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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Beatrice Boville and Other Stories, by Ouida
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Beatrice Boville and Other Stories
+
+Author: Ouida
+
+Release Date: October 6, 2010 [EBook #33942]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BEATRICE BOVILLE AND OTHER STORIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was
+produced from scanned images of public domain material
+from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE: Punctuation has been normalized. All other
+ printer's errors have been retained.
+
+
+
+
+ BEATRICE BOVILLE
+ AND
+ OTHER STORIES.
+
+ BY
+
+ "OUIDA."
+
+ AUTHOR OF
+ "STRATHMORE," "GRANVILLE DE VIGNE," "CHANDOS,"
+ "IDALIA," "RANDOLPH GORDON," ETC., ETC.
+
+
+ Third Series.
+
+
+ PHILADELPHIA:
+ J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY.
+ 1905
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+BEATRICE BOVILLE.
+
+ I.--OF EARLSCOURT'S FIANCEE. 9
+ II.--THE FIRST SHADOW. 13
+ III.--HOW PRIDE SOWED AND REAPED. 23
+ IV.--WHERE I SAW BEATRICE BOVILLE AGAIN. 33
+ V.--HOW IN PERFECT INNOCENCE I PLAYED THE PART OF A RIVAL. 44
+ VI.--HOW PRIDE BOWED AND FELL. 51
+
+
+A LINE IN THE "DAILY."
+
+ WHO DID IT, AND WHO WAS DONE BY IT. 65
+
+
+HOLLY WREATHS AND ROSE CHAINS.
+
+ I.--THE COLONEL OF THE "WHITE FAVORS" AND CECIL ST. AUBYN. 109
+ II.--THE CANADIAN'S COLD BATH WARMS UP THE COLONEL. 119
+ III.--SHOWING THAT LOVE-MAKING ON HOLY GROUND DOESN'T PROSPER. 132
+ IV.--THE COLONEL KILLS HIS FOX, BUT LOSES HIS HEAD AFTER
+ OTHER GAME. 146
+
+
+SILVER CHIMES AND GOLDEN FETTERS.
+
+ I.--WALDEMAR FALKENSTEIN AND VALÉRIE L'ESTRANGE. 161
+ II.--FALKENSTEIN BREAKS LANCES WITH "LONGS YEUX BLEUS." 174
+ III.--"SCARLET AND WHITE" MAKES A HIT, AND FALKENSTEIN FEELS
+ THE WEIGHT OF THE GOLDEN FETTERS. 188
+ IV.--THE GOLDEN FETTERS ARE SHAKEN OFF AND OTHERS ARE PUT ON. 202
+ V.--THE SILVER CHIMES RING IN A HAPPY NEW YEAR. 215
+
+
+SLANDER AND SILLERY.
+
+ I.--THE LION OF THE CHAUSSÉE D'ANTIN. 225
+ II.--NINA GORDON. 233
+ III.--LE LION AMOUREUX. 242
+ IV.--MISCHIEF. 252
+ V.--MORE MISCHIEF, AND AN END. 263
+
+
+SIR GALAHAD'S RAID.
+
+ AN ADVENTURE ON THE SWEET WATERS. 285
+
+
+"REDEEMED."
+
+ AN EPISODE WITH THE CONFEDERATE HORSE. 307
+
+
+OUR WAGER; OR, HOW THE MAJOR LOST AND WON.
+
+ I.--INTRODUCES MAJOR TELFER OF THE 50TH DASHAWAY HUSSARS. 333
+ II.--VIOLET TRESSILLIAN. 339
+ III.--FROM WHICH IT WOULD APPEAR, THAT IT IS SOMETIMES WELL
+ TO BEGIN WITH A LITTLE AVERSION. 346
+ IV.--IN WHICH THE MAJOR PROVOKES A QUARREL IN BEHALF OF
+ THE FAIR TRESSILLIAN. 353
+ V.--THE DUEL, AND ITS CONSEQUENCES. 367
+
+
+OUR COUNTRY QUARTERS. 379
+
+
+
+
+BEATRICE BOVILLE.
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+OF EARLSCOURT'S FIANCEE.
+
+ "To compass her with sweet observances,
+ To dress her beautifully and keep her true."
+
+
+That, according to Mr. Tennyson's lately-published opinion, is the
+devoir of that deeply-to-be-pitied individual, l'homme marié. Possibly
+in the times of which the Idyls treat, Launcelot and Gunevere _might_
+have been the sole, exceptional mauvais sujets in the land, and woad,
+being the chief ingredient in the toilet-dress, mightn't come quite so
+expensive. But nowadays "sweet observances," rendered, I presume, by
+gifts from Hunt and Roskell's and boxes in the grand tier, tell on a
+cheque-book so severely; "keeping her true" is such an exceedingly
+problematical performance, to judge by Sir C. C.'s breathless work, and
+"dressing her beautifully" comes so awfully expensive, with crinoline
+and cashmeres, pink pearls, and Mechlin, and the beau sexe's scornful
+repudiation, not alone of a faded silk, like poor Enid's, but of the
+handsomest dress going, if it's damned by being "seen twice," that I
+have ever vowed that, plaise à Dieu, I will never marry, and with
+heaven's help will keep the vow better than I might most probably keep
+the matrimonial ones if I took them. Yet if ever I saw a woman for whom
+I could have fancied a man's committing that semisuicidal act, that
+woman was Beatrice Boville. Not for her beauty, for, except one of the
+loveliest figures and a pair of the most glorious eyes, she did not
+claim much; not for her money, for she had none; not for her birth, for
+on one side that was somewhat obscure; but for _herself_; and had I ever
+tried the herculean task of dressing anybody beautifully and keeping
+anybody true, it should have been she, but for the fact that when I knew
+her first she was engaged to my cousin Earlscourt. We had none of us
+ever dreamt he would marry, for he had been sworn to political life so
+long, given over so utterly to the battle-ground of St. Stephen's and
+the intrigues of Downing Street, that the ladies of our house were
+sorely wrathful when they heard that he had at last fallen in love and
+proposed to Beatrice Boville, who, though she was Lady Mechlin's niece,
+was the daughter of a West Indian who had married her mother, broken her
+heart, spent her money, deserted her, and never been heard of since; the
+more wrathful as they had no help for themselves, and were obliged to be
+contented with distinguishing her with refreshing appellations of a
+"very clever schemer," evidently a "perfect intrigante," and similar
+epithets with which their sex is driven for consolation under such
+trying circumstances. It's a certain amount of relief to us to call a
+man who has cut us down in a race "a stupid owl; very little in him!"
+but it is mild gratification to that enjoyed by ladies when they
+retaliate for injury done them by that delightful bonbon of a sentence,
+"No doubt a most artful person!" You see it conveys so much and proves
+three things in one--their own artlessness, their enemy's worthlessness,
+and their victim's folly. Being with Earlscourt at the time of his
+"singularly unwise, step," as they phrased it, I knew that he wasn't
+trapped in any way, and that he was loved irrespectively of his social
+rank; but where was the good of telling that to deeply-injured and
+perforce silenced ladies? "They knew better;" and when a woman says
+that, always bow to her superior judgment, my good fellow, even when
+she knows better than you what you did with yourself last evening, and
+informs you positively you were at that odious Mrs. Vanille's opera
+supper, though, to the best of your belief, you never stirred from the
+U. S. card-room; or you will be voted a Goth, and make an enemy for the
+rest of your natural life.
+
+In opposition to the rest of the family, _I_ thought (and you must know
+by this time, amis lecteurs, that I hardly think marriage so enjoyable
+an institution as some writers do, but perhaps a little like a pipe of
+opium, of which the dreams are better than the awakening)--I thought
+that he could hardly have done better, as far as his own happiness went,
+as I saw her standing by him one evening in the window of Lady Mechlin's
+rooms at Lemongenseidlitz, where we all were that August, a brilliant,
+fascinating woman already, though then but nineteen, noble-hearted,
+frank, impetuous, with something in the turn of her head and the proud
+glance of her eyes, that told you, you might trust her; that she was of
+the stuff to keep her word even to her own hinderance; that neither
+would she tell a lie, nor brook one imputed to her; that she might err
+on the side of pride, on the side of meanness never; that she might have
+plenty of failings, but not anything petty, low, or ungenerous among
+them. The evening sun fell on them as they stood, on her high, white
+forehead, with its chestnut hair turned off it as you see it in old
+pictures, which Earlscourt was touching caressingly with his hand as he
+talked to her. They seemed well suited, and yet--his fault was pride,
+an unassailable, unyielding pride; hers was pride, too, pride in her own
+truth and honor, which would send you to the deuce if you ever presumed
+to doubt either; and I wondered idly as I looked at them, whether those
+two prides would ever come in conflict, and if so, whether either of
+them would give in in such a case--whether there would be submission on
+one side or on both, or on neither? Such metaphysical and romantic
+calculations are not often my line; but as they stood together, the sun
+faded off, and a cold, stormy wind blew up in its stead, which, perhaps,
+metaphorically suggested the problem to me. As one goes through life one
+gets up to so many sunny, balmy, cloudless days, and so often before the
+night is down gets wetted to the skin by a drenching shower, that one
+contracts an uncomfortable habit when the sun _does_ shine, of looking
+out for squalls, a fear that, sans doute, considerably damps the
+pleasures of the noon. But the fear is natural, isn't it, more's the
+pity, when one has been often caught?
+
+I chanced to ask her that night what made her so fond of Earlscourt. She
+turned her fearless, flashing eyes half laughingly, half haughtily on
+me, the color brighter in her face:
+
+"I should have thought you would rather have asked how could I, or any
+other woman whom he stooped to notice, fail to love him? There are few
+hearts and intellects so noble: he is as superior to you ball-room
+loungers, you butterfly flutterers, as the stars to that chandelier."
+
+"Bien obligé!" laughed I. "But that is just what I meant. Most young
+ladies are afraid of him; you never were?"
+
+She laughed contemptuously.
+
+"Afraid! You do not know much of me. It is precisely his giant
+intellect that first drew me to him, when I heard his speech on the
+Austrian question. Do you remember how the Lords listened to him so
+quietly that you could have heard a feather fall? I like that silence of
+theirs when they hear what they admire, better than I do the cheers of
+the other house. Afraid of him! What a ludicrous idea! Do you suppose I
+should be afraid of any one? It is only those who are conceited or
+cowardly, who are timid. If you have nothing to assume, or to conceal,
+what cause have you to fear? I love, honor, reverence Lord Earlscourt,
+God knows; but fear him--never!"
+
+"Not even his anger, if you ever incurred it?" I asked her, amused with
+her haughty indignation.
+
+"Certainly not. Did I merit it, I would come to him frankly, and ask his
+pardon, and he would give it; if I did not deserve it, _he_ would be the
+one to repent."
+
+She looked far more attractive than many a handsomer woman, and
+infinitely more noble than a more tractable one. She was admirably
+fitted for Earlscourt, if he trusted her; but it was just possible he
+might some day _mis_trust and _mis_understand her, and then there might
+be the devil to pay!
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+THE FIRST SHADOW.
+
+
+Lemongenseidlitz was a charming little Bad. Beatrice Boville
+and her aunt Lady Mechlin, Earlscourt and I, had been there
+six weeks. His brother peers--of whom there were scores at
+Lemongenseidlitz--complimented Earlscourt on his fiancée.
+
+"So you're caught at last?" said an octogenarian minister, who was as
+sprightly as a schoolboy. "Well, my dear fellow, you might have gone
+higher, sans doute, but on my honor I don't think you could have done
+better."
+
+It was the universal opinion. Beatrice was not the belle of the Bad,
+because there were dozens of beautiful women, and beautiful she was not;
+but she was more admired than any of them, and had Earlscourt wanted
+voices to justify his choice he would have had them, but he didn't; he
+was entirely independent of the opinions of others, and had he chosen to
+set his coronet on the brows of a peasant girl, would have cared little
+what any one thought or said. We all of us enjoyed that six weeks. Lady
+Mechlin lost to her heart's content at roulette, and was as complacent
+over her losses as any old dowager could be. Beatrice Boville shone
+best, as nice natures ever do, in a sunny atmosphere; and if she had any
+faults of impatient temper or pride, there was nothing to call them
+forth. Earlscourt, cold politician though he'd been, gave himself up
+entirely to the warmer, brighter existence, which he found in his new
+passion; and I, not being in love with anybody, made the pleasantest
+love possible wherever I liked. We all of us found a couleur de rose
+tint in the air of little Lemongenseidlitz, and I'd quite forgotten my
+presentiment, when, one night at the Kursaal, a cloud no bigger than a
+man's hand came up on the sunny horizon, and put me in mind of it.
+
+Earlscourt came into the ball room rather late; he had been talking with
+some French ministers on some international project which he was anxious
+to effect, and asked Lady Mechlin where Beatrice was.
+
+"She was with me a moment ago; she is waltzing, I dare say," said the
+old lady, whose soul was hankering after the ivory ball.
+
+"Very likely," he answered, as he looked among the dancers for her; he
+was restless without her, though he would have liked none to see the
+weakness, for he was a man who felt more than he told. He could not see
+her, and went through the rooms till he found her, which was in a small
+anteroom alone. She started as he spoke to her, and a start being a
+timorous and nervous thing of which Beatrice Boville was never guilty,
+he drew her to him anxiously.
+
+"My darling, has anything annoyed you?"
+
+She answered him with her habitual candor:
+
+"Yes; but I cannot tell you what, just now."
+
+"Cannot tell me! and why?"
+
+"Because I cannot. I can give no other reason. It is nothing of import
+to you, or you are sure I should not keep it from you."
+
+"Yes; but I am equally sure that anything that concerns you _is_ of
+import to me. To whom should you tell anything, if not to me? I do not
+like concealment, Beatrice."
+
+His tone was grave; indeed, too much like reproof to a fractious child
+to suit Beatrice's pride. She drew away from him.
+
+"Nor I. You must think but meanly of me if you can impute anything like
+concealment to me."
+
+"How can I do otherwise? You tell me you have been annoyed, and refuse
+to say how, and by whom. Is that anything but concealment? If any one
+has offended or insulted you, I ought to be the first you came to. A
+woman, Beatrice, should have nothing hidden from the man who is, or will
+be, her husband."
+
+She threw her arms around him. Her moods were variable as a child's.
+Perhaps this very variability Earlscourt hardly understood, for it was
+utterly opposed to his own character: you always found him the same;
+_she_ would be all storm one moment, all sunshine the next.
+
+"Do you suppose I would hide anything from you? Do you think for a
+moment I would hold back anything you had a right to know? You might
+look into my heart; there would be no thought or feeling there I should
+wish to keep from you. But if you exact confidence, so do I. Would you
+think of taking as your wife one you could not trust?"
+
+He answered her a little sternly:
+
+"No; if I once ceased to believe in your truth or honor, as I believe in
+my own, I should part from you forever, though God knows what it would
+cost me!"
+
+"God knows what it would cost _me!_ But I give you free leave. The
+instant you find a flaw in either, I am no longer worthy of your love;
+withdraw it, and I will never complain. But trust me you must and will;
+I merit your confidence, and I exact it. Look at me, Ernest. Do you
+believe I could ever deceive you?"
+
+He looked into her eyes long and earnestly.
+
+"No. When you do, your eyes will droop before mine. I trust you,
+Beatrice, fully, and I know you will never wrong it."
+
+She clung to him with caressant softness, softer in her than in a
+meeker-spirited woman, as she whispered, 'Never!' and a man would need
+have been obtuse and skeptical, indeed, who could then have doubted her.
+And so that cloud blew over, for a time, at the least--trusted, Beatrice
+Boville was soft and gentle as a lamb; mistrusted or misjudged, she was
+fiery as a young lioness, and Earlscourt, I thought, though originally
+won by her intellect, held her too much as a child to fully understand
+her character, and to see that, though she was his darling and
+plaything, she was also a passionate, ardent, proud-spirited woman,
+stung by injustice and impatient of doubt. No two people could be more
+fitted to make each other's happiness, yet it struck me that it was just
+possible they might make each other's misery very completely, through
+want of comprehension on the one side, through want of explanation on
+the other.
+
+"Your marriage is fixed, isn't it, Earlscourt?" asked his sister, Lady
+Clive Edghill, who had come to Lemongenseidlitz, and, though compelled
+by him, as he compelled all the rest of the family, to show Beatrice
+strict courtesy, disliked her, because she was not an advantageous
+match, was much too young in their opinion, and had no money--the
+gravest crimes a woman can have in the eyes of any man's relatives.
+"The 14th! Indeed! yours is a very short engagement!"
+
+"Is there any reason why it should be longer?"
+
+"O, dear, no! none that I am aware of. I wish, earnestly, my dear
+Earlscourt, I could congratulate you more warmly; but I can never say
+what I do not feel, and I had so much hoped--"
+
+"My dear Helena, as long as I have so much reason to congratulate
+myself, it matters very little whether you do or do not," smiled
+Earlscourt. He was too much of a lion to be stung by gnats.
+
+"I dare say. I sincerely trust you may ever have reason. But I heard
+some very disagreeable things about that Mr. Boville, Beatrice's father.
+Do you know that he was in a West India regiment, but was deprived of
+his commission even there?--a perfect blackleg and sharper, I
+understand. I suppose she has never mentioned him to you?"
+
+"You are very much mistaken; all that Beatrice knows of him, I know;
+that is but little, for Lady Mechlin took her long ago, when her mother
+died, from such unfit guardianship. Beatrice is as open as the day--"
+
+"Indeed! A little too frank, perhaps?"
+
+"Too frank? That is a paradox. No one can have too much candor. It is
+not a virtue of your sex, but it is one, thank God! which she possesses
+in a rare degree, though possibly it gains her enemies where it should
+gain her friends."
+
+"Still frankness _may_ merge into indiscretion," said Helena, musingly.
+
+"I doubt it. An indiscreet woman is never frank, for she has always the
+memory of silly things said and done which require concealment."
+
+"I was merely thinking," Helena went on, regardless of a speech which
+she did not perhaps relish, pour cause, "merely from my deep interest in
+you, and my knowledge of all you will wish your wife to be, that perhaps
+Beatrice might be, in pure insouciance, a little too careless, a little
+too candid for so prominent a position as she will occupy. Last night,
+in passing a little anteroom in the Redoute, I saw her in such extremely
+earnest conversation with a man, a handsome man, about your height and
+age, and--"
+
+The anteroom! Earlscourt thought, with a pang, of the start she had
+given when he entered it the previous night. But he was not of a jealous
+temperament, nor a curious one; his mind was too constantly occupied
+with great projects and ambitions to be capable of joining petty things
+together into an elaborate mosaic; he had no petitesses himself, and
+trifles passed unheeded. He interrupted her decidedly:
+
+"What is there in that to build a pyramid of censure from? Doubtless it
+was one of her acquaintances--probably one of mine also. I should have
+thought you knew me better, Helena, than to attempt this gossiping
+nonsense with me."
+
+"O, I say no more. I only thought you, of all men, would wish Cæsar's
+wife to be above--"
+
+The gnat-strings had been too insignificant to rouse him before, but at
+this one his eyebrows contracted, and he rose.
+
+"Silence! Never venture to make such a speech as that to me again. In
+insulting Beatrice you insult me. Unless you can mention her in terms of
+proper respect and reverence, never presume to speak her name to me
+again. Her enemies are my enemies, and, whoever they may be, I will
+treat them as such."
+
+Helena was sorely frightened; if she held anybody in veneration it was
+Earlscourt, and she would never have ventured so far with him but for
+the causeless hate she had taken to Beatrice, simply because Lady Clive
+had decided long ago that her brother was too voué to public life ever
+to marry, and that her son would succeed to his title. She was sorely
+frightened, but she comforted herself--the little thorn she had thrust
+in might rankle after a while; as pleasant a consolation under failure
+as any lady could desire.
+
+Beatrice was coming along the corridor as Earlscourt left Helena's
+rooms, which were in the same hotel as Lady Mechlin's. She was stopping
+to look out of one of the windows at the sunset; she did not see him at
+first, and he watched her unobserved, and smiled at the idea of
+associating anything deceitful with her--smiled still more at the idea
+when she came up to him, with her frank, bright, regard, lifting her
+face for a caress, and patting both her hands through his arm.
+Accustomed to chill and reserved women in his own family, her abandon
+had a great charm for him; but perhaps it led him into his error in
+holding her still as half a child.
+
+"You have been seeing my enemy?" she said, laughingly. "Your sister does
+not like me, does she?"
+
+"Not like you! Why should you think so? She may not like my marrying,
+perhaps, because she had decided for me that I should never do so; and
+no woman can bear any prophecies she makes to prove wrong."
+
+"Very possibly that may be one reason; but she does not think me good
+enough for you."
+
+Her tips curved disdainfully, and Earlscourt caught a glimpse of her in
+her fiery mood. He laughed at her where, with her, he had better have
+admitted the truth. Beatrice had too much pride to be wounded by it, and
+far too much good sense to measure herself by money and station.
+
+"Nonsense, Beatrice; I should have thought you too proud to suppose such
+a thing," he said, carelessly.
+
+"It is the truth, nevertheless."
+
+"More foolish she, then; but if you and I do not, what can it signify?"
+
+"Nothing. As long as I am worthy of you in your eyes, what others think
+or say is nothing to me. I honor you too much to make the gauge between
+us a third person's opinion; or measure you or myself by a few stops
+higher or lower in the social ladder. Your sister thinks me below you in
+rank, soit! She is right; I am quite ready to admit it; but that I am
+your equal in all that makes men and women equal in the sight of Heaven,
+I know. When she finds me unworthy of you in thought or deed, then she
+may call me beneath you--not till then."
+
+Her cheeks were flushed; he could hear her quick breathings, and in her
+vehemence and haughty indignation she picked the petals of her bouquet
+de corsage to pieces and flung them away. Another time he would have
+thought how well her pride became her, and given her some fond reply.
+Just now the thorn rankled as Lady Clive had hoped, and he answered her
+gravely, in the tone which it was as unwise to use to her as to prick a
+thorough-bred colt with both spurs.
+
+"You are quite right. Were I a king, you would be my equal as long as
+your heart was mine, your mind as noble, and your character as unsullied
+as I hope them to be now."
+
+She turned on him rapidly with the first indignant look she had ever
+given to him.
+
+"_Hope!_ You might say _know_, I think!"
+
+"I would have said 'know,' and meant it too, yesterday."
+
+"Yesterday? What do you mean? Why am I less worthy your confidence
+to-day than yesterday?"
+
+She looked wonderingly at him, her eyes full of inquiry and
+bewilderment. It was marvellous acting, if it was acting; yet he thought
+she could scarcely have so soon forgotten their scene in the anteroom
+the previous night. They had now come into the salon; he left her side
+and walked to the mantel-piece, leaning his arm on it, and speaking
+coldly, as he had never done to her since they first met.
+
+"Beatrice, do not attempt to act with me. You cannot have forgotten what
+we said in the anteroom last night. Nothing assumed ever deceives me,
+and you only lower yourself in my estimation."
+
+She clinched her hands till the rings he had given her crushed together.
+
+"Act! assume! Great Heaven, how dare you speak such words to me?"
+
+"Dare? You speak like an angry child, Beatrice. When you are reasonable
+I will answer you."
+
+The tears welled into her eyes, but she would not let them fall.
+
+"Reasonable? Is there anything unreasonable in resenting words utterly
+undeserved? Would you be calm under them yourself, Lord Earlscourt? I
+remember now what you mean by yesterday; I did not remember when I asked
+you. Had I done so I should never have simulated ignorance and surprise.
+Only last night you promised to trust me. Is this your trust, to accuse
+me of artifice, of acting, of falsehood? I would bear no such imputation
+from any one, still less from you, who ought to know me so well. What
+happiness can we have if you--"
+
+She stopped, the tears choking her voice, but he did not see them; he
+only saw her indignant attitude, her flushed cheeks, her flashing eyes,
+and put them down to her girlish passion.
+
+"Calm yourself, Beatrice, I beg. This sort of scene is very distasteful
+to me; to figure in a lover's quarrel hardly suits me. I am not young
+enough to find amusement in disputation and reconciliation, sparring one
+moment and caresses the next. My life is one of grave pursuits and
+feverish ambitions; I am often harassed, annoyed, worn out in body and
+mind. What I hoped for from you was, to borrow the gayety and brightness
+of your own youth, to find rest, and happiness, and distraction. A life
+of disputes, reproaches, and misconstruction, would be what I never
+would endure."
+
+Beatrice was silent; she leaned her forehead on her arms and did not
+answer him. His tone stung her pride, but his words touched her heart.
+Her passion was always short-lived, and no evil spirit possessed her
+long. She rebelled against the first part of his speech with all her
+might, but she softened to the last. She came up to him with her hands
+out.
+
+"I had no right to speak so impatiently to you. God knows, to make your
+life happy will be my only thought, and care, and wish. If I spoke
+angrily, forgive me!"
+
+Earlscourt knew that the nature so quick to acknowledge error was worth
+fifty unerring and unruffled ones; still he sighed as he answered her,--
+
+"My dear child, I forgive you. But, Beatrice, there is no foe to love so
+sure and deadly as dissension!" And as he drew her to him and felt her
+soft warm lips on his, he thought, half uneasily yet, "She has never
+told me who annoyed her--never mentioned her companion in the anteroom
+last night."
+
+Lady Clive had her wish; the thorn festered as promisingly as she could
+have desired. Ce n'est que le premier pas qui coûte in quarrels as in
+all else. Dispute once, you are very sure to dispute again, whether with
+the man you hate or the woman you love.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+HOW PRIDE SOWED AND REAPED.
+
+
+It only wanted three weeks to Beatrice Boville's marriage. We were all
+to leave Lemongenseidlitz together in a fortnight's time for old Lady
+Mechlin's house in Berks, where the ceremony was to take place.
+
+"Earlscourt is quite infatuated," said Lady Clive to me one evening.
+"Beatrice is very charming, of course, but she is not at all suited to
+him, she is so fiery, so impetuous, so self-reliant."
+
+"I think you are mistaken," said I. I admired Beatrice Boville--comme je
+vous ai dit--and I didn't like our family's snaps and snarls at her.
+"She may be impetuous, but, as her impulses are always generous, that
+doesn't matter much. She is only fiery at injustice, and, for myself, I
+prefer a woman who can stand up for her own rights and her friends' to
+one who'll sit by in--you'll call it meekness, I suppose? I call it
+cowardice and hypocrisy--to hear herself or them abused."
+
+"Thank you, mon ami," said Beatrice's voice at my elbow, as Lady Clive
+rose and crossed the room. "I am much obliged for your defence; I
+couldn't help hearing it as I stood in the balcony, and I wish very much
+I deserved it. I am afraid, though, I cannot dispute Helena's verdict of
+'fiery,' 'impetuous,'--"
+
+"And self-reliant?" I asked her. She laughed softly, and her eyes
+unconsciously sought Earlscourt, who was talking to Lady Mechlin.
+
+"Well? Not quite, now! But, by the way, why should people charge
+self-reliance on to one as something reprehensible and undesirable? A
+proper self-reliance is an indispensable ground-work to any success. If
+you cannot rely upon yourself, upon your power to judge and to act, you
+must rely upon some other person, possibly upon many people, and you
+become, perforce, vacillating and unstable.
+
+ 'To thine own self be true,
+ And it shall follow, as the day the night,
+ Thou canst not then be false to any man.'"
+
+As she spoke a servant brought a note to her, and I noticed her cheeks
+grow pale as she saw the handwriting upon it. She broke it open, and
+read it hastily, an oddly troubled, worried look coming over her face, a
+look that Earlscourt could not help but notice as he stood beside her.
+
+"Is there anything in that letter to annoy you, Beatrice?" he asked,
+very naturally.
+
+She started--rather guiltily, I thought--and crushed the note in her
+hand.
+
+"Whom is it from? It troubles you, I think. Tell me, my darling, is it
+anything that vexes or offends you?" he whispered, bending down to her.
+
+She laughed, a little nervously for her, and tore the note into tiny
+pieces.
+
+"Why do you not tell me, Beatrice?" he said again, with a shade of
+annoyance on his face.
+
+"Because I would rather not," she said, frankly enough, letting the
+pieces float out of the window into the street below. The shadow grew
+darker in his face; he bent his head in acquiescence, and said no more,
+but I don't think he forgot either the note or her destroyal of it.
+
+"I thought there was implicit confidence _before_ marriage whatever
+there is after," sneered his sister, as she passed him. He answered her
+calmly:--
+
+"I should say, Helena, that neither before nor after marriage would any
+man who respected his wife suffer curiosity or suspicion to enter into
+him. If he do, he has no right to expect happiness, and he will
+certainly not go the way to get it."
+
+That was the only reply he gave Lady Clive, but her thorn No. 2 festered
+in him, and when he bade Beatrice good night, standing alone with her in
+the little drawing room, he took both her hands in his, and looked
+straight into her eyes.
+
+"Beatrice, why would you not let me see that note this evening?"
+
+She looked up at him as fearlessly and clearly.
+
+"If I tell you why, I must tell you whom the note was from, and what it
+was about, and I would much rather do neither as yet."
+
+"That is very strange. I dislike concealment of all kinds, especially
+from you, who so soon will be my wife. It is inconceivable to me why you
+should need or desire any. I thought your life was a fair open book,
+every line of which I might read if I desired."
+
+Beatrice looked at him in amazement.
+
+"So you may. Do you suppose, if I had any secret from you that I feared
+you should know, I could have a moment's peace in your society, or look
+at you for an instant as I do now? I give you my word of honor that
+there was nothing either in the note that concerns you, or that you
+would wish me to tell you. In a few days you shall know all that was in
+it, but I ask you as a kindness not to press me now. Surely you do not
+think me such a child but that you can trust me in so small a trifle. If
+you say I am not worthy of your confidence, you imply that I am not
+worthy of your love. You spoke nobly to your sister just now, Ernest; do
+not act less nobly to me."
+
+He could not but admire her as she looked at him, with her fearless,
+unshadowed regard, her head thrown a little back, and her attitude
+half-commanding, half-entreating. He smiled in spite of himself.
+
+"You are a wayward, spoiled child, Beatrice. You must have your own
+way?"
+
+She gave a little stamp of her foot. She hated being called a spoiled
+child, specially by him, and in a serious moment.
+
+"If I have my own way, have I your full confidence too?"
+
+"Yes; but, my dear Beatrice, the only way to gain confidence is never to
+excite suspicion." And Lady Clive's thorn rankled à ravir; for even as
+he pressed his goodnight kisses on her lips, he thought, restlessly,
+"Shall we make each other happy?--am I too grave for her?--and is she
+too wilful for me? I want rest, not contention."
+
+The night after that there was a bal-masqué at the Redoute. I was just
+coming out of my room as Beatrice came down the corridor; She had her
+mask in her hand, her dress was something white starred with gold, and
+round her hair she had a little band of pearls of Earlscourt's gift. I
+never saw her look better, specially when her cheeks flushed and her
+eyes brightened as Earlscourt opened his door next mine, and met her. He
+did not see me, the corridor was empty, and he bent down to her with
+fond words and caresses.
+
+"Do I look well?" she said, with child-like delight.
+
+"I am so glad, Ernest, I want to do you honor."
+
+In that mood he understood her well enough, and he pressed her against
+his heart with the passion that was in him, whose strength he so rarely
+let her see. Then he drew her hand through his arm, and led her down the
+stairs; and, as I laughed to find to what lengths our cold statesman
+could come at last, I thought Lady Clive's thorns would be innocuous,
+however well planted.
+
+Earlscourt never danced; nothing but what was calm and stately could
+possibly have suited him; but Beatrice did, and waltzed like a Willis,
+(though she liked even better than that standing on his arm and talking
+with his friends--diplomatic, military, and ministerial--on all sorts of
+questions, most of which she could handle nearly as well as they;) and
+about the middle of the evening, while she was waltzing with some man or
+other who had begged to be introduced to her, Earlscourt left the
+ball-room for ten minutes in earnest conversation with one of the French
+ministers, who was leaving the next morning. As he came back again, I
+asked him where Beatrice was, because Powell, of the Bays, was bothering
+my life out to introduce him to her.
+
+"In the ball room, isn't she? She is with Lady Mechlin, of course, if,
+the waltz is over."
+
+A familiar voice stopped him.
+
+"She is not in the ball room. Go where you found her the other night,
+and see if Cæsar's promised wife be above suspicion!"
+
+I could have sworn the voice was Lady Clive's; a pink domino passed us
+too fast for detention, but Earlscourt's lips turned white at the subtle
+whisper, and he muttered a fierce oath--fiercer from him, because he's
+never stirred into fiery expletives. "There is some vile plot against
+her. I must sift it to the bottom;" and, pushing past me, he entered the
+ball room. Beatrice was not there; and wending his way through the
+crowd, he went in through several other apartments leading off to the
+right, and involuntarily I followed him, to see what the malicious
+whisper of the pink domino had meant. Earlscourt lifted the curtain that
+parted the anteroom from the other chamber--lifted it to see Beatrice
+Boville, as the pink domino had prophesied, and not alone! With her was
+a man, masked, but about Earlscourt's height, and seemingly about his
+age, who, as he saw us, let go her hand with a laugh, turned on to a
+balcony, which was but a yard or so from the street, and dropped on to
+the pave below. Beatrice started and colored, but I thought she must be
+the most desperate actress going, for she came up to Earlscourt with a
+smile, and was about to put her hand through his arm, but he signed her
+away from him.
+
+"Your acting is quite useless with me. I am not to be blinded by it
+again. I have believed in your truth as in my own--"
+
+"So you may still. Listen to me, Ernest!"
+
+"Hush! Do not add falsehood to falsehood."
+
+He spoke sternly and coldly; his pride, which was as strong as his love
+for her, would not gratify her by a sign of the torture within him, and
+even in his bitterest anger Earlscourt would never have been ungentle to
+a woman. That word acted like an incantation on her, the blood crimsoned
+her temples, her eyes literally flashed fire, and she threw back her
+head with the haughty, impatient gesture habitual to her.
+
+"Falsehood? Three times of late you have used that word to me."
+
+"And why? Because you merited it."
+
+She stood before him, the indignant flush hotter still upon her cheeks,
+her lips curved into scornful anger. If she was an actress, she knew her
+rôle to perfection.
+
+"Do you speak that seriously, Lord Earlscourt? Do you believe that I
+have lied to you?"
+
+"God help me! What else can I believe?" he muttered, too low for her to
+hear it.
+
+She asked him the question again, fiercely, and he answered her briefly
+and sternly,--
+
+"I believe that all your life with me has been a lie. I trusted you
+implicitly, and how do you return it? By carrying on clandestine
+intercourse with another man, giving him interviews that you conceal
+from me, having letters that you destroy, doubtless receiving caresses
+that you take care are unwitnessed; while you dare to smile in my face,
+and to dupe me with child-like tenderness, and to bid me 'trust' you and
+believe in you! Love shared to me is worthless, and on my wife,
+Beatrice, no stain must rest!"
+
+As he spoke, a dark shadow spread over her countenance, her evil spirit
+rose up in her, and her bright, frank, fearless face grew almost as
+hard and cold as his, while her teeth were set together, till her lips,
+usually soft and laughing, were pressed into one straight haughty line.
+
+"Since you give me up so easily, far be it from me to dispute your will.
+We part from this hour, if you desire it. My honor is as dear to me as
+yours to you, and to those who dare to suspect it I never stoop to
+defend it!"
+
+"But, my God! Beatrice, what _am_ I to believe?"
+
+"Whatever you please!"
+
+"What I please! Child, you must be mad. What _can_ I believe, but that
+you are the most perfect of all actresses, that your art is the greatest
+of all sins, the art that clothes itself in innocence, and carries
+would-be truth upon its lips. Prove to me that I wrong you!"
+
+She shook her head; the devil in her had still the victory; her eyes
+glittered, and her little teeth were clinched together.
+
+"What I exact is trust without proof. I am not your prisoner, Lord
+Earlscourt, to be tried coldly, and acquitted if you find legal evidence
+of innocence; convicted, if there be a link wanting. If you choose to
+trust me, I have told you often your trust will never be wronged; if you
+choose to condemn me, do. I shall not stoop to show you your injustice."
+
+Earlscourt's face grew dark and hard as hers, but it was wonderful how
+well his pride chained down all evidence of suffering; the only sign was
+in the hoarseness of, and quiver in, his voice.
+
+"Say nothing more--prevarication is guilt! God forgive you, Beatrice
+Boville! If you loved me, and knelt at my feet, I would not make you my
+wife after the art and the lies with which you have repaid my trust.
+Thank God, you do not already bear my name and my honor in your hands!"
+
+With those words he left her. Beatrice stood still in the same place,
+her lips set in one scornful line, her eyes glittering, her brow
+crimson, her whole attitude defiant, wronged, and unyielding. Earlscourt
+passed me, his face white as death, and was out of sight in a second. I
+waited a moment, then I followed my impulse, and went up to her.
+
+"Beatrice, for Heaven's sake, what is all this?"
+
+She turned her large eyes on me haughtily.
+
+"Do _you_ believe what your cousin does?"
+
+I answered her as briefly:--
+
+"No, I do not. There is some mistake here."
+
+She seized my arm, impetuously:--
+
+"Promise me, on your honor, never to tell what I tell to you while I
+live. Promise me, on your faith as a gentleman."
+
+"On my honor, I promise. Well?"
+
+"The man whom you saw with me to-night is my father. Lord Earlscourt
+chose to condemn me without inquiry; so let him! But I tell you, that
+you may tell him if I die before him, that he wronged me. You know Mr.
+Boville's--my father's--character. I had not seen him since I was a
+child, but when he heard of my engagement to Lord Earlscourt he found me
+out, and wanted to force himself on him, and borrow money of him, and--"
+She stopped, her face was crimson, but she went on, passionately. "All
+my efforts, of course, were to keep them apart, to spare my father such
+degradation, and your cousin such an application. I could not tell Lord
+Earlscourt, for he is generous as the winds, and I knew what he would
+have done. My note was from my father; he wanted to frighten me into
+introducing him to Lord Earlscourt, but he did not succeed. I would not
+have your cousin disgraced or pained by--Arthur, that is all my crime!
+No very great one, is it?" And she laughed a loud, bitter laugh, as
+unlike her own as the stormy shadow on her face was like the usual
+sunshine.
+
+"But, great Heaven! why not have told this to Earlscourt?"
+
+She signed me to silence with a passionate gesture.
+
+"No! He dishonored me with suspicion; let him go. I forbid you ever to
+breathe a word of what I have told you to him. If he has pride, so have
+I. He would hold no dishonor greater than for another man to charge him
+with a lie. My truth is as untainted as his, and my honor as dear to me.
+He accused me wrongly; let him repent. I would have loved and reverenced
+him as never any woman yet could do; but once suspected, I could find no
+happiness with him. His bitter words are stamped into my heart. I shall
+never forget--I doubt if I shall ever forgive--them. I can bear anything
+but injustice or misconception. If any doubt me, they are free to do so;
+theirs is the sin, not mine. As he has sown so must he reap, and so must
+I!" A low, gasping sob choked her voice, but she stood like a little
+Pythoness, the pearl gleaming above her brow, her eyes unnaturally
+bright, the color burning in her face, her attitude what it was when he
+left her, defiant, wronged, unyielding. She swept away from me to a man
+who was coming through the other room, and he stared at her set lips and
+her gleaming eyes as she asked him, carelessly, "Count Avonyl, will you
+have the kindness to take me to Lady Mechlin?"
+
+That was the last I saw of her. She left the Bad with her aunt as soon
+as the day dawned, and when I went to our hotel, I found that Earlscourt
+had ordered post-horses immediately he quitted the ball room, and
+gone--where he did not leave word. So my presentiment was verified; the
+pride of both had come in conflict, and the pride of neither had
+succumbed. How long it would sustain and satisfy them, I could not
+guess; but Lady Clive smiled again, as sweetly as ladies ever do when
+their thorns have thriven and brought forth abundant fruit. Some other
+time I will tell you how I saw Beatrice Boville again; but I often
+thought of
+
+ "Pauline, by pride
+ Angels have fallen ere thy time!"
+
+when I recalled her with the pearls above her brow, and her passionate,
+gleaming eyes, and her fearless, scornful, haughty anguish, as she had
+stood before me that night when Pride _v_. Pride caused the wreck of
+both their lives.
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+WHERE I SAW BEATRICE BOVILLE AGAIN
+
+
+I don't belong to St. Stephen's myself, thank Heaven. Very likely they
+would have returned me for the county when the governor departed this
+life had I tried them; but as I generally cut the county, from not being
+one of the grass countries, and as I couldn't put forward any patriotic
+claims like Mr. Harper Twelvetrees, (who, as he's such a slayer of
+vermin, thought, I suppose, that he'd try his hand at the dry-rot and
+the red tapeworms, which, according to cotton grumblers, are sapping the
+nation,) I haven't solicited its suffrages. The odds at Tattersall's
+interest me more than the figures of the ways and means; and
+Diophantus's and Kettledrum's legerdemain at Newmarket and Epsom is more
+to my taste than our brilliant rhetorician's with the surplus. I don't
+care a button about Lord Raynham and Sir C. Burrell's maids-of-all-work;
+they are not an attractive class, I should say, and, if they like to
+amuse their time tumbling out of windows, I can't see for the life of me
+why peers and gentlemen should rush to the rescue like Don Quixote to
+Dulcinea's. And as for that great question, Tea _v_. Paper, bohea
+delights the souls of old ladies and washerwomen--who destroy crumpets
+and character over its inebriating cups, and who will rush to crown Lord
+Derby's and Mr. Disraeli's brows with laurels if they ever go to the
+country with a teapot blazoned on their patriotic banners--more than it
+does mine, which prefers Bass and Burgundy, seltzer and Sillery; and,
+though I dare say Brown, Jones, and Robinson find the Divorce News
+exciting, and paper collars very showy and economical, as I myself am
+content with the _Times_ and its compeers, and think, with poor Brummel,
+that life without daily clean linen were worthless, _that_ subject
+doesn't absorb me as it does those gentlemen who find "the last tax of
+knowledge" so grandiloquent and useful a finishing period. So I have
+never stood for the county, nor essayed to stand for it, seeing that to
+one Bernal Osborne there are fifty prosers in St. Stephen's, and to be
+bored is, to a butterfly flutterer, as the young lady whose name heads
+this paper once obligingly called me, torture unparalleled by anything
+short of acid wine or the Chinese atrocities, though truly he who heads
+our Lower House with his vernal heart and his matchless brain were
+enough to make any man, coxcomb or hero, oppositionist or
+ministerialist, proud to sit in the same chamber with him. But there are
+nights now and then, of course, when I like to go to both Houses, to
+hear Lord Derby's rich, intricate oratory, or Gladstone's rhetoric,
+(which has so potent a spell even for his foes, and is yet charged so
+strangely against him as half a crime; possibly by the same spirit with
+which plain women reproach a pretty one for her beauty: what business
+has he to be more attractive than his compeers? of course it's a péché
+mortel in their eyes!) and when Mrs. Breloques, who is a charming little
+woman, to whom no man short of a Goth could possibly say "No" to any
+petition, gave me a little blow with her fan, and told me, as I valued
+her friendship, to get an order and take her and Gwen to hear the Lords'
+debate on Tuesday, when my cousin Viscount Earlscourt, one of the best
+orators in the Upper House, was certain to speak, of course I obliged
+her. Her sister Gwen, who was a girl of seventeen, barely out, and whom
+I wished at Jerico, (three is so odious a number, one of the triad must
+ever be _de trop_,) was wrathful with the Upper House; it in no wise
+realized her expectations; the peers should have worn their robes, she
+thought, (as if the horrors of a chamber filled with Thames odors in
+June wasn't enough without being bored with velvet and ermine) she would
+have been further impressed by coronets also; they had no business to
+lounge on their benches as if they were in a smoking-room; they should
+have declaimed like Kean, not spoken colloquially; and--in fact, they
+shouldn't have been ordinary men at all. I think a fine collection from
+Madame Tussaud's, with a touch of the Roman antique, would have been
+much more to Gwen's ideal, and she wasn't at all content till Earlscourt
+rose; _he_ reconciled her a little, for he had a grand-seigneur air, she
+said, that made up for the incongruities of his dress. It was a measure
+that he had much at heart; he had exerted for it all his influence in
+the cabinet, and he was determined that the bill should pass the Lords,
+though the majority inclined to throw it out. As he stood now against
+the table, with his calm dignity of gesture, his unstrained flow of
+words, and his rich and ringing voice, which could give majesty to
+commonplace subjects, and sway even an apathetic audience as completely
+as Sheridan's Begum speech, every one in the House listened attentively,
+and each of his words fell with its due weight. I heard him with pride,
+often as I had done so before, though I noticed with pain that the lines
+in his forehead and his mouth were visibly deepened; that he seemed to
+speak with effort, for him, and looked altogether, as somebody had said
+to me at White's in the morning, as if he were wearing out, and would go
+down in his prime, like Canning and Pitt.
