It
would be, if any thing, rather a larger party than before.
"I'm so sorry I can't join this winter," said Reggie's sister-in-law,
"but we must go to our cousins in Ireland; we've put them off so often.
What a shame! You'll have none of the same women this time."
"Excepting Mrs. Pentherby," said Reggie, demurely.
"Mrs. Pentherby! _Surely_, Reggie, you're not going to be so idiotic as
to have that woman again! She'll set all the women's backs up just as
she did this time. What _is_ this mysterious hold she's go over you?"
"She's invaluable," said Reggie; "she's my official quarreller."
"Your--what did you say?" gasped his sister-in-law.
"I introduced her into the house-party for the express purpose of
concentrating the feuds and quarrelling that would otherwise have broken
out in all directions among the womenkind. I didn't need the advice and
warning of sundry friends to foresee that we shouldn't get through six
months of close companionship without a certain amount of pecking and
sparring, so I thought the best thing was to localise and sterilise it in
one process. Of course, I made it well worth the lady's while, and as
she didn't know any of you from Adam, and you don't even know her real
name, she didn't mind getting herself disliked in a useful cause.
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