She had then asked, "I say, Ik, who was that
gentleman you were talking with?"
"He's an old friend of mine."
"He's not an OLD friend of any one. He is young and quite good-looking,
or rather he has a certain 'distingue' air that makes one look at
him twice. Who is he?"
"He is an artist, and if he lives and works as he is now doing,
through an ordinary lifetime, he will indeed by distinguished. In
fact, he stands high already."
"How nice," she exclaimed.
"He has another characteristic, which you will appreciate far more
than anything he will ever accomplish with his brush--he is very
rich."
"Why! he's perfectly splendid. Whoever heard of such a strange,
rare creature! I've flirted with lots of poor artists, but never
with a rich one. Bring him to me, and introduce him at once."
"He is not one that you can flirt with, like the attenuated youth
who has just meandered to the barroom."
"Why not?"
"If you had eyes for anything save your own pretty face, and the
public stare, you would have seen that my friend is not a 'creature,'
but a man."
"Come, Cousin Ik," she replied in more natural tones, "too much
of your house is made of glass for you to throw stones.
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