+
+"Lord Earlscourt looks very ill--don't you think so?" said Lelia
+Breloques.
+
+As I answered her, I heard a sharp-wrung sigh, and I looked for the
+first time at the lady next me. I saw a delicate profile, lips
+compressed and colorless, chestnut hair that I had last seen with his
+pearls gleaming above it: I saw, en deux mots, Beatrice Boville for the
+first time since that night eight months before, when she had stood
+before me in her passion and her pride. She never took her eyes off
+Earlscourt while he spoke, and I wondered if she regretted having lost
+him for a point of honor. Had she grown indifferent to him, that she had
+come to his own legislative chamber, or was her love so much stronger
+than her pride that she had sought to see him thus rather than not see
+him at all? When his speech was closed, and he had resumed his place on
+the benches, she leaned back, covering her eyes with her hand for a
+moment: and, as I said aloud (more for her benefit than Mrs.
+Breloques's) my regret that Earlscourt would wear himself out, I was
+afraid, in his devotion to public life, Beatrice started at the sound
+of my voice, turned her head hastily, and her face was colorless enough
+to tell me she had not gratified her pride without some cost. Of course
+I spoke to her; she had been a favorite of mine always, and I had often
+wished to come across her again; but beyond learning that she was with
+Lady Mechlin in Lowndes Square, and had been spending the winter at Pau
+for her aunt's health, I had no time to hear more, for Lelia, having
+only come for Earlscourt's speech, bade me take her to her carriage,
+while Beatrice and her party remained for the rest of the debate; but
+the rencontre struck me as so odd, that I believe it occupied my
+thoughts more than Mrs. Breloques liked, who got into her carriage in
+not the best of humors, and asked me if _I_ was going in for public life
+that I'd grown so particularly unamusing. We're always unamusing to one
+woman if we're thinking at all about another.
+
+"Do you know who was at the House to-night, Earlscourt, to hear your
+speech?" I asked him, as I met him, a couple of hours afterwards, in one
+of the passages, as he was leaving the House. He had altered much in
+eight months; he stooped a little from his waist; he looked worn, and
+his lips were pale. Men said his stamina was not equal to his brain;
+physicians, that he gave himself too much work and too little sleep. I
+knew he was more wrapped in public life than ever; that in his place in
+the government he worked unwearyingly, and that he found time in spare
+moments for intellectual recreation that would have sufficed for their
+life's study for most men. Still, I thought possibly there might be a
+weakness still clinging round his heart, though he never alluded to it;
+a passion which, though he appeared to have crushed it out, might be
+sapping his health more than all his work for the nation.
+
+"Do you mean any one in particular? Persigny said he should attend, but
+I did not see him."
+
+"No, I meant among the ladies. Beatrice Boville was in the seat next
+me." I had no earthly business to speak of her so abruptly, for when I
+had seen him for the first time after he left the Bad when Parliament
+met that February, he had forbidden me ever to mention her name to him,
+and no allusion to her had ever passed his lips. The worn, stern
+gravity, that had become his habitual expression, changed for a moment;
+bullet-proof he might be, but my arrow had shot in through the chain
+links of his armor; a look of unutterable pain, eagerness, anxiety,
+passion, passed over his face; but, whatever he felt, he subdued it,
+though his voice was broken as he answered me:--
+
+"Once for all, I bade you never speak that name to me. Without being
+forbidden, I should have thought your own feeling, your own delicacy,
+might--"
+
+"Have checked me? O, hang it, Earlscourt, listen one second without
+shutting a fellow up. I never broached the subject before, by your
+desire; but, now I have once broken the ice, I must ask you one
+question: Are you sure you judged the girl justly? are you sure you were
+not too quick to slan--"
+
+He pressed his hand on his chest and breathed heavily as I spoke, but he
+wouldn't let me finish.
+
+"That is enough. Would any man sacrifice what he held dearest wantonly
+and without proof? She is dear to me _now_. You are the only living
+being so thoughtless or so merciless as to force her name upon me, and
+rake up the one folly, the one madness, the one crowning sorrow of my
+life. See that you never dare bring forward her name again."
+
+He went out before me into the soft night air. His carriage was
+waiting; he entered it, threw himself back on its cushions, and was
+driven off before I had time to break my word of honor to Beatrice
+Boville, which I felt sorely tempted to do just then. Who among the
+thousands that heard his briliant speech that night, or read it the next
+morning, who saw him pass in his carriage, and had him pointed out to
+them as the finest orator of his day, or dined with him at his
+ministerial dinners at his house in Park Lane, would have believed that,
+with all his ambition, fame, honors, and attainments, the one cross, the
+one shadow, the one dark thread, in the successful stateman's life, was
+due to a woman's hand, and that underneath all his strength lay that
+single weakness, sapping and undermining it?
+
+"_Did you_ see that girl Boville at the House last night?" Lady Clive
+(who had smiled most sweetly ever since her thorns had brought forth
+their fruit--her son _would_ be his heir--Earlscourt would never marry
+now!) said to me, the next day, at one of the Musical Society concerts.
+"Incredible effrontery, wasn't it, in her, to come and hear Earlscourt's
+speech? One would have imagined that conscience and delicacy might have
+made her reluctant to see him, instead of letting her voluntarily seek
+his own legislative chamber, and listen coolly for an hour and a half to
+the man whom she misled and deceived so disgracefully."
+
+I laughed to think how long a time a woman's malice _will_ flourish,
+n'importe how victorious it may have been in crushing its object, or how
+harmless that object may have become.
+
+"You are very bitter about her still, Lady Clive. Is that quite fair?
+You know you were so much obliged to her for throwing Earlscourt away.
+You want Horace to come in for the title, don't you?" Which truism
+being unpalatable, Lady Clive averred that she had no wish on earth but
+for Earlscourt's happiness; that of course she naturally grieved for his
+betrayal by that little intrigante, but that had his marriage been a
+well-advised one, nobody would have rejoiced more, etc., etc., and bade
+me be silent and listen to Vieuxtemps, both of which commands I obeyed,
+pondering in my own mind whether I should go and call in Lowndes Square
+or not: if anybody heard of it, they would think it odd for me alone, of
+all the family, to continue acquainted with a girl whom report
+(circulated through Lady Clive) said had used Earlscourt so ill, and
+wrong constructions might get put upon it; but, thank God! I never have
+considered the qu'en dira-t-on. If constructions are wrong, to the deuce
+with them! they matter nothing to sensible people; and the man who lives
+in dread of "reports" will have to shift his conduct as the old man of
+immortal fable shifted his donkey, and won't ever journey in any peace
+at all. If anybody remarked my visiting Lowndes Square, I couldn't help
+it: I wanted to see Beatrice Boville again, and to Lowndes Square, after
+the concert, I drove my tilbury accordingly, which, as that turn-out is
+known pretty tolerably in those parts, I should be wisest to leave
+behind me when I don't want my calls noticed. By good fortune, I saw
+Beatrice alone. They were going to drive in the Park, and she was in the
+drawing room, dressed and waiting for her aunt. She was not altered: at
+her age sorrow doesn't tell physically as it does at Earlscourt's. In
+youth we have Hope; later on we know that of all the gifts of Pandora's
+box none are so treacherous and delusive as the one that Pandora left at
+the bottom. True, Beatrice had none of that insouciant, shadowless
+brightness that had been her chief charm at Lemongenseidlitz, but she
+was one of those women whose attractions, dependent on fascination, not
+on beauty, grow more instead of less as time goes on. She met me with a
+trace of embarrassment; but she was always self-possessed under any
+amount of difficulties, and stood chatting, a trifle hurriedly, of all
+the subjects of the year, of anything, I dare say, rather than of that
+speech the night before, or of the secret of which I was her sole
+confidant. But I was not going to let her off so easily. I had come
+there for a definite purpose, and was not going away without
+accomplishing it. I was afraid every second that Lady Mechlin might come
+down, or some visitor enter, and as she sat in a low chair among the
+flowers in the window, leant towards her, and plunged into it _in medias
+res_.
+
+"Miss Boville, I want you to release me from my promise."
+
+She looked up, her face flushing slightly, but her lips and eyes
+shadowed already with that determined pride and hauteur that they had
+worn the last time I had seen her. She did not speak, but played with
+the boughs of a coronella near her.
+
+"You remember" (I went on speaking as briefly as possible, lest the old
+lady's toilet should be finished, and our tête-à-tête cut short) "I gave
+you my word of honor never to speak again of what you told me in the
+Kursaal last autumn until you gave me leave; that leave I ask you for
+now. Silence lies in the way of your own happiness, I feel sure, and not
+alone of yours. If you give me carte blanche, you may be certain I shall
+use it discreetly and cautiously. You made the prohibition in a moment
+of heat and passion; withdraw it now--believe me, you will never
+repent."
+
+The flush died out of her cheeks as I spoke; but her little, white
+teeth were set together as they had been that night, and she answered me
+bitterly,--
+
+"You ask what is impossible; I cannot, in justice to myself, withdraw
+it. I would never have told you, but that I deemed you a man of honor,
+whom I could trust."
+
+"I do not think I have proved myself otherwise, Beatrice. I have kept my
+word to you, when I have been greatly tempted to break it, when I have
+doubted whether it were either right or wise to stand on such punctilio,
+when greater stakes were involved by my silence. Surely, if you once had
+elevated mind enough to comprehend and admire such a man as Earlscourt,
+and be won by the greatness of his intellect to prefer him to younger
+rivals, it is impossible you can have lowered your taste and found any
+one to replace him. No woman who once loved Earlscourt could stoop to an
+inferior man, and almost all men _are_ his inferiors; it is impossible
+you can have grown cold towards him."
+
+She turned her eyes upon me luminous with her old passion--the color hot
+in her cheeks, and her attitude full of that fiery pride which became
+her so infinitely well.
+
+"_I_ changed!--_I_ grown cold to him! I love him more than all the
+world, and shall do to my grave. Do you think that any who heard him
+last night could glory in him as I did? Did you think any physical
+torture would not have been easier to bear than what I felt when I saw
+his face once more, and thought of what we _should have been_ to one
+another, and of what we _are_? We women have to act, and smile, and wear
+a calm semblance, while our hearts are bursting; and so you fancy that
+we never feel."
+
+"But, great Heavens! Beatrice, if you love Earlscourt like this, why not
+give me leave to tell him? Why not write to him yourself? A word would
+clear you, a word restore you to him. Your anger, your pride, he would
+forgive in a moment."
+
+I'm a military man, not a diplomatist, or I shouldn't have added that
+last sentence.
+
+She rose, and looked at me haughtily and amazedly.
+
+"It is I who have to forgive, not he. I wronged him in no way; he
+wronged me bitterly. He dared to misjudge, to suspect, to insult me. I
+shall never stoop to undeceive him. He gave me up without a trial. I
+never will force myself upon him. He thanked God I was not his
+wife--could I seek to be his wife after that? Love him passionately I
+do, but forgive him I do _not_! I forbid you, on your faith as a
+gentleman, ever to tell him what I told you that night. I trusted to
+your honor; I shall hold you _dis_honored if you betray me."
+
+Just as she paused an open carriage rolled past. I looked down
+mechanically; in it was Earlscourt lying back on his cushions,
+returning, I believe, from a Cabinet Council. There, in the street,
+stood my tilbury, with the piebald Cognac that everybody in Belgravia
+knew. There, in the open window, stood Beatrice and I; and Earlscourt,
+as he happened to glance upwards, saw us both! His carriage rolled on;
+Beatrice grew as white as death, and her lips quivered as she looked
+after him; but Lady Mechlin entered, and I took them down to their
+barouche.
+
+"You are determined not to release me from my promise?" I asked
+Beatrice, as I pulled up the tiger-skin over her flounces.
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"Certainly not; and I should think you are too much of a gentleman not
+to hold a promise sacred."
+
+Pride and determination were written in every line of her face, in the
+very arch of her eyebrows, the very form of her brow, the very curve of
+her lips--a soft, delicate face enough otherwise, but as expressive of
+indomitable pride as any face could be. And yet, though I swore at her
+as I drove Cognac out of the square, I couldn't help liking her all the
+better for it, the little Pythoness! for, after all, it was natural and
+very intelligible to me--she had been misjudged and wrongly suspected,
+and the noblest spirits are always the quickest to rebel against
+injustice and resent false accusation.
+
+
+
+
+V.
+
+HOW IN PERFECT INNOCENCE I PLAYED THE PART OF A RIVAL.
+
+
+The season whirled and spun along as usual. They were having stormy
+debates in the Lower House, and throwing out bills in the Upper; stifled
+by Thames odors one evening, and running down to Epsom the next morning;
+blackguarding each other in parliamentary language--which, on my honor,
+will soon want duels revived to keep it within decent breeding, if Lord
+Robert Cecil and others don't learn better manners, and remember the
+golden rule that "He alone resorts to vituperation whose argument is
+illogical and weak." We, luckier dogs, who weren't slaves to St.
+Stephen's, nor to anything at all except as parsons and moralists, with
+whom the grapes sont verts et bons pour des goujats, said to our own
+worldly vitiated tastes and evil leanings, spent our hours in the Ring
+and the coulisses, White's and the United, crush balls and opera
+suppers, and swore we were immeasurably bored, though we wouldn't have
+led any other life for half a million. The season whirled along.
+Earlscourt devoted himself more entirely than ever to public life; he
+filled one of the most onerous and important posts in the ministry, and
+appeared to occupy himself solely with home politics and foreign
+politics. Lady Mechlin, only a baronet's widow, though she had very
+tolerable society of her own, was not in _his_ monde; and Beatrice
+Boville and he, with only Hyde Park Corner between them, might as well,
+for any chance of rapprochement, have been severally at Spitzbergen and
+Cape Horn. Two or three times they passed each other in Pall-Mall and
+the Ride; but Earlscourt only lifted his hat to Lady Mechlin, and
+Beatrice set her little teeth together, and wouldn't have solicited a
+glance from him to save her life. Earlscourt was excessively distant to
+me after seeing my tilbury at her door; no doubt he thought it strange
+for me to have continued my intimacy with a woman who had wronged him so
+bitterly. He said nothing, but I could see he was exceedingly
+displeased; and the more I tried to smooth it with him, the more
+completely I seemed to set my foot in it. It was exceedingly difficult
+to touch on any obnoxious subject with him; he was never harsh or
+discourteous, but he could freeze the atmosphere about him gently, but
+so completely, that no mortal could pierce through it; and, fettered by
+my promise to her and his prohibition to me, I hardly knew how to bring
+up her name. As the Fates would have it, I often met Beatrice myself, at
+the Regent Park fêtes, at concerts, at a Handel Festival at Sydenham, at
+one or two dinner parties; and, as she generally made way for me beside
+her, and was one of those women who are invariably, though without
+effort, admired and surrounded in any society, possibly people remarked
+it--possibly our continued intimacy might have come round to Earlscourt,
+specially as Lady Clive and Mrs Breloques abused me roundly, each à sa
+mode, for countenancing that "abominable intrigante." I couldn't help
+it, even if Earlscourt took exception at me for it. I knew the girl was
+not to blame, and I took her part, and tried my best to tame the little
+Pythoness into releasing me from my promise. But Beatrice was firm; had
+she erred, no one would have acknowledged and atoned for it quicker, but
+innocent and wrongly accused, she kept silent, coûte que coûte, and in
+my heart I sympathized with her. Nothing stings so sharply, nothing is
+harder to forgive, than injustice; and, knowing herself to be frank,
+honorable, and open as the day, his charge of falsehood and deception
+rankled in her only more keenly as time went on. Men ran after her like
+mad; she had more of them about her than many beauties or belles. There
+was a style, a charm, a something in her that sent beauties into the
+shade, and by which, had she chosen, she could soon have replaced
+Earlscourt. Still, it needed to be no Lavater to see, by the passionate
+gleam of her eyes and the haughty pride on her brow, that Beatrice
+Boville was not happy.
+
+"Why _will_ you let pride and punctilio wreck your own life, Beatrice?"
+I asked her, in a low tone, as we stood before one of Ed. Warren's
+delicious bits of woodland in the Water-Color Exhibition, where we had
+chanced to meet one day. "That he should have judged you as he did was
+not unnatural. Think! how was it possible for him to guess your father
+was your companion? Remember how very much circumstances were against
+you."
+
+"Had they been ten times more against me, a man who cared for me would
+have believed in me, and stood by me, not condemned me on the first
+suspicion. It was unchivalrous, ungenerous, unjust. I tell you, his
+words are stamped into my memory forever. I shall never forgive them."
+
+"Not even if you knew that he suffered as much and more than you do?"
+
+She clinched her hands on the rolled-up catalogue with a passionate
+gesture.
+
+"No; because he _misjudged_ me. Anything else I would have pardoned,
+though I am no patient Griselda, to put up tamely with any wrong; but
+_that_ I never could--I never would!"
+
+"I regret it, then. I thought you too warm and noble-hearted a woman to
+retain resentment so long. I never blamed you in the first instance, but
+I must say I blame you now."
+
+She laughed, a little contemptuously, and glanced at me with her
+haughtiest air; and on my life, much as it provoked one, nothing became
+her better.
+
+"Blame me or not, as you please--your verdict will be quite bearable,
+either way. I am the one sinned against. I can have nothing explained to
+Lord Earlscourt. Had he cared for me, as he once vowed, he would have
+been less quick then to suspect me, and quicker now to give me a chance
+of clearing myself. But you remember he thanked God I had not his name
+and his honor in my hands. I dare say he rejoices at his escape."
+
+She laughed again, turning over the catalogue feverishly and
+unconsciously. _Those_ were the words that rankled in her; and it was
+not much wonder if, to a proud spirit like Beatrice Boville's, they
+seemed unpardonable. As I handed her and Lady Mechlin into their
+carriage when they left the exhibition, Earlscourt, as ill luck would
+have it, passed us, walking on to White's, the fringe of Beatrice's
+parasol brushed his arm, and a hot color flushed into her cheeks at the
+sudden rencontre. By the instinct of courtesy he bowed to her and Lady
+Mechlin, but passed up Pall-Mall without looking at Beatrice. How well
+society drills us, that we meet with such calm impassiveness in its
+routine those with whom we have sorrowed and joyed, loved and hated, in
+such far different scenes!
+
+Their carriage drove on, and I overtook him as he went up Pall-Mall. He
+was walking slowly, with his hand pressed on his chest, and his lips set
+together, as if in bodily pain. He looked at me, as I joined him, with
+an annoyed glance of unusual irritation for him, for he was always calm
+and untroubled, punctiliously just, and though of a proud temper, never
+quick to anger.
+
+"You passed that girl wonderfully coldly, Earlscourt," I began, plunging
+recklessly into the thick of the subject.
+
+"Coldly!" he repeated, bitterly. "It is very strange that you will
+pursue me with her name. I forbade you to intrude it upon me; was not
+that sufficient?"
+
+"No; because I think you judged her too harshly."
+
+"Think so, if you please, but never renew the topic to me. If she gives
+you her confidence, enjoy it. If you choose, knowing what you do, to be
+misled by her, be so; but I beg of you to spare me your opinions and
+intentions."
+
+"But why? I say you _do_ misjudge her. She might err in impatience and
+pride; but I would bet you any money you like that you would prove her
+guilty of no indelicacy, no treachery, no underhand conduct, though
+appearances might be against her."
+
+"_Might_ be! You select your words strangely; you must have some deeper
+motive for your unusual blindness. I desire, for the last time, that you
+cease either the subject to me, or your acquaintance with me, whichever
+you prefer."
+
+With which, he went up the steps of White's, and I strolled on, amazed
+at the fierce acrimony of his tone, utterly unlike anything I had ever
+heard from him, wished their pride to the devil, called myself a fool
+for meddling in the matter at all, and went to have a quiet weed in the
+smoking-room of the U. S. to cool myself. I was heartily sick of the
+whole affair. If they wanted it cleared, they must clear it
+themselves--I should trouble myself no more about it. Yet I couldn't
+altogether dismiss Beatrice's cause from my mind. I thought her, to say
+the truth, rather harshly used. I liked her for her fearless, truthful,
+impassioned character. I liked her for the very courage and pride with
+which she preferred to relinquish any chance of regaining her forfeited
+happiness, rather than stoop to solicit exculpation from charges of
+which she knew she was innocent. Perhaps, at first, she did not consider
+sufficiently Earlscourt's provocation, and perhaps, now, she was too
+persisting in her resentment of it; still I liked her, and I was sorry
+to see her, at an age when life should have been couleur de rose, to one
+of her gay and insouciant nature, with a weary, passionate look on her
+face that she should not have had for ten years to come--a look that was
+rapidly hardening into stern and contemptuous sadness.
+
+"You tell me I am too bitter," she said to me one day, "how should I be
+otherwise? I, who have wronged no one, and have never in my life done
+anything of which I am ashamed, am called an intrigante by Lady Clive
+Edghill, and get ill-will from strangers, and misconstructions from my
+friends, merely because, thinking no harm myself, it never occurs to me
+that circumstances may look against me; and, hating falsehood, I cannot
+lie, and smile, and give soft words where I feel contempt and
+indignation. Mrs. Breloques yonder, with whom les présens ont toujours
+raison, and les absens ont toujours tort, who has honeyed speeches for
+her bitterest foes, and poisoned arrows (behind their back) for her most
+trusting friends, who goes to early matins every morning, and pries out
+for a second all over the top of her prayer-book, who kisses 'darling
+Helena,' and says she 'never looked so sweetly,' whispering en petit
+comité what a pity it is, when Helena is so passée, she _will_ dress
+like a girl just out--she is called the sweetest woman possible--so
+amiable! and is praised for her high knowledge of religion. You tell me
+I am too bitter. I think not. Honesty does _not_ prosper, and truth is
+at a miserable discount; straightforward frankness makes a myriad of
+foes, and adroit diplomacy as many friends. If you make a
+prettily-turned compliment, who cares if it is sincere? if you hold your
+tongue where you cannot praise, because you will not tell a conventional
+falsehood, the world thinks you very ill-natured, or odiously satirical.
+Society is entirely built upon insincerity and conventionality, from the
+wording of an acceptance of a dinner invitation, where we write 'with
+much pleasure,' thinking to ourselves 'what a bore!' to the giant
+hypocrisies daily spoken without a blush from pulpit and lecturn, and
+legitimatized both as permissible and praiseworthy. To truth and
+unconventionality society of course is adverse; and whoever dares to
+uphold them must expect to be hissed, as Paul by the Ephesians, because
+he shivered their silver shrines and destroyed the craft by which they
+got their wealth."
+
+Beatrice was right; her truth and fearlessness were her enemies with
+most people, even with the man who had loved her best. Had she been
+ready with an adroit falsehood and a quick excuse, Earlscourt's
+suspicions would never have been raised as they were by her frank
+admission that there was something she would rather not tell him, and
+her innocent request to be trusted. That must have been some very
+innocent and unworldly village schoolmaster, I should say, who first set
+going that venerable proverb, "Honesty is the best policy." He must have
+known comically little of life. A diplomatist who took it as his motto
+would soon come to grief, and ladies would soon stone out of their
+circles any woman bête enough to try its truth among them. There is no
+policy at greater discount in the world, and straightforward and candid
+people stand at very unequal odds with the rest of humanity; they are
+the one morsel of bread to a hogshead of sack, the handful of Spartans
+against a swarm of Persians, and they get the brunt of the battle and
+the worst of the fight.
+
+
+
+
+VI.
+
+HOW PRIDE BOWED AND FELL.
+
+
+Beyond meeting Earlscourt at White's, or, for an hour, at the réunion of
+some fair leader of ton, I scarcely saw him that season, for he was more
+and more devoted to public life. He looked wretchedly ill, and his
+physicians said if he wished to live he must go to the south of France
+in July, and winter at Corfu; but he paid them no heed; he occupied
+himself constantly with political and literary work, and grudged the
+three or four hours he gave to sleep that did him little good.
+
+"Will you get me admittance to the Lords to-morrow night?" Beatrice
+asked me, one morning, when I met her in the Ride. I looked at her
+surprised.
+
+"To the Lords? Of course, if you wish."
+
+"I do wish it." Her hands clinched on her bridle, and the color flushed
+into her face, for Earlscourt just then passed us, riding with one of
+his brother ministers. He looked at us both, and his face changed
+strangely, though he rode on, continuing his conversation with the other
+man, while I went round the turn with Beatrice and the other fellows who
+were about her; le fruit défendu is always most attractive, and
+Beatrice's profound negligence of them all made them more mad about her
+than all the traps and witcheries, beguilements and attractions, that
+coquettes and beauties set out for them. She rode beautifully; and a
+woman who _does_ sit well down on her saddle, and knows how to handle
+her horse, never looks better than en Amazone. Earlscourt met her three
+times at the turn of the Ride; and though you would not have told that
+he was passing any other than an utter stranger, I think it must have
+struck him that he had lost much in losing Beatrice Boville. I was
+riding on her off-side each time when we passed him. As I say, I never,
+thank God! have cared a straw for the qu'en dira-t-on? and if people
+remarked on my intimacy with my cousin's cast off fiancée, so they
+might, but to Earlscourt I wished to explain it more for Beatrice's sake
+than my own; and as I rode out by Apsley House afterwards, I overtook
+him, and went up to Piccadilly with him, though his manner was decidedly
+distant and chill, so pointedly so that it would have been rude, had he
+not been too entirely a disciple of Chesterfield to be ever otherwise
+than courteous to his deadliest foe; but, disregarding his coldness, I
+said what I intended to say, and began an explanation that I considered
+only due to him.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Earlscourt, for intruding on you a topic you have
+forbidden, but I shall be obliged to you to listen to me a moment. I
+wish to tell you my reasons for what, I dare say, seems strange to you,
+my continued intimacy with--"
+
+But I was not permitted to end my sentence; he divined what I was about
+to say, and stopped me, with a cold, wearied air.
+
+"I understand; but I prefer not to hear them. I have no desire to
+interfere with your actions, and less to be troubled with your motives.
+Of course, you choose your friendships as you please. All I beg is, that
+you obey the wish I expressed the other day, and intrude the subject no
+more upon me."
+
+And he bade me good morning, urged his mare into a sharp canter, and
+turned down St. James's Street. How little those in the crowd, who
+looked at him as he rode by, pointing him out to the women with them as
+Viscount Earlscourt, the most eloquent debater in the Lords, the
+celebrated foreign minister, author, and diplomatist, guessed that a
+woman's name could touch and sting him as nothing else could do, and
+that under the calm and glittering upper-current of his life ran a dark,
+slender, unnoticed thread that had power to poison all the rest! Those
+women, mon ami!--if we _do_ satirize them a little bit now and then, are
+we doing any more than taking a very mild revenge? Don't they make fools
+of the very best and wisest of us, play the deuce with Cæsar as with
+Catullus, and make Achilles soft as Amphimachus?
+
+The next morning I met Beatrice at a concert at the Marchioness of
+Pursang's. Lady Pursang would not have been, vous concevez, on the
+visiting list of Lady Mechlin, as she was one of the crème de la crème,
+but she had met Beatrice the winter before at Pau, had been very
+delighted with her, and now continued the acquaintance in town. I
+happened to sit next our little Pythoness, who looked better, I think,
+that morning, than ever I saw her, though her face was set into that
+disdainful sadness which had become its habitual expression. She liked
+my society, and sought it, no doubt, because I was the only link between
+her and her lost past; and she was talking with me more animatedly than
+usual, thanking me for having got her admittance to the Lords that
+night, during a pause in the concert, when Earlscourt entered the room,
+and took the seat reserved for him, which was not far from ours. Music
+was one of his passions, the only délassement, indeed, he ever gave
+himself now; but to-day, though ostensibly he listened to Alboni and
+Arabella Goddard, Hallé and Vieuxtemps, and talked to the marchioness
+and other women of her set, in reality he was watching Beatrice, who,
+her pride roused by his presence, laughed and chatted with me and other
+men with her old gay abandon, and, impervious to déréglement though he
+was, I fancy even _he_ felt it a severe trial of his composure when Lady
+Pursang, who had been the last five years in India with her husband, and
+who was ignorant of or had forgotten the name of the girl Earlscourt was
+to have married the year before, asked him, when the concert was over,
+to let her introduce him to her, yet Beatrice Boville, bringing him in
+innocent cruelty up to that little Pythoness, with whom he had parted so
+passionately and bitterly ten months before! Happy for them that they
+had that armor which the Spartans called heroism, the stoics philosophy,
+and we--simply style good breeding, or they would hardly have gone
+through that ordeal as well as they did when she introduced them to each
+other as strangers!--those two who had whispered such passionate love
+words, given and received such fond caresses, vowed barely twelve
+months before to pass their lifetime together! Happy for them they were
+used to society, or they would hardly have bowed to each other as calmly
+and admirably as they did, with the recollection of that night in which
+they had parted so bitterly, so full as it was in the minds of both.
+Beatrice was standing in one of the open windows of the little cabinet
+de peinture almost empty, and when the marchioness moved away, satisfied
+that she had introduced two people admirably fitted to entertain one
+another, Earlscourt, with people flirting and talking within a few yards
+of him, was virtually alone with Beatrice--for there is, after all, no
+solitude like the solitude of a crowd--and _then_, for the first time in
+his life, his self-possession forsook him. Beatrice was silent and very
+pale, looking out of the window on to the Green Park, which the house
+overlooked, and Earlscourt's pride had a hard struggle, but his passion
+got the better of him, malgré lui, and he leaned towards her.
+
+"Do you remember the last night we were together?"
+
+She answered him bitterly. She had not forgiven him. She had sometimes,
+I am half afraid, sworn to revenge herself.
+
+"I am hardly likely to forget it, Lord Earlscourt."
+
+He looked at her longingly and wistfully; his pride was softened, that
+granite pride, hitherto so unassailable! and he bent nearer to her.
+
+"Beatrice! I would give much to be able to wash out the memories of that
+night--to be proved mistaken--to be convicted of haste, of sternness--"
+
+The tears rushed into her eyes.
+
+"You need only have given one little thing--all I asked of you--trust!"
+
+"Would to God I dare believe you now! Tell me, answer me, did I judge
+you too harshly? Love at my age never changes, however wronged; it is
+the latest, and it only expires with life itself. I confess to you, you
+are dearer to me still than anything ever was, than anything ever will
+be. Prove to me, for God's sake, that I misjudged you! Only prove it to
+me; explain away what appeared against you, and we may yet--"
+
+He stopped; his voice trembled, his hand touched hers, he breathed short
+and fast. The Pythoness was very nearly tamed; her eyes grew soft and
+melting, her lips trembled; but pride was still strong in her. At the
+touch of his hand it very nearly gave way, but not wholly; it was there
+still, tenacious of its reign. She set her little teeth obstinately
+together, and looked up at him with her old hauteur.
+
+"No, as I told you then, you must believe in me _without_ proof. I have
+not forgotten your bitter words, nor yet forgiven them. I doubt if I
+ever shall. You roused an evil spirit in me that night, Lord Earlscourt,
+which you cannot exorcise at a moment's notice. Remember what was your
+own motto, 'An indiscreet woman is never frank,'--yet from my very
+frankness you accused me of indiscretion, and of far worse than
+indiscretion--"
+
+"My God! if I accused you falsely, Beatrice, forgive me!"
+
+He must have loved her very much to bow his pride so far as that. _He_
+was at _her_ feet--at _her_ mercy now; he, whom she had vainly sued,
+sued her; but a perverse, fiery devil in her urged her to take her own
+revenge, compelled her to throw away her own peace.
+
+"You should have asked me that ten months ago; it is too late now."
+
+His face dyed white, his eyes filled with passionate anguish. He crushed
+her hand in his.
+
+"Too late! Great Heavens! Answer me, child, I entreat you--I beseech
+you--is it 'too late' because report is true that you have replaced me
+with your cousin--that you are engaged to Hervey? Tell me truth now, for
+pity's sake. I will be trifled with no longer."
+
+Beatrice threw back her haughty little head contemptuously, though
+ladies _don't_ sneer at the idea of being liées with me generally, I can
+assure you. Her heart throbbed triumphantly and joyously. She had
+conquered him at last. The man of giant intellect and haughty will had
+bowed to her. She held him by a thread, he who ruled the fate of
+nations!--and she loved him so dearly! But the Pythoness was not wholly
+tamed, and she could not even yet forget her wrongs.
+
+"You told me before I spoke falsehoods to you, Lord Earlscourt; my word
+would find no more credence now."
+
+He looked at her, dropped her hand, and turned away, before Beatrice
+could detain him. Five minutes after he left the house. Little as I
+guessed it, he was jealous of me--I! who never in my own life rivalled
+any man who wished to _marry_! Beatrice had fully revenged herself. I
+wonder if she enjoyed it quite as much as she had anticipated, as she
+stood where he had left her looking out on the Green Park?
+
+I went with Beatrice and her party to the Lords that night; it was the
+tug of war for the bill which Earlscourt was so determined should pass,
+and a great speech was expected from him. We were not disappointed. When
+he rose he spoke with effort, and his oratory suffered from the slight
+hoarseness of his voice, for half the beauty of his rhetoric lay in the
+flexibility and music of his tones; still, it was emphatically a great
+speech, and Beatrice Boville listened to it breathlessly, with her eyes
+fixed on the face--weary, worn, but grandly intellectual--of the man
+whom Europe reverenced, and she--a girl of twenty!--ruled. Perhaps her
+heart smote her for the lines she had added there; perhaps she felt her
+pride misplaced to him, great as he was, with his stainless honor and
+unequalled genius; perhaps she thought of how, with all his strength,
+his hand had trembled as it touched hers; and how, with all her love,
+she had been wilful and naughty to him a second time. His voice grew
+weaker as he ended, and he spoke with visible effort; still it was one
+of his greatest political triumphs: his bill passed by a large majority,
+and the papers, the morning after, filled their leading articles with
+admiration of Viscount Earlscourt's speech. But before those journals
+were out, Earlscourt was too ill almost to notice the success of his
+measures: as he left the House, the presiding devil of beloved Albion,
+that plays the deuce with English statesmen as with Italian
+cantatrices,--the confounded east wind,--had caught him, finished what
+over-exertion had begun, and knocked him over, prostrated with severe
+bronchitis. What pity it is that the body _will_ levy such cruel black
+mail upon the mind; that a gust of wind, a horse's plunge, the effluvia
+of a sewer, the carelessness of a pointsman, can destroy the grandest
+intellect, sweep off the men whose genius lights the world, as
+ruthlessly as a storm of rain a cloud of gnats, and strike Peel and
+Canning, Macaulay and Donaldson, in the prime of their power, as
+heedlessly as peasants little higher than the brutes, dull as the clods
+of their own valley, who stake their ambitions on a surfeit of fat
+bacon, and can barely scrawl their names upon a slate!
+
+Unconscious that Earlscourt's jealousy had fastened so wrongly upon me,
+I was calling upon Beatrice late the next morning, ignorant myself of
+his illness, when his physician, who was Lady Mechlin's too, while
+paying her a complimentary visit, regretted to me my cousin's sudden
+attack.
+
+"Lord Earlscourt would speak last night," he began. "I entreated him
+not; but those public men are so obstinate; to-day he is very ill--very
+ill indeed, though prompt measures stopped the worst. He has risen to
+dictate something of importance to his secretary; he would work his
+brain if he were dying; but it has taken a severe hold on him, I fear. I
+shall send him somewhere south as soon as he can leave the house, which
+will not be for some weeks. He would be a great loss to the country. We
+have not such another foreign minister. But I admit to you, Major
+Hervey--though of course I do not wish it to go further--that I _do_
+think very seriously of Lord Earlscourt's state of health."
+
+Beatrice heard him as she sat at her Davenport; her face grew white, and
+her eyes filled with great anguish. She thought of his words to her only
+the day before, and of how her pride had repelled him a second time. I
+saw her hand clinch on the pen she was playing with, and her teeth set
+tight together, her habitual action under any strong emotion, thinking
+to herself, no doubt, "And my last words to him were bitter ones!"
+
+When the physician had left, I went up to her.--
+
+"Beatrice, you must let me tell him _now_!"
+
+She did not answer, but her hand clinched tighter on the pen-handle.
+
+"His life is in your hands; for God's sake relinquish your pride."
+
+But her pride was strong in her, and dear to her still, strong and dear
+as her love; and the two struggled together. Earlscourt had bowed _his_
+pride to her; but she had not yielded up her own, and it cost her much
+to yield it even now. All the Pythoness in her was not tamed yet. She
+was silent--she wavered--then her great love for him vanquished all
+else. She rose, white as death, her passionate eyes full of unshed
+tears, the bitterest, yet the softest, Beatrice Boville had ever known.
+
+"Take me to him. No one shall tell him but myself."
+
+Earlscourt was lying on a couch in his library; he had been unable to
+dictate or to write himself, for severe remedies had prostrated him
+utterly, and he could not speak above his breath, though he was loath to
+give up, and acknowledge himself as ill as he was. His eyes were closed,
+his forehead knitted together in pain, and his labored breathing told
+plainly enough how fiercely his foe had attacked him, and that it was by
+no means conquered yet. He had not slept all night, and had fallen into
+a short slumber now, desiring his attendants to leave him. I bade the
+groom of the chambers let us enter unannounced, and, opening the door
+myself, signed to Beatrice to go in, while her aunt and I waited in the
+anteroom. She stopped a moment at the entrance; her pride had its last
+struggle; but he turned restlessly, with a weary sigh, and by that sigh
+the Pythoness was conquered. Beatrice went forward and fell on her knees
+beside his sofa, bending down till her lips touched his brow, and her
+hot tears fell on his hands.
+
+"I was too proud last night to tell you you misjudged me. I have no
+pride now. I am your own--wholly your own. I never loved, I never should
+love, any but you. I forgive you now. O, how could you ever doubt me?
+Lord Earlscourt--Ernest--may we not yet be all we once were to one
+another?"
+
+Awakened by her kisses on his brow, bewildered by her sudden appearance,
+he tried to rise, but sank back exhausted. He did not disbelieve her
+now. He had no voice to speak to her, no strength to answer her; but he
+drew her down closer and closer to him, as she knelt by him, and, as her
+heart beat once more against his, the little Pythoness, tamed at last,
+threw her arms round him and sobbed like a child on his breast. And
+so--Beatrice Boville took her best REVENGE!--while I shut the library
+door, invited Lady Mechlin to inspect Earlscourt's collection of French
+pictures, and asked what she thought of _Punch_ this week.
+
+I don't know what his physicians would have said of the treatment, as
+they'd recommended him "perfect quiet;" all I do know is, that though
+Earlscourt went to the south of Europe as soon as he could leave the
+house, Beatrice Boville went with him; and he took his place on the
+benches and in the cabinet this season, without any trace of bronchia,
+or any sign of wearing out.
+
+Lady Clive, I regret to say, "does not know" Lady Earlscourt: anything
+for her beloved brother she _would_ do, were it possible; but she hopes
+we understand that, for her daughters' sakes, she feels it quite
+impossible to countenance that "shocking little intrigante."
+
+
+
+
+A LINE IN THE "DAILY."
+
+
+
+
+A LINE IN THE "DAILY."
+
+WHO DID IT, AND WHO WAS DONE BY IT.
+
+
+"Lieutenant-Colonel Fairlie's troop of Horse Artillery is ordered to
+Norwich to replace the 12th Lancers, en route to Bombay."--Those three
+lines in the papers spread dismay into the souls of Norfolk young
+ladies, and no less horror into ours, for we were very jolly at
+Woolwich, could run up to the Clubs and down to Epsom, and were far too
+material not to prefer ball-room belles to bluebells, strawberry-ice to
+fresh hautboys, the sparkle of champagne-cups to all the murmurs of the
+brooks, and the flutter of ballet-girls' wings to all the rustle of
+forest-leaves. But, unhappily, the Ordnance Office is no more given to
+considering the feelings of their Royal Gunners than the Horse Guards
+the individual desires of the two other Arms; and off we went to
+Norwich, repining bitterly, or, in modern English, swearing hard at our
+destinies, creating an immense sensation with our 6-pounders, as we
+flatter ourselves the Royals always contrive to do, whether on fair
+friends or fierce foes, and were looked upon spitefully by the one or
+two young ladies whose hearts were gone eastwards with the Twelfth,
+smilingly by the one or two hundred who, having fruitlessly laid out a
+great deal of tackle on the Twelfth, proceeded to manufacture fresh
+flies to catch us.
