening habit of drawing her tight veil down
even closer by a contortion of her lower jaw, so that the rector found
himself watching her chin rather than her eyes.</p>
<p>"I want you to know right away, as Marion's clergyman, and ours," she had
said, and had given her jaw a particularly vicious wag and twist. "Of
course it is not announced—I don't believe even the Spencers know it
yet. I am only telling you now because I know how dearly"—she did it
again—"how dearly interested you are in all your spiritual children.
Marion is engaged to Graham Spencer."</p>
<p>The rector had not been a shining light for years without learning how to
control his expression. He had a second, too, while she contorted her face
again, to recover himself.</p>
<p>"Thank you," he said gravely. "I much appreciate your telling me."</p>
<p>Mrs. Hayden had lowered her voice still more. The revelation took on the
appearance of conspiracy.</p>
<p>"In the early spring, probably," she said, "we shall need your services,
and your blessing."</p>
<p>So that was the end of one dream. He had dreamed so many—in his
youth, of spiritualizing his worldly flock; in middle life, of a
bishopric; he had dreamed of sons, to carry on the name he had meant to
make famous. But the failures of those dreams had been at once his own
failure and his own disappointment. This was different.</p>
<p>He was profoundly depressed. He wandered out of the crowd and, after
colliding with a man from the caterer's in a dark rear hall, found his way
up the servant's staircase to the small back room where he kept the lares
and penates of his quiet life, his pipe, his fishing rods, a shabby old
smoking coat, and back files of magazines which he intended some day to
read, when he got round to it.</p>
<p>The little room was jammed with old furniture, stripped from the lower
floor to make room for the crowd. He had to get down on his knees and
crawl under a table to reach his pipe. But he achieved it finally, still
with an air of abstraction, and lighted it. Then, as there was no place to
sit down, he stood in the center of the little room and thought.</p>
<p>He did not go down again. He heard the noise of the arriving and departing
motors subside, its replacement by the sound of clattering china, being
washed below in the pantry. He went down finally, to be served with a meal
largely supplemented by the left-overs of the afternoon refreshments,
ornate salads, fancy ices, and an overwhelming table decoration that shut
him off from his wife and Delight, and left him in magnificent solitude
behind a pyramid of flowers.</p>
<p>Bits of the afternoon's gossip reached him; the comments on Delight's
dress and her flowers; the reasons certain people had not come. But
nothing of the subject nearest his heart. At the end of the meal Delight
got up.</p>
<p>"I'm going to call up Mr. Spencer," she said. "He has about fifty dollars'
worth of thanks coming to him."</p>
<p>"I didn't see Graham," said Mrs. Haverford. "Was he here?"</p>
<p>Delight stood poised for flight.</p>
<p>"He couldn't come because he had enough to do being two places at once.
His mother said he was working, and Mrs. Hayden said he had taken Marion
to the Country Club. I don't know why they take the trouble to lie to me."</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />