The hint of irony,
however, was unmistakable.
"I am not more sought after than any one else," Lois returned, unruffled.
"Every one has to help in the work of frivolity."
"I shall be rather out of it, then," Beatrice said coolly. "I am not
amusing."
"It is quite sufficient to be willing, good-natured and good-humored,"
Lois answered.
They had by this time reached the group under the trees, where Mrs.
Carmichael and her companion had already arrived, under the escort of
a tall, stoutly built man, who was talking and apparently explaining
with great vigor. As Lois entered the circle, he glanced up and smiled
at her, revealing a handsome, cheerful face, singularly fresh-colored
in comparison with the deep tan of the other men.
"That is Mr. Travers," Lois explained. "He is a bank director or
something in Madras, and has been on a long business visit north.
He is awfully clever and popular, and gets up everything."
"Rich, I suppose?"
Lois glanced up at her companion. The beautiful profile and the tone
of the remark seemed incongruous.
"I don't know," she said rather abruptly. "He has four polo ponies.
Nobody else has more than two."
"Do you calculate wealth by polo ponies, then?"
Lois laughed.
"Yes, we do pretty well," she said--"that is, when we bother about such
things at all. Most people are poor, and if they aren't, they have to live
beyond their income, so it comes to the same in the end.
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