+
+We soon made up, I think, to the Norwich girls for the loss of the
+Twelfth. They set dead upon Fairlie, our captain, a Brevet
+Lieutenant-Colonel, and a C. B. for "services in India," where he had
+rivalled Norman Ramsay at Fuentes d'Onor, had had a ball put in his hip,
+and had come home again to be worshipped by the women for his romantic
+reputation. They made an immense deal, too, of Levison Courtenay, the
+beauty of the troop, and called Belle in consequence; who did not want
+any flummery or flirtation to increase his opinion of himself, being as
+vain of his almond eyes as any girl just entered as the favorite for the
+season. There were Tom Gower, too, a capital fellow, with no nonsense
+about him, who made no end of chaff of Belle Courtenay; and Little Nell,
+otherwise Harcourt Poulteney Nelson, who had by some miracle escaped
+expulsion both from Carshalton and the College; and _votre humble
+serviteur_ Phil Hardinge, first lieutenant; and one or two other
+fellows, who having cut dashing figures at our Woolwich reviews,
+cantering across Blackheath Common, or waltzing with dainty beauties
+down our mess-room, made the Artillery welcome in that city of shawls
+and oratorios, where according to the Gazetteer, no virtuous person
+ought to dwell, that volume, with characteristic lucidity, pronouncing
+its streets "ill-disposed."
+
+The Clergy asked us to their rectories--a temptation we were often proof
+against, there being three noticeable facts in rectories, that the talk
+is always slow, "the Church" being present, and having much the same
+chilling effect as the presence of a chaperone at a tête-à-tête; the
+daughters generally ugly, and, from leading the choir at morning
+services, perfectly convinced that they sing like Clara Novello, and
+that the harmonium is a most delightful instrument; and, last and worst,
+the wines are almost always poor, except the port which the reverend
+host drinks himself, but which, Dieu merci! we rarely or never touch.
+
+The County asked us, too; and there we went for good hock,
+tolerable-looking women, and first-rate billiard-tables. For the first
+month we were in Norfolk we voted it unanimously the most infernally
+slow and hideous county going; and I dare say we made ourselves
+uncommonly disagreeable, as people, if they are not pleased, be they
+ever so well bred, have a knack of doing.
+
+Things were thus quiescent and stagnant, when Fairlie one night at mess
+told us a bit of news.
+
+"Old fellows, whom do you think I met to-day?"
+
+"How should we know? Cut along."
+
+"The Swan and her Cygnets."
+
+"The Vanes? Oh, bravo!" was shouted at a chorus, for the dame and
+demoiselles in question we had known in town that winter, and a nicer,
+pleasanter, faster set of women I never came across. "What's bringing
+them down here, and how's Geraldine?"
+
+"Vane's come into his baronetcy, and his place is close by Norwich,"
+said Fairlie; "his wife's health has been bad, and so they left town
+early; and Geraldine is quite well, and counting on haymaking, she
+informed me."
+
+"Come, that is good news," said Belle, yawning. "There'll be one pretty
+woman in the county, thank Heaven! Poor little Geraldine! I must go and
+call on her to-morrow."
+
+"She has existed without your calls, Belle," said Fairlie, dryly, "and
+don't look as if she'd pined after you."
+
+"My dear fellow, how should you know?" said Belle, in no wise
+disconcerted. "A little rogue soon makes 'em look well, and as for
+smiles, they'll smile while they're dying for you. Little Vane and I
+were always good friends, and shall be again--if I care."
+
+"Conceited owl!" said Fairlie, under his moustaches. "I'm sorry to hurt
+your feelings, then, but your pretty 'friend' never asked after you."
+
+"I dare say not," said Belle, complacently. "Where a woman's most
+interested she's always quietest, and Geraldine----"
+
+"Lady Vane begged me to tell you you will always be welcome over there,
+old fellows," said Fairlie, remorselessly cutting him short. "Perhaps we
+shall find something to amuse us better than these stiltified Chapter
+dinners."
+
+The Vanes of whom we talked were an uncommonly pleasant set of people
+whom we had known at Lee, where Vane, a Q. C., then resided, his
+prospective baronetcy being at that time held by a third or fourth
+cousin. Fairlie had known the family since his boyhood; there were four
+daughters, tall graceful women, who had gained themselves the nickname
+of The Swan and her Cygnets; and then there were twins, a boy of
+eighteen, who'd just left Eton; and the girl Geraldine, a charming young
+lady, whom Belle admired more warmly than that dandy often admired
+anybody besides himself, and whom Fairlie liked cordially, having had
+many a familiar bit of fun with her, as he had known her ever since he
+was a dashing cadet, and she made her _début_ in life in the first
+column of the _Times_. Her sisters were handsome women; but Geraldine
+was bewitching. A very pleasant family they were, and a vast acquisition
+to us. Miss Geraldine flirted to a certain extent with us all, but
+chiefly with the Colonel, whenever he was to be had, those two having a
+very free-and-easy, familiar, pleasant style of intercourse, owing to
+old acquaintance; and Belle spent two hours every evening on his
+toilette when we were going to dine there, and vowed she was a "deuced
+pretty little puss. Perhaps she might--he wasn't sure, but perhaps (it
+would be a horrid sacrifice), if he were with her much longer, he wasn't
+sure she mightn't persuade him to take compassion upon her, he _was_ so
+weak where women were concerned!"
+
+"What a conceit!" said Fairlie thereat, with a contemptuous twist of his
+moustaches and a shrug of his shoulders to me. "I must say, if I were a
+woman, I shouldn't feel over-flattered by a lover who admired his own
+beauty first, and mine afterwards. Not that I pretend to understand
+women."
+
+By which speech I argued that his old playmate Geraldine hadn't thrown
+hay over the Colonel, and been taught billiards by him, and ridden his
+bay mare over the park in her evening dress, without interesting him
+slightly; and that--though I don't think he knew it--he was deigning to
+be a trifle jealous of his Second Captain, the all-mighty conqueror
+Belle.
+
+"What fools they must be that put in these things!" yawned Belle one
+morning, reading over his breakfast coffee in the _Daily Pryer_ one of
+those "advertisements for a wife" that one comes across sometimes in the
+papers, and that make us, like a good many other things, agree with
+Goldsmith:
+
+ Reason, they say, belongs to man,
+ But let them prove it if they can;
+ Wise Aristotle and Smiglicious,
+ By ratiocinations specious,
+ Have strove to prove with great precision,
+ With definition and division,
+ Homo est ratione præditum,
+ But for my soul I cannot credit 'em.
+
+"What fools they must be!" yawned Belle, wrapping his dressing-gown
+round him, and coaxing his perfumy whiskers under his velvet
+smoking-cap. Belle was always inundated by smoking-caps in cloth and
+velvet, silk and beads, with blue tassels, and red tassels, and gold
+tassels, embroidered and filigreed, rounded and pointed; he had them
+sent to him by the dozen, and pretty good chaff he made of the donors.
+"Awful fools! The idea of advertising for a wife, when the only
+difficulty a man has is to keep from being tricked into taking one. I
+bet you, if I did like this owl here, I should have a hundred answers;
+and if it was known it was I----"
+
+"Little Geraldine's self for a candidate, eh?" asked Tom Gower.
+
+"Very possibly," said Belle, with a self-complacent smile. "She's a fast
+little thing, don't check at much, and she's deucedly in love with me,
+poor little dear--almost as much trouble to me as Julia Sedley was last
+season. That girl all but proposed to me; she did, indeed. Never was
+nearer coming to grief in my life. What will you bet me that, if I
+advertise for a wife, I don't hoax lots of women?"
+
+"I'll bet you ten pounds," said I, "that you don't hoax one!"
+
+"Done!" said Belle, stretching out his hand for a dainty
+memorandum-book, gift of the identical Julia Sedley aforesaid, and
+entering the bet in it--"done! If I'm not asked to walk in the Close at
+noon and look out for a pink bonnet and a black lace cloak, and to
+loiter up the market-place till I come across a black hat and blue
+muslin dress; if I'm not requested to call at No. 20, and to grant an
+interview at No. 84; if I'm not written to by Agatha A. with hazel, and
+Belinda B. with black, eyes--all coming after me like flies after a
+sugar-cask, why you shall have your ten guineas, my boy, and my colt
+into the bargain. Come, write out the advertisement, Tom--I can't, it's
+too much trouble; draw it mild, that's all, or the letters we shall get
+will necessitate an additional Norwich postman. By George, what fun it
+will be to do the girls! Cut along, Tom, can't you?"
+
+"All right," said Gower, pushing away his coffee-cup, and drawing the
+ink to him. "Head it 'MARRIAGE,' of course?"
+
+"Of course. That word's as attractive to a woman as the belt to a
+prize-fighter, or a pipe of port to a college fellow."
+
+"'MARRIAGE.--A Bachelor----'"
+
+"Tell 'em a military man; all girls have the scarlet fever."
+
+"Very well--'an Officer in the Queen's, of considerable personal
+attractions----'"
+
+"My dear fellow, pray don't!" expostulated Belle, in extreme alarm; "we
+shall have such swarms of 'em!"
+
+"No, no! we must say that," persisted Gower--"'personal attractions,
+aged eight-and-twenty----'"
+
+"Can't you put it, 'in the flower of his age,' or his 'sixth lustre'?
+It's so much more poetic."
+
+"'--the flower of his age,' then (that'll leave 'em a wide range from
+twenty to fifty, according to their taste), 'is desirous of meeting a
+young lady of beauty, talent, and good family,'--eh?"
+
+"Yes. All women think themselves beauties, if they're as ugly as sin.
+Milliners and confectioner girls talk Anglo-French, and rattle a
+tin-kettle piano after a fashion, and anybody buys a 'family' for
+half-a-crown at the Heralds' Office--so fire away."
+
+"'--who, feeling as he does the want of a kindred heart and sympathetic
+soul, will accord him the favor of a letter or an interview, as a
+preliminary to the greatest step in life.'"
+
+"A step--like one on thin ice--very sure to bring a man to grief,"
+interpolated Belle. "Say something about property; those soul-and-spirit
+young ladies generally keep a look-out for tin, and only feel an
+elective affinity for a lot of debentures and consols."
+
+"'The advertiser being a man of some present and still more prospective
+wealth, requires no fortune, the sole objects of his search being love
+and domestic felicity.' Domestic felicity--how horrible! Don't it sound
+exactly like the end of a lady's novel, where the unlucky hero is always
+brought to an untimely end in a 'sweet cottage on the banks of the
+lovely Severn.'"
+
+"'Domestic felicity'--bah! What are you writing about?" yawned
+Belle. "I'd as soon take to teetotalism: however, it'll tell in the
+advertisement. Bravo, Tom, that will do. Address it to 'L. C., care of
+Mrs. Greene, confectioner, St. Giles Street, Norwich.' Miss Patty'll
+take the letters in for me, though not if she knew their errand. Tip
+seven-and-sixpence with it, and send it to the _Daily Pryer_."
+
+We did send it to the _Daily_, and in that broadsheet we all of us read
+it two mornings after.
+
+ MARRIAGE.--A Bachelor, an Officer of the Queen's, of
+ considerable personal attractions, and in the flower of
+ his age, is desirous of meeting a young lady of beauty,
+ accomplishments, and good family, who, feeling as he does the
+ want of a kindred heart and sympathetic soul, will accord him
+ the favor either of a letter or an interview, as a preliminary
+ to the greatest step in life. The advertiser being a man of
+ some present and still more prospective wealth, requires no
+ fortune, the sole objects of his search being love and domestic
+ felicity. Address, L. C., care of Mrs. Greene, confectioner,
+ St. Giles Street, Norwich.
+
+"Whose advertisement do you imagine that is?" said Fairlie, showing the
+_Daily_ to Geraldine, as he sat with her and her sisters under some
+lilac and larch trees in one of the meadows of Fern Chase, which had had
+the civility, Geraldine said, to yield a second crop of hay expressly
+for her to have the pleasure of making it. She leaned down towards him
+as he lay on the grass, and read the advertisement, looking uncommonly
+pretty in her dainty muslin dress, with its fluttering mauve ribbons,
+and a wreath she had just twisted up, of bluebells and pinks and white
+heaths which Fairlie had gathered as he lay, put on her bright hair. We
+called her a little flirt, but I think she was an unintentional one; at
+least, her agaceries were, all as unconscious as they were--her worst
+enemies (_i. e._ plain young ladies) had to allow--unaffected.
+
+"How exquisitely sentimental! Is it yours?" she asked, with demure
+mischief.
+
+"Mine!" echoed Fairlie, with supreme scorn.
+
+"It's some one's here, because the address is at Mrs. Greene's. Come,
+tell me at once, monsieur."
+
+"The only fool in the Artillery," said Fairlie, curtly: "Belle
+Courtenay."
+
+"Captain Courtenay!" echoed Geraldine, with a little flush on her
+cheeks, caused, perhaps, by the quick glance the Colonel shot at her as
+he spoke.
+
+"Captain Courtenay!" said Katherine Vane. "Why, what can he want with a
+wife? I thought he had _l'embarras de choix_ offered him in that line;
+at least, so he makes out himself."
+
+"I dare say," said Fairlie, dryly, "it's for a bet he's made, to see how
+many women he can hoax, I believe."
+
+"How can you tell it is a hoax?" said Geraldine, throwing cowslips at
+her greyhound. "It may be some medium of intercourse with some one he
+really cares for, and who may understand his meaning."
+
+"Perhaps you are in his confidence, Geraldine, or perhaps you are
+thinking of answering it yourself?"
+
+"Perhaps," said the young lady, waywardly, making the cowslips into a
+ball, "there might be worse investments. Your _bête noire_ is strikingly
+handsome; he is the perfection of style; he is going to be Equerry to
+the Prince; his mother is just married again to Lord Chevenix; he did
+not name half his attractions in that line in the _Daily_."
+
+With which Geraldine rushed across the meadow after the greyhound and
+the cowslip ball, and Fairlie lay quiet plucking up the heaths by the
+roots. He lay there still, when the cowslip ball struck him a soft
+fragrant blow against his lips, and knocked the Cuba from between his
+teeth.
+
+"Why don't you speak?" asked Geraldine, plaintively. "You are not half
+so pleasant to play with as you were before you went to India and I was
+seven or eight, and you had La Grace, and battledoor and shuttlecock,
+and cricket, and all sorts of games with me in the old garden at
+Charlton."
+
+He might have told her she was much less dangerous then than now; he was
+not disposed to flatter her, however. So he answered her quietly,
+
+"I preferred you as you were then."
+
+"Indeed!" said Geraldine, with a hot color in her cheeks "I do not think
+there are many who would indorse your complimentary opinion."
+
+"Possibly," said Fairlie, coldly.
+
+She took up her cowslips, and hit him hard with them several times.
+
+"Don't speak in that tone. If you dislike me, you can say so in warmer
+words, surely."
+
+Fairlie smiled _malgré lui_.
+
+"What a child you are, Geraldine! but a child that is a very mischievous
+coquette, and has learned a hundred tricks and _agaceries_ of which my
+little friend of seven or eight knew nothing. I grant you were not a
+quarter so charming, but you were, I am afraid--more true."
+
+Geraldine was ready to cry, but she was in a passion, nevertheless; such
+a hot and short-lived passion as all women of any spirit can go into on
+occasion, when they are unjustly suspected.
+
+"If you choose to think so of me you may," she said, with immeasurable
+hauteur, sweeping away from him, her mauve ribbons fluttering
+disdainfully. "I, for one, shall not try to undeceive you."
+
+The next night we all went up to a ball at the Vanes', to drink Rhenish,
+eat ices, quiz the women, flirt with the pretty ones in corners, lounge
+against doorways, criticise the feet in the waltzing as they passed us,
+and do, in fact, anything but what we went to do--dance,--according to
+our custom in such scenes.
+
+The Swan and her Cygnets looked very stunning; they "made up well," as
+ladies say when they cannot deny that another is good-looking, but
+qualify your admiration by an assurance that she is shockingly plain in
+the morning, and owes all to her milliner and maids. Geraldine, who, by
+the greatest stretch of scepticism, could not be supposed "made up," was
+bewitching, with her sunshiny enjoyment of everything, and her untiring
+waltzing, going for all the world like a spinning-top, only a top tires,
+and she did not. Belle, who made a principle of never dancing except
+under extreme coercion by a very pretty hostess, could not resist her,
+and Tom Gower, and Little Nell, and all the rest, not to mention half
+Norfolk, crowded round her; all except Fairlie, who leaned against the
+doorway, seeming to talk to her father or the members, or anybody near,
+but watching the young lady for all that, who flirted not a little,
+having in her mind the scene in the paddock of yesterday, and wishing,
+perhaps, to show him that if he did not admire her more than when she
+was eight, other men had better taste.
+
+She managed to come near him towards the end of the evening, sending
+Belle to get her an ice.
+
+"Well," she said, with a comical _pitié d'elle-même_, "do you dislike me
+so much that you don't mean to dance with me at all? Not a single waltz
+all night?"
+
+"What time have you had to give me?" said Fairlie, coldly. "You have
+been surrounded all the evening."
+
+"Of course I have. I am not so disagreeable to other gentlemen as I am
+to you. But I could have made time for you if you had only asked for it.
+At your own ball last week you engaged me beforehand for six waltzes."
+
+Fairlie relented towards her. Despite her flirting, he thought she did
+not care for Belle after all.
+
+"Well," he said, smiling, "will you give me one after supper?"
+
+"You told me you shouldn't dance, Colonel Fairlie," said Katherine Vane,
+smiling.
+
+"One can't tell what one mayn't do under temptation," said Fairlie,
+smiling too. "A man may change his mind, you know."
+
+"Oh yes," cried Geraldine; "a man may change his mind, and we are
+expected to be eminently grateful to him for his condescension; but if
+_we_ change our minds, how severely we are condemned for vacillation:
+'So weak!' 'Just like women!' 'Never like the same thing two minutes,
+poor things!'"
+
+"You don't like the same thing two minutes, Geraldine," laughed Fairlie;
+"so I dare say you speak feelingly."
+
+"I changeable! I am constancy itself!"
+
+"Are you? You know what the Italians say of 'ocche azzure'?"
+
+"But I don't believe it, monsieur!" cried Geraldine:
+
+ "Blue eyes beat black fifty to seven,
+ For black's of hell, but blue's of heaven!"
+
+"I beg your pardon, mademoiselle," laughed Fairlie:
+
+ "Done, by the odds, it is not true!
+ One devil's black, but scores are blue!"
+
+He whirled her off into the circle in the midst of our laughter at their
+ready wit. Soon after he bid her good night, but he found time to
+whisper as he did so.
+
+"You are more like _my_ little Geraldine to-night!"
+
+The look he got made him determine to make her his little Geraldine
+before much more time had passed. At least he drove us back to Norwich
+in what seemed very contented silence, for he smoked tranquilly, and let
+the horses go their own pace--two certain indications that a man has
+pleasant thoughts to accompany him.
+
+I do not think he listened to Belle's, and Gower's, and my conversation,
+not even when Belle took his weed out of his mouth and announced the
+important fact: "Hardinge! my ten guineas, if you please. I've had a
+letter!"
+
+"What! an answer? By Jove!"
+
+"Of course, an answer. I tell you all the pretty women in the city will
+know my initials, and send after me. I only hope they _will_ be pretty,
+and then one may have a good deal of fun. I was in at Greene's this
+morning having mock-turtle, and talking to Patty (she's not bad-looking,
+that little girl, only she drops her 'h's' so. I'm like that
+fellow--what's his name?--in the 'Peau de Chagrin:' I don't admire my
+loves in cotton prints), when she gave me the letter. I left it on my
+dressing-table, but you can see it to-morrow. It's a horrid red
+daubed-looking seal, and no crest; but that she mightn't use for fear of
+being found out, and the writing is disguised, but that it would be. She
+_says_ she has the three requisites; but where's the woman that don't
+think herself Sappho and Galatea combined? And she was nineteen last
+March. Poor little devil! she little thinks how she'll be done. I'm to
+meet her on the Yarmouth road at two, and to look out for a lady
+standing by the first milestone. Shall we go, Tom? It may lead to
+something amusing, you know, though certainly it won't lead to
+marriage."
+
+"Oh! we'll go, old fellow," said I. "Deuce take you, Belle! what a lucky
+fellow you are with the women."
+
+"Luckier than I want to be," yawned Belle. "It's a horrid bore to be so
+set upon. One may have too much of a good thing, you know."
+
+At two the day after, having refreshed ourselves with a light luncheon
+at Mrs. Greene's of lobster-salad and pale ale, Belle, Gower, and I
+buttoned our gloves and rode leisurely up the road.
+
+"How my heart palpitates!" said Belle, stroking his moustaches with a
+bored air. "How can I tell, you know, but what I may be going to see the
+arbiter of my destiny? Men have been tricked into all sorts of
+tomfoolery by their compassionate feelings. And then--if she should
+squint or have a turn-up nose! Good Heavens, what a fearful idea! I've
+often wondered when I've seen men with ugly wives how they could have
+been cheated into taking 'em; they couldn't have done it in their
+senses, you know, nor yet with their eyes open. You may depend they took
+'em to church in a state of coma from chloroform. 'Pon my word, I feel
+quite nervous. You don't think the girl will have a parson and a
+register hid behind the milestone, do you?"
+
+"If she should, it won't be legal without a license, thanks to the fools
+who turn Hymen into a tax-gatherer, and won't let a fellow make love
+without he asks leave of the Archbishop of Canterbury," said Gower.
+"Hallo, Belle, here's the milestone, but where's the lady?"
+
+"Virgin modesty makes her unpunctual," said Belle, putting up his
+eye-glass.
+
+"Hang modesty!" swore Tom. "It's past two, and we left a good quarter of
+that salad uneaten. Confound her!"
+
+"There are no signs of her," said I. "Did she tell you her dress,
+Belle?"
+
+"Not a syllable about it; only mentioned a milestone, and one might have
+found a market-woman sitting on that."
+
+"Hallo! here's something feminine. Oh, good gracious! this can't be it,
+it's got a brown stuff dress on, and a poke straw bonnet and a green
+veil. No, no, Belle. If you married her, that _would_ be a case of
+chloroform."
+
+But the horrible brown stuff came sidling along the road with that
+peculiar step belonging to ladies of a certain age, characterized by
+Patty Greene as "tipputting," sweeping up the dust with its horrible
+folds, making straight _en route_ for Belle, who was standing a little
+in advance of us. Nineteen! Good Heavens! she must have been fifty if
+she was a day, and under her green veil was a chestnut front--yes,
+decidedly a front--and a face yellow as a Canadian's, and wrinkled as
+Madame Pipelet's, made infinitely worse by that sweet maiden simper and
+assumed juvenility common to _vieilles filles_. Up she came towards poor
+Belle, who involuntarily retreated step by step till he had backed
+against the milestone, and could get no farther, while she smiled up in
+his handsome face, and he stared down in her withered one, with the most
+comical expression of surprise, dismay, and horror that had ever
+appeared on our "beauty's" impassive features.
+
+"Are you--the--the--L. C.?" demanded the maiden of ten lustres, casting
+her eyes to the ground with virgin modesty.
+
+"L. C. ar----My dear madam, I don't quite understand you," faltered
+Belle, taken aback for once in his life.
+
+"Was it not you," faltered the fair one, shaking out a
+pocket-handkerchief that sent a horrible odor of musk to the olfactory
+nerves of poor Belle, most fastidious connoisseur in perfume, "who
+advertised for a kindred heart and sympathetic soul?"
+
+"Really, my good lady," began Belle, still too aghast by the chestnut
+front to recover his self-possession.
+
+"Because," simpered his inamorata, too agitated by her own feelings to
+hear his horrible appellative, keeping him at bay there with the fatal
+milestone behind him and the awful brown stuff in front of him--"because
+I, too, have desired to meet with some elective affinity, some
+spirit-tie that might give me all those more subtle sympathies which can
+never be found in the din and bustle of the heartless world; I, too,
+have pined for the objects of your search--love and domestic happiness.
+Oh, blessed words, surely we might--might we not?----"
+
+She paused, overcome with maidenly confusion, and buried her face in the
+musk-scented handkerchief. Tom and I, where we stood _perdus_, burst
+into uncontrollable shouts of laughter. Poor Belle gave one blank look
+of utter terror at the _tout ensemble_ of brown stuff, straw poke, and
+chestnut front. He forgot courtesy, manners, and everything else; his
+lips were parted, with his small white teeth glancing under his silky
+moustaches, his sleepy eyes were open wide, and as the maiden lady
+dropped her handkerchief, and gave him what she meant to be the softest
+and most tender glance, he turned straight round, sprang on his bay, and
+rushed down the Yarmouth road as if the whole of the dignitaries of the
+church and law were tearing after him to force him _nolens volens_ into
+carrying out the horrible promise in his cursed line in the _Daily_.
+What was Tom's and my amazement to see the maiden lady seat herself
+astride on the milestone, and join her cachinnatory shouts to ours,
+fling her green veil into a hawthorn tree, jerk her bonnet into our
+faces, kick off her brown stuff into the middle of the road, tear off
+her chestnut front and yellow mask, and perform a frantic war-dance on
+the roadside turf. No less a person than that mischievous monkey and
+inimitable mimic Little Nell!
+
+"You young demon!" shouted Gower, shrieking with laughter till he cried.
+"A pretty fellow you are to go tricking your senior officer like this.
+You little imp, how can you tell but what I shall court-martial you
+to-morrow?"
+
+"No, no, you won't!" cried Little Nell, pursuing his frantic dance.
+"Wasn't it prime? wasn't it glorious? wasn't it worth the Kohinoor to
+see? You won't go and peach, when I've just given you a better farce
+than all old Buckstone's? By Jove! Belle's face at my chestnut front!
+This'll be one of his prime conquests, eh? I say, old fellows, when
+Charles Mathews goes to glory, don't you think I might take his place,
+and beat him hollow, too?"
+
+When we got back to barracks, we found Belle prostrate on his sofa,
+heated, injured, crestfallen, solacing himself with Seltzer-and-water,
+and swearing away anything but mildly at that "wretched old woman." He
+bound us over to secrecy, which, with Little Nell's confidence in our
+minds, we naturally promised. Poor Belle! to have been made a fool of
+before two was humiliation more than sufficient for our all-conquering
+_blondin_. For one who had so often refused to stir across a ball-room
+to look at a Court beauty, to have ridden out three miles to see an old
+maid of fifty with a chestnut front! The insult sank deep into his soul,
+and threw him into an abject melancholy, which hung over him all through
+mess, and was not dissipated till a letter came to him from Mrs.
+Greene's, when we were playing loo in Fairlie's room. That night Fairlie
+was in gay spirits. He had called at Fern Chase that morning, and though
+he had not been able to see Geraldine alone, he had passed a pleasant
+couple of hours there, playing pool with her and her sisters, and had
+been as good friends as ever with his old playmate.
+
+"Well, Belle," said he, feeling good-natured even with him that night,
+"did you get any good out of your advertisement? Did your lady turn out
+a very pretty one?"
+
+"No: deuced ugly, like the generality," yawned poor Belle, giving me a
+kick to remind me of my promise. Little Nell was happily about the city
+somewhere with Pretty Face, or the boy would scarcely have kept his
+countenance.
+
+"What amusement you can find in hoaxing silly women," said Fairlie, "is
+incomprehensible to me. However, men's tastes differ, happily. Here
+comes another epistle for you, Belle; perhaps there's better luck for
+you there."
+
+"Oh! I shall have no end of letters. I sha'n't answer any more. I think
+it's such a deuced trouble. Diamonds trumps, eh?" said Belle, laying the
+note down till he should have leisure to attend to it. Poor old fellow!
+I dare say he was afraid of another onslaught from maiden ladies.
+
+"Come, Belle," said Glenville; "come, Belle, open your letter; we're all
+impatience. If you won't go, I will in your place."
+
+"Do, my dear fellow. Take care you're not pounced down upon by a
+respectable papa for intentions, or called to account by a fierce
+brother with a stubby beard," said Belle, lazily taking up the letter.
+As he did so, the melancholy indolence on his face changed to eagerness.
+
+"The deuce! the Vane crest!"
+
+"A note of invitation, probably?" suggested Gower.
+
+"Would they send an invitation to Patty Greene's? I tell you it's
+addressed to L. C.," said Belle, disdainfully, opening the letter,
+leaving its giant deer couchant intact. "I thought it very likely; I
+expected it, indeed--poor little dear! I oughtn't to have let it out.
+Ain't you jealous, old fellows? Little darling! Perhaps I may be tricked
+into matrimony after all. I'd rather a presentiment that advertisement
+would come to something. There, you may all look at it, if you like."
+
+It was a dainty sheet of scented cream-laid, stamped with the deer
+couchant, such as had brought us many an invitation down from Fern
+Chase, and on it was written, in delicate caligraphy:
+
+"G. V. understands the meaning of the advertisement, and will meet L. C.
+at the entrance of Fern Wood, at eleven o'clock to-morrow morning."
+
+There was a dead silence as we read it; then a tremendous buzz. Cheaply
+as we held women, I don't think there was one of us who wasn't surprised
+at Geraldine's doing any clandestine thing like this. He sat with a look
+of indolent triumph, curling his perfumed moustaches, and looking at the
+little autograph, which gave us evidence of what he often
+boasted--Geraldine Vane's regard.
+
+"Let me look at your note," said Fairlie, stretching out his hand.
+
+He soon returned it, with a brief, "Very complimentary indeed!"
+
+When the men left, I chanced to be last, having mislaid my cigar-case.
+As I looked about for it, Fairlie addressed me in the same brief, stern
+tone between his teeth with which he spoke to Belle.
+
+"Hardinge, you made this absurd bet with Courtenay, did you not? Is this
+note a hoax upon him?"
+
+"Not that I know of--it doesn't look like it. You see there is the Vane
+crest, and the girl's own initials."
+
+"Very true." He turned round to the window again, and leaned against it,
+looking out into the dawn, with a look upon his face that I was very
+sorry to see.
+
+"But it is not like Geraldine," I began. "It may be a trick. Somebody
+may have stolen their paper and crest--it's possible. I tell you what
+I'll do to find out; I'll follow Belle to-morrow, and see who does meet
+him in Fern Wood."
+
+"Do," said Fairlie, eagerly. Then he checked himself, and went on
+tapping an impatient tattoo on the shutter. "You see, I have known the
+family for years--known her when she was a little child. I should be
+sorry to think that one of them could be capable of such----"
+
+Despite his self-command he could not finish his sentence. Geraldine was
+a great deal too dear to him to be treated in seeming carelessness, or
+spoken lightly of, however unwisely she might act. I found my
+cigar-case. His laconic "Good night!" told me he would rather be alone,
+so I closed the door and left him.
+
+The morning was as sultry and as clear as a July day could be when Belle
+lounged down the street, looking the perfection of a gentleman, a trifle
+less bored and _blasé_ than ordinary, _en route_ to his appointment at
+Fern Wood (a sequestered part of the Vane estate), where trees and
+lilies of the valley grew wild, and where the girls were accustomed to
+go for picnics or sketching. As soon as he had turned a corner, Gower
+and I turned it too, and with perseverance worthy a better cause, Tom
+and I followed Belle in and out and down the road which led to Fern
+Wood--a flat, dusty, stony two miles--on which, in the blazing noon of a
+hot midsummer day, nothing short of Satanic coercion, or love of
+Geraldine Vane, would have induced our beauty to immolate himself, and
+expose his delicate complexion.
+
+"I bet you anything, Tom," said I, confidently, "that this is a hoax,
+like yesterday's. Geraldine will no more meet Belle there than all the
+Ordnance Office."
+
+"Well, we shall see," responded Gower. "Somebody might get the
+note-paper from the bookseller, and the crest seal through the servants,
+but they'll hardly get Geraldine there bodily against her will."
+
+We waited at the entrance of the wood, shrouded ourselves in the wild
+hawthorn hedges, while we could still see Belle--of course we did not
+mean to be near enough to overhear him--who paced up and down the green
+alleys under the firs and larches, rendered doubly dark by the
+evergreens, brambles, and honeysuckles,
+
+ which, ripened by the sun,
+ Forbade the sun to enter.
+
+He paced up and down there a good ten minutes, prying about with his
+eye-glass, but unable to see very far in the tangled boughs, and heavy
+dusky light of the untrimmed wood. Then there was the flutter of
+something azure among the branches, and Gower gave vent to a low whistle
+of surprise.
+
+"By George, Hardinge! there's Geraldine! Well! I didn't think she'd have
+done it. You see they're all alike if they get the opportunity."
+
+It _was_ Geraldine herself--it was her fluttering muslin, her abundant
+folds, her waving ribbons, her tiny sailor hat, and her little veil, and
+under the veil her face, with its delicate tinting, its pencilled
+eyebrows, and its undulating bright-colored hair. There was no doubt
+about it: it was Geraldine. I vow I was as sorry to have to tell it to
+Fairlie as if I'd had to tell him she was dead, for I knew how it would
+cut him to the heart to know not only that she had given herself to his
+rival, but that his little playmate, whom he had thought truth, and
+honesty, and daylight itself, should have stooped to a clandestine
+interview arranged through an advertisement! Their retreating figures
+were soon lost in the dim woodland, and Tom and I turned to retrace our
+steps.
+
+"No doubt about it now, old fellow?" quoth Gower.
+
+"No, confound her!" swore I.
+
+"Confound her? _Et pourquoi!_ Hasn't she a right to do what she likes?"
+
+"Of course she has, the cursed little flirt; but she'd no earthly
+business to go making such love to Fairlie. It's a rascally shame, and I
+don't care if I tell her so myself."
+
+"She'll only say you're in love with her too," was Gower's sensible
+response. "I'm not surprised myself. I always said she was an
+out-and-out coquette."
+
+I met Fairlie coming out of his room as I went up to mine. He looked as
+men will look when they have not been in bed all night, and have watched
+the sun up with painful thoughts for their companions.
+
+"You have been----" he began; then stopped short, unwilling or unable to
+put the question into words.
+
+"After Belle? Yes. It is no hoax, Geraldine met him herself."
+
+I did not relish telling him, and therefore told it, in all probability,
+bluntly and blunderingly--tact, like talk, having, they say, been given
+to women. A spasm passed over his face. "_Herself!_" he echoed. Until
+then I do not think he had realized it as even possible.
+
+"Yes, there was no doubt about it. What a wretched little coquette she
+must have been; she always seemed to make such game of Belle----"
+
+But Fairlie, saying something about his gloves that he had left behind,
+had gone back into his room again before I had half done my sentence.
+When Belle came back, about half an hour afterwards, with an affected
+air of triumph, and for once in his life of languid sensations really
+well contented, Gower and I poured questions upon him, as, done up with
+the toil of his dusty walk, and horrified to find himself so low-bred as
+to be hot, he kicked off his varnished boots, imbibed Seltzer, and
+fanned himself with a periodical before he could find breath to answer
+us.
+
+"Was it Geraldine?"
+
+"Of course it was Geraldine," he said, yawning.
+
+"And will she marry you, Belle?"
+
+"To be sure she will. I should like to see the woman that wouldn't,"
+responded Belle, shutting his eyes and nestling down among the cushions.
+"And what's more, I've been fool enough to let her make me ask her. Give
+me some more sherry, Phil; a man wants support under such circumstances.
+The deuce if I'm not as hot as a ploughboy! It was very cruel of her to
+call a fellow out with the sun at the meridian; she might as well have
+chosen twilight. But, I say, you fellows, keep the secret, will you? she
+don't want her family to get wind of it, because they're bothering her
+to marry that old cove, Mount Trefoil, with his sixty years and his
+broad acres, and wouldn't let her take anybody else if they knew it;
+she's under age, you see."
+
+"But how did she know you were L. C.?"
+
+"Fairlie told her, and the dear little vain thing immediately thought it
+was an indirect proposal to herself, and answered it; of course I didn't
+undeceive her. She _raffoles_ of me--it'll be almost too much of a good
+thing, I'm afraid. She's deuced prudish, too, much more than I should
+have thought _she_'d have been; but I vow she'd only let me kiss her
+hand, and that was gloved."
+
+"I hate prudes," said Gower; "they've always much more devilry than the
+open-hearted ones. Videlicet--here's your young lady stiff enough only
+to give you her hand to kiss, and yet she'll lower herself to a
+clandestine correspondence and stolen interviews--a condescension I
+don't think I should admire in _my_ wife."
+
+"Love, my dear fellow, oversteps all--what d'ye call 'em?--boundaries,"
+said Belle, languidly. "What a bore! I shall never be able to wear this
+coat again, it's so ingrained with dust; little puss, why didn't she
+wait till it was cooler?"
+
+"Did you fix your marriage-day?" asked Tom, rather contemptuously.
+
+"Yes, I was very weak!" sighed Belle; "but you see she's uncommonly
+pretty, and there's Mount Trefoil and lots of men, and, I fancy, that
+dangerous fellow Fairlie, after her; so we hurried matters. We've been
+making love to one another all these three months, you know, and fixed
+it so soon as Thursday week. Of course she blushed, and sighed, and put
+her handkerchief to her eyes, and all the rest of it, _en règle_; but
+she consented, and I'm to be sacrificed. But not a word about it, my
+dear fellows! The Vanes are to be kept in profoundest darkness, and, to
+lull suspicion, I'm not to go there scarcely at all until then, and when
+I do, she'll let me know when she will be out, and I'm to call on her
+mother then. She'll write to me, and put the letters in a hollow tree in
+the wood, where I'm to leave my answers, or, rather, send 'em; catch me
+going over that road again! Don't give me joy, old boys. I know I'm
+making a holocaust of myself, but deuce take me if I can help it--she is
+so deuced pretty!"
+
+Fairlie was not at mess that night. Nobody knew where he was. I learnt,
+long months afterwards, that as soon as I had told him of Geraldine's
+identity, he, still thirsting to disbelieve, reluctant to condemn,
+catching at straws to save his idol from being shattered as men in love
+will do, had thrown himself across his horse and torn off to Fern Dell
+to see whether or no Geraldine was at home.
+
+His heart beat faster and thicker as he entered the drawing-room than it
+had done before the lines at Ferozeshah, or in the giant semicircle at
+Sobraon; it stood still as in the far end of the room, lying back on a
+low chair, sat Geraldine, her gloves and sailor hat lying on her lap.
+She sprang up to welcome him with her old gay smile.
+
+"Good God! that a child like that can be such an accomplished actress!"
+thought Fairlie, as he just touched her hand.
+
+"Have you been out to-day?" he asked suddenly.
+
+"You see I have."
+
+"Prevarication is conviction," thought Fairlie, with a deadly chill over
+him.
+
+"Where did you go, love?" asked mamma.
+
+"To see Adela Ferrers; she is not well, you know, and I came home
+through part of the wood to gather some of the anemones; I don't mean
+anemones, they are over--lilies of the valley."
+
+She spoke hurriedly, glancing at Fairlie all the time, who never took
+his iron gaze off her, though all the beauty and glory was draining away
+from his life with every succeeding proof that stared him in the face
+with its cruel evidence.
+
+At that minute Lady Vane was called from the room to give some
+directions to her head gardener about some flowers, over which she was
+particularly choice, and Fairlie and Geraldine were left in dead
+silence, with only the ticking of the timepiece and the chirrup of the
+birds outside the open windows to break its heavy monotony.
+
+Fairlie bent over a spaniel, rolling the dog backwards and forwards on
+the rug.
+
+Geraldine stood on the rug, her head on one side in her old pretty
+attitude of plaintiveness and defiance, the bright sunshine falling
+round her and playing on her gay dress and fair hair--a tableau lost
+upon the Colonel, who though he had risen too, was playing sedulously
+with the dog.
+
+"Colonel Fairlie, what is the matter with you? How unkind you are
+to-day!"
+
+Fairlie was roused at last, disgusted that so young a girl could be so
+accomplished a liar and actress, sick at heart that he had been so
+deceived, mad with jealousy, and that devil in him sent courtesy flying
+to the winds.
+
+"Pardon me, Miss Vane, you waste your coquetteries on me. Unhappily, I
+know their value, and am not likely to be duped by them."
+
+Geraldine's face flushed as deep a rose hue as the geraniums nodding
+their heads in at the windows.
+
+"Coquetteries?--duped? What do you mean?"
+
+"You know well enough what. All I warn you is, never try them again on
+me--never come near me any more with your innocent smiles and your lying
+lips, or, by Heaven, Geraldine Vane, I may say what I think of you in
+plainer words than suit the delicacy of a lady's ears!"
+
+Geraldine's eyes flashed fire; from rose-hued as the geraniums she
+changed to the dead white of the Guelder roses beside them.
+
+"Colonel Fairlie, you are mad, I think! If you only came here to insult
+me----"
+
+"I had better leave? I agree with you. Good morning."
+
+Wherewith Fairlie took his hat and whip, bowed himself out, and,
+throwing himself across his horse, tore away many miles beyond Norwich,
+I should say, and rode into the stable-yard at twelve o'clock that
+night, his horse with every hair wringing and limb trembling at the
+headlong pace he had been ridden; such a midnight gallop as only
+Mazeppa, or a Border rider, or Turpin racing for his life, or a man
+vainly seeking to leave behind him some pursuing ghost of memory or
+passion, ever took before.
+
+We saw little of him for the next few days. Luckily for him, he was
+employed to purchase several strings of Suffolk horses for the corps,
+and he rode about the country a good deal, and went over to Newmarket,
+and to the Bury horse fair, inspecting the cattle, glad, I dare say, of
+an excuse to get away.
+
+"I feel nervous, terribly nervous; do give me the Seltzer and hock, Tom.
+They wonder at the fellows asking for beer before their execution. I
+don't; and if a fellow wants it to keep his spirits up before he's
+hanged, he may surely want it before he's married, for one's a swing and
+a crash, and it's all over and done most likely before you've time to
+know anything about it; but the other you walk into so deliberately,
+superintend the sacrifice of yourself, as it were, like that old cove
+Seneca; feel yourself rolling down-hill like Regulus, with all the
+horrid nails of the 'domesticities' pricking you in every corner; see
+life ebbing away from you; all the sunshine of life, as poets have it,
+fading, sweetly but surely, from your grasp, and Death, _alias_ the
+Matrimonial Black Cap, coming down ruthlessly on your devoted heads. I
+feel low--shockingly low. Pass me the Seltzer, Tom, do!"
+
+So spake Geraldine's _sposo_ that was to be, on the evening before his
+marriage-day, lying on his sofa in his Cashmere dressing-gown, his gold
+embroidered slippers, and his velvet smoking-cap, puffing largely at his
+meerschaum, and unbosoming his private sentiments and emotions to the
+(on this score) sufficiently sympathetic listeners, Gower and I.
+
+"I don't pity you!" said Tom, contemptuously, who had as much disdain
+for a man who married as for one who bought gooseberry for champagne, or
+Cape for comet hock, and did not know the difference--"I don't pity you
+one bit. You've put the curb on yourself; you can't complain if you get
+driven where you don't like."
+
+"But, my dear fellow, _can_ one help it?" expostulated Belle,
+pathetically. "When a little winning, bewitching, attractive little
+animal like that takes you in hand, and traps you as you catch a pony,
+holding out a sieve of oats, and coaxing you, and so-ho-ing you till
+she's fairly got the bridle over your head, and the bit between your
+teeth, what is a man to do?"
+
+"Remember that as soon as the bit is in your mouth, she'll never trouble
+herself to give you any oats, or so-ho you softly any more, but will
+take the whip hand of you, and not let you have the faintest phantom of
+a will of your own ever again," growled the misogamistic Tom.
