Still spell-bound by his voice, she recovered self-control enough to bow to him and to resume her place on the sofa.
It was impossible to leave him now.
After looking at her for a moment, he entered the room without speaking to her again.
She was beginning to perplex as well as to interest him.
"No common sorrow," he thought, "has set its mark on that woman's face; no common heart beats in that woman's breast.
Who can she be?"
Mercy rallied her courage, and forced herself to speak to him.
"Lady Janet is in the library, I believe," she said, timidly. "Shall I tell her you are here?"
"Don't disturb Lady Janet, and don't disturb yourself."
With that answer he approached the luncheon-table, delicately giving her time to feel more at her ease.
He took up what Horace had left of the bottle of claret, and poured it into a glass.
"My aunt's claret shall represent my aunt for the present," he said, smiling, as he turned toward her once more.
"I have had a long walk, and I may venture to help myself in this house without invitation.
Is it useless to offer you anything?"
Mercy made the necessary reply.
She was beginning already, after her remarkable experience of him, to wonder at his easy manners and his light way of talking.
He emptied his glass with the air of a man who thoroughly understood and enjoyed good wine.
"My aunt's claret is worthy of my aunt," he said, with comic gravity, as he set down the glass. "Both are the genuine products of Nature."
He seated himself at the table and looked critically at the different dishes left on it.
One dish especially attracted his attention.
"What is this?" he went on. "A French pie!
It seems grossly unfair to taste French wine and to pass over French pie without notice."
He took up a knife and fork, and enjoyed the pie as critically as he had enjoyed the wine.
"Worthy of the Great Nation!" he exclaimed, with enthusiasm.
"Vive la France!"
Mercy listened and looked, in inexpressible astonishment.
He was utterly unlike the picture which her fancy had drawn of him in everyday life.
Take off his white cravat, and nobody would have discovered that this famous preacher was a clergyman!
He helped himself to another plateful of the pie, and spoke more directly to Mercy, alternately eating and talking as composedly and pleasantly as if they had known each other for years.
"I came here by way of Kensington Gardens," he said.
"For some time past I have been living in a flat, ugly, barren, agricultural district.
You can't think how pleasant I found the picture presented by the Gardens, as a contrast.
The ladies in their rich winter dresses, the smart nursery maids, the lovely children, the ever moving crowd skating on the ice of the Round Pond; it was all so exhilarating after what I have been used to, that I actually caught myself whistling as I walked through the brilliant scene! (In my time boys used always to whistle when they were in good spirits, and I have not got over the habit yet.) Who do you think I met when I was in full song?"
As well as her amazement would let her, Mercy excused herself from guessing.
She had never in all her life before spoken to any living being so confusedly and so unintelligently as she now spoke to Julian Gray!
He went on more gayly than ever, without appearing to notice the effect that he had produced on her.
"Whom did I meet," he repeated, "when I was in full song?
My bishop!
If I had been whistling a sacred melody, his lordship might perhaps have excused my vulgarity out of consideration for my music.
Unfortunately, the composition I was executing at the moment (I am one of the loudest of living whistlers) was by Verdi—"La Donna e Mobile"—familiar, no doubt, to his lordship on the street organs.
He recognized the tune, poor man, and when I took off my hat to him he looked the other way.
Strange, in a world that is bursting with sin and sorrow, to treat such a trifle seriously as a cheerful clergyman whistling a tune!"
He pushed away his plate as he said the last words, and went on simply and earnestly in an altered tone.
"I have never been able," he said, "to see why we should assert ourselves among other men as belonging to a particular caste, and as being forbidden, in any harmless thing, to do as other people do.
The disciples of old set us no such example; they were wiser and better than we are.
I venture to say that one of the worst obstacles in the way of our doing good among our fellow-creatures is raised by the mere assumption of the clerical manner and the clerical voice.
For my part, I set up no claim to be more sacred and more reverend than any other Christian man who does what good he can."
He glanced brightly at Mercy, looking at him in helpless perplexity.
The spirit of fun took possession of him again.
"Are you a Radical?" he asked, with a humorous twinkle in his large lustrous eyes.