house. But one couldn't get that for twenty
thousand dollars. The great pleasures don't come so cheap. There is nothing else, thank
you."
Chapter 2
That evening St. Peter was in the new house, dressing for dinner. His two daughters and
their husbands were dining with them, also an English visitor. Mrs. St. Peter heard the
shower going as she passed his door. She entered his room and waited until he came out
in his bath- robe, rubbing his wet, ink-black hair with a towel.
"Surely you'll admit that you like having your own bath," she said, looking past him into
the glittering white cubicle, flooded with electric light, which he had just quitted.
"Whoever said I didn't? But more than anything else, I like my closets. I like having room
for all my clothes, without hanging one coat on top of another, and not having to get
down on my marrow-bones and fumble in dark corners to find my shoes."
"Of course you do. And it's much more dignified, at your age, to have a room of your
own."
"It's convenient, certainly, though I hope I'm not so old as to be personally repulsive?" He
glanced into the mirror and straightened his shoulders as if he were trying on a coat.
Mrs. St. Peter laughed, -- a pleasant, easy laugh with genuine amusement in it. "No, you
are very handsome, my dear, especially in your bath-robe. You grow better-looking and
more intolerant all the time."
"Intolerant?" He put down his shoe and looked up at her. The thing that stuck in his mind
constantly was that she was growing more and more intolerant, about everything except
her sons-in-law; that she would probably continue to do so, and that he must school
himself to bear it.
"I suppose it's a natural process," she went on, "but you ought to try, try seriously, I mean,
to curb it where it affects the happiness of your daughters. You are too severe with Scott
and Louie. All young men have foolish vanities -- you had plenty."
St. Peter sat with his elbows on his knees, leaning forward and playing absently with the
tassels of his bath-robe. "Why, Lillian, I have exercised the virtue of patience with those
two young men more than with all the thousands of young ruffians who have gone
through my class-rooms. My forbearance is overstrained, it's gone flat. That's what's the
matter with me."
"Oh, Godfrey, how can you be such a poor judge of your own behaviour? But we won't
argue about it now. You'll put on your dinner coat? And do try to be sympathetic and
agreeable to-night."
Half an hour later Mr. and Mrs. Scott McGregor and Mr. and Mrs. Louie Marsellus
arrived, and soon after them the English scholar, Sir Edgar Spilling, so anxious to do the
usual thing in America that he wore a morning street suit. He was a gaunt, rugged,
large-boned man of fifty, with long legs and arms, a pear-shaped face, and a drooping,
pre-war moustache. His specialty was Spanish history, and he had come all the way to
Hamilton, from his cousin's place in Saskatchewan, to enquire about some of Doctor St.
Peter's "sources."
Introductions over, it was the Professor's son- in-law, Louie Marsellus, who took Sir
Edgar in hand. He remembered having met in China a Walter Spilling, who was, it turned
out, a brother of Sir Edgar. Marsellus had also a brother there, engaged in the silk trade.
They exchanged opinions on conditions of the Orient, while young McGregor put on his
horn-rimmed spectacles and roamed restlessly up and down the library. The two
daughters sat near their mother, listening to the talk about China.
Mrs. St. Peter was very fair, pink and gold, -- a pale gold, now that she was becoming a
little grey. The tints of her face and hair and lashes were so soft that one did not realize,
on first meeting her, how very definitely and decidedly her features were cut, under the
smiling infusion of colour. When she was annoyed or tired, the lines became severe.
Rosamond, the elder daughter, resembled her mother in feature, though her face was
heavier. Her colouring was altogether different; dusky black hair, deep dark eyes, a soft
white skin with rich brunette red in her cheeks and lips. Nearly everyone considered
Rosamond brilliantly beautiful. Her father, though he was very proud of her, demurred
from the general opinion. He thought her too tall, with a rather awkward carriage. She
stooped a trifle, and was wide in the hips and shoulders. She had, he sometimes remarked
to her mother, exactly the wide femur and flat shoulder- blade of his old slab-sided
Kanuck grandfather. For a tree-hewer they were an asset. But St. Peter was very critical.
Most
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