+
+"Catch a man's remembering while it's any use," was Belle's very true
+rejoinder. "After he's put his hand to a little bill, he'll remember
+it's a very green thing to do, but he don't often remember it before, I
+fancy. No, in things like this, one can't help one's self; one's time is
+come, and one goes down before fate. If anybody had told me that I
+should go as spooney about any woman as I have about that little girl
+Geraldine, I'd have given 'em the lie direct; I would, indeed! But then
+she made such desperate love to me, took such a deuced fancy to me, you
+see: else, after all, the women _I_ might have chosen----By George! I
+wonder what Lady Con, and the little Bosanquet, and poor Honoria, and
+all the rest of 'em will say?"
+
+"What?" said Gower; "say 'Poor dear fellow!' to you, and 'Poor girl, I
+pity her!' to your wife. So you're going to elope with Miss Geraldine? A
+man's generally too ready to marry his daughters, to force a fellow to
+carry them off by stealth. Besides, as Bulwer says somewhere,
+'_Gentlemen_ don't run away with the daughters of gentlemen.'"
+
+"Pooh, nonsense! all's fair in love or war," returned Belle, going into
+the hock and Seltzer to keep up his spirits. "You see, she's afraid, her
+governor's mind being so set on old Mount Trefoil and his baron's
+coronet; they might offer some opposition, put it off till she was
+one-and-twenty, you know--and she's so distractedly fond of me, poor
+little thing, that she'd die under the probation, probably--and I'm sure
+I couldn't keep faithful to her for two mortal years. Besides, there's
+something amusing in eloping; the excitement of it keeps up one's
+spirits; whereas, if I were marched to church with so many mourners--I
+mean groomsmen--I should feel I was rehearsing my own obsequies like
+Charles V., and should funk it, ten to one I should. No! I like eloping:
+it gives the certain flavor of forbidden fruit, which many things,
+besides pure water, want to 'give them a relish.'"
+
+"Let's see how's the thing to be managed?" asked Gower. "Beyond telling
+me I was to go with you, consigned ignominiously to the rumble, to
+witness the ceremony, I'm not very clear as to the programme."
+
+"Why, as soon as it's dawn," responded Belle, with leisurely whiffs of
+his meerschaum, "I'm to take the carriage up to the gate at Fern
+Wood--this is what she tells me in her last note; she was coming to meet
+me, but just as she was dressed her mother took her to call on some
+people, and she had to resort to the old hollow tree. The deuce is in
+it, I think, to prevent our meeting; if it weren't for the letters and
+her maid, we should have been horribly put to it for communication;--I'm
+to take the carriage, as I say, and drive up there, where she and her
+maid will be waiting. We drive away, of course, catch the 8.15 train,
+and cut off to town, and get married at the Regeneration, Piccadilly,
+where a fellow I know very well will act the priestly Calcraft. The
+thing that bothers me most of all is getting up so early. I used to hate
+it so awfully when I was a young one at the college. I like to have my
+bath, and my coffee, and my paper leisurely, and saunter through my
+dressing, and get up when the day's _warmed_ for me. Early parade's one
+of the crying cruelties of the service; I always turn in again after it,
+and regard it as a hideous nightmare. I vow I couldn't give a greater
+test of my devotion than by getting up at six o'clock to go after
+her--deuced horrible exertion! I'm quite certain that my linen won't be
+aired, nor my coffee fit to drink, nor Perkins with his eyes half open,
+nor a quarter of his wits about him. Six o'clock! By George! nothing
+should get me up at that unearthly hour except my dear, divine,
+delicious little demon Geraldine! But she's so deuced fond of me, one
+must make sacrifices for such a little darling."
+
+With which sublimely unselfish and heroic sentiment the bridegroom-elect
+drank the last of his hock and Seltzer, took his pipe out of his lips,
+flung his smoking-cap lazily on to his Skye's head, who did not relish
+the attention, and rose languidly to get into his undress in time for
+mess.
+
+As Belle had to get up so frightfully early in the morning, he did not
+think it worth while to go to bed at all, but asked us all to
+vingt-et-un in his room, where, with the rattle of half-sovereigns and
+the flow of rum-punch, kept up his courage before the impending doom of
+matrimony. Belle was really in love with Geraldine, but in love in his
+own particular way, and consoled himself for his destiny and her absence
+by what I dare say seems to mademoiselle, fresh from her perusal of
+"Aurora Leigh" or "Lucille," very material comforters indeed. But, if
+truth were told, I am afraid mademoiselle would find, save that from one
+or two fellows here and there, who go in for love as they go in for
+pig-sticking or tiger-hunting, with all their might and main, wagering
+even their lives in the sport, the Auroras and Lucilles are very apt to
+have their charms supplanted by the points of a favorite, their absence
+made endurable by the aroma of Turkish tobacco, and their last fond
+admonishing words, spoken with such persuasive caresses under the
+moonlight and the limes, against those "horrid cards, love," forgotten
+that very night under the glare of gas, while the hands that lately held
+their own so tenderly, clasp wellnigh with as much affection the
+unprecedented luck "two honors and five trumps!"
+
+ Man's love is of man's life a thing apart.
+
+Byron was right; and if we go no deeper, how can it well be otherwise,
+when we have our stud, our pipe, our Pytchley, our Newmarket, our club,
+our coulisses, our Mabille, and our Epsom, and they--oh, Heaven help
+them!--have no distraction but a needle or a novel! The Fates forbid
+that our _agrémens_ should be _less_, but I dare say, if they had a vote
+in it, they'd try to get a trifle _more_. So Belle put his "love apart,"
+to keep (or to rust, whichever you please) till six A. M. that morning,
+when, having by dint of extreme physical exertion got himself dressed,
+saw his valet pack his things with the keenest anxiety relative to the
+immaculate folding of his coats and the safe repose of his shirts, and
+at last was ready to go and fetch the bride his line in the _Daily_ had
+procured him.
+
+As Belle went down the stairs with Gower, who should come too, with his
+gun in his hand, his cap over his eyes, and a pointer following close at
+his heels, but Fairlie, going out to shoot over a friend's manor.
+
+Of course he knew that Belle had asked for and obtained leave for a
+couple of months, but he had never heard for what purpose; and possibly,
+as he saw him at such an unusual hour, going out, not in his usual
+travelling guise of a wide-awake and a Maude, but with a delicate
+lavender tie and a toilet of the most unexceptionable art, the purport
+of his journey flashed fully on his mind, for his face grew as fixed and
+unreadable as if he had had on the iron mask. Belle, guessing as he did
+that Fairlie would not have disliked to have been in his place that
+morning, was too kind-hearted and infinitely too much of a gentleman to
+hint at his own triumph. He laughed, and nodded a good morning.
+
+"Off early, you see, Fairlie; going to make the most of my leave.
+'Tisn't very often we can get one; our corps is deuced stiff and strict
+compared to the Guards and the Cavalry."
+
+"At least our strictness keeps us from such disgraceful scenes as some
+of the other regiments have shown up of late," answered Fairlie between
+his teeth.
+
+"Ah! well, perhaps so; still, strictness ain't pleasant, you know, when
+one's the victim."
+
+"Certainly not."
+
+"And, therefore, we should never be hard upon others."
+
+"I perfectly agree with you."
+
+"There's a good fellow. Well, I must be off; I've no time for
+philosophizing. Good-bye, Colonel."
+
+"Good-bye--a safe journey."
+
+But I noticed that he held the dog's collar in one hand and the gun in
+the other, so as to have an excuse for not offering that _poignée de
+main_ which ought to be as sure a type of friendship, and as safe a
+guarantee for good faith, as the Bedouin Arab's salt.
+
+Belle nodded him a farewell, and lounged down the steps and into the
+carriage, just as Fairlie's man brought his mare round.
+
+Fairlie turned on to me with unusual fierceness, for generally he was
+very calm, and gentle, and impassive in manner.
+
+"Where is he gone?"
+
+I could not help but tell him, reluctant though I was, for I guessed
+pretty well what it would cost him to hear it. He did not say one word
+while I told him, but bent over Marquis, drawing the dog's leash
+tighter, so that I might not see his face, and without a sign or a reply
+he was out of the barracks, across his mare's back, and rushing away at
+a mad gallop, as if he would leave thought, and memory, and the curse of
+love for a worthless woman behind him for ever.
+
+His man stood looking at the gun Fairlie had thrown to him with a
+puzzled expression.
+
+"Is the Colonel gone mad?" I heard him say to himself. "The devil's in
+it, I think. He used to treat his things a little carefuller than this.
+As I live, he's been and gone and broke the trigger?"
+
+The devil wasn't in it, but a woman _was_, an individual that causes as
+much mischief as any Asmodeus, Belphégor, or Mephistopheles. Some fair
+unknown correspondents assured me the other day, in a letter, that my
+satire on women was "a monstrous libel." All I can say is, that if it
+_be_ a libel, it is like many a one for which one pays the highest, and
+which sounds the blackest--a libel that is _true_!
+
+While his rival rode away as recklessly as though he was riding for his
+life, the gallant bridegroom--as the _Court Circular_ would have
+it--rolled on his way to Fern Wood, while Gower, very amiably occupying
+the rumble, smoked, and bore his position philosophically, comforted by
+the recollection that Geraldine's French maid was an uncommonly
+good-looking, coquettish little person.
+
+They rolled on, and speedily the postilion pulled up, according to
+order, before the white five-bar gate, its paint blistering in the hot
+summer dawn, and the great fern-leaves and long grass clinging up round
+its posts, still damp with the six o'clock dew. Five minutes passed--ten
+minutes--a quarter of an hour. Poor Belle got impatient. Twenty
+minutes--five-and-twenty--thirty. Belle couldn't stand it. He began to
+pace up and down the turf, soiling his boots frightfully with the long
+wet grass, and rejecting all Tom's offers of consolation and a
+cigar-case.
+
+"Confound it!" cried poor Belle, piteously, "I thought women were always
+ready to marry. I know, when I went to turn off Lacquers of the Rifles
+at St. George's, his bride had been waiting for him half an hour, and
+was in an awful state of mind, and all the other brides as well, for you
+know they always marry first the girl that gets there first, and all the
+other poor wretches were kept on tenter-hooks too. Lacquers had lost the
+ring, and found it in his waistcoat after all! I say, Tom, devil take
+it, where can she be? It's forty minutes, as I live. We shall lose the
+train, you know. She's never prevented coming, surely. I think she'd let
+me hear, don't you? She could send Justine to me if she couldn't come by
+any wretched chance. Good Heavens, Tom, what shall I do?"
+
+"Wait, and don't worry," was Tom's laconic and common-sense advice;
+about the most irritating probably to a lover's feelings that could
+pretty well be imagined. Belle swore at him in stronger terms than he
+generally exerted himself to use, but was pulled up in the middle of
+them by the sight of Geraldine and Justine, followed by a boy bearing
+his bride's dainty trunks.
+
+On came Geraldine in a travelling-dress; Justine following after her,
+with a brilliant smile, that showed all her white teeth, at "Monsieur
+Torm," for whom she had a very tender friendship, consolidated by
+certain half-sovereigns and French phrases whispered by Gower after his
+dinners at Fern Chase.
+
+Belle met Geraldine with all that tender _empressement_ which he knew
+well how to put into his slightest actions; but the young lady seemed
+already almost to have begun repenting her hasty step. She hung her head
+down, she held a handkerchief to her bright eyes, and to Belle's
+tenderest and most ecstatic whispers she only answered by a convulsive
+pressure of the arm, into which he had drawn her left hand, and a
+half-smothered sob from her heart's depths.
+
+Belle thought it all natural enough under the circumstances. He knew
+women always made a point of impressing upon you that they are making a
+frightful sacrifice for your good when they condescend to accept you,
+and he whispered what tender consolation occurred to him as best fitted
+for the occasion, thanked her, of course, for all the rapture, &c. &c.,
+assured her of his life-long devotion--you know the style--and lifted
+her into the carriage, Geraldine only responding with broken sighs and
+stifled sobs.
+
+The boxes were soon beside Belle's valises, Justine soon beside Gower,
+the postilion cracked his whip over his outsider, Perkins refolded his
+arms, and the carriage rolled down the lane.
+
+Gower was very well contented with his seat in the rumble. Justine was a
+very dainty little Frenchwoman, with the smoothest hair and the whitest
+teeth in the world, and she and "Monsieur Torm" were eminently good
+friends, as I have told you, though to-day she was very coquettish and
+wilful, and laughed _à propos de bottes_ at Gower, say what Chaumière
+compliments he might.
+
+"Ma chère et charmante petite," expostulated Tom, "tes moues mutines
+sont ravissantes, mais je t'avoue que je préfère tes----"
+
+"Tais-toi, bécasse!" cried Justine, giving him a blow with her parasol,
+and going off into what she would have called _éclats de rire_.
+
+"Mais écoute-moi, Justine," whispered Tom, piqued by her perversity; "je
+raffole de toi! je t'adore, sur ma parole! je----Hallo! what the devil's
+the matter? Good gracious! Deuce take it!"
+
+Well might Tom call on his Satanic Majesty to explain what met his eyes
+as he gave vent to all three ejaculations and maledictions. No less a
+sight than the carriage-door flying violently open, Belle descending
+with a violent impetus, his face crimson, and his hat in his hand,
+clearing the hedge at a bound, plunging up to his ankles in mud on the
+other side of it, and starting across country at the top of his speed,
+rushing frantically straight over the heavy grass-land as if he had just
+escaped from Hanwell, and the whole hue and cry of keepers and policemen
+was let loose at his heels.
+
+"Good Heavens! By Jove! Belle, Belle, I say, stop! Are you mad? What's
+happened? What's the row? I say--the devil!"
+
+But to his coherent but very natural exclamations poor Tom received no
+answer. Justine was screaming with laughter, the postilion was staring,
+Perkins swearing, Belle, flying across the country at express speed,
+rapidly diminishing into a small black dot in the green landscape, while
+from inside the carriage, from Geraldine, from the deserted bride, peals
+of laughter, loud, long, and uproarious, rang out in the summer
+stillness of the early morning.
+
+"By Jupiter! but this is most extraordinary. The deuce is in it. Are
+they both gone stark staring mad?" asked Tom of his Cuba, or the
+blackbirds, or the hedge-cutter afar off, or anything or anybody that
+might turn out so amiable as to solve his problem for him.
+
+No reply being given him, however, Tom could stand it no longer. Down he
+sprang, jerked the door open again, and put his head into the carriage.
+
+"Hallo, old boy, done green, eh? Pity 'tisn't the 1st of April!" cried
+Geraldine, with renewed screams of mirth from the interior.
+
+"Eh? What? What did you say, Miss Vane?" ejaculated Gower, fairly
+staggered by this extraordinary answer of a young girl, a lady, and a
+forsaken bride.
+
+"What did I say, my dear fellow? Why, that you're done most preciously,
+and that I fancy it'll be a deuced long time before your delectable
+friend tries his hand at matrimony again, that's all. Done! oh, by
+George, he is done, and no mistake. Look at me, sir, ain't I a charming
+bride?"
+
+With which elegant language Geraldine took off her hat, pulled down some
+false braids, pushed her hair off her forehead, shook her head like a
+water-dog after a bath, and grinned in Gower's astonished eyes--_not_
+Geraldine, but her twin-brother, Pretty Face!
+
+"Do you know me now, old boy?" asked the Etonian, with demoniacal
+delight,--"do you know me now? Haven't I chiselled him--haven't I
+tricked him--haven't I done him as green as young gooseberries, and as
+brown as that bag? Do you fancy he'll boast of his conquests again, or
+advertise for another wife? So you didn't know how I got Gary Clements,
+of the Ten Bells, to write the letters for me? and Justine to dress me
+in Geraldine's things? You know they always did say they couldn't tell
+her from me; I've proved it now, eh?--rather! Oh, by George, I never had
+a better luck! and not a creature guesses it, not a soul, save Justine,
+Nell, and I! By Jupiter, Gower, if you'd heard that unlucky Belle go on
+swearing devotion interminable, and enough love to stock all Mudie's
+novels! But I never dare let him kiss me, though my beard is down,
+confound it! Oh! what jolly fun it's been, Gower, no words can tell. I
+always said he shouldn't marry her; he'll hardly try to do it now, I
+fancy! What a lark it's been! I couldn't have done it, you know, without
+that spicy little French girl;--she did my hair, and got up my
+crinoline, and stole Geraldine's dress, and tricked me up altogether,
+and carried my notes to the hollow oak, and took all my messages to
+Belle. Oh, Jupiter! what fun it's been! If Belle isn't gone clean out of
+his senses, it's very odd to me. When he was going to kiss me, and
+whispered, 'My dearest, my darling, my wife!' I just took off my hat and
+grinned in his face, and said, 'Ain't this a glorious go? Oh! by
+George, Gower, I think the fun will kill me!'"
+
+And the wicked little dog of an Etonian sank back among the carriage
+cushions stifled with his laughter. Gower staggered backwards against a
+roadside tree, and stood there with his lips parted and his eyes wide
+open, bewildered, more than that cool hand had ever been in all his
+days, by the extraordinary finish of poor Belle's luckless wooing; the
+postilion rolled off his saddle in cachinnatory fits at the little
+monkey's narrative! Perkins, like a soldier as he was, utterly impassive
+to all surrounding circumstances, shouldered a valise and dashed at
+quick march after his luckless master; Justine clapped her plump
+French-gloved fingers with a million ma Fois! and mon Dieus! and O
+Ciels! and far away in the gray distance sped the retreating figure of
+poor Belle, with the license in one pocket and the wedding-ring in the
+other, flying, as if his life depended on it, from the shame, and the
+misery, and the horror of that awful sell, drawn on his luckless head by
+that ill-fated line in the _Daily_.
+
+While Belle drove to his hapless wooing, Fairlie galloped on and on.
+Where he went he neither knew nor cared. He had ridden heedlessly along,
+and the Grey, left to her own devices, had taken the road to which her
+head for the last four months had been so often turned--the road leading
+to Fern Chase,--and about a mile from the Vane estate lost her left
+hind-shoe, and came to a dead stop of her own accord, after having been
+ridden for a couple of hours as hard as if she had been at the Grand
+Military. Fairlie threw himself off the saddle, and, leaving the bridle
+loose on the mare's neck, who he knew would not stray a foot away from
+him, he flung himself on the grass, under the cool morning shadows of
+the roadside trees, no sound in the quiet country round him breaking in
+on his weary thoughts, till the musical ring of a pony's hoofs came
+pattering down the lane. He never heard it, however, nor looked up,
+till the quick trot slackened and then stopped beside him.
+
+"Colonel Fairlie!"
+
+"Good Heavens! Geraldine!"
+
+"Well," she said, with tears in her eyes and petulant anger in her
+voice, "so you have never had the grace to come and apologize for
+insulting me as you did last week?"
+
+"For mercy's sake do not trifle with me."
+
+"Trifle! No, indeed!" interrupted the young lady. "Your behavior was no
+trifle, and it will be a very long time before I forgive it, if ever I
+do."
+
+"Stay--wait a moment."
+
+"How can you ask me, when, five days ago, you bid me never come near you
+with my cursed coquetries again?" asked Geraldine, trying, and vainly,
+to get the bridle out of his grasp.
+
+"God forgive me! I did not know what I said. What I had heard was enough
+to madden a colder man than I. Is it untrue?"
+
+"Is what untrue?"
+
+"You know well enough. Answer me, is it true or not?"
+
+"How can I tell what you mean? You talk in enigmas. Let me go."
+
+"I will never let you go till you have answered me."
+
+"How can I answer you if I don't know what you mean?" retorted
+Geraldine, half laughing.
+
+"Do not jest. Tell me, yes or no, are you going to marry that cursed
+fool?"
+
+"What 'cursed fool'? Your language is not elegant, Colonel Fairlie!"
+said Geraldine, with demure mischief.
+
+"Belle! Would you have met him? Did you intend to elope with him?"
+
+Geraldine's eyes, always large enough, grew larger and a darker blue
+still, in extremest astonishment.
+
+"Belle!--elope with him? What are you dreaming? Are you mad?"
+
+"Almost," said Fairlie, recklessly. "Have you misled him, then--tricked
+him? Do you care nothing for him? Answer me, for Heaven's sake,
+Geraldine!"
+
+"I know nothing of what you are talking!" said Geraldine, with her
+surprised eyes wide open still. "Oblige me by leaving my pony's head. I
+shall be too late home."
+
+"You never answered his advertisement, then?"
+
+"The very question insults me! Let my pony go."
+
+"You never met him in Fern Wood--never engaged yourself to him--never
+corresponded with him?"
+
+"Colonel Fairlie, you have no earthly right to put such questions to
+me," interrupted Geraldine, with her hot geranium color in her cheeks
+and her eyes flashing fire. "I honor the report, whoever circulated it,
+far more than it deserves, by condescending to contradict it. Have the
+kindness to unhand my pony, and allow me to continue my ride."
+
+"You shall _not_ go," said Fairlie, as passionately as she, "till you
+have answered me one more question: Can you, will you ever forgive me?"
+
+"No," said Geraldine, with an impatient shake of her head, but a smile
+nevertheless under the shadow of her hat.
+
+"Not if you know it was jealousy of him which maddened me, love for you
+which made me speak such unpardonable words to you?--not if I tell you
+how perfect was the tale I was told, so that there was no link wanting,
+no room for doubt or hope?--not if I tell you what tortures I had
+endured in losing you--what bitter punishment I have already borne in
+crediting the report that you were secretly engaged to my rival--would
+you not forgive me then?"
+
+"No," whispered the young lady perversely, but smiling still, the
+geraniums brighter in her cheeks, and her eyes fixed on the bridle.
+
+Fairlie dropped the reins, let go her hand, and left her free to ride,
+if she would, away from him.
+
+"Will you leave me, Geraldine? Not for this morning only, remember, nor
+for to-day, nor for this year, but--for ever?"
+
+"No!" It was a very different "No" this time.
+
+"Will you forgive me, then, my darling?"
+
+Her fingers clasped his hand closely, and Geraldine looked at him from
+under her hat; her eyes, so like an April day, with their tears, and
+their tender and mischievous smile, were so irresistibly provocative
+that Fairlie took his pardon for granted, and thanked her in the way
+that seemed to him at once most eloquent and most satisfactory.
+
+If you wish to know what became of Belle, he fled across the country to
+the railway station, and spent his leave Heaven knows where--in
+sackcloth and ashes, I suppose--meditating on his frightful sell. _We_
+saw nothing more of him; he could hardly show in Norwich again with all
+his laurels tumbled in the dust, and his trophies of conquest
+laughing-stocks for all the troop. He exchanged into the Z Battery going
+out to India, and I never saw or heard of him till a year or two ago,
+when he landed at Portsmouth, a much wiser and pleasanter man. The
+lesson, joined to the late campaign under Sir Colin, had done him a vast
+amount of good; he had lost his conceit, his vanity, his affectation,
+and was what Nature meant him to be--a sensible, good-hearted fellow. As
+luck would have it, Pretty Face, who had joined the Eleventh, was there
+too, and Fairlie and his wife as well, and Belle had the good sense to
+laugh it over with them, assuring Geraldine, however, that no one had
+eclipsed the G. V. whom he had once hoped had answered his memorable
+advertisement. He has grown wiser, and makes a jest of it now; it may be
+a sore point still, I cannot say--nobody sees it; but, whether or no, in
+the old city of Norwich, and in our corps, from Cadets to Colonels,
+nobody forgets THE LINE IN THE "DAILY:" WHO DID IT, AND WHO WAS DONE BY
+IT.
+
+
+
+
+HOLLY WREATHS AND ROSE CHAINS.
+
+
+
+
+HOLLY WREATHS AND ROSE CHAINS.
+
+
+I.
+
+THE COLONEL OF THE "WHITE FAVORS" AND CECIL ST. AUBYN.
+
+"What are you going to do with yourself this Christmas, old fellow?"
+said Vivian, of the 60th Hussars: the White Favors we call them,
+because, after Edgehill, Henriette Maria gave their Colonel a white
+rosette off her own dress to hang to his sword-knot, and all the 60th
+have like ribbons to this day. "If you've nothing better to do,"
+continued their present Lieutenant-Colonel, "Come down with me to
+Deerhurst. The governor'll be charmed to see you; my mother has always
+some nice-looking girls there; and, as we keep the hounds, I can promise
+you some good hunting with the Harkaway."
+
+"I shall be delighted," said I, who, being in the ---- Lancers, had been
+chained by the leg at Kensington the whole year, and, of all the woes
+the most pitiable, had not been able to get leave for either the 12th or
+the 1st; but while my chums were shooting among the turnips, or stalking
+royals in Blackmount Forest, I had been tied to town, a solitary unit in
+Pall-Mall, standing on the forsaken steps of the U. S., or pacing my
+hack through the dreary desert of Hyde Park--like Macaulay's New
+Zealander gazing on the ruins of London Bridge.
+
+"Very well," continued Vivian, "come down with me next week, and you can
+send your horses with Steevens and my stud. The governor could mount you
+well enough, but I never hunt with so much pleasure as when I'm on Qui
+Vive; so I dare say you, like me, prefer your own horses. I only hope we
+shan't have a confounded 'black frost;' but we must take our chance of
+the weather. I think you'll like my sisters; they're just about half my
+age. Lots of children came in between, but were providentially nipped in
+the bud."
+
+"Are they pretty?"
+
+"Can't say, really; I'm too used to them to judge. I can't make love to
+them, so I never took the trouble to criticise them; but we've always
+been a good-looking race, I believe. I tell you who's staying
+there--that girl we met in Toronto. Do you remember her--Cecil St.
+Aubyn?"
+
+"I should say I did. How did she get here?"
+
+"She's come to live with her aunt, Mrs. Coverdale. You know that
+over-dressed widow who lives in Hyde Park gardens, and, when she can't
+afford Brighton, shuts the front shutters, lives in the back
+drawing-room, and says, 'Not at home to callers?' St. Aubyn is as poor
+as a rat, so I suppose he was glad to send Cecil here; and the Coverdale
+likes to have somebody who'll draw men to her parties, which I'm sure
+her champagne will never do. It's the most unblushing gooseberry ever
+ticketed 'Veuve Clicquot.'"
+
+"'Pon my life, I'm delighted to hear it," said I. "The St. Aubyn's
+superb eyes will make the gooseberry go down. Men in Canada would have
+swallowed cask-washings to get a single waltz with her. All Toronto
+went mad on that score. You admired her, too, old fellow, only you
+weren't with her long enough for such a stoic as you are to boil up into
+anything warmer."
+
+"Oh yes, I thought her extremely pretty, but I thought her a little
+flirt, nevertheless."
+
+"Stuff! An attractive girl can't make herself ugly or disagreeable, or
+erect a brick wall round herself, with iron spikes on the top, for fear,
+through looking at her, any fellow might come to grief. The men followed
+her, and she couldn't help that."
+
+"And she encouraged them, and she _could_ help that. However, I don't
+wish to speak against her; it's nothing to me how she kills and slays,
+provided I'm not among the bag. Take care you don't get shot yourself,
+Ned."
+
+"Keep your counsel for your own use, Syd. You put me in mind of the
+philanthropist, who ran to warn his neighbor of the dangers of soot
+while his own chimney was on fire."
+
+"As how? I don't quite see the point of your parable," said Vivian, with
+an expression of such innocent impassiveness that one would have thought
+he had never seen her fair face out of her furs in her sledge, or
+admired her small ankles when she was skating on the Ontario.
+
+The winter before, a brother of mine, who was out there in the Rifles,
+wrote and asked me to go and have some buffalo-hunting, and Vivian went
+out with me for a couple of months. We had some very good sport in the
+western woods and plains, and his elk and bison horns are still stuck up
+in Vivian's rooms at Uxbridge, with many another trophy of both
+hemispheres. We had sport of another kind, too, to the merry music of
+the silvery sledge-bells, over the crisp snow and the gleaming ice,
+while bright eyes shone on us under delicate lace veils, and little feet
+peeped from under heaps of sable and bearskin, and gay voices rang out
+in would-be fear when the horses shied at the shadow of themselves, or
+at the moon shining on the ice. Who thinks of Canada without in fancy
+hearing the ringing chimes of the gay sledge bells swinging joyous
+measure into the clear sunshine or the white moonlight, in tune with
+light laughter, and soft whispers, and careless hearts?
+
+There we saw Cecil St. Aubyn, one of the prettiest girls in Toronto,
+then about nineteen. My brother Harry was mad about her, so were almost
+all the men in the Canada Rifles, and Engineers, and, 61st that were
+quartered there; and Vivian admired her too, though in a calmer sort of
+way. Perhaps if he had been with her more than a fortnight he might have
+gone further. As it was, he left Toronto liking her long Canadian eyes
+no more than was pleasant. It was as well so, perhaps, for it would not
+have been a good match for him, St. Aubyn being a broken-down gambler,
+who, having lost a princely fortune at Crocky's, and the Bads, married
+at fifty a widow with a little money, and migrated to Toronto, where he
+was a torment to himself and to everybody else. Vivian, meanwhile, was a
+great matrimonial _coup_. Coming of a high county family, and being the
+only son, of course there was priceless value set on his life, which,
+equally, of course, he imperilled, after the manner of us all, in every
+way he could--in charges and skirmishes, yachting, hunting, and
+steeple-chasing--ever since some two-and-twenty years ago he joined as a
+cornet of fifteen--a man already in muscle and ideas, pleasures and
+pursuits.
+
+At the present time he had been tranquilly engaged in the House, as he
+represented the borough of Cacklebury.
+
+He spoke seldom, but always well, and was thought a very promising
+member, his speeches being in Bernal Osborne's style; but he himself
+cared little about his senatorial laurels, and was fervently hoping
+that there would be a row with Russia, and that we should be allowed to
+go and stick Croats and make love to Bayadères, to freshen us up and
+make us boys again.
+
+Next week, the first in December, he and I drove to Paddington, put
+ourselves in the express, and whisked through the snow-covered
+embankments, whitened fields, and holly hedges on the line down to
+Deerhurst. If the frost broke up we should have magnificent runs, and we
+looked at the country with a longing eye. Ever since he was six years
+old, he told me, he had gone out with the Harkaway Hack on
+Christmas-eve. When the drag met us, with the four bays steaming in the
+night air, and the groom warming into a smile at the sight of the
+Colonel, the sleet was coming down heavily, and the wind blew as keen as
+a sabre's edge. The bays dashed along at a furious gallop under Vivian's
+hand, the frosty road cracked under the wheel, the leaders' breath was
+white in the misty night; we soon flew through the park gate--though he
+didn't forget to throw down a sovereign on the snow for the old
+porteress--and up the leafless avenue, and bright and cheery the old
+manor-house, with its score of windows, like so many bright eyes, looked
+out upon the winter's night.
+
+"By George! we did that four miles quick enough," said Vivian, jumping
+down, and shaking the snow off his hair and mustaches. "The old place
+looks cheery, doesn't it? Ah! there are the girls; they're sure to
+pounce on me."
+
+The two girls in question having warm hearts, not spoilt by the
+fashionable world they live in, darted across the hall, and, regardless
+of the snow, welcomed him ardently. They were proud of him, for he is a
+handsome dog, with haughty, aristocratic features, and a grand air as
+stately as a noble about Versailles in the polished "Age doré."
+
+He shook himself free, and went forward to meet his mother, whom he is
+very fond of; while the governor, a fine-looking, genial old fellow,
+bade me welcome to Deerhurst. In the library door I caught sight of a
+figure in white that I recognised as our belle of the sledge drives; she
+was looking at Vivian as he bent down to his mother. As soon as she saw
+me though, she disappeared, and he and I went up to our rooms to thaw,
+and dress for dinner.
+
+By the fire, talking to Blanche Vivian, stood Cecil, when we went down
+to the drawing-room. She always makes me think of a Sèvres or Dresden
+figure, her coloring is so delicate, and yet brilliant; and if you were
+to see her Canadian eyes, her waving chestnut hair, and her
+instantaneous, radiant, coquettish smiles, you would not wonder at the
+Toronto men losing their heads about her.
+
+"Why, Cecil, you never told me you knew Sydney!" cried Blanche, as
+Vivian shook hands with the St. Aubyn. "Where did you meet him? how long
+have you been acquainted? why did you never tell me?"
+
+"How could I tell Colonel Vivian was your brother?" said Cecil, playing
+with a little silver Cupid driving a barrowful of matches on the
+mantelpiece till she tumbled all his matches into the fender.
+
+"You might have asked. Never mind the wax-lights," said Blanche, who,
+not having been long out, had a habit of saying anything that came into
+her head. "When did you see him? Tell me, Sydney, if she won't."
+
+"Oh, in Canada, dear!" interrupted Cecil, quickly. "But it was for so
+short a time I should have thought Colonel Vivian would have forgotten
+my face, and name, and existence."
+
+"Nay, Miss St. Aubyn," said Vivian, smiling. "Pardon me, but I think
+you must know your own power too well to think that any man who has seen
+you once could hope for his own peace to forget you."
+
+The words of course were flattering, but his quizzical smile made them
+doubtful. Cecil evidently took them as satire. "At least, you've
+forgotten anything we talked about at Toronto," she said, rather
+impatiently, "for I remember telling you I detested compliments."
+
+"I shouldn't have guessed it," murmured Vivian, stroking his mustaches.
+
+"And you," Cecil went on, regardless of the interruption, "told me you
+never complimented any woman you respected; so that speech just now
+doesn't say much for your opinion of me."
+
+"How dare I begin to like you?" laughed Vivian.
+
+"Don't you know Levinge and Castlereagh were great friends of mine? Poor
+fellows! the sole object of their desires now is six feet of Crimean
+sod, if we're lucky enough to get out there." Cecil colored. Levinge's
+and Castlereagh's hard drinking and gloomy aspect at mess were popularly
+attributed to the witchery of the St. Aubyn. Canada, while she was in
+it, was as fatal to the Service as the Cape or the cholera.
+
+"If I talked so romantically, Colonel Vivian, with what superb mockery
+you would curl your mustaches. Surely the Iron Hand (wasn't that your
+sobriquet in Caffreland?) does not believe in broken hearts?"
+
+"Perhaps not; but I _do_ believe in some people's liking to try and
+break them."
+
+"So do I. It is a favorite pastime with your sex," said Cecil, beating
+the hearth-rug impatiently with her little satin shoe.
+
+"I don't think we often attack," laughed Vivian. "We sometimes yield out
+of amiability, and we sometimes take out the foils in self-defence,
+though we are no match for those delicate hands that use their Damascus
+blades so skilfully. We soon learn to cry quarter!"
+
+"To a dozen different conquerors in as many months, then!" cried Cecil,
+with a defiant toss of her head.
+
+Vivian looked down on her as a Newfoundland might look down on a small
+and impetuous-minded King Charles, who is hoping to irritate him. Just
+then three other people staying there came in. A fat old dowager and a
+thin daughter, who had turquoise eyes, and from whom, being a great
+pianist, we all fled in mortal terror of a hailstorm of Thalberg and
+Hertz, and a cousin of Syd's, Cossetting, a young chap, a blondin, with
+fair curls parted down the centre, whose brains were small, hands like a
+girl's, and thoughts centred on dew _bouquets_ and his own beauty, but
+who, having a baronetcy, with much tin, was strongly set upon by the
+turquoise eyes, but appeared himself to lean more towards the Canadian,
+as a greater contrast to himself, I suppose.
+
+"How do you do, Cos?" said Vivian, carelessly. The Iron Hand very
+naturally scorned this effeminate _patte de velours_.
+
+"You here!" lisped the baronet. "Delighted to see you! thought you'd
+killed yourself over a fence, or something, before this----"
+
+"Why, Horace," burst in energetic little Blanche, "I have told you for
+the last month that he was coming down for Christmas."
+
+"Did you, my dear child?" said Cos. "'Pon my life I forgot it. Miss St.
+Aubyn, my man Cléante (he's the handiest dog--he once belonged to the
+Duc d'Aumale) has just discovered something quite new--there's no
+perfume like it; he calls it 'Fleurs des Tilleuls,' and the best of it
+is, nobody can have it. If you'll allow me----"
+
+"Everybody seems to make it their duty to forget Sydney," muttered
+Blanche, as the Baronet murmured the rest of his speech inaudibly.
+
+"Never mind, petite; I can bear it," laughed Vivian, leaning against the
+mantelpiece with that look of quiet strength characteristic of both his
+mind and body.
+
+Cecil overheard the whisper, and flushed a quick look at him; then
+turning to Cossetting, talked over the "Fleurs des Tilleuls" as if her
+whole mind was absorbed in _bouquet_.
+
+When dinner was announced, Vivian troubled himself, however, to give his
+arm to Cecil, and, tossing his head back in the direction of the
+turquoise eyes, said to the discomfited Horace, "You sing, don't you,
+Cosset? Miss Screechington will bore you less than she would me."
+
+"Is it, then, because I 'bore you less' that you do me the honor?" asked
+Cecil, quickly.
+
+"Yes," said Syd, calmly; "or, rather, to put it more courteously, you
+amuse me more."
+
+"Monseigneur! je vous remercie," said Cecil, her long almond eyes
+sparkling dangerously. "You promote me to the same rank with an opera, a
+hookah, a rat-hunt, and a French novel?"
+
+"And," Vivian went on tranquilly, "I dare say I shall amuse _you_ better
+than that poor little fool with his lisp and his talk of the toilet, and
+his hands that never pulled in a thorough-bred or aided a rowing match."
+
+"Oh, we're not in the Iliad and Odyssey days to deify physical
+strength," said Cecil, who secretly adored it, as all women do; "nor yet
+among the Pawnees to reverence a man according to his scalps. Though Sir
+Horace may not have followed your example and jeopardised his life on
+every possible occasion, he is very handsome, and can be very
+agreeable."
+
+"Is it possible you can endure that fop?" said Vivian, quickly.
+
+"Certainly. Why not?"
+
+The Colonel stroked his moustache contemptuously. "I should have fancied
+you more difficile, that is all; but Cos is, as you say, good-looking,
+and very well off. I wish----"
+
+"What? That you were 'less bored?'"
+
+"That I always wish; but I was thinking of Cos, there--milk-posset, as
+little Eardley in the troop says they called him at Eton--I was wishing
+he could see Levinge and Castlereagh, just as _épouvantails_, to make
+him turn and flee as the French noblesse did when they saw their cousins
+and brothers strung up à la lanterne."
+
+"Wasn't it very strange," Blanche was saying to me at the same time,
+"that Cecil never mentioned Sydney? I've so often spoken of him, told
+her his troop, and all about him. (He has always been so kind to me,
+though he is eighteen years older--just twice my age.) Besides, I found
+her one day looking at his picture in the gallery, so she must have
+known it was the same Colonel Vivian, mustn't she Captain Thornton?"
+
+"I should say so. Have you known her long?"
+
+"No. We met her at Brighton this August with that silly woman, Mrs.
+Coverdale. All her artifices and falsehoods annoy Cecil so; Cecil
+doesn't mind saying she's not rich, she knows it's no crime."
+
+"C'est pire qu'un crime, c'est une faute," said I.
+
+"Don't talk in that way," laughed Blanche. "That's bitter and sarcastic,
+like Sydney in his grand moods, when I'm half afraid of him. I am sure
+Cecil couldn't be nicer, if she were ever such an heiress. Mamma asked
+her for Christmas because she once knew Mr. St. Aubyn well, and Cecil is
+not happy with Mrs. Coverdale. False and true don't suit each other. I
+hope Sydney will like her--do you think he does?"
+
+That was a question I could not answer. He admired her, of course,
+because he could not well have helped it, and had done so in Canada; and
+he was talking to her now, I dare say, to force her to acknowledge that
+he _was_ more amusing than Horace Cos. But he seemed to me to weigh her
+in a criticising balance, as if he expected to find her wanting--as if
+it pleased him to provoke and correct her, as one pricks and curbs a
+beautiful two-year old, just to see its graceful impatience at the check
+and the glance of its wild eye.
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+THE CANADIAN'S COLD BATH WARMS UP THE COLONEL.
+
+
+Deerhurst was a capital house to spend a Christmas in. It was the house
+of an English gentleman, with even the dens called bachelors' rooms
+comfortable and luxurious to the last extent: a first-rate stud, a
+capital billiard table, a good sporting country, pretty girls to amuse
+one with when tired of the pink, the best Chablis and Château Margaux to
+be had anywhere, and a host who would have liked a hundred people at his
+dinner-table the whole year round. The snow, confound it! prevented our
+taking the hounds out for the first few days; but we were not bored as
+one might have expected, and our misery was the girls' delight, who were
+fervently hoping that the ice might come thick enough for them to skate.
+Cecil was invaluable in a country-house; her resources were as unlimited
+as Houdin's inexhaustible bottle. She played in French vaudevilles and
+Sheridan Knowles's comedies, acted charades, planned tableaux vivants,
+sang gay wild chansons peculiar to herself, that made the Screechington
+bravuras and themes more insupportable than ever; and, what was more,
+managed to infuse into everybody else some of her own energy and spirit.
+She made every one do as she liked; but she tyrannised over us so
+charmingly that we never chafed at the bit; and to the other girls she
+was so good-natured in giving them the rôles they liked, in praising,
+and in aiding them, that it was difficult for feminine malice, though
+its limits are boundless, to find fault with her. Vivian, though he did
+not relax his criticism of her, was agreeable to her, as he had been in
+Canada, and as he is always to women when he is not too lazy. He
+consented to stand for Rienzi in a tableau, though he hates doing all
+those things, and played in the Proverbs with such a flashing fire of
+wit in answer to Cecil that we told him he beat Mathews.
+
+"I'm inspired," he said, with a laughing bend of his head to Cecil, when
+somebody complimented him.
+
+She gave an impatient movement--she was accustomed to have such things
+whispered in earnest, not in jest. She laughed, however. "Are you
+inspired, then, to take _Huon's_ part? All the characters are cast but
+that."
+
+"I'm afraid I can't play well enough."
+
+"Nonsense. You cannot think that. Say you would rather not at once."
+
+Vivian stroked his mustaches thoughtfully. "Well, you see, it bores me
+rather; and I'm not Christian enough to suffer ennui cheerfully to
+please other people."
+
+"Very well, then, I will give the part to Sir Horace," said Cecil,
+looking through the window at the church spire, covered with the
+confounded snow.
+
+Vivian stroked away at his mustaches rather fiercely this time. "Cos!
+he'll ruin the play. Dress him up as a lord in waiting, he'll be a
+dainty lay figure, but for anything more he's not as fit as this setter!
+Fancy that essenced, fair-haired young idiot taking _Huon_--his lisp
+would be so effective!"
+
+She looked up in his face with one of her mischievous, dangerous smiles,
+and put up her hands in an attitude of petition. "He must have the part
+if you won't. Be good, and don't spoil the play. I have set my mind on
+its being perfect, and--I will have _such_ a dress as the _Countess_ if
+you will only do as I tell you."
