"It is my most ardent desire to win Myra over, my dear Standish," said

Don Carlos, as Tony rose to go. "Pray convey to her my most respectful

salutations, and beg her to receive me this afternoon."

It was with mingled amusement and exasperation that Myra listened to

Tony's account of the interview. She could not help feeling that Don

Carlos had turned the tables on Tony, and now had it in his power to

make her look ridiculous.

"I think he is the most conceited and impudent man in the world," she

commented. "And he's clever! If I refuse to go to Auchinleven, he

will tell the world it is because I am afraid of falling in love with

him. If you withdraw your invitation to him, he will explain it is

because you are afraid he might persuade me to elope with him. He will

flatter himself we are both afraid of him, and the affair will become

the joke of the season."

"Yes, I realise that, Myra," drawled Tony. "He's got that laugh on us,

so to speak, and I think it would be best to save our faces by

pretending the whole affair was a sort of practical joke on your part.

I don't suppose he'll try to make love to you again, and even if he

does you will know he is not in earnest."

"Tony, you duffer, let me assure you he is very much in earnest, and he

means to take me from you," said Myra. "And I warn you, my dear, that

I should probably have fallen for him and jilted you if he wasn't so

inordinately proud of himself and hadn't boasted that he would compel

me to love him. As it is, I am not sure that I am not in love with

him."

"I say, Myra, you're not pulling my leg again, are you?" asked Tony,

tugging at his little sandy moustache and looking worried. "I'm in a

frightfully awkward position, as I said before. I like the chap

immensely, and I think he's too much of a gentleman to poach--although,

of course, foreigners have a different code of morals from us, and

aren't to be trusted where women are concerned. I--er--I don't quite

know what to do, but, of course, I'll do anything rather than risk

losing you."

There flashed into his mind as he spoke Don Carlos's remark concerning

women complaining of another man's attentions in order to bring a

husband or a lover "up to scratch," and he had what he would have

described as a "brain wave."




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