
“Hmm? But they’ve been lovely guests. Fit right in-”
“It’s the nasty little barbs flying between them.”
“Oh, that. They’ve always been that way. I scarcely notice it anymore.”
“And have you seen the way Reggie follows Beryl about, like a puppy dog?”
Hugh laughed. “Around a pretty woman, Reggie is a puppy dog.”
“Well, it’s no wonder Helena’s always sniping at him.” Jordan stepped back and regarded his uncle’s bow tie with a frown.
“How’s it look?”
“It’ll have to do.”
Hugh glanced at the clock. “Better check on the kitchen. See that things are in order. And why aren’t the Vanes down yet?”
As if on cue, they heard the sound of querulous voices on the stairway. Lady Helena, as always, was scolding her husband. “Someone has to point these things out to you,” she said.
“Yes, and it’s always you, isn’t it?”
Sir Reggie fled into the study, pursued by his wife. It never failed to puzzle Jordan, the obvious mismatch of the pair. Sir Reggie, handsome and silver haired, towered over his drab little mouse of a wife. Perhaps Helena’s substantial inheritance explained the pairing; money, after all, was the great equalizer.
As the hour edged toward six o’clock, Hugh poured out glasses of sherry and handed them around to the foursome. “Before the hordes arrive,” he said, “a toast, to your safe return to Paris.” They sipped. It was a solemn ceremony, this last evening together with old friends.
Now Reggie raised his glass. “And here’s to English hospitality. Ever appreciated!”
From the front driveway came the sound of car tires on gravel. They all glanced out the window to see the first limousine roll into view. The chauffeur opened the door and out stepped a fiftyish woman, every ripe curve defined by a green gown ablaze with bugle beads. Then a young man in a shirt of purple silk emerged from the car and took the woman’s arm.