+
+Cecil, in her soft, childlike moods, could finish any man. Of course
+Vivian rehearsed "Love" with her that afternoon, a play that was to come
+off on the 23rd. Cos sulked slightly at being commanded by her to dress
+himself beautifully and play the _Prince of Milan_.
+
+"To be refused by you," lisped Horace. "Oh, I dare say! No! 'pon my
+life----"
+
+"My dear Cos, you'll have plenty of fellow-sufferers," whispered Syd,
+mischievously.
+
+"Do you dare to disobey me, Sir Horace?" cried Cecil. "For shame! I
+should have thought you more of a preux chevalier. If you don't order
+over from Boxwood that suit of Milan armor you say one of your ancestors
+wore at Flodden, and wear it on Tuesday, you shall never waltz with me
+again. Now what do you say?"
+
+"Nobody can rethitht you," murmured Cos. "You do anything with a fellow
+that you chooth."
+
+Vivian glanced down at him with superb scorn, and turned to me. "What a
+confounded frost this is. The weathercock sticks at the north, and old
+Ben says there's not a chance of a change till the new moon. Qui Vive
+might as well have kept at Hounslow. To waste all the season like this
+would make a parson swear! If I'd foreseen it I would have gone to
+Paris with Lovell, as he wanted me to do."
+
+I suppose the Colonel was piqued to find he was not the only one
+persuaded into his rôle. He bent over Laura Caldecott's chair, a pretty
+girl, but with nothing to say for herself, admired her embroidery, and
+talked with great empressement about it, till Laura, much flattered at
+such unusual attention, after lisping a good deal of nonsense, finally
+promised to embroider a note-case for him, "if you'll be good and use
+it, and not throw it away, as you naughty men always do the pretty
+things we give you," simpered Miss Laura.
+
+"Hearts included," said Syd, smiling. "I assure you if you give me
+yours, I will prize it with Turkish jealousy."
+
+The fair brodeuse gave a silly laugh; and Vivian, whose especial
+detestation is this sort of love-making nonsense, went on flirting with
+her, talking the persiflage that one whispers leaning over the back of a
+phaeton after a dinner at the Castle or a day at Ascot, but never
+expects to be called to remember the next morning, when one bows to the
+object thereof in the Ring, and the flavor of the claret-cup and the
+scent of the cigar are both fled with the moonbeams and forgotten.
+
+Cecil gave the Colonel and his flirtation a glance, and let Cossetting
+lean over the back of her chair and deliver himself of some
+lackadaisical sentiment (taken second-hand out of "Isidora" or the
+"Amant de la Lune," and diluted to be suitable for presentation to her),
+looking up at him with her large velvet eyes, or flashing on him her
+radiant smile, till Horace pulled up his little stiff collar, coaxed his
+flaxen whiskers, looked at her with his half-closed light eyes--and
+thought himself irresistible--and Miss Screechington broke the string of
+the purse she was making, and scattered all the steel beads about the
+floor in the futile hope of gaining his attention. Blanche went down on
+her knees and spent twenty minutes hunting them all up; but as I helped
+her I saw the turquoise eyes looked anything but grateful for our
+efforts, though if Blanche had done anything for me with that ready
+kindness and those soft little white hands, I should have repaid her
+very warmly. But oh, these women! these women! Do they ever love one
+another in their hearts? Does not Chloris always swear that Lelia's
+gazelle eyes have a squint in them and Delia hint that Daphne, who is
+innocent as a dove, is bad style, and horridly bold?
+
+At last Cecil got tired of Cos's drawling platitudes, and walked up to
+one of the windows. "How is the ice, will anybody tell me? I am wild to
+try it, ain't you, Blanche? If we are kept waiting much longer, we will
+have the carpets up and skate on the oak floors."
+
+I told her I thought they might try it safely. "Then let us go after
+luncheon, shall we?" said Cecil. "It is quite sunny now. You skate, of
+course, Sir Horace?"
+
+"Oh! to be sure--certainly," murmured Cos. "We'd a quadrille on the
+Serpentine last February, Talbot, and I, and some other men--lots of
+people said they never saw it better done. But it's rather cold--don't
+you think so?"
+
+"Do you expect to find ice in warm weather?" said Vivian, curtly, from
+the fire, where he was standing watching the commencement of the
+note-case.
+
+"No. But I hate cold," said Horace, looking at his snowy fingers. "One
+looks such a figure--blue, and wet, and shivering; the house is much the
+best place in a frost."
+
+"Poor fellow!" said Vivian, with a contemptuous twist of his mustaches.
+"I fear, however fêté you may be in every other quarter, the seasons
+won't change to accommodate you."
+
+"Oh! you are a dreadful man," drawled Cos. "You don't a bit mind tanning
+yourself, nor getting drenched through, nor soiling your hands----"
+
+"Thank Heaven, no!" responded Syd. "I'm neither a school-girl, nor--a
+fop."
+
+"Would you believe it, Miss St. Aubyn?" said the baronet, appealingly.
+"That man'll get up before daylight and let himself be drenched to the
+skin for the chance of playing a pike; and will turn out of a
+comfortable arm-chair on a winter's night just to go after poachers and
+knock a couple of men over, and think it the primest fun in life. I
+don't understand it myself, do you?"
+
+"Yes," said Cecil, fervently. "I delight in a man's love for sport, for
+I idolise horses, and there is nothing that can beat a canter on a fine
+fresh morning over a grass country; and I believe that a man who has the
+strength, and nerve, and energy to go thoroughly into fishing, or
+shooting, or whatever it be, will carry the same will and warmth into
+the rest of his life; and the hand that is strong in the field and firm
+in righteous wrath, will be the truer in friendship and the gentler in
+pity."
+
+Cecil spoke with energetic enthusiasm. Horace stared, the Screechington
+sneered, Laura gave an affected little laugh. The Colonel swung round
+from his study of the fire, his face lighting up. I've seen Syd on
+occasion look as soft as a woman. However, he said nothing; he only took
+her in to luncheon, and was exceedingly kind to her and oblivious of
+Laura Caldecott's existence throughout that meal, which, at Deerhurst,
+was of unusual splendor and duration. And afterwards, when she had
+arrayed herself in a hat with soft curling feathers, and looped up her
+dress in some inexplicable manner that showed her dainty high heels
+artistically, he took her little skates in his hand and walked down by
+her side to the pond. It was some way to the pond--a good sized piece of
+water, that snobs would have called the Lake, by way of dignifying their
+possessions, with willows on its banks (where in summer the sentimental
+Screechington would have reclined, Tennyson _à la main_), and boats and
+punts beside it, among which was a tub, in which Blanche confessed to me
+she had paddled herself across to the saturation of a darling blue
+muslin, and the agonised feelings of her governess, only twelve months
+before.
+
+"A dreadful stiff old thing that governess was," said Blanche, looking
+affectionately at the tub. "Do you know, Captain Thornton, when she went
+away, and I saw her boxes actually on the carriage-top, I waltzed round
+the schoolroom seven times, and burnt 'Noel et Chapsal' in the fire--I
+did, indeed!"
+
+The way, as I say, was long to the pond; and as Cecil's dainty high
+heels and Syd's swinging cavalry strides kept pace over the snow
+together, they had plenty of time for conversation.
+
+"Miss Caldecott is looking for you," said Cecil, with a contemptuous
+glance at the fair Laura, who, between two young dandies, was picking
+her route over the snow holding her things very high indeed, and casting
+back looks at the Colonel.
+
+"Is she? It is very kind of her."
+
+"If you feel the kindness so deeply, you had better repay it by joining
+her."
+
+Vivian laughed. "Not just now, thank you. We are close to the
+kennels--hark at their bay! Would you like to come and see them?
+By-the-by, how is your wolf-dog--Leatherstockings, didn't you call him?"
+
+"Do you remember him?" said Cecil, her eyes beaming and her lips
+quivering. "Dear old dog, I loved him so much, and he loved me. He was
+bitten by an asp just before I left, and papa would have him shot. Good
+gracious! what is the matter?--she is actually frightened at that
+setter!"
+
+The "she" of whom Cecil so disdainfully spoke was Miss Caldecott, who,
+on seeing a large setter leap upon her with muddy paws and much sudden
+affection, began to scream, and rushed to Vivian with a beseeching cry
+of "Save me, save me!" Cecil stood and laughed, and called the setter to
+her.
+
+"Here, Don--Dash--what is your name? Come here, good dog. That poor
+young lady has nerves, and you must not try them, or you will cause her
+endless expenses in sal volatile and ether; But I have no such
+interesting weaknesses, and you may lavish any demonstrations you please
+on me!"
+
+We all laughed as she thus talked confidentially to the setter, holding
+his feathered paws against her waist; while Vivian stood by her with
+admiration in his glance. Poor Laura looked foolish, and began to caress
+a great bull-dog, who snapped at her. She hadn't Cecil's ways either
+with dogs or men.
+
+"What a delightful scene," whispered Cecil to the Colonel, as we left
+the kennels. "You were not half so touched by it as you were expected to
+be!"
+
+Vivian laughed. "Didn't you effectually destroy all romantic effect? You
+can be very mischievous to your enemies."
+
+Cecil colored. "She is no enemy of mine; I know nothing of her, but I do
+detest that mock sentimentality, that would-be fine ladyism that thinks
+it looks interesting when it pleads guilty to sal volatile, and screams
+at an honest dog's bark. Did you see how shocked she and Miss
+Screechington looked because I let the hounds leap about me?"
+
+"Of course; but though you have not lived very long, you must have
+learned that you are too dangerous to the peace of our sex to expect
+much mercy from your own."
+
+A flush came into Cecil's cheeks _not_ brought by the wind. Her feathers
+gave a little dance as she shook her head with her customary action of
+annoyance.
+
+"Ah, never compliment me, I am so tired of it."
+
+"I wish I could believe that," said Syd, in a low tone. "Your feelings
+are warm, your impulses frank and true; it were a pity to mar them by an
+undue love for the flattering voices of empty-headed fools."
+
+Tears of pleasure started into her eyes, but she would not let him see
+it. She had not forgotten the Caldecott flirtation of the morning enough
+to resist revenging it. She looked up with a merry laugh.
+
+"Je m'amuse--voilà tout. There is no great harm in it."
+
+A shadow of disappointment passed over Syd's haughty face.
+
+"No, if you do not do it once too often. I _have_ known men--and women
+too--who all their lives through have been haunted by the memory of a
+slight word, a careless look, with which, unwittingly or in obstinacy,
+they shut the door of their own happiness. Have you ever heard of the
+Deerhurst ghost?"
+
+"No," said Cecil, softly. "Tell it me."
+
+"It is a short story. Do you know that picture of Muriel Vivian, the
+girl with the hawk on her wrist and long hair of your color? She lived
+in Charles's time, and was a great beauty at the court. There were many
+who would have lived and died for her, but the one who loved her best
+was her cousin Guy. The story says that she had plighted herself to him
+in these very woods; at any rate, he followed her when she went to join
+the court, and she kept him on, luring him with vague promises, and
+flirting with Goring, and Francis Egerton, and all the other gay
+gentlemen. One night his endurance broke down: he asked her whether or
+no she cared for him? He begged, as a sign, for the rosebud she had in
+her dress. She laughed at him, and--gave the flower to Harry Carrew, a
+young fellow in Lunsford's 'Babe-eaters.' Guy said no more, and left
+her. Before dawn he shot Carrew through the heart, took the rosebud from
+the boy's doublet, put it in his own breast, and fell upon his sword.
+They say Muriel lost her senses. I don't believe it: no coquette ever
+had so much feeling; but if you ask the old servants they will tell you,
+and firmly credit the story too, that hers and Guy Vivian's ghosts still
+are to be seen every midnight at Christmas-eve, the day that he fought
+and killed little Harry Carrew."
+
+He laughed, but Cecil shuddered.
+
+"What a horrible story! But do you believe that any woman ever possessed
+such power over a man?"
+
+"I believe it since I have seen it. One of my best friends is now
+hopelessly insane because a woman as worthless as this dead branch
+forsook him. Poor fellow! they set it down to a coup de soleil, but it
+was the falsehood of Emily Rushbrooke that did it. But, for myself, I
+never should lose my head for any woman. I did once when I was a boy,
+but I know better now."
+
+A wild, desperate idea came into Cecil's mind. She contrasted the
+passionless calm of his face with the tender gentleness of his tone a
+few moments ago, and she would have given her life to see him "lose his
+head for her" as he had done for that other. How she hated her, whoever
+she had been! Cecil had seen too many men not to know that Syd's cool
+exterior covered a stormy heart, and in the longing to rouse up the
+storm at her incantation she resolved to play a dangerous game. The
+ghost story did not warn her. As Mephistopheles to Faust came Horace Cos
+to aid the impulse, and Cecil turned to him with one of her radiant
+smiles. She never looked prettier than in her black hat; the wind had
+only blown a bright flush into her cheeks--though it had turned Laura
+blue and the Screechington red--and the Colonel looked up at her as he
+put her skates on with something of the look Guy might have given Muriel
+Vivian flirting gaily with the roistering cavaliers.
+
+"Now, Sir Horace, show us some of those wonderful Serpentine figures,"
+cried Cecil, balancing herself with the grace of a curlew, and whirling
+here, there, and everywhere at her will as easily as if she were on a
+chalked ball-room floor. She hadn't skated and sledged on the Ontario
+for nothing. More than one man had lost his own balance looking after
+her. Cos wasn't started yet; one pair of skates were too large, another
+pair too small; if he'd thought of it he'd have had his own sent over.
+He stood on the brink much as Winkle, of Pickwickian memory, trembled in
+Weller's grasp. Cecil looked at him with laughing eyes, a shrewd
+suspicion that he had planted her adorer, and that the quadrille on the
+Serpentine was an offspring of the Cossetting poetic fancy. Thrice did
+the luckless baronet essay the ice, and thrice did he come to grief with
+heels in the air, and his dainty apparel disordered. At last, his
+Canadian sorceress took compassion upon him, and declaring she was
+tired, asked him to drive her across the pond. Cos, with an air of
+languid martyrdom and a heavy sigh as he glanced at his Houbigants, torn
+and soiled, grasped the back of the chair, and actually contrived to
+start it. Once started, away went the chair and its Phaeton after it,
+whether he would or no, its occupant looking up and laughing in the
+dandy's heated, disconcerted, and anxious face. All at once there was a
+crash, a plunge, and a shout from Vivian, who was on the opposite bank.
+The chair had broken the ice, flung Cecil out into the water with the
+shock, while her charioteer, by a lucky jump backwards, had saved
+himself, and stood on the brink of the chasm unharmed. Cecil's crinoline
+kept her from sinking; she stretched out her little hand with a cry--it
+sounded like Vivian's name as it came to my ears on the keen north
+wind--but before Vivian, who came across the ice like a whirlwind, could
+get to her, Cos, valorously determining to wet his wristbands, stooped
+down, and, holding by the chair, which was firmly wedged in, put his arm
+round her and dragged her out. Vivian came up two seconds too late.
+
+"Are you hurt?" he said, bending towards her.
+
+"No," said Cecil, faintly, as her head drooped unconsciously on Cos's
+shoulder. She had struck her forehead on the ice, which had stunned her
+slightly. The Colonel saw the chestnut hair resting against Cos's arm;
+he dropped the hand he had taken, and turned to the shore.
+
+"Bring her to the bank," he said, briefly. "I will go home and send a
+carriage. Good Heavens! that that fool should have saved her!" I heard
+him mutter, as he brushed past me.
+
+He drove the carriage down himself, and under pretext of holding on the
+horses, did not descend from the box while Horace wrapped rugs and
+cloaks round Cecil, who, having more pluck than strength, declared she
+was quite well now, but nearly fainted when Horace lifted her out, and
+she was consigned by Mrs. Vivian to her bedroom for the rest of the day.
+
+"It is astonishing how we miss Cecil," remarked Blanche, at dinner.
+"Isn't it dull without her, Sydney?"
+
+"I didn't perceive it," said the Colonel, calmly; "but I am very sorry
+for the cause of her absence."
+
+"Well, by Jove! it sounds unfeeling; but I can't say I am," murmured
+Horace. "It's something to have saved such a deuced pretty girl as
+that."
+
+"Curse that puppy," muttered Syd to his champagne glass. "A fool that
+isn't fit for her to look at----"
+
+Syd's and my room, in the bachelors' wing, adjoin each other; and as our
+windows both possess the convenience of balconies, we generally smoke in
+them, and hold a little chat before turning in. When I stepped out into
+my balcony that night, Syd was already puffing away at his pipe. Perhaps
+his Cavendish was unusually good, for he did not seem greatly inclined
+to talk, but leant over the balcony, looking out into the clear frosty
+night, with the winter stars shining on the wide white uplands and the
+leafless glittering trees.
+
+"What's that?" said he sharply, as the notes of a cornet playing, and
+playing badly, Halévy's air, "Quand de la Nuit," struck on the night
+air.
+
+"A serenade, I suppose."
+
+"A serenade in the snow. Who is romantic idiot enough for that?" said
+Vivian contemptuously, nearly pitching himself over to see where the
+cornet came from. It came from under Cecil's windows, where a light was
+still burning. The player looked uncommonly like Cossetting wrapped up
+in a cloak with a wide-awake on, under which the moonlight showed us
+some fair hair peeping.
+
+Vivian drew back with an oath he did not mean me to hear. He laughed
+scornfully. "Milk-posset, of course! There is no other fool in the
+house. His passion must be miraculously deep to drag him out of his bed
+into the snow to play some false notes to his lady-love. It's rather
+windy, don't you think, Ned. Good night, old fellow--and, I say, don't
+turn little Blanche's head with your pretty speeches. You and I are
+bound not to flirt, since we're sworn never to marry; and I don't want
+the child played with, though possibly (being a woman) she'd very soon
+recover it."
+
+With which sarcasm on his sister and her sex, the Colonel shut down the
+window with a clang; and I remained, smoking four pipes and a half,
+meditating on his last words, for I _had_ been playing with the child,
+and felt (inhuman brute! the ladies will say) that I should be sorry if
+she _did_ recover it.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+SHOWING THAT LOVE-MAKING ON HOLY GROUND DOESN'T PROSPER.
+
+
+Cecil came down the next morning looking very pretty after her ducking.
+Vivian asked her how she was with his general air of calm courtesy,
+helped her to some cold pheasant, and applied himself to his breakfast
+and some talk with a sporting man about the chances of the frost
+breaking up.
+
+Horace, who looked upon himself as a preux chevalier, had had his left
+arm put in a sling on the strength of a bruise as big as a
+fourpenny-piece, and appeared to consider himself entitled to Cecil's
+eternal gratitude and admiration for having gone the length of wetting
+his coat sleeves for her.
+
+"Do you like music by starlight?" he whispered, with a self-conscious
+smile, after a course of delicate attentions throughout breakfast.
+
+Syd fixed his eyes on Cecil's, steadily but impassively. The color rose
+into her face, and she turned to Cos with a mischievous laugh.
+
+"Very much, if--I am not too sleepy to hear it; and it isn't a cornet
+out of tune."
+
+"How cruel!" murmured Horace, as he passed her coffee. "You shouldn't
+criticise so severely when a fellow tries to please you."
+
+"That poor dear girl really thinks I turned out into the snow last night
+to give her that serenade," observed Cos, with a languid laugh, when we
+were alone in the billiard-room. "Good, isn't it, the idea of _my_
+troubling myself?"
+
+"Whose cracked cornet was it, then, that made that confounded row last
+night?" I asked.
+
+Horace laughed again; it was rarely he was so highly amused at anything:
+"It was Cléante's, to be sure. He don't play badly when his hands are
+not numbed, poor devil! Of course he made no end of a row about going
+out into the snow, but I made him do it. I knew Cecil would think it was
+I. Women are so vain, poor things!"
+
+It was lucky I alone was the repository of his confidence, for if Vivian
+had chanced to have been in the billiard-room, it is highly probable he
+would then and there have brained his cousin with one of the cues.
+
+Happily he was out of the reach of temptation, in the stables, looking
+after Qui Vive, who had to "bide in stall," as much to that gallant
+bay's disquiet as to her owner's; for I don't know which of the two
+best loves a burst over a stiff country, or a fast twenty minutes up
+wind alone with the hounds when they throw up their heads.
+
+To the stables, by an odd coincidence, Cecil, putting the irresistible
+black hat on the top of her chestnut braids, prevailed on Blanche to
+escort her, vowing (which was nearly, but not quite, the truth) that she
+loved the sweet pets of horses better than anything on earth. Where
+Cecil went, Laura made a point of going too, to keep her enemy in sight,
+I suppose; though Cecil, liking a fast walk on the frosty roads, a game
+of battledore and shuttlecock with Blanche (when we were out of the
+house), or anything, in short, better than working with her feet on the
+fender, and the Caldecott inanities or Screechington scandals in her
+ear, often led Laura many an unwelcome dance, and brought that luckless
+young lady to try at things which did not sit well upon her as they did
+upon the St. Aubyn, who had a knack of doing, and doing charmingly, a
+thousand things no other woman could have attempted. So, as Vivian and
+I, and some of the other men, stood in the stable-doors, smoking, and
+talking over the studs accommodated in the spacious stalls, a strong
+party of four young ladies came across the yard.
+
+"I'm come to look at Qui Vive; will you show him to me?" said Cecil,
+softly. Her gentle, childlike way was the most telling of all her
+changing moods, but I must do her the justice to say that it was
+perfectly natural, she was no actress.
+
+"With great pleasure," said Syd, very courteously, if not
+over-cordially; and to Qui Vive's stall Cecil went, alone in her glory,
+for Laura was infinitely too terrified at the sight of the bay's strong
+black hind legs to risk a kick from them, even to follow Syd. Helena
+Vivian stayed with her, and Blanche came with me to visit my hunters.
+
+Cecil is a tolerable judge of a horse; she praised Qui Vive's lean head,
+full eye, and silky coat with discrimination, and Qui Vive, though not
+the best-tempered of thorough-breds, let her pat his smooth sides and
+kiss his strong neck without any hostile demonstration.
+
+Vivian watched her as if she were a spoilt child who bewitched him, but
+whom he knew to be naughty; he could not resist the fascination of her
+ways, but he never altered his calm, courteous tone to her--the tone
+Cecil longed to hear change, were it even into invectives against her,
+to testify some deeper interest.
+
+"Now show me the mount you will give me when the frost breaks up and we
+take out the hounds," said Cecil, with a farewell caress of Qui Vive.
+
+"You shall have the grey four-year-old; Billiard-ball, and he will suit
+you exactly, for he is as light as a bird, checks at nothing, and will
+take you safe over the stiffest bullfinch. I know you may trust him, for
+he has carried Blanche."
+
+Cecil threw back her head. "Oh, I would ride anything, Qui Vive himself,
+if he would bear a habit. I am not like Miss Caldecott, who, catching
+sight of his dear brown legs, vanished as rapidly as if she had seen
+Muriel's ghost on Christmas-eve."
+
+The Colonel smiled. "You are very unmerciful to poor Miss Caldecott.
+What has she done to offend you?"
+
+"Offend me! Nothing in the world. Though I heard her lament with Miss
+Screechington in the music-room, that I was 'so fast,' and 'such slang
+style;' I consider that rather a compliment, for I never knew any lady
+pull to pieces my bonnet, or my bouquet, or my hat, unless it was a
+prettier one than their own. That sounds a vain speech, but I don't mean
+it so."
+
+
+The Colonel looked down into her velvet eyes; she was most dangerous to
+him in this mood. "No," he said, briefly, "no one would accuse you of
+vanity, though they might, pardon me, of love of admiration."
+
+Cecil laughed merrily. "Yes, perhaps so; it is pleasant, you know. Yet
+sometimes I am tired of it all, and I want----"
+
+"A more difficult conquest? To find a diamond, merely, like Cleopatra,
+to show your estimate of its value by throwing it away."
+
+A flush of vexation came into her cheeks. "Do you think me utterly
+heartless?" she said impetuously. "No. I mean that I often tire of the
+fulsome compliments, the flattery, the attention, the whirl of society!
+I do like admiration. I tell you candidly what every other woman
+acknowledges to herself but denies to the world; but often it is nothing
+to me--mere Dead Sea fruit. I care nothing for the voices that whisper
+it; the eyes that express it wake no response in mine, and I would give
+it all for one word of true interest, one glance of real----"
+
+Vivian looked down on her steadily with his searching eagle eyes, out of
+which, when he chose, nothing could be read. "If I dare believe you----"
+he said, half aloud.
+
+Gentle as his tone was, the mere doubt stung Cecil to the quick.
+Something of the wild, desperate feeling of the day previous rose in her
+heart. The same feeling that makes men brave heaven and hell to win
+their desires worked up in her. If she had been one of us, just at that
+moment, she would have flinched at nothing; being a young lady, her
+hands were tied. She could only go to Cos's stalls with him (Cos knows
+as much about horseflesh as I do about the profound female mystery they
+call "shopping"), and flirt with him to desperation, while Horace got
+the steam up faster than he, with his very languid motor powers, often
+did, being accustomed to be spared the trouble and have all the love
+made to him--an indolence in which the St. Aubyn, who knows how to keep
+a man well up to hand, never indulged him.
+
+"Do have some pity on me," I heard Cos murmuring, as she stroked a great
+brute of his, with a head like a fiddle-case, and no action at all. "I
+assure you, Miss St. Aubyn, you make me wretched. I'd die for you
+to-morrow if I only saw how, and yet you take no more notice of me
+sometimes than if I were that colt."
+
+Cecil glanced at him with a smile that would have driven Cos distracted
+if he'd been in for it as deep as he pretended.
+
+"I don't see that you are much out of condition, Sir Horace, but if you
+have any particular fancy to suicide, the horse-pond will accommodate
+you at a moment's notice; only don't do it till after our play, because
+I have set my heart on that suit of Milan armor. Pray don't look so
+plaintive. If it will make you any happier, I am going for a walk, and
+you may come too. Blanche, dear, which way is it to the plantations?"
+
+Now poor Horace hated a walk on a frosty morning as cordially as
+anything, being altogether averse to any natural exercise: but he was
+sworn to the St. Aubyn, and Blanche and I, dropping behind them, he had
+a good hour of her fascinations to himself. I do not know whether he
+improved the occasion, but Cecil at luncheon looked tired and teased. I
+should think, after Syd's graphic epigrammatic talk, the baronet's
+lisped nonsense must have been rather trying, especially as Cecil has a
+strong leaning to intellect.
+
+Vivian didn't appear at luncheon; he was gone rabbit-shooting with the
+other fellows, and I should have been with them if I had not thought
+lounging in the drawing-room, reading "Clytemnestra" to Blanche, with
+many pauses, the greater fun of the two. I am keen about sport, too; but
+ever since, at the age of ten, I conceived a romantic passion for my
+mother's lady's-maid--a tall and stately young lady, who eventually
+married a retail tea-dealer--I have thought the beaux yeux the best of
+all games.
+
+"Mrs. Vivian, Blanche and Helena and I want to be very useful, if you
+will let us," said Cecil, one morning. She was always soft and playful
+with that gentlest of all women, Syd's mother. "What do you smile in
+that incredulous way for? We _can_ be extraordinarily industrious: the
+steam sewing-machine is nothing to us when we choose! What do you think
+we are going to do? We are going to decorate the church for Christmas.
+To leave it to that poor little old clerk, who would only stick two
+holly twigs in the pulpit candlesticks, and fancy he had done a work of
+high art, would be madness. And, besides, it will be such fun."
+
+"If you think it so, pray do it, dear," laughed Mrs. Vivian. "I can't
+say I should, but your tastes and mine are probably rather different.
+The servants will do as you direct them."
+
+"Oh no," said Cecil; "we mean to do it all ourselves. The gentlemen may
+help us if they like--those, at least, who prefer our society to that of
+smaller animals, with lop-ears and little bushy tails, who have a
+fascination superior sometimes to any of our attractions." She flashed a
+glance at the Colonel, who was watching her over the top of _Punch_, as,
+when I was a boy, I have watched the sun, though it pained my eyes to do
+it. "You're the grand seigneur of Deerhurst," said Cecil, turning to
+him; "will you be good, and order cart-loads of holly and evergreens
+(and plenty of the Portugal laurel, please, because it's so pretty) down
+to the church; and will you come and do all the hard work for me? The
+rabbits would _so_ enjoy a little peace to-day, poor things!"
+
+He smiled in spite of himself, and did her bidding, with a flush of
+pleasure on his face. I believe at that moment, to please her, he would
+have cut down the best timber on the estates--even the old oaks, in
+whose shadow in the midsummer of centuries before Guy Vivian and Muriel
+had plighted their troth.
+
+The way to the church was through a winding walk, between high walls of
+yew, and the sanctuary itself was a find old Norman place, whose _tout
+ensemble_ I admired, though I could not pick it to pieces
+architecturally.
+
+To the church we all went, of course, with more readiness than we
+probably ever did in our lives, regardless of the rose chains with which
+we were very likely to become entangled, while white hands weaved the
+holly wreaths.
+
+Vivian had ordered evergreens enough to decorate fifty churches, and had
+sent over to the neighboring town for no end of ribbon emblazonments and
+illuminated scrolls, on which Cecil looked with delight. She seemed to
+know by instinct it was done for _her_, and not for his sisters.
+
+"How kind that is of you," she said, softly. "That is like what you were
+in Toronto. Why are you not always the same?"
+
+For a moment she saw passion enough in his eye to satisfy her, but he
+soon mastered it, and answered her courteously:
+
+"I am very glad they please you. Shall we go to work at once, for fear
+it grow dusk before we get through with it?"
+
+"Can I do anything to help you?" murmured Cos in her ear.
+
+She did not want him, and laughed mischievously. "You can cut some holly
+if you like. Begin on those large boughs."
+
+"Better not, Cos," said the Colonel. "You will certainly soil your
+hands, and you might chance to scratch them."
+
+"And if you did you would never forgive me, so I will let you off duty.
+You may go back to the dormeuse and the 'Lys de la Vallée' if you wish,"
+laughed Cecil.
+
+Horace looked sulky, and curled his blond whiskers in dudgeon, while
+Cecil, with half a dozen satellites about her, proceeded to work with
+vigorous energy, keeping Syd, however, as her head workman; and the
+Colonel twisted pillars, nailed up crosses, hung wreaths, and put up
+illuminated texts, as if he had been a carpenter all his life, and his
+future subsistence entirely depended on his adorning Deerhurst church in
+good taste. It was amusing to me to see him, whom the highest London
+society, the gayest Paris life bored--who pronounced the most dashing
+opera supper and the most vigorous debates alike slow--taking the
+deepest interest in decorating a little village church! I question if
+Eros did not lurk under the shiny leaves and the scarlet berries of
+those holly boughs quite as dangerously as ever he did under the rose
+petals consecrated to him.
+
+I had my own affairs to attend to, sitting on the pulpit stairs at
+Blanche's feet, twisting the refractory evergreens at her direction; but
+I kept an occasional look-out at the Colonel and his dangerous Canadian
+for all that. They found time (as we did) for plenty of conversation
+over the Christmas decorations, and Cecil talked softly and earnestly
+for once without any "mischief." She talked of her father's
+embarrassments, her mother's trials, of Mrs. Coverdale, with honest
+detestation of that widow's arts and artifices, and of her own tastes,
+and ideas, and feelings, showing the Colonel (what she did not show
+generally to her numerous worshippers) her heart as well as her mind. As
+she knelt on the altar steps, twisting green leaves round the communion
+rails, Syd standing beside her, his pale bronze cheek flushed, and his
+eyes never left their study of her face as she bent over her work,
+looking up every minute to ask him for another branch, or another strip
+of blue ribbon.
+
+When it had grown dusk, and the church was finished, looking certainly
+very pretty, with the dark leaves against its white pillars, and the
+scarlet berries kissing the stained windows, Cecil went noiselessly up
+into the organ-loft, and played the Christmas anthem. Vivian followed
+her, and, leaning against the organ, watched her, shading his eyes with
+his hand. She went on playing--first a Miserere, then Mozart's Symphony
+in E, and then improvisations of her own--the sort of music that, when
+one stands calmly to listen to it, makes one feel it whether one likes
+or not. As she played, tears rose to her lashes, and she looked up at
+Vivian's face, bending over her in the gloaming. Love was in her eyes,
+and Syd knew it, but feared to trust to it. His pulses beat fast, he
+leaned towards her, till his mustaches touched her soft perfumy hair.
+Words hung on his lips. But the door of the organ-loft opened.
+
+"'Pon my life, Miss St. Aubyn, that's divine, delicious!" cried Cos. "We
+always thought that you were divine, but we never knew till now that you
+brought the angels' harmony with you to earth. For Heaven's sake, play
+that last thing again!"
+
+"I never play what I compose twice," said Cecil, hurriedly, stooping
+down for her hat.
+
+Vivian cursed him inwardly for his untimely interruption, but cooler
+thought made him doubt if he were not well saved some words, dictates of
+hasty passion, that he might have lived to repent. For Guy Vivian's fate
+warned him, and he mistrusted the love of a flirt, if flirt, as he
+feared--from her sudden caprices to him, her alternate impatience with,
+and encouragement of, his cousin--Cecil St. Aubyn would prove. He gave
+her his arm down the yew-tree walk. Neither of them spoke all the way,
+but he sent a servant on for another shawl, and wrapped it round her
+very tenderly when it came; and when he stood in the lighted hall, I saw
+by the stern, worn look of his face--the look I have seen him wear after
+a hard fight--that the fiery passions in him had been having a fierce
+battle.
+
+That evening the St. Aubyn was off her fun, said she was tired, and,
+disregarding the misery she caused to Cos and four other men, who,
+figuratively speaking, _not_ literally, for they went into the "dry" and
+comestibles fast enough, had lived on her smiles for the last month,
+excused herself to Mrs. Vivian, and departed to her dormitory. Syd gave
+her her candle, and held her little hand two seconds in his as he bid
+her softly good night at the foot of the staircase.
+
+I did not get much out of him in the balcony that night, and long after
+I had turned in, I scented his Cavendish as he smoked, Heaven knows how
+many pipes, in the chill December air. The next day, the 23rd, was the
+night of our theatricals, which went off as dashingly as if Mr. Kean,
+with his eternal "R-r-r-richard," had been there to superintend them.
+
+All the country came; dowagers and beauties, with the odor of Belgravia
+still strong about them: people not quite so high, who were not the
+rose, but living near it, toadied that flower with much amusing and
+undue worship; a detachment of Dragoons from the next town, whom the
+girls wanted to draw, and the mammas to warn off--Dragoons being
+ordinarily better waltzers than speculations; all the magnates, custos
+rotulorum, sheriff, members, and magistrates--the two latter portions of
+the constitution being chiefly remarkable for keenness about hunting and
+turnips, and an unchristian and deadly enmity against all poachers and
+vagrants; rectors, who tossed down the still Ai with Falstaff's keen
+relish; other rectors, who came against their principles, but preferred
+fashion to salvation, having daughters to marry and sons to start;
+hunting men; girls who could waltz in a nutshell; dandies of St.
+James's, and veterans of Pall-Mall, down for the Christmas; belles
+renewing their London acquaintance, and recalling that "pleasant day at
+Richmond." But, by Jove! if I describe all the different species
+presented to view in that ball-room, I might use as many words as an old
+whip giving you the genealogy of a killing pack in a flying county.
+
+Suffice it, there they all were to criticise us, and pretty sharply I
+dare say they did it, when they were out of our hearing, in their
+respective clarences, broughams, dog-carts, drags, tilburies, and
+hansoms. Before our faces, of course, they only clapped their snowy kid
+gloves, and murmured "Bravissimo!" with an occasional "Go it, Jack!" and
+"Get up the steam, old fellow!" from the young bloods in the background;
+and a shower of bouquets at Cecil and Blanche from their especial
+worshippers.
+
+Blanche made the dearest little _Catherine_ that ever dressed herself up
+in blue and silver, and when she drew her toy-rapier in the green-room,
+asked me if I could not get her a cornetcy in ours. As for Cecil, she
+played _à ravir_ as Cos, in his Milan armor, whispered with some
+difficulty, as the steel gorget pressed his throat uncomfortably.
+Vestris herself never made a more brilliant or impassioned _Countess_.
+She and Syd really acquitted themselves in a style to qualify them for
+London boards, and as she threw herself at his feet--
+
+ Huon--my husband--lord--canst thou forgive
+ The scornful maid? for the devoted wife
+ Had cleaved to thee, though ne'er she owned thee lord,
+
+I thought the St. Aubyn must be as great an actress as Rachel, if some
+of that fervor was not real.
+
+Cecil played in the afterpiece, "The wonderful Woman;" the Colonel
+didn't; and Cos being _De Frontignac_, Syd leaned against one of the
+scenes, and looked on the whole thing with calm indifference externally,
+but much disquietude and annoyance within him. He was not jealous of the
+puppy; he would as soon have thought of putting himself on a par with
+Blanche's little white terrier, but he'd come to set a price on Cecil's
+winning smiles, and to see them given pretty equally to him, and to a
+young fool, her inferior in everything save position, whom he knew in
+her inmost soul she must ridicule and despise, galled his pride, and
+steeled his heart against her. His experience in women made him know
+that it was highly probable that Cecil was playing both at once, and
+that though, as he guessed, she loved him, she would, if Cos offered
+first, accept the title, and wealth, and position his cousin, equally
+with himself, could give her; and such love as that was far from the
+Colonel's ideal.
+
+"By George! Vivian, that Canadian of yours is a perfect angel," said a
+man in the Dragoons, who had played _Ulric_. "She's such a deuced lot
+ove pluck, such eyes, such hair, such a voice! 'Pon my life, I quite
+envy you. I suppose you mean to act out the play in reality, don't you?"
+
+Vivian lying back in an arm-chair in the green-room crushed up one of
+the satin playbills in his hand, and answered simply, "You do me too
+much honor, Calvert. Miss St. Aubyn and I have no thought of each
+other."
+
+If any man had given Vivian the lie, he would have had him out and shot
+him instanter; nevertheless, he told this one with the most unhesitating
+defiance of truth. He did not see Cecil, who had just come off the
+stage, standing behind him. But she heard his words, went as white as
+Muriel's phantom, and brushed past us into her dressing room, whence she
+emerged, when her name was called, her cheeks bright with their first
+rouge, and her eyes unnaturally brilliant. _How_ she flirted with Horace
+that night, when the theatricals were over! Young ladies who wanted to
+hook the pet baronet, whispered over their bouquets, "How bold!" and
+dowagers, seeing one of their best matrimonial speculations endangered
+by the brilliant Canadian, murmured behind their fans to each other
+their wonder that Mrs. Vivian should allow any one so fast and so
+unblushing a coquette to associate with her young daughters.
+
+Vivian watched her with intense earnestness. He had given her a bouquet
+that day, and she had thanked him for it with her soft, fond eyes, and
+told him she should use it. Now, as she came into the ball-room, he
+looked at the one in her hand; it was not his, but his cousin's.
+
+He set his teeth hard; and swore a bitter oath to himself. As _Huon_, he
+was obliged to dance the first dance with the _Countess_, but he spoke
+little to her, and indeed, Cecil did not give him much opportunity, for
+she talked fast, and at random, on all sorts of indifferent subjects,
+with more than even her usual vivacity, and quite unlike the ordinary
+soft and winning way she had used of late when with him. He danced no
+more with her, but, daring the waltzes with which he was obliged to
+favor certain county beauties, and all the time he was doing the honors
+of Deerhurst, with his calm, stately, Bayard-like courtesy, his eyes
+would fasten on the St. Aubyn, driving the Dragoons to desperation,
+waltzing while Horace whispered tender speeches in her ear, or sitting
+jesting and laughing, half the men in the room gathered round her--with
+a look of passion and hopelessness, tenderness and determination,
+strangely combined.
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+THE COLONEL KILLS HIS FOX, BUT LOSES HIS HEAD AFTER OTHER GAME.
+
+
+The next day was Christmas-eve; and on the 24th of December the hounds,
+from time immemorial, had been taken out by a Vivian. For the last few
+days the frost had been gradually breaking up, thank Heaven, and we
+looked forward to a good day's sport The meet was at Deerhurst, and it
+proved a strong muster for the Harkaway; though not exactly up to the
+Northamptonshire Leicestershire mark, are a clever, steady pack. Cecil
+and Blanche were the only two women with us, for the country is cramped
+and covered with blind fences, and the fair sex seldom hunt with the
+Harkaway. But the St. Aubyn is a first-rate seat, and Blanche has, she
+tells me, ridden anything from the day she first stuck on to her
+Shetland, when she was three years old. They were both down in time.
+Indeed, I question if they went to bed at all, or did any more than
+change their ball dresses for their habits. As I lifted Blanche on to
+her pet chestnut, I heard Syd telling Cecil that Billiard-ball was
+saddled.
+
+"Thank you," said the St. Aubyn, hurriedly. "I need not trouble you.
+Sir Horace has promised to mount me."
+
+Vivian bent his head with a strange smile, and sprang on Qui Vive, while
+Cecil mounted a showy roan, thorough-bred, the only good horse Cos had
+in his stud, despite the thousands he had paid into trainers' and
+breeders' pockets.
+
+"Stole away--forward, forward!" screamed Vivian's fellow-member for
+Cacklebury; and, holding Qui Vive hard by the head, away went Syd after
+the couple or two of hounds that were leading the way over some pasture
+land, with an ox-rail at the bottom of it, all the field after him.
+Cecil's roan flew over the grass land, and rose at the ox-rail as
+steadily as Qui Vive. Blanche's chestnut let himself be kicked along at
+no end of a pace, his mistress sitting down in her stirrups as well as
+the gallant M. F. H., her father. I never _do_ think of anything but the
+hounds flying along in front of me, but I could not help turning my head
+over my shoulder to see if she was all right; and I never admired her so
+much as when she passed me with a merry laugh: "Five to one I beat you,
+monsieur!" Away we went over the dark ploughed lands, and the naked
+thorn hedges, the wide straggling briar fences, and the fields covered
+with stones and belted with black-looking plantations. Down went Cos
+with his horse wallowing helplessly in a ditch, after considerately
+throwing him unhurt on the bank. Syd set his teeth as he lifted Qui Vive
+over the prostrate baronet, to the imminent danger of that dandy
+field-sportsman's life. "Take hold of his head, Miss St. Aubyn," shouted
+the M. F. H.; but before the words had passed his lips, Cecil had landed
+gallantly a little farther down. Another ten minutes with the hounds
+streaming over the country--a ten minutes of wild delight, worth all the
+monotonous hours of every-day life--and Qui Vive was alone with the
+hounds. We could see him speeding along a quarter of a mile ahead of us,
+and Cecil's roan was but half a field behind him. She was "riding
+jealous" of one of the best riders in the Queen's; the M. F. H. just in
+front of her turned his head once, in admiration of her pluck, to see
+her lift her horse at a staken-bound fence; but the Colonel never looked
+round. Away they went--they disappeared over the brow of a hill. Blanche
+shook her reins and struck her chestnut, and I sawed my hunter's mouth
+mercilessly with the snaffle. No use--we were too late by three minutes.
