"That isn't the point, Don Carlos," hastily interposed Tony, beginning

to regret having made so much fuss. "I--er--I am willing to believe

that you have not seriously been trying to steal Myra's affections away

from me, or that possibly Myra may have taken you too seriously."

"How can a mere man hope to read what is in the heart of a woman?"

responded Don Carlos, helping himself to a cigarette. "Our Spanish

girls, if they think an accepted lover is not sufficiently devoted and

attentive, will complain that another man is making passionate

love--thus arousing the lover's jealousy and re-firing him with ardour;

and a married woman will invent a lover and complain of his attentions

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for the same reason, if her husband's love seems to be cooling."

"I say, Don Carlos, are you suggesting that Myra complained for that

reason--because she thinks I'm not keen enough?"

"My dear Standish, I am not suggesting anything. I am merely trying to

explain the psychology of the women of my own country as I understand

it. Yet I doubt if Englishwomen differ very greatly, after all, from

their Latin sisters where affairs of the heart are concerned. Won't

you have a cigarette?"

Tony accepted a cigarette from the silver-and-cedar-wood box that was

slid across the table to him, and he lit it with thoughtful

deliberation. Had Myra complained about Don Carlos making love to her

just to keep him "up to scratch," he was wondering, and found himself

more puzzled than ever. He knew that lots of men had been, and

probably still were, in love with Myra, and that fact made him the more

proud to be her accepted lover. He recalled Myra's boast that there

was no horse or man she could not master, and he found it a little

difficult to believe she was really scared of Don Carlos.

"In my country, Mr. Standish, a man betrothed to a girl as beautiful as

Miss Rostrevor would feel almost insulted if his friends did not openly

envy him and protest themselves hopelessly in love with the young lady

he had won," resumed Don Carlos. "The lady herself would feel slighted

if the friends of her betrothed did not continue to attempt to make

love to her. To profess to be heartbroken because she belongs to

another, and to make love to a betrothed girl or a married woman, is

surely paying an indirect compliment to the accepted lover or husband,

as well as a direct compliment to the lady."

"Humph! I hadn't thought of it that way," commented Tony drily. "It

would never have occurred to me for a moment that in making love to

Myra you were paying me any sort of compliment. Here in England, Don

Carlos, any man who persists in making love to an engaged girl or a

married woman is asking for trouble. Of course, I can appreciate the

fact that most women would feel flattered by the thought that a man

like you had fallen in love with them, even if you were only pretending

out of a desire to be polite, but--er--well, obviously Myra appears to

be more annoyed than flattered. Perhaps, as I said before, she has

taken you too seriously."




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