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CHAPTER I

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The younger of the two two men standing just outside the Royal enclosure at Ascot on that sunny Cup day heaved a sigh of relief as the more or less informal mannequin parade mingled with the well-dressed crowd and vanished. The other—tall and distinguished, with his silver hair and hawklike, aristocratic features, smiled just a little grimly as he caught the expression on his junior's face. His smile, though humorous and perhaps a trifle mocking, did not lack a certain austerity that hinted at stern determination of character behind the jauntiness of the mere man of the world.

"Yes," he said. "She is an amazingly pretty girl, but, if I were you, Tom, I would not think seriously about her."

Tom Gilchrist looked a little uneasy. There were times when his uncle, Sir Walter Vanguard, seemed to read his thoughts in an almost uncanny fashion.

"And why not?" he asked. "What is your prejudice against Maudie Vascombe? Dash it all, uncle, if she does get her living as a mannequin and serve in a milliner's shop, that is no disgrace these times, is it? And, anyway, she is a lady. And, what is more, I have known her and her brother Ian practically all my life. It was not so many years ago since the Vascombes were big people, before the smash came, and the war reduced them to poverty. But, of course, seeing that you have spent most of your life in China, you have probably forgotten that. Don't you think you are rather inclined to be old-fashioned? Everybody nowadays is in business of some sort or another. And I don't see any difference between a girl getting her living as a shop girl and hanging on to some of her aristocratic friends, waiting for a chance to sell herself to some rich man who probably started life in a marine store."

"I dare say there is something in what you say," Vanguard replied. "But that is not exactly the point, my boy. I know what hard work is, nobody more so. When I was a boy I could have hung about the old house and watched my father beggaring himself over horses and cards and selling the family estates by instalments, as he did, and found myself today a pauper. Instead of which, I went out to China, about the time most boys are leaving school, and made a fortune there by my own exertions. And that is why I am a rich man today and why you, the last of the race, and my dead sister's only son are enjoying a handsome allowance after ruffling it at Eton and Cambridge with the best of them. I dare say you will think this is no time for a moral lecture, but I think you owe me something. Tom—"

"Of course I do," Tom Gilchrist said warmly. "I owe you everything. And I am not ungrateful. But, dash it all, uncle, I don't want to marry Mona Catesby and might just as well say so sooner or later. Because that is what you are driving at, though why, goodness only knows."

"But, my dear boy, a little consideration would show you. Who bought the best part of our family property 20 years ago? Tell me that."

"Why, Mona's father, of course."

"Now happily dead," Sir Walter said, a trifle sardonically. "A self-made man of the worst type, but he had the money and the best part of land which has belonged to our family for 300 years. And, what is more to the point, he had a daughter, to whom he left everything. She is still single and so far as I know, unattached. And anybody can see with half an eye that she would be only too willing to throw her lot in with yours and, once that was done, the ambition of my life would be satisfied. I should like to live to see the Vanguard property back in the family again, though your name is Gilchrist. And you can't say she is not an attractive girl, and you can't say she is not a lady."

"Oh, attractive enough, if you like," Tom Gilchrist agreed. "But she doesn't come out of the top drawer. I don't care for those big girls, though I must admit that she carries it off very well. I can't see—"

Sir Walter turned away a little impatiently. There was a hard gleam in his eye and the humorous lines about the corners of his mouth had stiffened into something like cruelty.

"Well, we won't discuss it now," he said. "I didn't mean to bring it up at all yet, only you looked so infernally sentimental when those girls were passing that I felt impelled to speak. Come inside and we can watch the big race together."

"Presently," Tom said. "You go alone, uncle, and I will follow a little later."

Sir Walter passed in through the gates of the Royal Enclosure, whilst his nephew turned and pushed his way through the crowd. He came presently to the object of his search. She was standing quite alone, gazing about her with an interested air, for it was the first time she had ever been on the famous heath and she was enjoying the prospect to the full now that her rather trying ordeal was over.

A beautiful girl, slim and rather tall, with a certain haughty carriage of her head and a free movement of her slim limbs which spoke of perfect health. There was something about her that would have attracted attention anywhere. Even had Maudie Vascombe been dressed in rags, she would have stood out from her fellow women with a distinction that is more easily imagined than described. And now, beautifully dressed for the occasion in the last word of fashion, she stood there with a hundred curious eyes upon her. If she was aware of the fact, she did not show it, for she had all that savoir faire and serenity which is the hall mark of birth and breeding all the world over.

She turned with a brilliant, almost caressing smile as Tom Gilchrist murmured her name.

"Oh, you, is it?" she said. "I saw you just now with Sir Walter, though you may not know it."

"Did you?" Tom asked. "That is very sweet of you, Maudie. But what are you doing here all by yourself?"

"All my lovely companions have faded and gone, like the last rose of summer," the girl laughed. "As a matter of fact, I am looking for Ian. He is about somewhere, taking notes. You know what he is. A most forgetful boy, especially when he has his notebook in his hand."

Gilchrist smiled. He knew all about that. He was perfectly aware of the fact that Ian Vascombe made a fair and increasing living by dress designing—a rather ignoble profession for a man who had once been captain of the Eton cricket eleven, but then, in these strange times, the mere fact of getting a living at all is no mean achievement.

"Oh, never mind about Ian," Gilchrist said. "Have you had any lunch? No, I can see you haven't. I suppose Madame Ninette sent you and the rest down here without making any provision of that sort."

"We are supposed to take care of ourselves," Maudie smiled.

"Ah, yes, I thought so. Now, you come with me to the club tent, and I will give you a glass of champagne and a lobster salad or something like that."

"My dear Tom, are you actually proposing to entertain a mere mannequin in your exclusive club tent? You would never hear the last of it."

"I am not troubling about that," Tom said. "Besides half the women there get their own livings, don't they? And some of them not half as honestly as you do. Now, come along, don't be silly."

With that, Gilchrist led the way to the gaily decorated tent which, by this time, was half empty. He found seats for himself and his companion and, over a more or less elaborate lunch, proceeded to discuss certain intimate affairs.

"How long are we going on like this, Maudie?" he asked. "I simply hate to see you leading this sort of life. It is damnable to think of a girl, bred and born like you, going to shows like this, dressed up doll fashion for a lot of male and female cads to make remarks about. Why don't you marry me and have done with it?"

Just for a moment a soft look crept into the great grey eyes that were turned on the speaker.

"Now, my dear Tom, do be reasonable. How can I marry you? Oh, I am not saying I am not fond of you, but am I as fond as all that? I live fairly comfortably and with what I earn and Ian earns, we can afford to run the cosy little flat we have been living in for the last year or so. And now answer me one straight question. What are we going to live on? When you tell your uncle that you are going to marry a mannequin, what will he say, and, more to the point, what will he do?"

"Make the best of it," Tom said sanguinely.

"Oh no, he won't, my boy. He'll cut you off with a shilling. I don't say he hasn't been a good uncle to you up to now, but if you don't offer to marry Mona Catesby, then you will have to look to yourself. Oh, Tom, don't make it harder for me than you can help. Let's be happy whilst we have a chance. Of course I could listen to what you say and ruin your life, but you may be sure I shan't do that."

"Well, it's dashed hard," Gilchrist groaned.

"Of course it is," Maudie laughed. "And perhaps it is a good deal harder on me than it is on you."

Queen of Hearts

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