+Confound it! they had just killed their fox after twenty minutes' burst
+over a stiff country, one of the fastest things I ever saw.
+
+Cecil was pale with over-excitement, and upon my word she looked more
+ready to cry than anything when the M. F. H. complimented her with his
+genial smile, and his cordial "Well done, my dear. I never saw anybody
+ride better. I used to think my little Blanche the best seat in the
+country, but she must give place to you--eh, Syd?"
+
+"Miss St. Aubyn does everything well that she attempts," answered the
+Colonel, in his calm, courteous tone, looking, nevertheless, as stern as
+if he had just slain his deadliest enemy, instead of having seen a fox
+killed.
+
+Cecil flushed scarlet, and Cos coming up at that moment, a sadly
+bespattered object for such an Adonis to present, his coat possessing
+more the appearance of a bricklayer's than any one else's, after its
+bath of white mud, she turned to him, and began to laugh and talk with
+rather wild gaiety. It so chanced that the fox was killed on Horace's
+land, and we, being not more than a mile and a half off his house, the
+gallant Cos immediately seized upon the idea of having the object of his
+idolatry up there to luncheon; and his uncle, and Cecil, and Blanche
+acquiescing in the arrangement, to his house we went, with such of the
+field as had ridden up after the finish. Cos trotted forward with the
+St. Aubyn to show us the way by a short cut through the park, and the
+echoes of Cecil's laughter rang to Vivian in the rear discussing the run
+with his father.
+
+A very slap-up place was Cos's baronial hall, for the Cossettings had
+combined blood and money far many generations; its style and
+appointments were calculated to back him powerfully in the matrimonial
+market, and that Cecil might have it all was fully apparent, as he
+devoted himself to her at the luncheon, which made its appearance at a
+minute's notice, as if Aladdin had called it up. Cecil seemed disposed
+to have it too. A deep flush had come up in her cheeks; she smiled her
+brightest smiles on Cos; she drank his Moët's, bending her graceful head
+with a laughing pledge to her host; she talked so fast, so gaily, such
+repartee, such sarcasms, such jeux de mots, that it was well no women
+were at table to sit in judgment on her afterwards. A deadly paleness
+came over Vivian's face as he listened to her--but he sat at the bottom
+of the board where Cecil could not see him. His father, the gayest and
+best-tempered of mortals, laughed and applauded her; the other men were
+charmed with a style and a wit so new to them; and Cos, of course, was
+in the seventh heaven.
+
+The horses were dead beat, and Cos's drag, with its four bays very
+fresh, for they were so little worked, was ordered to take us back to
+Deerhurst.
+
+"Who'll drive," said Horace. "Will you, Syd?"
+
+"No," said his cousin, more laconically than politely.
+
+"Let _me_," cried Cecil. "I can drive four in hand. Nothing I like
+better."
+
+"Give me the ribbons," interposed the Colonel, changing his mind, "if
+you can't drive them yourself, Cos, as you ought to do."
+
+"No, no," murmured Cos. "Mith St. Aubyn shall do everything she wishes
+in _my_ house."
+
+"Let her drive them," laughed Vivian, senior. "Blanche has tooled my
+drag often enough before now."
+
+Before he had finished, Cecil had sprung up on to the box as lightly as
+a bird; her cheeks were flushed deeper still, and her gazelle eyes
+flashed darker than ever. Cos mounted beside her. Blanche and I in the
+back seat. The M. F. H., Syd, and the two other men behind. The bays
+shook their harness and started off at a rattling pace, Cecil tooling
+them down the avenue with her little gauntleted hands as well as if she
+had been Four-in-hand Forester of the Queen's Bays, or any other crack
+whip. How she flirted, and jested, and laughed, and shook the ribbons
+till the bays tore along the stony road in the dusky winter's
+afternoon--even Blanche, though a game little lady herself, looked
+anxious.
+
+Cecil asked Horace for a cigar, and struck a fusee, and puffed away into
+the frosty air like the wildest young Cantab at Trinity. It didn't make
+her sick, for she and Blanche had had two Queens out of Vivian's case,
+and smoked them to the last ash for fun only the day before; and she
+drove us at a mad gallop into Deerhurst Park, past the dark trees and
+the gleaming water and the trooping deer, and pulled up before the hall
+door just as the moon came out on Christmas-eve.
+
+We were all rather fast at Deerhurst, so Blanche got no scolding from
+her mamma (who, like a sensible woman, never put into their heads that
+things done in the glad innocency of the heart were "wrong"); and Cecil,
+as soon as she had sprung down, snatched her hand from Cos, and went up
+to her own room.
+
+The Colonel's lips were pressed close together, and his forehead had the
+dark frown that Guy wears in his portrait.
+
+It had been done with another, so it was all wrong; but oh! Syd, my
+friend, if the "dry" that was drunk, and the drag that was tooled, and
+the weed that was smoked, had been _yours_, wouldn't it have been the
+most charming caprice of the most charming woman!
+
+That night, at dinner, a letter by the afternoon's post came to the
+Colonel. It was "On her Majesty's Service," and his mother asked him
+anxiously what it was.
+
+"Only to tell me to join soon," said he, carelessly, giving me a sign to
+keep the contents of a similar letter I had just received to myself;
+which I should have done anyhow, as I had reason to hope that the
+disclosure of them would have quenched the light in some bright eyes
+beside me.
+
+"Ordered off at last, thank God!" said Syd, handing his father the
+letter as soon as the ladies were gone. "There's a train starts at
+12.40, isn't there, for town? You and I, Ned, had better go to-night.
+You don't look so charmed, old fellow, as you did when you went out to
+Scinde. I say, don't tell my sisters; there is no need to make a row in
+the house. Governor, you'll prepare my mother; I must bid _her_
+good-by."
+
+I _did not_ view the Crimea with the unmingled, devil-me-care delight
+with which I had gone out under "fighting Napier" nine years before,
+for Blanche's sunshiny face had made life fairer to me; and to obey Syd,
+and go without a farewell of her, was really too great a sacrifice to
+friendship. But he and I went to the drawing-rooms, chatted, and took
+coffee as if nothing had chanced, till he could no longer stand seeing
+Cecil, still excited, singing chansons to Cos, who was leaning
+enraptured over the instrument, and he went off to his own room. The
+other girls and men were busy playing the Race game; Blanche and I were
+sitting in the back drawing-room beside the fire, and the words that
+decided my destiny were so few, that I cite them as a useful lesson to
+those novelists who are in the habit of making their heroes, while
+waiting breathless to hear their fate, recite off at a cool canter four
+pages of the neatest-turned sentences without a single break-down or a
+single pull-up, to see how the lady takes it.
+
+"Blanche, I must bid you good-by to-night." Blanche turned to me in
+bewildered anxiety. "I must join my troop: perhaps I may be sent to the
+Crimea. I could go happily if I thought you would regret me?"
+
+Brutally selfish that was to be sure, but she did not take it so. She
+looked as if she was going to faint, and for fear she should, trusting
+to the engrossing nature of the Race game in the further apartment, I
+drew nearer to her. "Will you promise to give yourself to nobody else
+while I am away, my darling?" Blanche's eyes did promise me through
+their tears, and this brief scene, occupying the space of two minutes,
+twisted our fates into one on that eventful Christmas-eve.
+
+While I was parting with my poor little Blanche in the library, Vivian
+was bidding his mother farewell in her dressing-room. His mother had the
+one soft place in his heart, steeled and made skeptical to all others by
+that fatal first love of which he had spoken to Cecil. Possibly some of
+her son's bitter grief was shown to her on that sad Christmas-eve; at
+all events, when he left her dressing-room, he had the tired, haggard
+look left by any conflict of passion. As he came down the stairs to come
+to the dog-cart that was to take us to the station, the door of
+Blanche's boudoir stood open, and in it he saw Cecil. The fierce tide of
+his love surged up, subduing all his pride, and he paused to take his
+last sight of the face that would haunt him in the long night watches
+and the rapid rush of many a charge. She looked up and saw him; that
+look overpowered all his calmness and resolve. He turned, and bent
+towards her, every feature quivering with the passion she had once
+longed to rouse. His hot breath scorched her cheek, and he caught her
+fiercely against his heart in an iron embrace, pressing his burning lips
+on hers. "God forgive you! I have loved you too well. Women have ever
+been fatal to my race!"
+
+He almost threw her from him in the violence of feelings roused after a
+long sleep. In another moment he was driving the dog-cart at a mad
+gallop past the old church in which we had spent such pleasant hours.
+Its clock tolled out twelve strokes as we passed it, and on the quiet
+village, and the weird-like trees, and the tall turrets of Deerhurst,
+the Christmas morning dawned.
+
+Vivian continued so utterly enfeebled and prostrate that there was but
+one chance for him--return homewards. I was going to England with
+despatches, and Syd, at his mother's entreaty, let himself be carried
+down to a transport, and shipped for England. He was utterly listless
+and strengthless, although the voyage did him a little good. He did not
+care where he went, so he stayed in town with me while I presented
+myself at the Horse Guards and war Office, and then we travelled down
+together to Deerhurst.
+
+Oddly enough it was Christmas-eve again when we drove up the old avenue.
+The snow was falling heavily, and lay deep on the road and thick on the
+hedges and trees. The meadows and woods were white against the dark,
+hushed sky, and the old church, and its churchyard cedars, were loaded
+too with the clouds' Christmas gift. To me, at least, the English scene
+was very pleasant, after the heat, and dirt, and minor worries of
+Gallipoli and Constantinople. The wide stretching country, with its
+pollards, and holly hedges, and homesteads, the cattle safe housed, the
+yule fire burning cheerily on the hearths, the cottages and farms
+nestling down among their orchards and pasture-lands, all was so
+heartily and thoroughly English. They seemed to bring back days when I
+was a boy skating and sliding on the mere at home, or riding out with
+the harriers light-hearted and devil-me-care as a boy might be, coming
+back to hear the poor governor's cheery voice tell me I was one of the
+old stock, and to toss down a bumper of Rhenish with a time-honored
+Christmas toast. The crackle of the crisp snow, the snort of the horses
+as they plunged on into the darkening night, and the red fire-light
+flickering on the lattice windows of the cottages we passed, were so
+many welcomes home, and I double-thonged the off-wheeler with a
+vengeance as I thought of soft lips that would soon touch mine, and a
+soft voice that would soon whisper my best "Io triumphe!"
+
+The lodge-gates flew open. We passed the old oaks and beeches, the deer
+trooping away over the snow as we startled them out of their rest. We
+were not expected that night, and my man rang such a peal at the bell as
+might have been heard all over the quiet park. Another minute, and
+Blanche and I were together again, and alone in the library where we had
+parted just twelve months before. Of course, for the time being, we
+neither knew nor cared what was going on in the other rooms of the
+house. The Colonel had gone to rest himself on the sofa in the
+dining-room. Half an hour had elapsed, perhaps, when a wild cry rang
+through the house, startling even us, absorbed though we were in our
+tête-à-tête. Blanche's first thought was of her brother. She ran out
+through the hall, and up the staircase, and I followed her. At the top
+of the stairs, leaning against the wall, breathing fast, and his face
+ashy white, stood Syd, and at his feet, in a dead faint, lay Cecil St.
+Aubyn. I caught hold of Blanche's arm and held her back as she was about
+to spring forward. I thought their meeting had much best be
+uninterrupted; for, if Cecil's had been mere flirtation I fancied the
+Colonel's return could scarcely have moved her like this.
+
+Vivian stood looking down on her, all the passion in him breaking
+bounds. He could not stand calmly by the woman he loved. He did not wait
+to know whether she was his or another's--whether she was worthy or
+unworthy of him--but he lifted her up and pressed her unconscious form
+against his heart, covering her lips with wild caresses. Waking from her
+trance, she opened her eyes with a terrified stare, and gazed up in his
+face; then tears came to her relief, and she sank down at his feet again
+with a pitiful cry, "Forgive me--forgive me!" Weak as Syd was, he found
+strength to raise her in his arms, and whisper, as he bent over her, "If
+you love me, I have nothing to forgive."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The snow fell softly without over the woods and fields and the winds
+roared through the old oaks and whistled among the frozen ferns, but
+Christmas-eve passed brightly enough to us at home within the strong
+walls of Deerhurst.
+
+I am sure that all Moore's pictures of Paradise seemed to me tame
+compared to that drawing-room, with its warmth, and coziness, and
+luxuries; with the waxlights shining on the silver of the English tea
+equipage (pleasant to eye and taste, let one love campaigning ever so
+well, after the roast beans of the Commissariat), and the fire-gleams
+dancing on the soft brow and shining hair of the face beside me. I doubt
+if Vivian either ever spent a happier Christmas-eve as he lay on the
+sofa in the back drawing-room, with Cecil sitting on a low seat by him,
+her hand in his, and the Canadian eyes telling him eloquently of love
+and reconciliation. They had such volumes to say! As soon as she knew
+that wild farewell of his preceded his departure to the Crimea, Cecil,
+always impulsive, had written to him on the instant, telling him how she
+loved him, detailing what she had heard in the green-room, confessing
+that, in desperation, she had done everything she could to rouse his
+jealousy, assuring him that that same evening she had refused Cos's
+proposals, and beseeching him to forgive her and come back to her. That
+letter Vivian had never had (six months from that time, by the way, it
+turned up, after a journey to India and Melbourne, following a cousin of
+his, colonel of a line regiment, she in her haste having omitted to put
+his troop on the address), and Cecil, whose feeling was too deep to let
+her mention the subject to Blanche or Helena, made up her mind that he
+would never forgive her, and being an impressionable young lady, had, on
+the anniversary of Christmas-eve, been comparing her fate with that of
+Muriel in the ghost legend, and, on seeing the Colonel's unexpected
+apparition, had fainted straight away in the over-excitement and sudden
+joy of the moment.
+
+Such was Cecil's story, and Vivian was content with it and gladly took
+occasion to practise the Christmas duties of peace, and love, and
+pardon. He had the best anodyne for his wounds now, and there was no
+danger for him, since Cecil had taken the place of the Scutari nurses.
+No "Crimean heroes," as they call us in the papers, were ever more fêted
+and petted than were the Colonel and I.
+
+Christmas morning dawned, the sun shining bright on the snow-covered
+trees, and the Christmas bells chiming merrily; and as we stood on the
+terrace to see the whole village trooping up through the avenue to
+receive the gifts left to them by some old Vivian long gone to his rest
+with his forefathers under the churchyard cedars, Syd looked down with a
+smile into Cecil's eyes as she hung on his arm, and whispered,
+
+"I will double those alms, love, in memory of the priceless gift this
+Christmas has given me. Ah! Thornton and I little knew, when we came
+down for the hunting, how fast you and Blanche would capture us with
+your--HOLLY WREATHS AND ROSE CHAINS."
+
+
+
+
+SILVER CHIMES AND GOLDEN FETTERS.
+
+
+
+
+SILVER CHIMES AND GOLDEN FETTERS.
+
+
+
+
+I.
+
+WALDEMAR FALKENSTEIN AND VALÉRIE L'ESTRANGE.
+
+
+"A quarter to twelve! By Heaven if my luck don't change before the year
+is out, I vow I'll never touch a card in the next!" exclaimed one of
+several men playing lansquenet in Harry Godolphin's rooms at
+Knightsbridge.
+
+There were seven or eight of them, some with long rent-rolls, others
+within an ace of the Queen's Bench; the poor devils losing in the long
+run much oftener and more recklessly than the rich fellows; all of them
+playing high, as that _beau joueur_ of the Guards, Godolphin, always
+did.
+
+Luck had been dead against the man who spoke ever since they had
+deserted the mess-room for the _cartes_ in the privacy of Harry's rooms.
+If Fortune is a woman, he ought to have found favor in her eyes. His age
+was between thirty and thirty-five, his figure with grace and strength
+combined, his features nobly and delicately cut, his head, like
+Canning's, one of great intellectual beauty, and by the flash of his
+large dark eyes, and the additional paleness of his cheek, it was easy
+to see he was playing high once too often.
+
+Five minutes passed--he lost still; ten minutes' luck was yet against
+him. A little French clock began the Silver Chimes that rang out the Old
+Year; the twelfth stroke sounded, the New Year was come, and Waldemar
+Falkenstein rose and drank down some cognac--a ruined man.
+
+"A happy New Year to you, and better luck, Falkenstein," cried
+Godolphin, drinking his toast with a ringing laugh and a foaming bumper
+of Chambertin. "What shall I wish you? The richest wife in the kingdom,
+a cabal that will break all the banks, for Mistletoe to win the Oaks, or
+for your eyes to be opened to your sinful state, as the parson phrases
+it--which, eh?"
+
+"Thank you, Harry," laughed Falkenstein. (Like the old Spartans, we can
+laugh while the wolf gnaws our vitals.) "You remind me of what my
+holy-minded brother wrote to me when I broke my shoulder-bone down at
+Melton last season: 'My dear Waldemar, I am sorry to hear of your sad
+accident; but all things are ordered for the best, and I trust that in
+your present hours of solitude your thoughts may be mercifully turned to
+higher and better things.' Queer style of sympathy, wasn't it? I
+preferred yours, when you sent me 'Adélaïde Méran,' and that splendid
+hock I wasn't allowed to touch."
+
+"I should say so; but catch the Pharisees giving anybody anything warmer
+than texts and counsels, that cost them nothing," said Tom Bevan of the
+Blues. "Apropos of Pharisees, have you heard that old Cash is going to
+build a chapel-of-ease in Belgravia, to endow that young owl Gus with as
+soon as he can pull himself through his 'greats?' It is thought that the
+dear Bella will be painted as St. Catherine for the altar-piece."
+
+"She'll strychnine herself if we're all so hard-hearted as to leave her
+to St. Catharine's nightcap," laughed Falkenstein.
+
+"Why don't _you_ take up with her, old fellow?" said a man in
+Godolphin's troop. "Not the sangue puro, you'd say; rather sallied with
+XXX. But what does that signify? you've quarterings enough for two."
+
+"Much good the quarterings do me. No, thank you," said Falkenstein
+bitterly. "I'm not going to sell myself, though my dear friends would
+insinuate that I was sold already to a gentleman who never quits hold of
+his bargains. I've fetters enough now too heavy by half to add
+matrimonial handcuffs to them."
+
+"Right, old boy," said Harry. "The Cashranger hops and vats, even done
+in the brightest parvenu _or_, would scarcely look well blazoned on the
+royal _gules_. Come, sit down. Where are you going?"
+
+"He's going to Eulalie Brown's, I bet," said Bevan. "Nonsense, Waldemar;
+throw her over, and stay and take your revenge--it's so early."
+
+"No, thank you," said Falkenstein briefly. "By the way, I suppose you
+all go to Cashranger's to-morrow?"
+
+"Make a point of it, answered Godolphin. I feel I'm sinning against my
+Order to visit him, but really his Lafitte's so good----I'm sorry you
+_will_ leave us, Waldemar, but I know I might as well try to move the
+Marble Arch as try to turn you."
+
+"Indeed I never set up for a Roman, Harry. The deuce take this pipe, it
+won't light. Good night to you all." And leaving them drinking hard,
+laughing loud, and telling _grivois_ tales before they sat down to play
+in all its delirious delight, he sprang into a hanson, and drove, not to
+Eulalie Brown's _petit souper_, but to his own rooms in Duke Street, St.
+James's.
+
+Falkenstein's governor, some two-score years before, had got in
+mauvaise odeur in Vienna for some youthful escapade at court; powerful
+as his princely family was, had been obliged to fly the country; and,
+coming over here, entered himself at the Bar, and, setting himself to
+work with characteristic energy, had, wonderful to relate, made a
+fortune at it. A fine, gallant, courtly _ancien noble_ was the Count,
+haughty and passionate at times, after the manner of the house; fond of
+his younger son Waldemar, who at school had tanned boys twice his size;
+rode his pony in at the finish; smoked, swam, and otherwise conducted
+himself, till all the rest of the boys worshipped him, though I believe
+the masters generally attributed to him more _diablerie_ than divinity.
+But of late, unluckily, his father had been much dominated over by
+Waldemar's three sisters, ladies of a chill and High Church turn of
+mind, and by his brother, who in early life had been a prize boy and a
+sap, and received severe buffetings from his junior at football; and
+now, being much the more conventional and unimpeachable of the two, took
+his revenge by carrying many tales to the old Count of his wilder
+son--tales to which Falkenstein gave strong foundation. For he was
+restless and reckless, strikingly original, and, above the common herd,
+too impatient to take any meddling with his affairs, and too proud to
+explain where he was misjudged; and, though he held a crack government
+place, good pay, and all but a sinecure, he often spent more than he
+had, for economy was a dead-letter to him, and if any man asked him a
+loan, he was too generous to say "No." Life in all its phases he had
+seen from the time he left school, and you know, mon ami, we cannot see
+life on a groat--at least, through the bouquet of the wines at Véfours,
+and the brilliance of the gas-light in Casinos and Redoutes. The
+fascinations of play were over him--the iron hand of debt pressed upon
+him; altogether, as he sat through the first hours of the New Year,
+smoking, and gazing on the flickering fire gleams, there was not much
+light either in his past or future!
+
+Keenly imaginative and susceptible, blasé and skeptical though he was,
+the weight of the Old Year and of many gone before it, weighed heavily
+on his thoughts. Scenes and deeds of his life, that he would willingly
+have blotted out, rose before him; vague regrets, unformed desires,
+floated to him on the midnight chimes.
+
+The Old Year was drifting away on the dark clouds floating on to the
+sea, the New Year was dawning on the vast human life swarming in the
+costly palaces and crowded dens around him. The past was past,
+ineffaceable, and relentless; the future lay hid in the unborn days, and
+Falkenstein, his pipe out, his fire cold and black, took a sedative, and
+threw himself on his bed, to sleep heavily and restlessly through the
+struggling morning light of the New Year.
+
+James Cashranger, Esq., of 133, Lowndes Square, was a millionnaire, and
+the million owed its being to the sale of his entire, which was of high
+celebrity, being patronised by all the messes and clubs, shipped to all
+the colonies, blessed by all the H. E. I. C.s, shouted by all the potmen
+as "Beer-r-r-how," and consumed by all England generally. But
+Cashranger's soul soared above the snobisms of malt and jack, and à la
+Jourdain, of bourgeois celebrity, he would have let any Dorante of the
+beau monde fleece him through thick and thin, and, _en effet_, gave
+dinners and drums unnumbered to men and women, who, like Godolphin, went
+there for the sake of his Lafitte, and quizzed him mercilessly behind
+his back. The first day Harry dined there with nine other spirits worse
+than himself--Cashranger having begged him to bring some of his
+particular chums--he looked at the eleventh seat, and asked, with
+consummate impudence, who it was for?
+
+"Why, really, my dear Colonel, it is for--for myself," faltered the
+luckless brewer.
+
+"Oh?--ah?--I see," drawled Harry; "you mistook me; I said I'd dine
+_here_--I didn't say I'd dine with _you_."
+
+That, however, was four or five years before; now, Godolphin having
+proclaimed his cook and cellar worth countenancing, and his wife, the
+relict of a lieutenant in the navy, being an admirable adept in the
+snob's art of "pushing," plenty of exclusive dandies and extensive fine
+ladies crushed up the stairs on New Year's-night to one of Cashranger's
+numerous "At homes." Among them, late enough, came Falkenstein. These
+sort of crushes bored him beyond measure, but he wanted to see Godolphin
+about some intelligence he had had of an intended illegitimate use of
+the twitch to Mistletoe, that sweet little chestnut who stood favorite
+for the Oaks. He soon paid his devoir to madame, who wasn't quite
+accustomed even yet to all this grandeur after her early struggles on
+half-pay, and to her eldest daughter, the Bella aforesaid, a showy,
+flaunting girl with a peony color, and went on through the rooms seeking
+Harry, stopping, however, for a word to every pretty woman he knew; for
+though he began to find his game grow stale, he and the beau sexe have a
+mutual attraction. Little those women guessed, as they smiled in his
+handsome eyes, and laughed at his witty talk, and blushed at his soft
+voice, how heartily sick he was of their frivolities, and how often
+disappointment and sarcasm lurked in his mocking words. To be blasé was
+no affectation with Falkenstein; it was a very earnest reality, as with
+most of us who have knocked about in the world, not only from the
+variety of his manifold experiences, but from the trickery, and censure,
+and cold water with which the world had treated him.
+
+"You here, old fellow?" said Bevan of the Blues, meeting him in the
+music-room, where some artistes were singing Traviata airs. "You don't
+care for this row, do you? Come along with me, and I'll show you
+something that will amuse you better."
+
+"Show me Godolphin, and I'll thank you. I didn't come to stay--did you?"
+
+"No. Horrid bore, ain't it? But since you are here, you may as well take
+a look at the dearest little actress I ever saw since I was a boy, and
+bewitched by Léontine Fay. Sit down." Bevan went on, as they entered a
+room fitted up like a theatre, "There, it's that one with blue eyes, got
+up like a Watteau's huntress; isn't she a brilliant little thing?"
+
+"Very. She plays as well as Déjazet. Who is she?"
+
+"Don't know. Can you tell us, Forester?"
+
+"She's old Cash's niece," said Forester, not taking his eyes off the
+stage. "Come as a sort of companion to the beloved Bella; dangerous
+companion, I should say, for there's no comparing the two."
+
+"What's her name?"
+
+"Viola--Violet--no, Valérie L'Estrange. L'Estrange, of the 10th, ran
+away with Cash's sister. God knows why. Horrid low connexion, and no
+money. She went speedily to glory, and he drank himself to death two
+years ago in Lahore. I remember him, a big fellow, fourteen stone,
+pounded Bully Batson once at Moseley, and there wasn't such another hard
+hitter among the fancy as Bully. When he departed this life, of course
+his daughter was left to her own devices, with scarcely a rap to buy her
+bonnets. Clever little animal she is, too; she wrote those proverbs
+they're now playing; full of dash, and spice, ain't they? especially
+when you think a girl wrote 'em."
+
+"Introduce me as soon as they're over," said Falkenstein, leaning back
+to study the young actress and author, who was an engaging study enough,
+being full of grace and vivacity, with animated features, mobile
+eyebrows, dark-blue eyes, and chestnut hair. "Anything original would be
+as great a wonder as to buy Cavendish in Regent-Street that wasn't
+bird's-eye."
+
+"Valérie's original enough for anybody's money. Hark how she's firing
+away at Egerton. Pretty little soft voice she has. I do like a pretty
+voice for a woman," said Forester, clapping softly, with many a murmured
+bravisima.
+
+"You're quite enthusiastic," smiled Falkenstein. "Pity you haven't a
+bouquet to throw at her."
+
+"Don't you poke fun at me, you cynic," growled Forester. "I've seen you
+throw bouquets at much plainer women."
+
+"And the bouquets and the women were much alike in morning light--faded
+and colorless on their artificial stalks as soon as the gas glare was
+off them."
+
+"Hold your tongue, Juvenal," laughed Forester, "or I vow I won't
+introduce you. You'll begin satirising poor little Val as soon as you've
+spoken to her."
+
+"Oh, I can be merciful to the weak; don't I let _you_ alone, Forester?"
+laughed Waldemar, as the curtain fell.
+
+The proverbs were over, and having put herself in ball-room style, the
+author came among the audience. He amused himself with watching how she
+took her numerous compliments, and was astonished to detect neither
+vanity nor shyness, and to hear her turn most of them aside with a
+laugh. She was quite as attractive off as on the stage, especially with
+the aroma of her sparkling proverbs hanging about her; and Falkenstein
+got his introduction, and consigning Godolphin and Mistletoe to
+futurity, waltzed with her, and found her dancing as full of grace and
+lightness as an Andalusian's or Arlésienne's. Falkenstein cared little
+enough for the saltatory art, but this waltz did not bore him, and when
+it was over, regardless of some dozen names written on her tablets, he
+gave her his arm, and they strolled out of the ball-room into a cooler
+atmosphere. He found plenty of fun in her, as he had expected from her
+proverbs, and sat down beside her in the conservatory to let himself be
+amused for half an hour.
+
+"Do you know many of the people here?" she asked him. "Is there anybody
+worth pointing out? There ought to be, in four or five hundred dwellers
+in the aristocratic west."
+
+"I know most of them personally or by report, but they are all of the
+same stamp, like the petals of that camellia, some larger and some
+smaller, but all cut in the same pattern. Most of them apostles of
+fashion, martyrs to debt, worshippers of the rising sun. All of them
+created by art, from the young ladies who owe their roses and lilies to
+Breidenbach, to the ci-devant jeunes hommes, who buy their figures in
+Bond Street and their faces from Isidore. All of them actors--and pretty
+good actors, too--from that pretty woman yonder, who knows her milliner
+may imprison her any day for the lace she is now drawing round her with
+a laugh, to that sleek old philanthropist playing whist through the
+doors there, whose guinea points are paid by the swindle of half
+England."
+
+She laughed.
+
+"Lend me your lorgnon. I should like to see around me as you do."
+
+"Wait twenty years, you will have it; there are two glasses to
+it--experience and observation."
+
+"But your glasses are smoked, are they not?" said Valérie, with a quick
+glance at him; "for you seem to me to see everything en noir."
+
+He smiled.
+
+"When I was a boy I had a Claude glass, but they break very soon; or
+rather, as you say, grow dark and dim with the smoke of society. But you
+ask me about these people. You know them, do you not, as they are your
+uncle's guests?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"I have been here but a week or two. For the last two years I have been
+vegetating among the fens, with a maiden aunt of poor papa's."
+
+"And did you like the country?"
+
+"Like it!" cried Valérie, "I was buried alive. Everything was so
+dreadfully punctual and severe in that house, that I believe the very
+cat had forgotten how to purr. Breakfast at eight, drive at two, dinner
+at five, prayers at ten. Can't you fancy the dreary diurnal round, with
+a pursy old rector or two, and three or four high-dried county
+princesses as callers once a quarter? Luckily, I can amuse myself, but
+oh, you cannot think how I sickened of the monotony, how I longed to
+_live!_ At last, I grew so naughty, I was expelled."
+
+"May I inquire your sins?" asked Falkenstein, really amused for once.
+
+She laughed at the remembrance.
+
+"I read 'Notre-Dame' against orders, and I rode the fat old mare round
+the paddock without a saddle. I saw no harm in it; as a child, I read
+and rode everything I came near, but the rough-riding was condemned as
+unfeminine, and any French book, were it even the 'Génie du
+Christianisme,' or the 'Petit Carême,' would be regarded by Aunt Agatha,
+who doesn't know a word of the language, as a powder magazine of
+immorality and infidelity."
+
+"C'est la profonde ignorance qui inspire le ton dogmatique," laughed
+Falkenstein. "But surely you have been accustomed to society."
+
+"No, never; but I am made for it, I fancy," said Valérie, with an
+unconscious compliment to herself. "When I was with the dear old Tenth,
+I used to enjoy myself, but I was a child then. The officers were very
+kind to me--gentlemen always are much more so than ladies"--("Pour
+cause," thought Waldemar, as she went on)--"but ever since then I have
+vegetated as I tell you, in much the same still life as the anemones in
+my vase."
+
+"Yet you could write those proverbs," said he, involuntarily.
+
+She laughed, and colored.
+
+"Oh, I have written ever since I could make A B C, and I have not
+forgotten all I saw with the old Tenth. But come, tell me more of these
+people; I like to hear your satire."
+
+"I am glad you do," said Falkenstein, with a smile; "for only those who
+have no foibles to hit have a relish for sarcasm. Do you think Messaline
+and Lélie had much admiration for La Bruyère's periods, however well
+turned or justly pointed? but those whom the caps did not fit probably
+enjoyed them as you and I do. All satirists, from Martial downwards,
+most likely gain an enemy for each truth they utter, for in this bal
+masqué of life it is not permitted to tear the masks off our
+companions."
+
+"Do you wear one?" asked Valérie, quickly. "I fancy, like Monte Cristo,
+your pleasure is to 'usurper les vices que vous n'avez pas, et de cacher
+les vertus que vous avez.'"
+
+"Virtues? If you knew me better, you would know that I never pretend to
+any. If you compare me to Monte Cristo, say rather that I 'prêche
+loyalement l'égoisme,'" laughed Falkenstein. "Upon my word, we are
+talking very seriously for a ball-room. I ought to be admiring your
+bouquet, Miss L'Estrange, or petitioning for another waltz."
+
+"Don't trouble yourself. I like this best," said Valérie, playing with
+the flowers round her. "And I ought to have my own way, for this is my
+birthday."
+
+"New Year's-day? Indeed! Then I am sure I wish you most sincerely the
+realisation of all your ideals and desires, which, to the imaginative
+author of the proverbs, will be as good as wishing her Aladdin's lamp,"
+smiled Falkenstein.
+
+She smiled too, and sighed.
+
+"And about as improbable as Aladdin's lamp. Did you see the Old Year out
+last night?"
+
+"Yes," he answered, briefly; for the remembrance of what he had lost
+watching it out was not agreeable to him.
+
+"There was a musical party here," continued Valérie, "but I got away
+from it, for I like to be alone when the past and the future meet--do
+not you?"
+
+"No; your past is pure, your future is bright. Mine are not so; I don't
+want to be stopped to contemplate them."
+
+"Nor are mine, indeed; but the death of an Old Year is sad and solemn to
+me as the death of a friend, and I like to be alone in its last hour. I
+wonder," she continued, suddenly, "what this year will bring. I wonder
+where you and I shall be next New Year's-night?"
+
+Falkenstein laughed, not merrily.
+
+"_I_ shall be in Kensal Green or the Queen's Bench, very likely. Why do
+you look astonished Miss L'Estrange; one is the destination of everybody
+in these rooms, and the other probably of one-half of them."
+
+"Don't speak so bitterly--don't give me sad thoughts on my birthday. Oh,
+how tiresome!" cried Valérie, interrupting herself, "there comes Major
+D'Orwood."
+
+"To claim you?"
+
+"Yes; I'd forgotten him entirely. I promised to waltz with him an hour
+ago."
+
+"What the devil brought you here to interrupt us?" thought Falkenstein,
+as the Guardsman lisped a reproof at Valérie's cruelty, and gave her his
+arm back to the ball-room. Waldemar stopped her, however, engaged her
+for the next, and sauntered through the room on her other side. He
+waltzed a good deal with her, paying her that sort of attention which
+Falkenstein knew how to make the softest and subtlest homage a woman
+could have. Amused himself, he amused her with his brilliant and pointed
+wit, so well, that Valérie L'Estrange told him, when he bid her good
+night, that she had never enjoyed any birthday so much.
+
+"Well," said Bevan, as they drove away from 133, Lowndes Square, "did
+you find that wonderful little L'Estrange as charming a companion as
+actress? You ought to know, for you've been after her all night, like a
+ferret after a rabbit."
+
+"Yes," said Falkenstein, taking out a little pet briarwood pipe, "I was
+very pleased with her: she's worth no more than the others, probably, au
+fond, but she's very entertaining and frank: she'll tell you anything.
+Poor child! she can't be over-comfortable in Cash's house. She's a lady
+by instinct; that odious ostentation and snobbish toadying must disgust
+her. Besides, Bella is not very likely to lead a girl a very nice life
+who is partially dependent on her father, and infinitely better style
+than herself."
+
+"The devil, no! That flaunting, flirting, over-dressed Cashranger girl
+is my detestation. She'll soon find means to worry littil Valérie. Women
+have a great spice of the mosquito in 'em, and enjoy nothing more than
+stinging each other to death."
+
+"Well, she must get Forester or D'Orwood--some man who can afford it--to
+take compassion upon her. All of them finish so when they can; the rich
+ones marry for a title, and the poor ones for a home," said the Count,
+stirring up his pipe. "Here's my number; thank you for dropping me; and
+good night, old fellow."
+
+"Good night. Pleasant dreams of your author and actress, _aux longs yeux
+bleus_."
+
+Waldemar laughed as he took out his latch-key. "I'm afraid I couldn't
+get up so much romance. You and I have done with all that, Tom. Confound
+it, I never saw Godolphin, after all. Well, I must go and breakfast with
+him to-morrow."
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+FALKENSTEIN BREAKS LANCES WITH THE "LONGS YEUX BLEUS."
+
+
+He did breakfast with Godolphin, not, however, before he had held a
+small but disagreeable levee to one or two rather impatient callers whom
+he couldn't satisfy, and a certain Amadeus Levi, who, having helped him
+to the payment of those debts of honor incurred in Harry's rooms, held
+him by Golden Fetters as hard to unclasp as the chains that bound
+Prometheus. He shook himself free of them at last, drove to
+Knightsbridge, and had a chat with Godolphin, over coffee and
+chibouques, went to his two or three hours' diplomatic work in the Deeds
+and Chronicles Office, and when he came out, instead of going to his
+club as usual, thought he might as well call on the Cashrangers, and
+turned his steps to Lowndes Square. Valérie L'Estrange was sitting at a
+Davenport, done out of her Watteau costume into very becoming English
+morning dress; he had only time to shake hands with her before Bella and
+her mamma set upon him. Miss Cashranger had a great admiration for him,
+and, though his want of money was a drawback, the royal gules of his
+blazonments, joined to his manifold attractions, fairly dazzled her, and
+she held him tight, talking over the palace concerts, till a dowager and
+her daughter, and a couple of men from Hounslow, being ushered in, he
+was at liberty, and sitting down by Valérie, gave her a book she had
+said the night before she wished to read.
+
+"'Goethe's Autobiography!' Oh, thank you--how kind you are!"
+
+"Not at all," laughed Falkenstein. "To merit such things I ought to have
+saved your life at least. What are you doing here; writing some more
+proverbs, I hope, to give me a part in one?"
+
+She shook her head. "Nothing half so agreeable. I am writing dinner
+invitations, and answering Belle's letters."
+
+"Why, can't she answer them herself?"
+
+"My motto here is 'Ich Dien,'" she answered, with a flush on her cheeks.
+
+Bella turned languidly round, and verified her words: "Val, Puppet's
+scratching at the door; let him in, will you?"
+
+Waldemar rose and opened the door for a little slate-colored greyhound,
+and while Bella lisped out her regrets for his trouble, smiled a smile
+that made Miss Cashranger color, and looked searchingly at Valérie to
+see how she took it. She turned a grateful, radiant look on him, and
+whispered, "Je m'affranchirai un jour."
+
+"Et comment?"
+
+She raised her mobile eyebrows: "Dieu sait! Comme actrice, comme
+feuilletonniste--j'ai mes rêves, monsieur--mais pas comme institutrice:
+cela me tuerait bientôt."
+
+"Je le crois," said Falkenstein, briefly, as he took up the
+autobiography, and began to talk on it.
+
+"I don't like Goethe for one thing," said Valérie; "he loved a dozen
+women one after the other. That I would pardon him; most men do so; but
+I don't believe he really loved any one of them."
+
+"Oh yes he did; quite enough, at least, to please himself. He wasn't so
+silly as to go in for a never-ending, heart-burning, heart-breaking,
+absorbing passion. We don't do those things."
+
+"Go in for it!" repeated Valérie, contemptuously, "I suppose if he had
+been of the nature to feel such, he couldn't have helped it."
+
+"I can help going near the fire, can't I, if I don't wish to be burnt?"
+
+"Yes; but a coal may fly out of the fire, and set you in flames, when
+you are sitting far away from it."
+
+"Then I ought to wear asbestos," said Waldemar, with a merry quizzical
+smile. "You authors, and poets, and artists think 'the world well lost,
+and all for love!' but we rational people, who know the world, find it
+quite the contrary. Those are very pretty ideas for your proverbs, but
+they don't suit real life. _We_, when we're boys, worship some parterre
+divinity, till we see her some luckless day inebriate with
+eau-de-Cologne, or more unpoetic porter, are cured and disenchanted,
+wait ten years with Christines and Minna Herzliebs in the interim, and
+wind up with a rich widow, who keeps us straight and heads our table.
+_You_, fresh from the school-room, fasten on some lachrymose curate, or
+flirting dragoon, as the object of your early romances, walk with him
+under the limes, work him a smoking-cap, and write him tender little
+notes, till mamma whispers her hope that Mr. A. or B. is serious, and
+you, balancing, like a sensible girl, A. or B.'s tangible settlements
+with the others' intangible love-speeches, forsake the limes, forswear
+the notes, and announce yourself as 'sold.' That's the love of our day,
+Miss L'Estrange, and very wise and----"
+
+"Love!" cried Valérie, with supreme scorn. "You don't know the common A
+B C of love. You might as well call gilt leather-work pure gold."
+
+Falkenstein laughed heartily. "Well, there's a good deal more
+leather-work than gold about in the world, isn't there?"
+
+"A good deal more, granted; but there is some gold to be found, I should
+hope."
+
+"Not without alloy; it can't be worked, you know."
+
+"It can't be worked for the base purposes of earth; but it may be found
+still undefiled before men's touch has soiled it. So I believe in some
+hearts, undefiled by the breath of conventionality and cant, may lie the
+true love of the poets, 'lasting, and knowing not change.'"
+
+"Ah! you're too ideal for me," cried Waldemar, smiling at her impetuous
+earnestness. "You are all enthusiasm, imagination, effervescence----"
+
+"I am not," she answered, impatiently. "I can be very practical when I
+like; I made myself the loveliest wreath yesterday; quite as pretty as
+Bella buys at Mitchell's for five times the sum mine cost me. That was
+very realistic, wasn't it?"
+
+"No. That exercised your fancy. You wouldn't do--what do you call
+it?--plain work, with half the gusto; now, would you?"
+
+Valérie made a _moue mutine_, expressive of entire repudiation of such
+employment.
+
+"I thought so," laughed Falkenstein. "You idealists are like the fire in
+the grate yonder; you flame up very hot and bright for a moment, but
+'the sparks fly upward and expire,' and if they're not fed with some
+fresh fuel they soon die out into lifeless cinders."
+
+"On the contrary," said Valérie, quickly, "we are like wood fires, and
+burn red down to the last ash."
+
+"Mr. Falkenstein, come and look at this little 'Ghirlandaio,'" said
+Bella, turning round, with an angry light in her eyes; "it is such a
+gem. Papa bought it the other day."
