stability or perseverance to achieve.'"
Penelope's level brows contracted into a frown and she shook her head dissentingly.
"It's true--every word of it," asserted Nan.
The other dropped her hands from Nan's shoulders and turned away.
"You'll break everyone's heart before you've finished," she said. Adding in a lighter tone: "I'm going out now. If Maryon Rooke comes, don't begin by breaking his for him."
The door closed behind her and Nan, left alone, strolled restlessly over to the window and stood looking out.
"Break his!" she whispered under her breath. "Dear old Penny! She doesn't know the probabilities in this particular game of chance."
The slanting afternoon sunlight revealed once more that sudden touch of gravity--almost of fear--in her face. It was rather a charming face, delicately angled, with cheeks that hollowed slightly beneath the cheek-bones and a chin which would have been pointed had not old Dame Nature changed her mind at the last moment and elected to put a provoking little cleft there. Nor could even the merciless light of a wintry sun find a flaw in her skin. It was one of those rare, creamy skins, with a golden undertone and the feature of a flower petal, sometimes found in conjunction with dark hair. The faint colour in her cheeks was of that same warm rose which the sun kisses into glowing life on the velvet skin of an apricot.
The colour deepened suddenly in her face as the sound of an electric bell trilled through the flat. Dropping her arms to her sides, she stood motionless, like a bird poised for flight. Then, with a little impatient shrug of her shoulders, she made her way slowly, almost unwillingly, across the hall and threw open the door.
"You, Maryon?" she said a trifle breathlessly. Then, as he entered: "I--I hardly expected you."
He took both her hands in his and kissed them.
"It's several years since I expected anything," he answered. "Now--I only hope."
Nan smiled.
"Come in, pessimist, and don't begin by being epigrammatic on the very doorstep. Tea? Or coffee? I'm afraid the flat doesn't run to whisky-and-soda."
"Coffee, please--and your conversation--will suffice. 'A Loaf of Bread . . . and Thou beside me singing in the Wilderness' . . ."
"You'd much prefer a whisky-and-soda and a grilled steak to the loaf and--the et ceteras," observed Nan cynically. "There's a very wide gulf between what a man says and what he thinks."
"There's a much wider one between what a man wants and what he gets," he returned grimly.
"You'll soon have all you want," she answered. "You're well on the way to fame already."
"Do you know," he remarked irrelevantly, "your eyes are exactly like blue violets. I'd like to paint you, Nan."
"Perhaps I'll sit for you some day," she replied, handing him his coffee. "That is, if you're very good."
Maryon Rooke was a man the merit of whose work was just beginning to be noticed in the art world. For years he had laboured unacknowledged and with increasing bitterness--for he knew his own worth. But now, though, still only in his early thirties, his reputation, particularly as a painter of women's portraits, had begun to be noised abroad. His feet were on the lower rungs of the ladder, and it was generally prophesied that he would ultimately reach the top. His gifts were undeniable, and there was a certain ruthlessness in the line of the lips above the small Van Dyck beard he wore which suggested that he would permit little to stand in the way of his attaining his goal--be it what it might.
"You'd make a delightful picture, Sun-kissed," he said, narrowing his eyes and using one of his most frequent names for her. "With your blue violet eyes and that rose-petal skin of yours."
Nan smiled involuntarily.
"Don't be so flowery, Maryon. Really, you and Penelope are very good antidotes to each other! She's just been giving me a lecture on the error of my ways. She doesn't waste any breath over my appearance, bless her!"
"What's the crime?"
"Lack of application, waste of opportunities, and general idleness."
"It's all true." Rooke leaned forward, his eyes lit by momentary enthusiasm. They were curious eyes--hazel brown, with a misleading softness in them that appealed to every woman he met. "It's all true," he repeated. "You could do big things, Nan. And you do nothing."
Nan laughed, half-pleased, half-vexed.
"I think you overrate my capabilities."
"I don't. There are very few pianists who have your technique, and fewer still, your soul and power of interpretation."
"Oh, yes, there are. Heaps. And they've got what I lack."
"And that is?"
"The power to hold their audience."
"You lack that? You who can hold a man--"
She broke in excitedly.
"Yes, I can hold one man--or woman. I can play to a few people and hold them. I know that. But--I can't hold a crowd."
Rooke regarded her thoughtfully. Perhaps it was true that in spite
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