Also she had a keen little brain, a
reckless but good-humored heart and a memory retentive of important
trifles.
"In the West, Bertie?" she inquired of Cressey. "You were in that big
wreck there, weren't you?"
"Devil of a wreck," said Cressey uneasily. You never could tell what
Esther might know or might not say.
"Ask him over here," directed that young lady blandly, "for coffee and
liqueurs."
"Oh, I say!" protested one of the men. "Nobody knows anything about
him--"
"He's a friend of mine," put in Cressey, in a tone which ended that
particular objection. "But I don't think he'd come."
Instantly there was a chorus of demand for him.
"All right, I'll try," yielded Cressey, rising.
"Put him next to me," directed Miss Forbes.
The emissary visited Banneker's table, was observed to be in brief
colloquy with him, and returned, alone.
"Wouldn't he come?" interrogated the chorus.
"He's awfully sorry, but he says he isn't fit for decent human
associations."
"More and more interesting!"--"Why?"--"What awful thing has he been
doing?"
"Eating onions," answered Cressey. "Raw."
"I don't believe it," cried the indignant Miss Forbes. "One doesn't eat
raw onions at Sherry's. It's a subterfuge."
"Very likely.
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