+
+Waldemar rose reluctantly enough to inspect the "Ghirlandaio,"
+manufactured in a back slum, and smoked into proper antiquity to pigeon,
+under the attractive title of an "Old Master," the brewer and his
+species, and found Miss Cashranger's ignorant dilettantism very tame
+after Valérie's animated arguments and gesticulation. But he was too old
+a hand at such game not to know how to take advantage of even an enemy's
+back-handed stroke, and he turned the discussion on art to an inspection
+of Valérie's portfolio, over whose croquis and pastels, and
+water-colors, he lingered as long as he could, till the clock reminded
+him that it was time to walk on into Eaton Square, where he was going to
+dine at his father's. The governor excepted, Falkenstein had little
+rapport with his family. His brother was as chilly disagreeable in
+private life as he was popularly considered irreproachable in public,
+and as pragmatical and uncharitable as your immaculate individuals
+ordinarily are. His sisters were cold, conventional women, as utterly
+incapable of appreciating him as of allowing the odor of his Latakia in
+their drawing-room, and so it chanced that Waldemar, a favorite in every
+other house he entered, received but a chill welcome at home. A prophet
+has no honor in his own country, and the hearth where a man's own kin
+are seated is too often the one to nurture the cockatrice's eggs of
+ill-nature and injustice against him. Thank Heaven there are others
+where the fire burns brighter, and the smiles are fonder for him. It
+were hard for some of us if we were dependent on the mercies of our "own
+family."
+
+The old Count gave him this night but a distant welcome, for Maximilian
+was there to "damn" his brother with "faint praise," and had been
+pouring into his father's ear tales of "poor Waldemar's losses at play."
+All that Falkenstein said, his sisters took up, contradicted, and jarred
+upon, till he, fairly out of patience, lapsed into silence, only broken
+by a sarcasm deftly flung at Maximillian to floor him completely in his
+orthodoxy or ethics. He was glad to bid the governor good night; and
+leaving them to hold a congress over his skepticism, radicalism, and
+other dangerous opinions, he walked through the streets, and swore
+slightly, with his pipe between his teeth, as he opened his own door.
+
+"Since my father prefers Max to me, let him have him," thought Waldemar,
+smoking, and undressing himself. "If people choose to dictate to me or
+misjudge me, let them go; and if they have not penetration enough to
+judge what I am, I shall not take the trouble to show them."
+
+But, nevertheless, as he thus resolved, Falkenstein smoked hard and
+fast, for he was fond of the old Count, and felt keenly his desertion;
+for, steel himself as he might, egotist as he might call himself,
+Waldemar was quick in his susceptibilities and tenacious in his
+attachments.
+
+Since Falkenstein had got intimate with Valérie L'Estrange in one ball
+you are pretty sure that week after week did not lessen their
+friendship. He was amused, and past memories of women he had wooed, and
+won, and left, certain passages in his life where such had reproached
+him, not always deservedly, never presented themselves to check him in
+his new pursuit. It is pleasant to a naturalist to study a butterfly
+pinned to the wall; the rememberance that the butterfly may die of the
+sport does not occur to him, or, at least, never troubles him.
+
+So Falkenstein called to Lowndes Square, and lent her books, and gave
+her a little Skye of his, and met her occasionally by accident on
+purpose in Kensington Gardens, where Valérie, according to Mrs.
+Cashranger's request, sometimes took one of her cousins, a headstrong
+young demon of six or seven, for an early walk, to which early walks
+Valérie made no objection, preferring them to the drawing-rooms of No.
+133, and liking them, you may guess, none the less after seeing somebody
+she knew standing by the pond throwing in sticks for his retriever, and
+Falkenstein had sat down with her under the bushes by the water, and
+talked of all the things in heaven and earth; while Julius Adolphus ran
+about and gobbled at the China geese, and wetted his silk stockings
+unreproved. He made no love to her, not a bit; he talked of it
+theoretically, but never practically. But he liked to talk to her, to
+argue with her, to see her demonstrative pleasure in his society, to
+watch her coming through the trees, and find the _longs yeux bleus_
+gleam and darken at his approach. All this amused him, pleased him as
+something original and out of the beaten track. She told him all she
+thought and felt; she pleased him, and beguiled him from his darker
+thoughts, and she began to reconcile him to human nature, which, with
+Faria, he had learnt to class into "les tigres et les crocodiles à deux
+pieds."
+
+It was well he had this amusement, for it was his only one. He was going
+to the bad, as we say; debts and entanglements imperceptibly gathered
+round him, held him tight, and only in Valérie's lively society (lively,
+for when with him she was as happy as a bird) could exercise his dark
+spirit.
+
+You remember the vow he made when the Silver Chimes rang in the New
+Year? So did not he. We cannot be always Medes and Persians, madam, to
+resist every temptation and keep unbroken every law, though you, sitting
+in your cushioned chair, in unattacked tranquillity, can tell us easily
+enough we should be. One night, when he was dining with Bevan, Tom
+produced those two little ivory fiends, whose rattle is in the ear of
+watchful deans and proctors as the singing of the rattlesnake, and whose
+witchery is more wily and irresistible than the witchery of woman. No
+beaux yeux, whether of the cassette or of one's first love, ever
+subjugate a man so completely as the fascinations of play. Once yielded
+to the charm, the Circe that clasps us will not let us go. Falkenstein,
+though in much he had the strong will of his race, had no power to
+resist the beguilements of his Omphale; he played again and again, and
+five times out of seven lost.
+
+"Well, Falkenstein," cried Godolphin, after five games of écarté at a
+pony a side, three of which Falkenstein had lost, "I heard Max lamenting
+to old Straitlace in the lobby, the other night, that you were going to
+the devil, only the irreproachable member phrased it in more delicate
+periods."
+
+"Quite true," said Falkenstein, with a short laugh, "if for devil you
+substitute Queen's Bench."
+
+"Well, we're en route together, old fellow," interrupted Tom Bevan;
+"and, with all your sins, you're a fat lot better than that brother of
+yours, who, I believe, don't know Latakia from Maryland. Jesse Egerton
+told me the other day that his wife has an awful life of it; but who'd
+credit it of a man who patronises Exeter Hall, and gave the shoeblacks
+only yesterday such unlimited supply of weak tea, buns, and strong
+texts?"
+
+"Who indeed! Max is such a moral man," sneered Falkenstein; "though he
+has done one or two things in his life that I wouldn't have stooped to
+do. But you may sin as much as you like as long as you sin under the
+rose. John Bull takes his vices as a ten pound voter takes a bribe; he
+stretches his hand out eagerly enough, but he turns his eyes away and
+looks innocent, and is the first to point at his neighbor and cry out
+against moral corruption. Melville's quite right that there is an
+eleventh commandment--'Thou shalt not be found out'--whose transgression
+is the only one society visits with impunity."
+
+"True enough," laughed Jimmy Fitzroy. "Thank Heaven, nobody can accuse
+us of studying the law and the prophets overmuch. By the way, old
+fellow, who's that stunning little girl you were walking with by the
+Serpentine yesterday morning, when I was waiting for the Metcalfe, who
+promised to meet me at twelve, and never came till half-past one--the
+most unpunctual woman going. Any new game? She's a governess, ain't she?
+She'd some sort of brat with her; but she's deuced good style, anyhow."
+
+"That's little L'Estrange," laughed Godolphin: "the beloved Bella's
+cousin. He's met her there every day for the last three months. I don't
+know how much further the affair may have gone, or if----"
+
+"My dear Harry, your imagination is running away with you," said
+Falkenstein, impatiently. "I never made an appointment with her in my
+life; she's not the same style as Mrs. Metcalfe."
+
+Oh the jesuitism of the most candid men on occasion! He never made an
+appointment with her, because it was utterly unnecessary, he knowing
+perfectly that he should find her feeding the ducks with Julius Adolphus
+any morning he chose to look for her.
+
+"All friendship is it, then?" laughed Godolphin. "Stick to it, my boy,
+if you can. Take care what you do, though, for to carry her off to Duke
+Street would give Max such a handle as he would not let go in a hurry;
+And to marry (though that of course, will never enter your wildest
+dreams) with anybody of the Cashranger's race, were it the heiress
+instead of the companion, would be such a come-down to the princely
+house, as would infallibly strike you out of Count Ferdinand's will."
+
+Waldemar threw back his head like a thorough-bred impatient of the
+punishing. "The 'princely house,' as you call it, is not so
+extraordinarily stainless; but leave Valérie alone, she and I have
+nothing to do with other, and never shall have. I have enough on my
+hands, in all conscience, without plunging into another love affair."
+
+"I did hear," continued Godolphin, "that Forester proposed to her, but I
+don't suppose it's true; he'd scarcely be such a fool."
+
+Falkenstein looked up quickly, but did not speak.
+
+"I think it is true," said Bevan; "and, moreover, I fancy she refused
+him, for he used to cry her up to the skies, and now he's always
+snapping and sneering at her, which is beastly ungenerous, but after the
+manner of many fellows."
+
+"One would think you were an old woman, Tom, believing all the tales you
+hear," said Godolphin. "She'd better know you disclaim her, Falkenstein,
+that she mayn't waste her chances waiting for you."
+
+Waldemar cast a quick, annoyed, contemptuous glance upon him. "You are
+wonderfully careful over her interests," he said, sharply, "but I never
+heard that having her on your lips, Harry, ever did a woman much good.
+Pass me that whisky, Conrad, will you?"
+
+The next morning, however, though he "disclaimed" her, Waldemar, about
+ten, took his stick, whistled his dog, and walked down to Kensington
+Gardens. Under the beeches just budding their first leaves, he saw what
+he expected to see--Valérie L'Estrange. She turned--even at that
+distance he thought he saw the _longs yeux bleus_ flash and
+sparkle--dropped the biscuits she was giving the ducks to the tender
+mercies of Julius Adolphus, and came to meet him. Spit, the little Skye
+he had given her, welcoming him noisily.
+
+"Spit is as pleased to see you as I am," said Valérie, laughing. "We
+have both been wondering whether you would come this morning. I am so
+glad you have, for I have been reading your 'Pollnitz Memoirs,' and want
+to talk to you about them. You know I can talk to no one as I can to
+you."
+
+"You do me much honor," said Falkenstein, rather formally. He was
+wondering in his mind whether she _had_ refused Forester or not.
+
+"What a cold, distant speech! It is very unkind of you to answer me so.
+What is the matter with you, Count Waldemar?"
+
+She always called him by the title he had dropped in English society;
+she had a fervent reverence for his historic _antécédens_; and besides,
+as she told him one day, "she liked to call him something no one else
+did."
+
+"Matter with me? Nothing at all, I assure you," he answered, still
+distantly.
+
+"You are not like yourself, at all events," persisted Valérie. "You
+should be kind to me. I have so few who are."
+
+The tone touched him; he smiled, but did not speak, as he sat down by
+her poking up the turf with his stick.
+
+"Count Waldemar," said Valérie, suddenly, brushing Spit's hair off his
+bright little eyes, "do tell me; hasn't something vexed you?"
+
+"Nothing new," answered Falkenstein, with a short laugh. "The same
+entanglements and annoyances that have been netting their toils round me
+for many years--that is all. I am young enough, as time counts, yet I
+give you my word I have as little hope in my future, and I know as well
+what my life will be as if I were fourscore."
+
+"Hush, don't say so," said Valérie, with a gesture of pain. "You are so
+worthy of happiness; your nature was made to be happy; and if you are
+not, fate has misused you cruelly."
+
+"Fate? there is no such thing. I have been a fool, and my folly is now
+working itself out. I have made my own life, and I have nobody but
+myself to thank for it."
+
+"I don't know that. Circumstances, temptation, education, opportunity,
+association, often take the place of the Parcæ, and gild or cut the
+threads of our destiny."
+
+"No. I don't accept that doctrine," said Falkenstein, always much
+sterner judge to himself than anybody would have been to him. "What I
+have done has been with my eyes open. I have known the price I should
+pay for my pleasures, but I never paused to count it. I never stopped
+for any obstacle, and for what I desired, I would, like the men in the
+old legends, have sold myself to the devil. Now, of course, I am
+hampered with ten thousand embarrassments. You are young; you are a
+woman; you cannot understand the reckless madness which will drink the
+wine to-day, though one's life paid for it to-morrow. Screened from
+opportunity, fenced in by education, position, and society, you cannot
+know how impossible it is to a man, whose very energies and strength
+become his tempters, to put a check upon himself in the vortex of
+pleasure round him----"
+
+"Yes," interrupted Valérie, "I can. Feeling for you, I can sympathise in
+all things with you. Had I been a man, I should have done as you have
+done, drunk the ambrosia without heeding its cost. Go on--I love to hear
+you speak of yourself; and I know your real nature, Count Waldemar, into
+whatever errors or hasty acts repented of in cooler moments the hot
+spirit of your race may have led you."
+
+Falkenstein was pleased, despite himself, half amused, half saddened. He
+turned it off with a laugh. "By Heaven, I wish they had made a brewer of
+me--I might now be as rich and free from care as your uncle."
+
+"You a brewer!" cried Valérie. Her father, a poor gentleman, had left
+her his aristocratic leanings. "What an absurd idea! All the old
+Falkensteins would come out of their crypts, and chanceries, and
+cloisters, to see the coronet surmounting the beer vats!"
+
+He smiled at her vehemence. "The coronet! I had better have full pockets
+than empty titles."
+
+"For shame!" cried Valérie. "Yes, bark at him, Spit dear; he is telling
+stories. You do not mean it; you know you are proud of your glorious
+name. Who would not rather be a Falkenstein on a hundred a year, than a
+Cashranger on a thousand?"
+
+"I wouldn't," said Waldemar, wilfully. "If I had money, I could find
+oblivion for my past, and hope for my future. If I had money, what loads
+of friends would open their purses for me to borrow the money they'd
+know I did not need. As it is, if I except poor Tom Bevan, who's as hard
+up as I am, and who's a good-hearted, single-minded fellow, and likes
+me, I believe I haven't a friend. Godolphin welcomes me as a companion,
+a bon vivant, a good card player; but if he heard I was in the Queen's
+Bench, or had shot myself, he'd say, 'Poor devil! I am not surprised,'
+as he lighted his pipe and forgot me a second after. So they would all.
+I don't blame them."
+
+"But I do," cried Valérie, her cheeks burning; "they are wicked and
+heartless, and I hate them all. Oh! Count Waldemar, I would not do so. I
+would not desert you if all the world did!"
+
+He smiled: he was accustomed to her passionate ebullitions. "Poor child,
+I believe you would be truer than the rest," he muttered, half aloud, as
+he rose hastily and took out his watch. "I must be in Downing Street by
+eleven, and it only wants ten minutes. If you will walk with me to the
+gates, I have something to tell you about your MS."
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+"SCARLET AND WHITE" MAKES A HIT, AND FALKENSTEIN FEELS THE WEIGHT OF THE
+GOLDEN FETTERS.
+
+
+"Tom, will you come to the theatre with me to-night?" said Falkenstein
+as they lounged by the rails one afternoon in May.
+
+"The theatre! What for? Who's that girl with a scarlet tie, on that roan
+there? I don't know her face. The ballet is the only thing worth
+stirring a step for in town. Which theatre is it?"
+
+"I am going to see the new piece Pomps and Vanities is bringing out, and
+I want you as a sort of claqueur."
+
+"Very well. I'll come," said Tom, who regarded Falkenstein, who had been
+his school and formfellow, still rather as a Highlandman his chief;
+"but, certainly, the first night of a play is the very last I should
+select. But if you wish it---- There's that roan coming round again!
+Good action, hasn't it?"
+
+Obedient to his chiefs orders, Bevan brushed his whiskers, settled his
+tie, or rather let his valet do it for him, and accompanied Waldemar to
+one of the crack-up theatres, where Pomps and Vanities, as the manager
+was irreverently styled by the habitués of his green-room, reigned in a
+state of scenic magnificence, very different to the days when Garrick
+played Macbeth in wig and gaiters.
+
+Bevan asked no questions; he was rather a silent man, and probably knew
+by experience that he would most likely get no answers, unless the
+information was volunteered. So settling in his own mind that it was the
+début of some protégée of Falkenstein's, he followed him to the door of
+a private box. Waldemar opened it, and entered. In it sat two women:
+one, a middle-aged lady-like-looking person; the other a young one, in
+whom, as she turned round with a radiant smile, and gave Falkenstein her
+hand, Bevan recognised Valérie L'Estrange. "Keep up your courage,"
+whispered Waldemar, as he took the seat behind her, and leaned forward
+with a smile. Tom stared at them both. It was high Dutch to him; but
+being endowed with very little curiosity, and a lion's share of British
+immovability, he waited without any impatience for the elucidation of
+the mystery, and seeing the Count and Valérie absorbed in earnest and
+low-toned conversation, he first studied the house, and finding not a
+single decent-looking woman, he dropped his glass and studied the
+play-bill. The bill announced the new piece as "Scarlet and White."
+"Queer title," thought Bevan, a little consoled for his self-immolation
+by seeing that Rosalie Rivers, a very pretty little brunette, was to
+fill the soubrette rôle. The curtain drew up. Tom, looking at Valérie
+instead of the stage, fancied she looked very pale, and her eyes were
+fixed, not on the actors, but on Falkenstein. The first act passed off
+in ominous silence. An audience is often afraid to compromise itself by
+applauding a new piece too quickly. Then the story began to develop
+itself--wit and passion, badinage and pathos, were well intermingled. It
+turned on the love of a Catholic girl, a fille d'honneur to Catherine de
+Médicis, for a Huguenot, Vicomte de Valère, a friend of Condé and
+Coligny. The despairing love of the woman, the fierce struggle of her
+lover between his passion and his faith, the intrigues of the court, the
+cruelty and weakness of Charles Neuf, were all strikingly and forcibly
+written. The actors, being warmly applauded as the plot thickened and
+the audience became interested, played with energy and spirit; and when
+the curtain fell the success of "Scarlet and White" was proclaimed
+through the house.
+
+"Very good play--very good indeed," said Tom, approvingly. "I hope
+you've been pleased, Miss L'Estrange." Valérie did not hear him; she was
+trembling and breathless, her blue eyes almost black with excitement,
+while Falkenstein bent over her, his face more full of animation and
+pleasure than Bevan had seen it for many a day. "Well," thought Tom,
+"Forester _did_ say little Val was original. I should think that was a
+polite term for insane. I suppose Falkenstein's keeper."
+
+At that minute the applause redoubled. Pomps and Vanities had announced
+"Scarlet and White" for repetition, and from the pit to the gods there
+was a cry for the author. Falkenstein bent his head till his lips
+touched her hair, and whispered a few words. She looked up in his face.
+"Do you wish me?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+His word was law. She rose and went to the front of the box, a burning
+color in her cheeks, smiles on her lips, and tears lying under her
+lashes.
+
+"The devil, Waldemar! Do you mean that--that little thing?" began Bevan.
+
+Falkenstein nodded, and Tom, for once in his life astonished, forgot to
+finish his sentence in staring at the author! Probably the audience also
+shared his surprise, in seeing her young face and girlish form, in lieu
+of the anticipated member of the Garrick or new Bourcicault, with
+inspiration drawn from Cavendish and Cognac; for there was a moment's
+silence, and then they received her with such a welcome as had not
+sounded through the house for years.
+
+She bowed two or three times to thank them; then Falkenstein, knowing
+that though she had no shyness, she was extremely excitable, drew her
+gently back to her seat behind the curtain. "Your success is too much
+for you," he said, softly.
+
+"No, no," said Valérie, passionately, utterly forgetful that any one
+else was near her; "but I am so glad that I owe it all to you. It would
+be nothing to me, as you know, unless it pleased you; and it came to me
+through your hands."
+
+Falkenstein gave a short, quick sigh, and moved restlessly.
+
+"You would like to go home now, wouldn't you?" he said after a pause.
+
+She assented, and he led her out of the box, poor victimised Tom
+following with her duenna, who was the daily governess at No. 133.
+
+As their cab drove away, Valérie leaned out of the window, and watched
+Falkenstein as long as she could see him. He waved his hand to her, and
+walked on into Regent Street in silence.
+
+"Hallo, Waldemar!" began Bevan, at length, "so your protégée's turning
+out a star. Do you mean that she really wrote that play?"
+
+Falkenstein nodded.
+
+"Well, it's more than I could do. But what the deuce have you got to do
+with it? For a man who says he won't entangle himself with another love
+affair, you seem pretty tolerably _au mieux_ with her. How did it all
+come about?"
+
+"Simply enough," answered Falkenstein. "Of course I haven't known her
+all these months without finding out her talents. She has a passion for
+writing, and writes well, as I saw at once by those New Year's Night's
+Proverbs. She has no money, as you know; she wants to turn her talents
+to account, and didn't know how to set about it. She'd several
+conversations with me on the subject, so I took her play, looked it
+over, and gave it to Pomps and Vanities. He read it to oblige me, and
+put it on the stage to oblige himself, as he wanted something new for
+the season, and was pretty sure it would make a hit."
+
+"Do the Cashrangers know of it?"
+
+"No; that is why she asked the governess to come with her to-night. That
+stingy old Pomps wouldn't pay her much, but she thinks it an El Dorado,
+and I shall take care she commands her own price next time. I count on a
+treat on enlightening Miss Bella."
+
+"Yes, she'll cut up rough. By George! I quite envy you your young
+genius."
+
+"She isn't _mine_," said Falkenstein, bitterly.
+
+"She might be if you chose."
+
+"Poor little thing!--yes. But love is too expensive a luxury for a
+ruined man, even if---- The devil take this key, why won't it unlock?
+You're off to half a dozen parties I suppose, Tom?"
+
+"And where are you going?"
+
+"Nowhere."
+
+"What! going to bed at half-past ten?"
+
+"There is no particular sin in going to bed at half-past ten, is there?"
+said Waldemar, impatiently. "I haven't the stuff in me for balls and
+such things. I'm sick of them. Good-night, old fellow."
+
+He went up-stairs to his room, threw himself on his bed, and, lighting
+his pipe, lay smoking and thinking while the Abbey clock tolled the
+hours one after another. The _longs yeux bleus_ haunted him, for
+Waldemar had already too many chains upon him not to shrink from adding
+to them the Golden Fetters of a fresh passion, and marriage, unless a
+rich one, was certain to bring about him all his entanglements. He
+resolved to seek her no more, to check the demonstrative affection
+which, like Esmeralda, "à la fois naïve et passionnée," she had no
+thought of concealing from him, and which, as Falkenstein's conscience
+told him, he had done everything to foster. "What is a man worth if he
+hasn't strength of will?" he muttered, as he tossed on his bed. "And
+yet, poor little Valérie---- Pshaw! all women learn quickly enough to
+forget!"
+
+Some ten days after he was calling in Lowndes Square. True as yet to his
+resolution, he had avoided the tête-à-tête walks in the Gardens; and
+Valérie keenly felt the change in his manner, though in what he did for
+her he was as kind as ever. The successful run of "Scarlet and White,"
+the praises of its talents, its promises of future triumphs--all the
+admiration which, despite Bella's efforts to keep her back, the _yeux
+bleus_ excited--all were valueless, if, as she vaguely feared, she had
+lost "Count Waldemar." The play had made a great sensation, and the
+Cashrangers had taken a box the night before, as they made a point of
+following the lead and seeing everything, though they generally forswore
+theatres as not quite _ton_. Pah! these people, "qui se couchent
+roturiers et se lèvent nobles," they paint their lilies with such
+superabundant coloring, that we see, at a glance, the flowers come not
+out of a conservatory but out of an atelier.
+
+They were out, as it chanced, and Valérie was alone. She received him
+joyously, for unhappy as she was in his absence, the mere sight of his
+face recalled her old spirits, and Falkenstein, in all probability,
+never guessed a tithe she suffered, because she had always a smile for
+him.
+
+"Oh! Count Waldemar," she cried, "why have you never been to the
+Gardens this week? If you only knew how I miss you----"
+
+"I have had no time," he answered, coldly.
+
+"You could make time if you wished," said Valérie, passionately. "You
+are so cold, so unkind to me lately. Have I vexed you at all?"
+
+"Vexed me, Miss L'Estrange? Certainly not."
+
+She was silent, chilled, despite herself.
+
+"Why do you call me Miss L'Estrange?" she said, suddenly. "You know I
+cannot bear it from _you_."
+
+"What should I call you?"
+
+"Valérie," she answered, softly.
+
+He got up and walked to the hearth-rug, playing with Spit and Puppet
+with his foot, and for once hailed, as a relief, the entrance of Bella,
+in an extensive morning toilet, fresh from "shopping." She looked
+rapidly and angrily from him to Valérie, and attacked him at once.
+Seeing her cousin's vivacity told, she went in for the same stakes, with
+but slight success, being a young lady of the heavy artillery stamp,
+with no light action about her.
+
+"Oh! Mr. Falkenstein," she began, "that exquisite play--you've seen it,
+of course? Captain Boville told me I should be delighted with it, and so
+I was. Don't you think it enchanting?"
+
+"It is very clever," answered Falkenstein, gravely.
+
+"Val missed a great treat," continued Bella; "nothing would make her go
+last night; however, she never likes anything I like. I should love to
+know who wrote it; some people say a woman, but I would never believe
+it."
+
+"The witty raillery and unselfish devotion of the heroine might be
+dictated by a woman's head and heart, but the passion, and vigor, and
+knowledge of human nature indicate a masculine genius," replied
+Waldemar.
+
+Valérie gave him such a grateful, rapturous glance, that, had Bella been
+looking, might have disclosed the secret; but she was studying her
+dainty gloves, and went on:
+
+"Could it be Westland Marston--Sterling Coyne?"
+
+Falkenstein shook his head. "If it were, they would put their name on
+the play-bills."
+
+"You naughty man! I do believe you could tell me if you chose. _Are_ you
+not, now, in the author's confidence?"
+
+The corner of Falkenstein's mouth went up in an irresistible smile as he
+telegraphed a glance at "the author." "Well, perhaps I am."
+
+Bella clapped her hands with enchanting gaiety. "Then, tell me this
+moment; I am in agonies to know!"
+
+"It is no great mystery," smiled Falkenstein. "I fancy you are
+acquainted with the unknown."
+
+"You don't mean it!" cried Bella, in a state of ecstasy. "Have you
+written it, then?"
+
+"I'm afraid I can't lay claim to the honor."
+
+"Who can it be? Oh, do tell me! How enchanting!" cried Miss Cashranger;
+"I am wild to hear. Somebody I know, you say? Is it--is it Captain
+Tweed?"
+
+"No, it isn't," laughed Falkenstein. Elliot Tweed--Idiot Tweed, as they
+all call him--who was hanging after Bella, abhorred all caligraphy, and
+wrote his own name with one _e_.
+
+"Mr. Dashaway, then?"
+
+"Dash never scrawled anything but I. O. U.s."
+
+"Lord Flippertygibbett, perhaps?"
+
+"Wrong again. Flip took up a pen once too often, when he signed his
+marriage register, to have any leanings to goose quills."
+
+"Charlie Montmorency, then?"
+
+"Reads nothing but his betting-book and _Bell's Life_."
+
+"Dear me! how tiresome. Who can it be? Wait a moment. Let me see. Is it
+Major Powell?"
+
+"Guess again. He wouldn't write, save in Indian fashion, with his
+tomahawk on his enemies' scalps."
+
+"How provoking!" cried Bella, exasperated. "Stop: is it Mr. Beauchamp?"
+
+"No; he scribbles for six-and-eightpences too perseveringly to have time
+for anything, except ruining his clients."
+
+"Dr. Montressor, then?"
+
+"Try once more. His prescriptions bring him too many guineas for him to
+waste ink on any other purpose."
+
+"How stupid I am! Perhaps--perhaps---- Yet no, it can't be, because he's
+at the Cape, and most likely killed, poor fellow. Could it be Cecil
+Green?"
+
+Falkenstein laughed. "You needn't go so far as Kaffirland; try a little
+nearer home. Think over the _ladies_ you know."
+
+"The ladies! Then it _is_ a woman!" cried Bella. "Well, I should never
+have believed it. Who can she be? How I shall admire her, and envy her!
+A lady! Can it be darling Flora?"
+
+"No. If your pet friend can get through an invitation-note of four
+lines, the exertion costs her at least a dram of sal volatile."
+
+"How wicked you are," murmured Miss Cashranger, delighted, after the
+custom of women, to hear her friend pulled to pieces. "Is it Mrs.
+Lushington, then?"
+
+"Wrong again. The Lushington has so much business on hand, inditing
+rose-hued notes to twenty men at once, and wording them differently, for
+fear they may ever be compared, that she's no time for other
+composition."
+
+"Lady Mechlin, perhaps--she is a charming creature?"
+
+Falkenstein shook his head. "Never could learn the simplest rule of
+grammar. When she was engaged to Mechlin, she wrote her love-letters out
+of 'Henrietta Temple,' and flattered him immensely by their pathos."
+
+"Was there ever such a sarcastic creature!" cried Bella, reprovingly;
+her interest rather flagged, since no man was the incognito author.
+"Well, let me see: there is Rosa Temple--she is immensely intellectual."
+
+"But immensely orthodox. Every minute of her life is spent in working
+slippers and Bible markers for interesting curates. It is to be hoped
+one of them may reward her some day, though, I believe, till they _do_
+propose, she is in the habit of advocating priestly celibacy, by way of
+assertion of her disinterestedness. No! Miss Cashranger, the talented
+writer of 'Scarlet and White,' is not only of your acquaintance, but
+your family."
+
+"My family!" almost screamed Bella. "Good gracious, Mr. Falkenstein, is
+it dear papa, or--or Augustus?"
+
+The idea of the brewer, fat, and round, and innocent of literature as
+one of his own teams, or of his son just plucked for his "smalls" at
+Cambridge, for spelling Cæsar, Sesar, sitting down to indite the pathos
+and poetry of "Scarlet and White," was so exquisitely absurd that
+Waldemar, forgetting courtesy, lay back in his arm-chair and laughed
+aloud. The contagion of his ringing laugh was irresistible; Valérie
+followed his example, and their united merriment rang in the astonished
+ears of Miss Cashranger, who looked from one to the other in wrathful
+surprise. As soon as he could control himself, Falkenstein turned
+towards her with his most courteous smile.
+
+"You will forgive our laughter, I am sure, when I tell you what I am
+certain _must_ give you great pleasure, that the play you so warmly and
+justly admire was written by your cousin."
+
+Bella stared at him, her face scarlet, all the envy and reasonless spite
+within her flaming up at the idea of her cousin's success.
+
+"Valérie--Valérie," she stammered, "is it true? I had no idea she ever
+thought of----"
+
+"No," said Falkenstein, roused in his protégée's defence; "I dare say
+you are astonished, as every one else would be, that any one so young,
+and, comparatively speaking, so inexperienced as your cousin, should
+have developed such extraordinary talent and power."
+
+"Oh, of course--to be sure--yes," said Bella, her lips twitching
+nervously, "mamma will be astonished to hear of these new laurels for
+the family. I congratulate you, Valérie; I never knew you dreamt of
+writing, much less of making so public a début."
+
+"Nor should I ever have been able to do so unless my way had been
+pioneered for me," said Valérie, resting her eyes fondly on Waldemar.
+
+He stayed ten minutes longer, chatting on indifferent subjects, then
+left, making poor little Val happy with a touch of his hand, and a smile
+as "kind" as of old.
+
+"You horrid, deceitful little thing!" began Bella, bursting with fury,
+as the door closed on him, "never to mention what you were doing. I
+can't bear such sly people I hate----"
+
+"My dear Bella, don't disturb yourself," said Valérie, quietly; "if you
+had testified any interest in my doings, you might have known them; as
+it was, I was glad to find warmer and kinder friends."
+
+"In Waldemar Falkenstein, I suppose," sneered Bella, white with rage. "A
+nice friend you have, certainly; a man whom everybody knows may go to
+prison for debt any day."
+
+"Leave him alone," said Valérie haughtily; "unless you speak well of
+him, in my presence, you shall not speak at all."
+
+"Oh, indeed," laughed Bella, nervously; "how very much interested you
+are in him! more than he is in you, I'm afraid, dear. He's famed for
+loving and leaving. Pray how long has this romantic affair been on the
+tapis?"
+
+"He's met her every day in the Gardens," cried Julius Adolphus, just
+come in with that fatal apropos of "enfans terribles," much oftener the
+result of méchanceté than of innocence; "he's met her every day, Bella,
+while I fed the ducks."
+
+Bella rose, inflated with fury, and summoning all her dignity:
+
+"I suppose, Valérie, you know the sort of reputation you will get
+through these morning assignations."
+
+Valérie bent over Spit with a smile.
+
+"Of course, it is nothing to _me_," continued Bella, spitefully; "but I
+shall consider it my duty to inform mamma."
+
+Valérie fairly laughed out.
+
+"Do your duty, by all means."
+
+"And," continued Bella, a third time, "I dare say she will find some
+means to put a stop to this absurd friendship with an unmarried and
+unprincipled man."
+
+Valérie was roused; she lifted her head like a little Pythoness, and her
+blue eyes flashed angry scorn.
+
+"Tell your mamma what you please, but--listen to me, Bella--if you
+venture to harm him in any way with your pitiful venom, I, girl as I am,
+will never let you go till I have revenged myself and him."
+
+Bella, like most bullies, was a terrible coward. There was an
+earnestness in Valérie's words, and a dangerous light in her eyes, that
+frightened her, and she left the room in silence, while Valérie leaned
+her forehead on Spit's silky back, and cried bitterly, tears that for
+her life she wouldn't have shed while her cousin was there.
+
+The next time Falkenstein called at Lowndes Square, the footman told
+him, "Not at home," and Waldemar swore, mentally, as he turned from the
+door, for though he could keep himself from seeking her, it was
+something new not to find her when he wished.
+
+"She's like all the rest," he thought bitterly; "She's used me, and now
+she's gone to newer friends. I was a fool to suppose any woman would do
+otherwise. They'll tell her I can't marry; of course she'll go over to
+D'Orwood, or some of those confounded fools that are dangling after
+her."
+
+So in his skeptical haste judged Falkenstein, on the strength of a
+single "Not at home," due to Cashranger malice, and the fierce throbs
+the mere suspicion gave him showed him that he loved Valérie too much to
+be able to deceive himself any longer with the assurance that his
+feelings towards his protégée was simple "friendship." He knew it, but
+he was loth to give way to it. He had long held as a doctrine that a man
+could forget if he chose. He had been wearied of so many, been
+disappointed in so much, he had had idols of the hour, in which, their
+first gloss off, he had found no beauty, he could not tell; it might not
+be the same with Valérie. Warm and passionate as a Southern, haughty and
+reserved as a Northern, he held many a bitter conflict in his solitary
+vigils at night over his pipe, after evenings spent in society which no
+longer amused him, or excitement with which he vainly sought to drown
+his cares. When he did meet Valérie out, which was rarely, as he
+refused most invitations now, his struggle against his ill-timed passion
+made his manner so cold and capricious, that Valérie, who could not
+divine the workings of his heart, began, despite her vehement faith in
+him, and conviction that he was not wholly indifferent to her, to dread
+that Bella might be right, and that as he had left others so would he
+leave her. He gave her no opportunity of questioning him as to his
+sudden change, for when he did call in Lowndes Square, Bella and her
+aunt always stationed themselves as a sort of detective police, and
+Falkenstein now never sought a tête-à-tête.
+
+One evening she met him at a dinner-party. With undisguised delight she
+watched his entrance, and Waldemar, seeing her radiant face, thought in
+his haste, "She is happy enough, what does she care for me?" If he had
+looked at her after he had shaken hands carelessly with her, and turned
+away to talk to another woman, he would have discovered his mistake. But
+when do we ever discover half our errors before it is too late? She
+signed to him to come to her under pretext of looking at some croquis,
+and whispered hurriedly,
+
+"Count Waldemar, what have I done--why do you never come to see me? You
+are so changed, so altered----"
+
+"I was not aware of it."
+
+"But I never see you in the Gardens now. You never talk to me, you never
+call on me."
+
+"I have other engagements."
+
+Valérie breathed hard between her set teeth.
+
+"That are more agreeable to you, I suppose. You should not have
+accustomed me to what you intended to withdraw when it ceased to amuse
+you. _I_ am not so capricious. Your kindness about my play----"
+
+"It was no kindness; I would have done the same for any one."
+
+She looked at him fixedly.
+
+"General kindness is no kindness," said Valérie, passionately. "If you
+would do for a mere acquaintance what you would do for your friend, what
+value attaches to your friendship?"
+
+"I attach none to it," said the Count, coldly.
+
+Valérie's little hands clenched hard. She did not speak, lest her
+self-possession should give way, and just then D'Orwood came to give her
+his arm in to dinner; and at dinner Valérie, demonstrative and candid as
+she was, was gay and animated, for she could wear a mask in the bal
+d'Opéra of life as well as he; and though she could not believe the
+coldness he testified was really meant, she felt bitterly the neglect of
+his manner before others, at sight of which Bella's small eyes sparkled
+with malicious satisfaction.
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+SOME GOLDEN FETTERS ARE SHAKEN OFF AND OTHERS ARE PUT ON.
+
+
+"Mrs. Boville told me last night that Waldemar Falkenstein is so
+dreadfully in debt, that she thinks he'll have to go into court--don't
+they call it?" lisped Bella, the next morning; "be arrested, or
+bankrupt, or something dreadful. Should you think it is true?"
+
+"I know it's true," said Idiot Tweed, who was there, having a little
+music before luncheon. "He's confoundedly hard up, poor devil."
+
+"But I thought he was in such a good position--so well off?" said Bella,
+observing with secret delight that her cousin's head was raised, and
+that the pen with which she was writing had stopped in its rapid gallop.
+
+"Ah! so one thinks of a good many fellows," answered the Guardsman;
+"or, at least, you ladies do, who don't look at a man's ins and outs,
+and the fifty hundred things there are to bother him. Lots of
+people--householders, and all that sort of thing--that one would fancy
+worth no end, go smash when nobody's expecting it."
+
+"And Mr. Falkenstein really is embarrassed?"
+
+The Guardsman laughed outright. "That is a mild term, Miss Cashranger. I
+heard down at Windsor yesterday, from a man that knows his family very
+well, that if he don't pay his debts this week, Amadeus Levi will arrest
+him. I dare say he will. Jews do when they can't bleed you any longer,
+and think your family will come down handsomely. But they say the old
+Count won't give Falkenstein a rap, so most likely he'll cut the
+country."
+
+That afternoon, on his return from the Deeds and Chronicles Office,
+whose slow red-tapeism ill suited his impatient and vigorous intellect,
+Waldemar sat down deliberately to investigate his affairs. It was true
+that Amadeus Levi's patience was waning fast; his debts of honor had put
+him deep in that worthy's books, and Falkenstein, as he sat in his
+lodgings, with the August sun streaming full on the relentless figures
+that showed him, with cruel mathematical ruthlessness, that he was fast
+chained in the Golden Fetters of debt, leaned his head upon his arms
+with the bitter despair of a man whose own hand has blotted his past and
+ruined his future.
+
+The turning of the handle of his door roused him from his reverie. He
+looked up quickly.
+
+"A lady wants to speak to you, sir," said the servant who waited on him.
+
+"What name?"
+
+"She'd rather not give it, sir."
+
+"Very well," said Falkenstein, consigning all women to the devil; "show
+her up."
+
+Resigning himself to his fate, he rose, leaning his hand on the arm of
+the chair. He started involuntarily as the door opened again.
+
+"Valérie!"
+
+She looked up at him half hesitatingly. "Count Waldemar, don't be angry
+with me----"
+
+"Angry! no, Heaven knows; but----"
+
+Her face and her voice were fast thawing his chill reserve, and he
+stopped abruptly.
+
+"You wonder why I have come here," Valérie went on singularly shyly for
+her, "but--but I heard that you--you have much to trouble you just now.
+Is it true?"
+
+"True enough, Heaven knows."
+
+"Then--then," said Valérie, with all her old impetuosity, "let me do
+something for you--let me help you in some way--you who have done
+everything for me, who have been the only person kind to me on earth. Do
+let me--do not refuse me. I would die to serve you."
+
+He breathed fast as he gazed on her expressive eyes. It was a hard
+struggle to him to preserve his self-control.
+
+"No one can help me," he answered, hurriedly. "I have made my own
+fate--leave me to it."
+
+"I will not!" cried Valérie, passionately. "Do not send me away--do not
+refuse me. What happiness would there be for me so great as serving
+you--you to whom I owe all the pleasure I have known! Take them. Count
+Waldemar--pray take them; they have often told me they are worth a good
+deal, and I will thank Heaven every hour for having enabled me to aid
+you ever so little." She pressed into his hands a jewel-case.
+
+Falkenstein could not answer her. He stood looking down at her, his lips
+white as death. She mistook his silence for displeasure, and laid her
+hands on his arm.
+
+"Do not be offended--do not be annoyed with me. They are my own--an old
+heirloom of the L'Estranges that only came to me the other day. Take
+them, Count Waldemar. Do, for Heaven's sake. I spoke passionately to you
+last night; I have been unhappy ever since. If you will not take them, I
+shall think you have not yet forgiven me?"
+
+He seized her hands and drew her close to him: "Good Heavens! do you
+love me like this?"
+
+She did not answer, but she looked up at him. That look shivered to
+atoms Falkenstein's resolves, and cast his pride and prudence to the
+winds. He pressed her fiercely against his heart, he kissed her again
+and again, bitter tears rushing to his burning eyes.
+
+"Valérie! Valérie!" he whispered, wildly, "my fate is at its darkest.
+Will you share it?"
+
+She leaned her brow on his shoulder, trembling with hysterical joy.
+
+"You do care for me, then?" she murmured, at last.
+
+"Oh! thank Heaven."
+
+In the delirium of his happiness, in the vehemence of feelings touched
+to the core by sight of the intense love he had awakened, Falkenstein
+poured out on her all the passion of his impetuous and reserved nature,
+and in the paradise of the moment forgot every cloud that hung on his
+horizon.
+
+"Valérie!" he whispered, at length, "I have now nothing to offer you. I
+can give you none of the riches, and power, and position that other men
+can----"
+
+She stopped him, putting her hands on his lips. "Hush! I shall have
+everything that life can give me in having your love."
+
+"My darling, Heaven bless you!" cried Falkenstein, passionately; "but
+think twice, Valérie--pause before you decide. I am a ruined
+man--embarrassments fetter me on every side. To-morrow, for aught I
+know, I may be arrested for debt. I would not lead you into what, in
+older years, you may regret."
+
+"Regret!" cried Valérie, clinging to him. "How can I ever regret that I
+have won the one heaven I crave. If you love me, life will always be
+beautiful in my eyes; and, Count Waldemar, I can work for you--I can
+help you, be it ever so little. I cannot make much money now, but you
+have said that I shall gain more year after year. Only let me be with
+you; let me know your sorrows and lighten them if I can, and I could ask
+no greater happiness----"
+
+Falkenstein bent over her, and covered with caresses the lips that to
+him seemed so eloquent; he had no words to thank her for a love that, to
+his warm and solitary heart, came like water in the wilderness. The
+sound of voices gay and laughing, on the stairs, startled him.
+
+"That is Bevan and Godolphin; I forgot they were coming for me to go
+down to the Castle. Good Heavens! they mustn't see you here, love, to
+jest about you over their mess-tables. Stay," said Falkenstein, hastily,
+as the men entered the front room, "wait here a moment; they cannot see
+you in this window, and I will come to you again. Hallo! old fellows!"
+said he, passing through the folding-doors. "You're wonderfully
+punctual, Tom. I always give you half an hour's grace; but I suppose
+Harry's such an awful martinet, that he kept you up to time for once."
