"He's nothing but a boy," he said at last, with an effort.
"He's no boy," she said. "He's almost twenty-two years old. He's a man."
"Some are men at twenty-two, and some are boys," Holloway remarked. "I was
a man before I was eighteen--a man out in the world of men. But Denham's a
boy."
He rose as he spoke, and she held out her hand for him to raise her, too.
"It's early to go," she remarked parenthetically.
"I know," he replied; "but I hear someone being shown into the
drawing-room. I don't feel formal to-day, and if I can't lounge in here
alone with you I'd rather go."
"How egotistical!" she commented.
"I am egotistical," he admitted.
And went.
The footman passed him in the hall; he had a card upon his silver salver,
and was seeking his mistress in the library. But when he entered there the
room was empty. Mrs. Rosscott had slipped through the blue velvet
portieres, expecting to see a friend, and had stopped short on the other
side, amazed at finding herself face to face with an utter stranger.
"I gave the man my card," said the stranger, in a tone as faded as his
mustache. He was a long, thin man, but what the Germans style "_sehr
korrect_."
"I didn't wait to get it," the hostess said. "I supposed that, of course,
it was somebody that I knew."
"That was natural," he admitted.
There was a slight pause of awkwardness.
"Won't you sit down?" she asked.
"Certainly," said the caller, and sat down.
Then she sat down, too, and another awkward pause ensued.
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