for the weekend.â
Mrs. Vernier was not his aunt, she was his godmother; and it was not spiritual consanguinity that drew them together but a mutual fondness of long standing. Twenty Deer had been one of his favorite places as a boy; and Sarah Vernierâs charm, plus the excellence of her table and her French husbandâs cellar, preserved its attractions for him as an adult. It was the estate near Rhinebeck whichâbefore his motherâs revelationâhad been one of his possible choices for the weekend he had sworn not to spend in the city.
âIâm afraid itâs impossible, Aunt Sarah,â Dane said.
âShoot!â she said. âWhat is it with everyone? Somebody must be spreading the rumor that we have the plague up here.â
âI wish I could come, I really do.â
âIâll bet you do. Itâs a new girl, isnât it, you devil?â Mrs. Vernier sounded pleased. âTell me about her.â
âItâs worse. A new book, Aunt Sarah.â
âOh, dear, that obsession of yours.â The weekend was ruined, no one was coming to Twenty Deer, she would be alone with Jacquesâsweet man, wasnât he? but one of those infernal enthusiasts. Two years ago it was organic farming, last year orchids, now itâs falcons.
âMessy, smelly, savage things,â said Mrs. Vernier. âFortunately, he keeps them in the barn, so Iâm spared the sight of them. As a result, of course, I never see Jacques, either. Iâve half a mind to come into town, just to teach him a lesson.â
And, âWhy donât you?â said Dane strongly.
It was as easy as that. In a moment he would be astonished at the speed of his inspiration; now he had time for nothing but following it up.
âBut everyoneâs away, dear,â Sarah Vernier said. âNo one at all is left in New York.â
âYou can always,â Dane said, âdo some shopping.â
âBut with whom? Youâre aware, my dear, that your mother is no fun, bless herâshe might as well get her things from the Salvation Army. And youâre too busy. Or,â she asked suddenly, âare you?â
âFor you, Aunt Sarah? Never!â
So easy. Sarah Vernier and her shopping were proverbial in and about their circle. It was one of the few subjects on which she could be a bore. So Dane knew all about her favorite shopping places.
As usual, she began with trivia and worked her way up. She visited Tiffanyâs and orderedâfor her husbandâcuff links with falcons on them. Then she picked up two cut-glass toothpick holders at the Carriage House for her collection. At a ânew little placeâ in the East 80s she (eventually) came away with a âdarlingâ hat. At Leo Ottmillerâs bookshop, since the falcon-ridden Jacquesâs happiness was still on her conscience, Mrs. Vernier purchased The Boke of the Hawke .
They lunched at the Colony.
She attacked her vichyssoise and cold chicken with good appetite. âWhere shall we go next?â she asked. âOh, Dane, this was an inspiration. Iâm having such fun!â
âMacyâs?â
âDonât be wicked . I know!â she cried. âSheila Greyâs.â
And Dane saidâas if he had not brought Sarah Vernier half the length of the Hudson Valley for this sole purpose without her slightest suspicion of itââSheila Greyâs? Of course,â with just the right touch of vagueness. He must have heard her say it a hundred times: I always get my things at Sheila Greyâs .
On the sidewalk outside the Colony, she said, âYou look like a porter on safari. Why donât we leave the packages somewhere?â
âTheyâre light as air.â It was an important part of his plan to arrive at his goal looking the very picture of Gentleman Helping Lady on Extended Shopping Tour. He handed her into the taxicab before she could insist.
So here