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a weak face, small, vacant features, a feeble chin, a good-humoured, simple mouth, and a wealth of golden hair that seemed to strike a keynote.

      “In the theatrical profession?” I inquired at last, looking up.

      He hesitated. “Well, not exactly,” he answered.

      I pursed my lips and blew a ring. “Music-hall stage?” I went on, dubiously.

      He nodded. “But a girl is not necessarily any the less a lady because she sings at a music-hall,” he added, with warmth, displaying an evident desire to be just to his betrothed, however much he admired Daphne.

      “Certainly not,” I admitted. “A lady is a lady; no occupation can in itself unladify her.... But on the music-hall stage, the odds, one must admit, are on the whole against her.”

      “Now, THERE you show prejudice!”

      “One may be quite unprejudiced,” I answered, “and yet allow that connection with the music-halls does not, as such, afford clear proof that a girl is a compound of all the virtues.”

      “I think she’s a good girl,” he retorted, slowly.

      “Then why do you want to throw her over?” I inquired.

      “I don’t. That’s just it. On the contrary, I mean to keep my word and marry her.”

      “IN ORDER to keep your word?” I suggested.

      He nodded. “Precisely. It is a point of honour.”

      “That’s a poor ground of marriage,” I went on. “Mind, I don’t want for a moment to influence you, as Daphne’s cousin. I want to get at the truth of the situation. I don’t even know what Daphne thinks of you. But you promised me a clean breast. Be a man and bare it.”

      He bared it instantly. “I thought I was in love with this girl, you see,” he went on, “till I saw Miss Tepping.”

      “That makes a difference,” I admitted.

      “And I couldn’t bear to break her heart.”

      “Heaven forbid!” I cried. “It is the one unpardonable sin. Better anything than that.” Then I grew practical. “Father’s consent?”

      “MY father’s? IS it likely? He expects me to marry into some distinguished English family.”

      I hummed a moment. “Well, out with it!” I exclaimed, pointing my cigar at him.

      He leaned back in his chair and told me the whole story. A pretty girl; golden hair; introduced to her by a friend; nice, simple little thing; mind and heart above the irregular stage on to which she had been driven by poverty alone; father dead; mother in reduced circumstances. “To keep the home together, poor Sissie decided—”

      “Precisely so,” I murmured, knocking off my ash. “The usual self-sacrifice! Case quite normal! Everything en regle!”

      “You don’t mean to say you doubt it?” he cried, flushing up, and evidently regarding me as a hopeless cynic. “I do assure you, Dr. Cumberledge, the poor child—though miles, of course, below Miss Tepping’s level—is as innocent, and as good—”

      “As a flower in May. Oh, yes; I don’t doubt it. How did you come to propose to her, though?”

      He reddened a little. “Well, it was almost accidental,” he said, sheepishly. “I called there one evening, and her mother had a headache and went up to bed. And when we two were left alone, Sissie talked a great deal about her future and how hard her life was. And after a while she broke down and began to cry. And then—”

      I cut him short with a wave of my hand. “You need say no more,” I put in, with a sympathetic face. “We have all been there.”

      We paused a moment, while I puffed smoke at the photograph again. “Well,” I said at last, “her face looks to me really simple and nice. It is a good face. Do you see her often?”

      “Oh, no; she’s on tour.”

      “In the provinces?”

      “M’yes; just at present, at Scarborough.”

      “But she writes to you?”

      “Every day.”

      “Would you think it an unpardonable impertinence if I made bold to ask whether it would be possible for you to show me a specimen of her letters?”

      He unlocked a drawer and took out three or four. Then he read one through, carefully. “I don’t think,” he said, in a deliberative voice, “it would be a serious breach of confidence in me to let you look through this one. There’s really nothing in it, you know—just the ordinary average every-day love-letter.”

      I glanced through the little note. He was right. The conventional hearts and darts epistle. It sounded nice enough: “Longing to see you again; so lonely in this place; your dear sweet letter; looking forward to the time; your ever-devoted Sissie.”

      “That seems straight,” I answered. “However, I am not quite sure. Will you allow me to take it away, with the photograph? I know I am asking much. I want to show it to a lady in whose tact and discrimination I have the greatest confidence.”

      “What, Daphne?”

      I smiled. “No, not Daphne,” I answered. “Our friend, Miss Wade. She has extraordinary insight.”

      “I could trust anything to Miss Wade. She is true as steel.”

      “You are right,” I answered. “That shows that you, too, are a judge of character.”

      He hesitated. “I feel a brute,” he cried, “to go on writing every day to Sissie Montague—and yet calling every day to see Miss Tepping. But still—I do it.”

      I grasped his hand. “My dear fellow,” I said, “nearly ninety per cent. of men, after all—are human!”

      I took both letter and photograph back with me to Nathaniel’s. When I had gone my rounds that night, I carried them into Hilda Wade’s room and told her the story. Her face grew grave. “We must be just,” she said at last. “Daphne is deeply in love with him; but even for Daphne’s sake, we must not take anything for granted against the other lady.”

      I produced the photograph. “What do you make of that?” I asked. “I think it an honest face, myself, I may tell you.”

      She scrutinised it long and closely with a magnifier. Then she put her head on one side and mused very deliberately. “Madeline Shaw gave me her photograph the other day, and said to me, as she gave it, ‘I do so like these modern portraits; they show one WHAT MIGHT HAVE BEEN.’”

      “You mean they are so much touched up!”

      “Exactly. That, as it stands, is a sweet, innocent face—an honest girl’s face—almost babyish in its transparency but… the innocence has all been put into it by the photographer.”

      “You think so?”

      “I know it. Look here at those lines just visible on the cheek. They disappear, nowhere, at impossible angles. AND the corners of that mouth. They couldn’t go so, with that nose and those puckers. The thing is not real. It has been atrociously edited. Part is nature’s; part, the photographer’s; part, even possibly paint and powder.”

      “But the underlying face?”

      “Is a minx’s.”

      I handed her the letter. “This next?” I asked, fixing my eyes on her as she looked.

      She read it through. For a minute or two she examined it. “The letter is right enough,” she answered, after a second reading, “though its guileless simplicity is, perhaps, under the circumstances, just a leetle overdone; but the handwriting—the handwriting is duplicity itself: a cunning, serpentine hand, no openness or honesty in it. Depend upon it, that girl is playing a double game.”

      “You believe, then, there is character in handwriting?”

      “Undoubtedly; when we know the character, we can see it in

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