She came down, the upturned wired points of the tunic trembling as

she stepped. When she came closer he saw that she was made up for the

costume ball also, her face frankly rouged, fine lines under her eyes,

her lashes blackened. She looked very lovely and quite unfamiliar. But

he had determined not to spoil her evening, and he continued gravely

smiling.

"You'd better like it, Clay," she said, and took a calculating advantage

of what she considered a softened mood. "It cost a thousand dollars."

She went on past him, toward the room where the florist was still

putting the finishing touches to the flowers on the table. When the

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first guests arrived, she came back and took her place near him, and he

was uncomfortably aware of the little start of surprise with which she

burst upon each new arrival, In the old and rather staid surroundings of

the club she looked out of place--oriental, extravagant, absurd.

And Clayton Spencer suffered. To draw him as he stood in the club that

last year of our peace, 1916, is to draw him not only with his virtues

but with his faults; his over emphasis on small things; his jealousy for

his dignity; his hatred of the conspicuous and the unusual.

When, after the informal manner of clubs, the party went in to dinner,

he was having one of the bad hours of his life to that time. And when,

as was inevitable, the talk of the rather serious table turned to the

war, it seemed to him that Natalie, gorgeous and painted, represented

the very worst of the country he loved, indifference, extravagance, and

ostentatious display.

But Natalie was not America. Thank God, Natalie was not America.

Already with the men she was having a triumph. The women, soberly clad,

glanced at each other with raised eye-brows and cynical smiles. Above

the band, already playing in the ballroom, Clayton could hear old Terry

Mackenzie paying Natalie extravagant, flagrant compliments.

"You should be sitting in the sun, or on a balcony," he was saying, his

eyes twinkling. "And pretty gentlemen with long curls and their hats

tucked under their arms should be feeding you nightingale tongues, or

whatever it is you eat."

"Bugs," said Natalie.

"But--tell me," Terry bent toward her, and Mrs. Terry kept fascinated

eyes on him. "Tell me, lovely creature--aren't peacocks unlucky?"

"Are they? What bad luck can happen to me because I dress like this?"

"Frightfully bad luck," said Terry, jovially. "Some one will undoubtedly

carry you away, in the course of the evening, and go madly through the

world hunting a marble balustrade to set you on. I'll do it myself if

you'll give me any encouragement."