The Old Adam: A Story of Adventure
VI.
One hour later, in the double-bedded chamber at the Majestic, as hiswife lay in bed and he was methodically folding up a creased white tieand inspecting his chin in the mirror, he felt that he was touchingagain, after an immeasurable interval, the rock-bottom of reality.Nellie, even when he could see only her face, and that in a mirror, wasthe most real phenomenon in his existence, and she possessed the strangefaculty of dispelling all unreality, round about her.
"Well," he said. "How did you get on in the box?"
"Oh!" she replied, "I got on very well with the Woldo woman. She's oneof our sort. But I'm not so set up with your Elsie April."
"Dash this collar!"
Nellie continued:
"And I can tell you another thing. I don't envy Mr. Rollo Wrissel."
"What's Wrissel got to do with it?"
"She means to marry him."
"Elsie April means to marry Wrissel?"
"He was in and out of the box all night. It was as plain as apikestaff."
"What's amiss with my Elsie April?" Edward Henry demanded.
"She's a thought too _pleasant_ for my taste," answered Nellie.
Astonishing, how pleasantness is regarded with suspicion in the FiveTowns, even by women who can at a pinch be angels!