SOAMES PREPARES TO TAKE STEPS
When Soames entered his sister's little Louis Quinze drawing-room,with its small balcony,always flowered with hanging geraniums in the summer,and now with pots of Lilium Auratum,he was struck by the immutability of human affairs.It looked just the same as on his first visit to the newly married Darties twenty-one years ago.
He had chosen the furniture himself,and so completely that no subsequent purchase had ever been able to change the room's atmosphere.Yes,he had founded his sister well,and she had wanted it.Indeed,it said a great deal for Winifred that after all this time with Dartie she remained well-founded.From the first Soames had nosed out Dartie's nature from underneath the plausibility,savoir faire,and good looks which had dazzled Winifred,her mother,and even James,to the extent of permitting the fellow to marry his daughter without bringing anything but shares of no value into settlement.
Winifred,whom he noticed next to the furniture,was sitting at her Buhl bureau with a letter in her hand.She rose and came towards him.Tall as himself,strong in the cheekbones,well tailored,something in her face disturbed Soames.She crumpled the letter in her hand,but seemed to change her mind and held it out to him.He was her lawyer as well as her brother.
Soames read,on Iseeum Club paper,these words:
'You will not get chance to insult in my own again.I am leaving country to-morrow.It's played out.I'm tired of being insulted by you.You've brought on yourself.No self-respecting man can stand it.I shall not ask you for anything again.Good-bye.Itook the photograph of the two girls.Give them my love.I don't care what your family say.It's all their doing.I'm going to live new life.