+
+"All the credit's due to my mare," laughed Godolphin. "She did the
+distance from Knightsbridge in four minutes, and I don't think Musjid
+himself could beat that. Are you ready, I say? because we're to be at
+the Castle by six, and Fitz don't like waiting for his turbot."
+
+"Give me a brace of seconds, and I shall be with you," said Waldemar.
+
+"Make haste, there's a good fellow. By George!" said Harry, catching
+sight of the jewel-case, "for a fellow who's so deucedly hard up, you've
+been pretty extravagant in getting those diamonds, Waldemar. Who are
+they for--Rosalie Rivers, or the Deloraine; or that last love of yours,
+that wonderful little L'Estrange?"
+
+Falkenstein's brow grew dark; he snatched the case from the table, with
+a suppressed oath, and went back to the inner room, slamming the
+folding-doors after him. Godolphin lounged to the window looking on the
+street, where he stood for five minutes, whistling A te, o cara. "The
+devil! what's that fellow about?" he said, yawning. "How impatient
+Bonbon's growing! Why don't that fool Roberts drive her up and down? By
+Jove! come here, Tom. Who's that girl Falkenstein's now putting into a
+cab? That's what he wanted his brace of seconds for! Confound that
+portico! I can't see her face, and women dress so much alike now,
+there's no telling one from another. What an infernal while he is
+bidding her good-by. I shall know another time what his two seconds
+mean. There, the cab's off at last, thank Heaven!--Very pretty,
+Falkenstein," he began, as the Count entered. "That's your game, is it?
+I think you might have confided in your bosom friend. Who is the fair
+one? Come, make a clean breast of it."
+
+Falkenstein shook his head. "My dear Harry, spare your words. Don't you
+know of old that you never get anything out of me unless I choose?"
+
+"Oh yes, confound you, I know that pretty well. One question,
+though--was she pretty?"
+
+"Do you suppose I entertain plain women?"
+
+"No; never was such a man for the beaux yeux. It looked uncommonly like
+little L'Estrange; but I don't suppose she could get out of the durance
+vile of Lowndes Square, to come and pay you a tête-à-tête call. Well,
+are you ready now? because Bonbon's tired of waiting, and so are we. A
+man in love makes an abominable friend."
+
+"A man in love with himself makes a worse one," said Waldemar; which hit
+Harry in a vulnerable spot, Godolphin being generally chaffed about the
+affection he bore his own person.
+
+"That _was_ the little L'Estrange, wasn't it?" asked Godolphin, as they
+leaned out of the window after dinner, apart from the others.
+
+"Yes," said Waldemar, curtly; "but I beg you to keep silence on it to
+every one."
+
+"To be sure; I've kept plenty of your confidences. I had no idea you'd
+push it so far. Of course you won't be fool enough to marry her?"
+
+Falkenstein's dark eyes flashed fire. "I shall not be fool enough to
+consult or confide in any man upon my private affairs."
+
+Godolphin shrugged his shoulders with commiseration, and left Waldemar
+alone in his window.
+
+Falkenstein called in Lowndes Square the morning after and had an
+interview with old Cash in the library of gaudy books that were never
+opened, and told him concisely that he loved his niece, and--that ever I
+should live to record it!--that little snob, with not two ideas in his
+head, who couldn't, if put to it, tell you who his own grandfather was,
+and who owed his tolerance in society to his banking account, refused an
+alliance with the refined intellect and the blue blood of one of the
+proud, courtly, historic Falkensteins! He'd been tutored by his wife,
+and said his lesson properly, refusing to sanction "any such connexion;"
+of course his niece must act for herself.
+
+Waldemar bowed himself out with all his haughtiest high-breeding; he
+knew Valérie _would_ act for herself, but the insult cut him to the
+quick. He threw himself into the train, and went down to Fairlie, his
+governor's place in Devonshire, determining to sacrifice his pride, and
+ask his father to aid him in his effort for freedom. In the drawing-room
+he found his sister Virginia, a cold, proud woman of the world. She
+scarcely let him sit down and inquire for the governor, before she
+pounced on him.
+
+"Waldemar, I have heard the most absurd report about you."
+
+"Most reports are absurd."
+
+"Yes, of course; but this is too ridiculous. What do you think it is?"
+
+"I am sure I can't say."
+
+"That you are going to marry."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Well! You take it very quietly. If you were going to make a good match
+I should be the first to rejoice; but they say that you are engaged to
+some niece of that odious, vulgar parvenu, Cashranger, the brewer; that
+little bold thing who wrote that play that made a noise a little while
+ago. Pray set me at rest at once, and say it is not true."
+
+"I should be very sorry if it were not."
+
+His sister looked at him in haughty horror. "Waldemar! you must be mad.
+If you were rich, it would be intolerable to stoop to such a connexion;
+but, laden with debts as you are, to disgrace the family with such----"
+
+"Disgrace?" repeated Falkenstein, scornfully. "She would honor any
+family she entered."
+
+"You talk like a boy of twenty," said Virginia, impatiently. "To load
+yourself with a penniless wife when you are on the brink of ruin--to
+introduce to _us_ the niece of a low-bred, pushing plebeian--to give
+your name to a bold manoeuvring girl, who has the impudence to take her
+stand before a crowded theatre----"
+
+"Hold!" broke out Waldemar, fiercely: "you might thank Heaven, Virginia,
+if you were as frank-hearted and as free from guile as she is. She
+thinks no ill, and therefore she is not, like you fine ladies, on the
+constant qui vive lest it should be attributed to her. I have found at
+last a woman too generous to be mistrustful, too fond to wait for the
+world's advantages, and, moreover, untainted by the breath of your
+conventionalities, and pride, and cant."
+
+Virginia threw back her head with a curl on her lip. "You are mad, as I
+said before. I suppose you do not expect me to countenance your
+infatuation?"
+
+He shrugged his shoulder. "Really, whether you do or not is perfectly
+immaterial to me."
+
+Virginia was silent, pale with anger, for they were all (pardonably
+enough) proud. She turned with a sneer to Josephine, a younger and less
+decided woman, just entering. "Josephine, you are come in time to be
+congratulated on your sister-in-law."
+
+"Is it true?" murmured Josephine, aghast. "Oh! my dear Waldemar, pause;
+consider how dreadful for us--a person who is so horribly connected;
+the man's beer wagon is now standing at the door. Oh, do reflect--a
+girl, whose name is before the public----"
+
+"By talent that would grace a queen!" interrupted Waldemar, rising
+impatiently. "You waste your words; you might know that I am not so weak
+as to give up my sole chance of happiness to please your pitiful
+prejudices."
+
+"Very well. _I_ shall never speak to her," said Virginia, between her
+teeth.
+
+"That you will do as you please; you will be the loser."
+
+"But, Waldemar, do consider," began Josephine.
+
+"Your women's tongues would drive a man mad," muttered Falkenstein.
+"Tell me where my father is."
+
+"In his study," answered Virginia briefly. And in his study Falkenstein
+found him. He saw at once that something was wrong by his reception; but
+he plunged at once into his affairs, showing him plainly his position,
+and asking him frankly for help to discharge his debts.
+
+Count Ferdinand heard him in silence. "Waldemar," he answered, after a
+long pause, "you shall have all you wish. I will sign you a check for
+the amount this instant if you give me your word to break off this
+miserable affair."
+
+Falkenstein's cheek flushed with annoyance; he had expected sympathy
+from his father, or at least toleration. "That is impossible. You ask me
+to give up the one thing that binds me to life--the one love I have
+given me--the one chance of redeeming the future, that lies in my grasp.
+I am not a boy led away by a passing caprice. I have known and tried
+everything, and I can judge what will make my happiness. What
+unfortunate prejudice have you all formed against my poor little
+Valérie----"
+
+"Enough" said his father, sternly. "I address you as a man of the world,
+and a man of sense; you answer me with infatuated folly. I give you your
+choice: my aid and esteem, in everything you can desire, or the madman's
+gratification of the ill-placed caprice of the hour."
+
+Falkenstein rose as haughtily as the Count.
+
+"Virtually, then, you give me no choice. I am sorry I troubled you with
+my concerns. I know whose interference I have to thank for it, and am
+only astonished you are so easily influenced," said Falkenstein, setting
+his teeth hard as he closed the door; for his father's easy desertion of
+him hit him hard, and he attributed it, rightly enough, to Maximilian,
+who, industriously gathering every grain of evil report against his
+brother, had taken such a character of Valérie--whom, unluckily, he had
+seen coming out of Duke street--down to Fairlee, that his father vowed
+to disinherit him, and his sisters never to speak to him. The doors both
+of his own home and Lowndes Square were closed to him; and in his
+adversity the only one that clung to him was Valérie.
+
+If he had been willing to ask them, none of his friends could have
+helped him. Godolphin, with 20,000_l_. a year, spent every shilling on
+himself; Tom Bevan, but that he stood for a pocket borough of his
+governor's, would have been in quod long ago; and for the others, men
+very willing to take your money at écarté are not very willing to lend
+you theirs when you can play écarté no longer. Amadeus Levi grew more
+and more importunate; down on him at once, as Falkenstein knew, would
+come the Jew's _griffes_ if he took any such unprofitable step as a
+marriage for love; and with all the passion in the world,
+mesdemoiselles, a man thinks twice before he throws himself into the
+Insolvent Court.
+
+One night, _nolens volens_, decision was forced on him. He had seen
+Valérie that morning in the Pantheon, and they had parted to meet again
+at a ball, one of the lingering stragglers of the past season. About
+twelve he dressed and walked down Duke Street, looking for a cab to take
+him to Park Lane. Under a lamp at the corner, standing reading, he saw a
+man whom he knew by sight, and whose errand he guessed without
+hesitation. He paused unnoticed close beside him; he stood a moment and
+glanced over his shoulder; he saw a warrant for his own apprehension at
+Levi's suit. The man looking, to make sure of the dress, never raised
+his eyes. Falkenstein walked on, hailed a hansom in Regent street, and
+in a quarter of an hour was chatting with his hostess.
+
+"Where is Miss L'Estrange?" he asked, carelessly.
+
+"She was waltzing with Tom a moment ago," answered Mrs. Eden. "If you
+run after her so, I shall believe report. But is anything the matter,
+Falkenstein? How ill you look!"
+
+"Too much champagne," laughed Waldemar. "I've been dining with Gourmet,
+and all the Falkensteins inherit the desire of obtaining that
+gentlemanlike curse, the gout."
+
+"It's not the gout, mon ami," smiled Mrs. Eden.
+
+"Break your engagement and waltz with me," he whispered, ten minutes
+after, to Valérie.
+
+"I have none. I kept them all free for you!"
+
+He put his arm round her and whirled her into the circle.
+
+"Count Waldemar, you are not well. Has anything fresh occurred?" she
+asked anxiously, as she felt the quick throbs of his heart, and saw the
+dark circles of his eyes and the deepened lines round his haughty mouth.
+
+"Not much, dearest. I will tell you in a moment."
+
+She was silent, and he led her through the different rooms into Mrs.
+Eden's boudoir, which he knew was generally deserted; and there, holding
+her close to him, but not looking into her eyes lest his strength should
+fail him, he told her that he must leave England, and asked her if he
+should go alone.
+
+She caught both his hands and kissed them passionately. "No, no; do not
+leave me--take me with you, wherever it be. Oh, that I were rich for
+your sake! I, who would die for you, can do nothing to help you--"
+
+He pressed her fiercely to him. "Oh, Valérie! Heaven bless you for your
+love, that renders the darkest hour of my life the brightest. But weigh
+well what you do, my darling. I am utterly ruined. I cannot insure you
+from privation in the future, perhaps not from absolute want; if I make
+money, much must go in honor year by year to the payment of my debts, by
+instalments. I shall take you from all the luxuries and the society that
+you are formed for; do not sacrifice yourself blindly----"
+
+"Sacrifice myself!" interrupted Valérie. "Oh! Waldemar, if it is no
+sacrifice to _you_, let me be with you wherever it be; and if you have
+cares, and toil, and sorrow, let me share them. I will write for you,
+work for you, do anything for you, only let me be with you----"
+
+He pressed his lips to hers, silent with the tumult of passion,
+happiness, delirious joy, regret, remorse, that arose in him at her
+words.
+
+"My guardian angel, be it as you will!" he said, at length. "I must be
+out of England to-morrow, Valérie. Will you come with me as my wife?"
+
+Early on Sunday morning Falkenstein was married, and out of his host of
+friends, and relatives, and acquaintance, honest Tom Bevan was the only
+man who turned him off, as Tom phrased it, and bid him good bye, with
+few words but much regret, concealed, after the manner of Britons, for
+the loss of his old chum. Tom's congratulations were the only ones that
+fell on Valérie's ear in the empty church that morning; but I question
+if Valérie ever noticed the absence of the marriage paraphernalia, so
+entirely were her heart, and eyes, and mind, fixed on the one whom she
+followed into exile. They were out of London before their part of it had
+begun to lounge down to their late breakfasts; and as they crossed the
+Channel, and the noon sun streamed on the white line of cliffs,
+Falkenstein, holding her hands in his and looking down into her eyes,
+forgot the follies of his past, the insecurity of his future, the tale
+of his ruin and his flight, that would be on the tongues of his friends
+on the morrow, and only remembered the love that came to him when all
+others forsook him.
+
+
+
+
+V.
+
+THE SILVER CHIMES RING IN A HAPPY NEW YEAR.
+
+
+One December evening Falkenstein sat in his lodgings in Vienna; the wood
+fire burnt brightly, and if its flames lighted up a room whose
+_appanages_ were rather different to the palace his grandfather had
+owned in the imperial city, they at least shone on waving hair and
+violet eyes that were very dear to him, and helped to teach him to
+forget much that he had forfeited. From England he had come to Vienna,
+where, as he had projected, his uncle, one of the cabinet, had been able
+to help him to a diplomatic situation, for which his keen judgment and
+varied information fitted him; and in Austria his name gave him at once
+a brevet of the highest nobility. Of course the knowledge that he was
+virtually outlawed, and that he was deep in the debt of such sharps as
+Amadeus Levi, often galled his proud and sensitive nature; but Valérie
+knew how to soften and to soothe him, and, under her caressing affection
+or her ready vivacity, the dark hours passed away.
+
+He was smoking his favorite briar-wood pipe, with Valérie sitting at his
+feet, reading him some copy just going to her publishers in England, and
+little Spit, not forgotten in their flight, lying on the hearth, when a
+deep English voice startled them, singing out, "Here you are at last! I
+give you my word, I've been driving over this blessed city two hours to
+find you!"
+
+"Tom!" cried Falkenstein.
+
+"Captain Bevan!" echoed Valérie, springing to her feet, while Spit began
+barking furiously.
+
+Bevan shook hands with them; heartily glad to see his friend again,
+though, of course he grumbled more about the snow and the stupidity of
+the Viennese than anything else. "Very jolly rooms you've got," said he
+at last; "and, 'pon my life, you look better than I've seen you do a
+long time, Waldemar. Madame has done wonders for you."
+
+"Madame" laughed, and glanced up at Falkenstein, who smiled half sadly.
+
+"She has taught me how to find happiness, Tom. I wish you may get such a
+teacher."
+
+"Thank you, so do I, if my time ever comes; but geniuses _aux longs yeux
+bleus_ are rare in the world. But you're wondering why I'm here, ain't
+you?"
+
+"I was flattering myself you were here to see us."
+
+"Well, of course and very glad to see you, too; but I'm come in part as
+your governor's messenger."
+
+Valérie saw him look up quickly, a flush on his face. "My father?"
+
+"Yes, that rascal--(you know I always said he was good for nothing, a
+fool that couldn't smoke a Queen without being sick)--I mean, your
+brother Maximillian--was at the bottom of the Count's row with you. Last
+week I was dining at old Fitz's, and your father and sisters were there,
+and when the women were gone I asked him when he'd last heard of you; of
+course he looked tempestuous, and said, 'Never.' Happily, I'm not easily
+shut up, so I told him it was a pity, then, for if he did he'd hear you
+were jollier than ever, and I said your wife was---- Well, I won't say
+what, for fear we spoil this young lady, and make her vain of herself.
+The old boy turned pale, and said nothing; but two days after I got a
+line from him, saying he wasn't quite well; would I go down and speak to
+him. I found him chained with the gout, and he began to talk about you.
+I like that old man, Waldemar, I do, uncommonly. He said he'd been too
+hasty, but that it was a family failing, and that Max had brought him
+such--well, such confounded lies--about Valérie, that he would have shot
+you rather than see you give her your name; now he wants to have you
+back. I'd nothing to do, so I said I'd come and ask you to forgive the
+poor old boy, and come and see him, for he isn't well. I know you will,
+Falkenstein, because you never _did_ bear malice."
+
+"Oh yes, he will," murmured Valérie, tears in her eyes. "I separated
+you, Waldemar; you will let me see you reconciled?"
+
+"My darling, yes! Poor old governor!" And Falkenstein stopped and
+smoked vigorously, for kindness always touched him to the heart.
+
+Bevan looked at him and was silent. "I say," he whispered, when he was a
+moment alone with Valérie. "I didn't tell Waldemar, because I thought
+you'd break it to him less blunderingly than I should, but the old
+Count's breaking fast. I doubt if he'll live another week."
+
+Bevan was right. In another week Falkenstein stood by the death-bed of
+his father. He had a long interview with him alone, in which the old
+Count detailed to him the fabricated slanders with which his brother had
+blackened Valérie's name. With all his old passion he disowned the son
+capable of such baseness, and constituted Waldemar his sole heir, save
+the legacies left his daughters. He died in Waldemar's arms the night
+they arrived in England, with his last word to him and Valérie, whom,
+despite Virginia's opposition, he insisted on seeing. Falkenstein's
+sorrow for his father was deep and unfeigned, like his character; but
+his guardian angel, as he used to call her, was there to console him,
+and, under the light of her smile, sorrow could not long pursue him.
+
+On his brother, always his own enemy, and now the traducer of the woman
+he loved, Waldemar's wrath fell heavily, and would, to a certainty, have
+found some means of wreaking itself, but for the last wishes of his
+father. As it was, he took a nobler, yet a more complete revenge. The
+day of the funeral, when they were assembled for the reading of the
+will, Maximilian, unconscious of his doom, came with his gentle face,
+and tender melancholy air, to inherit, as he believed, Fairlie, and all
+the personal property.
+
+Stunned as by a spent ball, horror-struck, disbelieving his senses, he
+heard his younger brother proclaimed the heir. It was a serious thing
+to him, moreover, for--for a man of large expenses and great
+ostentation--his own means were small. To secure every shilling he had
+schemed, and planned, and lied; and now every shilling was taken from
+him. Like the dog of Æsopian memory, trying to catch two pieces of meat,
+he had lost his own!
+
+After the last words were read, Waldemar stood a moment irresolute; then
+he lifted his head, his dark eyes bright and clear, his mouth fixed and
+firm, a proud calm displacing his old look of passion and of care.
+
+He went up to his brother with a generous impulse, and held out his
+hand.
+
+"Maximilian, from our boyhood you never liked me, and of late you have
+done me a great wrong; but I am willing to believe that you did it from
+a mistaken motive, and by me, at least, it shall never be recalled. My
+father, in his wish to make amends for the one harsh act of his life to
+me, has made a will which I know you consider unjust. I cannot dispute
+his last desire that I should inherit Fairlie, but I can do what I know
+he would sanction--divide with you the wealth his energy collected. Take
+the half of the property, as if he had left it to you, and over his
+grave let us forget the past!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the last day of the year, so eventful to them both, Falkenstein and
+Valérie drove through the park at Fairlie. The rôle of a country
+gentleman would have been the last into which Waldemar, with his
+independent opinions and fastidious intellect, would have sunk; but he
+was fond of the place from early associations, and he came down to take
+possession. The tenantry and servants welcomed him heartily, for they
+had often used to wish that the wild high-spirited child, who rode his
+Shetland over the country at a headlong pace, and if he sometimes
+teased their lives out, always gave them a kind word and merry laugh,
+had been the heir instead of the one to whom they applied the old
+proverb "still and ill."
+
+The tenantry had been dismissed, the dinner finished, even the briarwood
+pipe smoked out, and in the wide Elizabethan window of the library
+Falkenstein stood, looking on the clear bright night, and watching the
+Old Year out.
+
+"You sent the deed of gift to-day to Maximilian?" said Valérie, clasping
+both her hands on his arm.
+
+"Yes. He does not take it very graciously; but perhaps we can hardly
+expect that from a man who has been disinherited. I question if I should
+accept it at all."
+
+"But you could never have wronged another as he wronged you," cried
+Valérie. "Oh, Waldemar! I think I never realised fully, till the day you
+took your generous revenge, how noble, how good, how above all others
+you are."
+
+He smiled, and put his hand on her lips.
+
+"Good, noble, silly child! those words may do for some spotless Gahlahad
+or Folko, not for me, who, a month ago, was in debt to some of the
+greatest blackguards in town, who have yielded to every temptation,
+given way to every weakness; not with the excuse of a boy new to life,
+but willfully and recklessly, knowing both the pleasures and their
+price--I, who but for your love and my father's, should now be a
+solitary exile, paying for my past follies with----"
+
+"Be quiet," interrupted Valérie, with her passionate vivacity. "As
+different as was 'Mirabeau jugé par sa famille et Mirabeau jugé par le
+peuple,' are you judged by your enemies, and judged by those who love
+you. Granted you have had temptations, follies, errors; so has every
+man of high spirit and generous temper, and I value you far more coming
+out of a fiery furnace with so much of pure gold that the flames could
+not destroy, than if you were some ascetic Pharisee, who has never
+succumbed because he has never been tempted, and, born with no
+weaknesses, is born with no warmer virtues either!"
+
+Falkenstein laughed, as he looked down at her.
+
+"You little goose! Well, at least you have eloquence, Valérie, if not
+truth, on your side; and your sophistry is dear to me, as it springs out
+of your love."
+
+"But it is not sophistry," she cried, with an energetic stamp of her
+foot. "If you will not listen to philosophy, concede, at least, to fact.
+Which is most worthy of my epithets--'noble and good'--Waldemar
+Falkenstein, or Maximillian? And yet Maximillian has been quiet and
+virtuous from his youth upwards, and always wins white balls from the
+ballot of society."
+
+"Well, you shall have the privilege of your sex--the last word," smiled
+Waldemar, "more especially as the last word is on my side."
+
+"Hark!" interrupted Valérie, quiet and subdued in a second, "the clock
+is striking twelve."
+
+Silently, with her arms round his neck, they listened to the parting
+knell of the Old Year, stealing quietly away from its place among men.
+From the church towers through England tolled the twelve strokes, with a
+melancholy echo, telling a world that its dead past was laid in a sealed
+grave, and the stone of Never More was rolled to the door of the
+sepulchre. The Old Year was gone, with all its sins and errors, its
+golden gleams and midnight storms, its midsummer days of sunshine for
+some, its winter nights of starless gloom for others. Its last knell
+echoed; and then, from the old grey belfries in villages and towns, over
+the stirring cities and the sleeping hamlets, over the quiet meadows and
+stretching woodlands and grand old forest trees, rang the Silver Chimes
+of the New Year.
+
+"It shall be a happy New Year to you, my darling, if my love can make it
+so," whispered Waldemar, as the musical bells clashed out in wild
+harmony under the winter stars.
+
+She looked up into his eyes. "I _must_ be happy, since it will be passed
+with you. Do you remember, Waldemar, the night I saw you first, my
+telling you New Year's-day was my birthday, and wondering where you and
+I should spend the next? I liked you strangely from the first, but how
+little I foresaw that my whole life was to hang on yours!"
+
+"As little as I foresaw when, after heavy losses at Godolphin's, I
+watched the Old Year out in my chambers, a tired, ruined, hopeless,
+aimless man, with not one on whom I could rely for help or sympathy in
+my need, that I should stand here now, free, clear from debt, with all
+my old entanglements shaken off, my old scores wiped out, my darker
+errors forgotten, my worst enemy humbled, and my own future bright. Oh!
+Valérie! Heaven bless you for the love that followed me into exile!"
+
+He drew her closer to him as he spoke, and as he felt the beating of the
+heart that was always true to him, and the soft caress of the lips that
+had always a smile for him, Falkenstein looked out over the wide
+woodland that called him master, glistening in the clear starlight, and
+as he listened to the SILVER CHIMES--joyous herald of the New-born
+Year--he blessed in his inmost heart the GOLDEN FETTERS OF LOVE.
+
+
+
+
+SLANDER AND SILLERY.
+
+
+
+
+SLANDER AND SILLERY.
+
+
+
+
+I.
+
+THE LION OF THE CHAUSSÉE D'ANTIN.
+
+ Ma mère est à Paris,
+ Mon père est à Versailles.
+ Et moi je suis ici.
+ Pour chanter sur la paille,
+ L'amour! L'amour!
+ La nuit comme le jour.
+
+
+Humming this popular if not over-recherché ditty, a man sat sketching in
+pastels, one morning, in his rooms at Numéro 10, Rue des Mauvais Sujets,
+Chaussée d' Antin, Paris.
+
+The band of the national guard, the marchands crying "Coco!" the
+charlatans puffing everything from elixirs to lead-pencils, the Empress
+and Mme. d'Alve passing in their carriage, the tramp of some Zouaves
+just returned from Algeria--nothing in the street below disturbed him;
+he went sketching on as if his life depended on the completion of the
+picture. He was a man about thirty-three, middle height, and eminently
+graceful. He was half Bohemian, half English, and the animation of the
+one nation and the hauteur of the other were by turns expressed on his
+chiselled features as his thoughts moved with his pencil. The stamp of
+his good blood was on him; his face would have attracted and interested
+in ever so large a crowd. He was very pale, and there was a tired look
+on his wide, powerful forehead and in his long dark eyes, and a weary
+line or two about his handsome mouth, as if he had exhausted his youth
+very quickly; and, indeed, to see life as he had seen it _is_ somewhat a
+fatiguing process, and apt to make one blasé before one's time.
+
+The rooms in which he sat were intensely comfortable, and very
+provocative to a quiet pipe and idleness. To be sure, if one judged his
+tastes by them, they were not probably, to use the popular jargon,
+"healthy," for they had nothing very domestic or John Halifaxish about
+them, and were certainly not calculated to gratify the eyes of maiden
+aunts and spinster sisters.
+
+There were fencing-foils, pistols, tobacco-boxes of every style and
+order, from ballet-girls to terriers' heads. There were three or four
+cockatoos and parrots on stands chattering bits of Quartier Latin songs,
+or imitating the cries in the street below. There were cards,
+dice-boxes, albums à rire, meerschaums, lorgnons, pink notes, no end of
+De Kock's and Lebrun's books, and all the etcæteras of chambres de
+garçon strewed about: and there were things, too--pictures, statuettes,
+fauteuils, and a breakfast-service of Sèvres and silver--that Du Barry
+need not have scrupled to put in her "petite bon-bonnière" at Luciennes.
+
+So busy was he sketching and singing
+
+ "Messieurs les étudiens
+ Montez á la Chaumière!"
+
+that he never heard a knock at his door, and he looked up with an
+impatient frown on his white, broad forehead as a man entered _sans
+cérémonie_.
+
+"Mon Dieu! Ernest," cried his friend, "what the devil are you doing here
+with your pipe and your pastels, when I've been waiting at Tortoni's a
+good half-hour, and at last, out of patience, drove here to see what on
+earth had become of you?"
+
+"My dear fellow, I beg you a thousand pardons," said Vaughan, lazily. "I
+was sketching this, and you and your horses went clean out of my head, I
+honestly confess."
+
+"And your breakfast too, it seems," said De Concressault, glancing at
+the table. "Is it Madame de Mélusine or the little Bluette whose
+portrait absorbs you so much? No, by Jove! it's a prettier woman than
+either of 'em. If she's like that, take me to see her this instant. What
+glorious gold hair! I adore your countrywomen when they've hair that
+color. Where did you get that face? Is she a duchess, or a danseuse, a
+little actress you're going to patronise, or a millionnaire you're going
+to marry?"
+
+"I can't tell you," laughed Vaughan. "I've not an idea who she may be. I
+saw her last evening coming out of the Français, and picked up her
+bouquet for her as she was getting into her carriage. The face was
+young, the smile very pretty and bright, and, as they daguerreotyped
+themselves in my mind, I thought I might as well transfer them to paper
+before newer beauties chased them out of it."
+
+"Diable! and you don't know who she is? However, we'll soon find out.
+That gold hair mustn't be lost. But get your breakfast, pray, Ernest,
+and let us be off to poor Armand's sale."
+
+"That's the way we mourn our dead friends," said Vaughan, with a sneer,
+pouring out his coffee. "Armand is jesting, laughing, and smoking with
+us one day, the next he's pitched out of his carriage going down to
+Asnières, and all we think of is--that his horses are for sale. If I
+were found in the Morgue to-morrow, your first emotion, Emile, would be,
+'Vaughan's De l'Orme will be sold. I must go and bid for it directly.'"
+
+De Concressault laughed as he looked up at a miniature of Marion de
+l'Orme, once taken for the Marquis of Gordon. "I fancy, mon garçon,
+there'll be too many sharks after all your possessions for me to stand
+any chance."
+
+"True enough," said Vaughan; "and I question if they'll wait till my
+death before they come down on 'em. But I don't look forward. I take
+life as it comes. Vogue la galère! At least, I've _lived_, not
+vegetated." And humming his refrain,
+
+ "L'amour! l'amour!
+ La nuit comme le jour!"
+
+he lounged down the stairs and drove to a sale in the Faubourg St.
+Germain, where one of his Paris chums, a virtuoso and connoisseur, had
+left endless _meubles_ to be sold by his duns and knocked down to his
+friends.
+
+Vaughan was quite right; he _had_ lived, and at a pretty good pace, too.
+When he came of age a tolerably good fortune awaited him, but it had not
+been long in his hands before he contrived to let it slip through them.
+He'd been brought up at Sainte Barbe, after being expelled from Rugby,
+knew all the best of the "jeunesse dorée," and could not endure any
+place after Paris, where his life was as sparkling and brilliant as the
+foam off a glass of champagne. Wild and careless, high spirited, and
+lavish in his Opera suppers, his _cabaret_ dinners, his Trois Frères
+banquets, his lansquenet parties, his bouquets for baronnes, and his
+bracelets for ballerinas, Ernest gained his reputation as a _Lion_,
+and--ruined himself, too, poor old fellow!
+
+His place down in Surrey had mortgages thick on every inch of its lands,
+and the money that kept him going was borrowed from those modern Satans,
+money lenders, at the usually ruinous interest. "But still," Ernest was
+wont to say, with great philosophy, "I've had ten years' swing of
+pleasure. Does every man get as much as that? And should I have been any
+happier if I'd been a good boy, and a country squire, sat on the bench,
+amused my mind with turnips, and married some bishop's daughter, who'd
+have marched me to church, forbidden cigars, and buried me in family
+boots?"
+
+Certainly that would _not_ have been his line, and so, in natural horror
+at it, he dashed into a diametrically opposite one, and after the favor
+he had shown him from every handsome woman that drove through Longchamp,
+wore diamonds at the Tuileries, and supped with dominos noirs at bals
+d'Opéra, and the favor he showed to cards, the _courses_, and the
+_coulisses_, few bishops would have imperilled their daughters' souls by
+setting them to hunt down this wicked _Lion_, especially as the poor
+_Lion_ now wasn't worth the trapping. If he had been, there would have
+been hue and cry enough after him I don't doubt; but the Gordon Cummings
+of the beau sexe rarely hunt unless it's worth their while, and they can
+bring home splendid spoils to make their bosom friends mad with envy;
+and Ernest, despite his handsome face, his fashionable reputation, and
+the aroma of conquest that hung about him (they used to say he never
+wooed ever so negligently but he won), was assuredly neither an
+"eligible speculation" nor a "marrying man," and was an object rather
+of terror to English mammas steering budding young ladies through the
+dangerous vortex of French society with a fierce chevaux de frise of
+British prejudices and a keen British eye to business. If Ernest was of
+no other use, however, he was invaluable to his uncles, aunts, and male
+cousins, as a sort of scapegoat and _épouvantail_, to be held up on high
+to show the unwary what they would come to if they followed his steps.
+It was so pleasant to them to exult over his backslidings, and, cutting
+him mercilessly up into little bits, hold condemnatory sermons over
+every one of the pieces. "Dans l'adversité de nos meilleurs amis, nous
+trouvons toujours quelque chose qui ne nous déplait pas;" and Vaughan's
+friends, like the rest of us pharisees, dearly loved to glance at the
+publican (especially if he was handsomer, cleverer, or any way better
+than themselves), and thank God loudly that they were not such men as
+he. Ernest was a hardened sinner, however; he laughed, put the Channel
+between him and them, and went on his ways without thinking or caring
+for their animadversions.
+
+"By Jove! Emile," said he as they sat dining together at Leiter's, "I
+should like to find out my golden-haired sylphide. She was English, by
+her fair skin, and though I'm not very fond of my compatriotes,
+especially when they're abroad (I think touring John Bull detestable
+wrapped up in his treble plaid of reserve), still I should like to find
+her out just for simple curiosity. I assure you she'd the prettiest foot
+and ankle I ever saw, not excepting even Bluette's."
+
+"Ma foi! that's a good deal from _you_. She must be found, then. Voyons!
+shall we advertise in the _Moniteur_, employ the secret police, or call
+at all the hotels in person to say that you're quite ready to act out
+Soulié's 'Lion Amoureux,' if you can only discover the petite
+bourgeoise to play it with you?"
+
+Vaughan laughed as he drank his demi-tasse.
+
+"Lion amoureux! that's an anomaly; we're only in love just enough pour
+nous amuser; and of us Albin says, very rightly,
+
+ Si vous connaissiez quelques meilleurs,
+ Vous porteriez bientôt cette âme ailleurs."
+
+"Very well, then: if you don't know of anything better, let's hunt up
+this incognita. If she went to the Français, she's most likely at the
+Odéon to-night," said De Concressault. "Shall we try?"
+
+"Allons!" said Vaughan, rising indolently, as he did most things. "But
+it's rather silly, I think; there are bright smiles and pretty feet
+enough in Paris without one's setting off on a wild-goose chase after
+them."
+
+They were playing the last act of "La Calomnie," as Vaughan and De
+Concressault took their places, put up their lorgnons, and looked round
+the house. He swore a few mental "Diables!" and "Sacrés!" as his gaze
+fell on faces old or ugly, or too brunes or too blondes, or anything but
+what he wanted. At last, without moving his glass, he touched De
+Concressault's arm.
+
+"There she is, Emile, in the fourth from the centre, in a white opera
+cloak, with pink flowers in her hair."
+
+"I see her, mon ami," said Emile. "I found her out two seconds ago (see
+how well you sketch!) but I wouldn't spoil your pleasure in discovering
+her. Mon Dieu! Ernest, she's looking at you, and smiles as if she
+recognised you. Was there ever so lucky a Lauzun?"
+
+Vaughan could have laughed outright to see by the brightness of the
+girl's expression that she knew the saviour of her bouquet again, for
+though he was accustomed to easy conquests, such naive interest in him
+at such short notice was something new to him.
+
+He didn't take his lorgnon off her again, and she was certainly worth
+the honor, with her soft, lustrous gold hair, the eyes that defy
+definition--black in some lights, violet in others--a wide-arched
+forehead, promising plenty of brains, and a rayonnante, animated, joyous
+expression, quite refreshing to anybody as bored and blasé as Vaughan
+and De Concressault. As soon as the last piece was over Vaughan slipped
+out of his loge, and took up his station at the entrance.
+
+He didn't wait in vain: the golden hair soon came, on the arm of a
+gentleman--middle aged, as Vaughan noticed with a sensation of
+satisfaction. She glanced up at him as she passed: he looked very
+handsome in the gas glare. Vaughan perhaps was too sensible a fellow to
+think of his pose, but even _we_ have our weaknesses under certain
+circumstances, as well as the crinolines. Luckily for him, he chanced to
+have in his pocket a gold serpent bracelet he had bought that morning
+for some fair dame or demoiselle. He stopped her, and held it out to
+her.
+
+"I beg your pardon, mademoiselle," he said in French, "but I think you
+dropped this?"
+
+She looked up at him with the sunniest of smiles as she answered, in a
+pure accent, "No monsieur, thank you, it does not belong to me."
+
+The middle-aged man glanced sideways at him with true British
+suspicion--I dare say a pickpocket, a Rouge, and Fieschi, were all mixed
+up in his mind as embodied in the graceful figure and bold glance of the
+_Lion_. He drew the girl on, looking much like a heavy cloud with a
+bright sun ray after it; but she half turned her head over her shoulder
+to give him a farewell smile, which Ernest returned with ten per cent.
+interest.
+
+"Anglais," said Emile, concisely.
+
+"Malheureusement," said Ernest as briefly, as he pushed his way into the
+air, and saw the gold hair vanish into her carriage. He went quickly up
+to the cocher.
+
+"Où demeurent-ils, mon ami?" he whispered, slipping a five-franc piece
+into his hand.
+
+The man smiled. "A l'Hôtel de Londres, monsieur; No. 6, au premier."
+
+"The devil! pourquoir ne allez pas?" said an unmistakably English voice
+from the interior of the voiture. The man set off at a trot; Ernest
+sprang into his own trap.
+
+"Au Chateau Rouge! May as well go there, eh, Emile? What a deuced pity
+la chevelure dorée is English!"
+
+"I wish she were a danseuse, an actress, a fleuriste--anything one could
+make his own introduction to. Confound it there's the 'heavy father,'
+I'm afraid, in the case, and some rigorous mamma, or vigilant _béguine_
+of a governess: but, to judge by the young lady's smiles, she'll be easy
+game unless she's tremendously fenced in."
+
+With which consolatory reflection Vaughan leaned back and lighted a
+cheroot, _en route_ to spend the night as he had spent most of them for
+the last ten years, till the fan had begun to be more bore than
+pleasure.
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+NINA GORDON.
+
+
+"Have you been to the Hôtel de Londres, Ernest?" said De Concressault,
+as Vaughan lounged into Tortoni's next day, where Emile and three or
+four other men were drinking Seltzer and talking of how Cerisette had
+beaten Vivandière by a neck at Chantilly, or (the sport to which a
+Frenchman takes much more naturally) of how well Rivière played in the
+"Prix d'un Bouquet;" what a _belle taille_ la De Servans had; and what a
+fool Senecterre had made of himself in the duel about Madame Viardot.
+
+"Of course I have," said Vaughan. "The name is Gordon--general name
+enough in England. They were gone to the Expiatoire, the portière told
+me. There _is_ the heavy father, as I feared, and a quasi-governess
+acting duenna; they're travelling with another family, whose name I
+could not hear: the woman said 'C'était beaucoup trop dur pour les
+lèvres.' I dare say they're some Brummagem people--some Fudge family or
+other--on their travels. Confound it!"
+
+"Poor Ernest," laughed De Concressault. "Some gold hair has bewitched
+him, and instead of finding it belongs to a danseuse, or a married
+woman, or a fleuriste of the Palais Royal, or something attainable, he
+finds it turn into an unapproachable English girl, with no end of
+outlying sentries round her, who'll fire at the first familiar
+approach."
+
+"It is a hard case," said De Kerroualle, a dashing fellow in one of the
+"Régiments de famille." "Never mind, mon ami; 'contre fortune bon
+coeur,' you know: it'll be more fun to devastate one of our countrymen's
+inviolate strongholds than to conquer where the white flag's already
+held out. Halloa! here's a compatriot of yours, I'd bet; look at his
+sanctified visage and stiff choker--a Church of England man, eh?"
+
+"The devil!" muttered Vaughan, turning round; "deuce take him, it's my
+cousin Ruskinstone! What in the world does _he_ do in Paris?"
+
+The man he spoke of was the Rev. Eusebius Ruskinstone, the Dean's
+Warden of the cathedral of Faithandgrace, a tall, thin young clerical of
+eight or nine-and-twenty, with goodness enough (it was generally
+supposed) in his little finger to make up for all Ernest's sins, scarlet
+though they were. He had just sat down and taken up the carte to blunder
+through "Potage au Duc de Malakoff," "Fricassée de volaille à la
+Princesse Mathilde," and all the rest of it, when his eye lit on his
+graceless cousin, and a vinegar asperity spread over his bland visage.
+Vaughan rose with a lazy grace, immensely bored within him: "My dear
+Ruskinstone, what an unanticipated pleasure. I never hoped Vanity Fair
+would have had power to lure _you_ into its naughty peep-shows and
+roundabouts."
+
+The Rev. Eusebius reddened slightly; he had once stated strongly his
+opinion that poor Paris was Pandemonium. "How do you do?" he said,
+giving his cousin two fingers; "it is a long time since we saw you in
+England."
+
+"England doesn't want me," said Ernest, dryly. "I don't fancy I should
+be very welcome at Faithandgrace, should I? The dear Chapter would
+probably consign me to starvation for my skeptical notions, as Calvin
+did Castellio. But what _has_ brought you to Paris? Are you come to
+fight the Jesuits in a conference, or to abjure the Wardenship and turn
+over to them?"
+
+Eusebius was shocked at the irreverent tone, but there was a satirical
+smile on his cousin's lips that he didn't care to provoke. "I am come,"
+he said, stiffly, "partly for health, partly to collect materials for a
+work on the 'Gurgoyles and Rose Mouldings of Mediæval Architecture,' and
+partly to oblige some friends of mine. Pardon me, here they come."
+
+Vaughan lifted his eyes, expecting nothing very delectable in
+Ruskinstone's friends; to his astonishment they fell on his beauty of
+the Français! with the outlying sentries of father, governess, and two
+other women, the Warden's maiden sisters, stiff, maniérées, and prudish,
+like too many Englishwomen. The young lady of the Français was a curious
+contrast to them: she started a little as she saw Vaughan, and smiled
+brilliantly. On the spur of that smile Ernest greeted his cousins with a
+degree of _empressement_ that they certainly wouldn't have been honored
+by without it. They were rather frightened at coming in actual contact
+with such a monster of iniquity as a Paris _Lion_, who, they'd heard,
+had out-Juan'd Don Juan, and gave him but a frigid welcome. Mr. Gordon
+had doubtless heard, too, of Vaughan's misdemeanors, for he looked
+stoical and acidulated as he bowed. But the young girl's eyes reconciled
+Ernest to all the rest, as she frankly returned a look with which he was
+wont to win his way through women's hearts, 'midst the hum of ball
+rooms, in the soft tête-à-tête in boudoirs, and over the sparkling
+Sillery of _petits soupers_. So, for the sake of his new quarry, he
+disregarded the cold looks of the others, and made himself so charming,
+that nobody could withstand the fascination of his manner till their
+dinner was served, and then, telling his cousins he would do himself the
+pleasure of calling on them the next day, he left the café to drive over
+to Gentilly, to inspect a grey colt of De Kerroualle's.
+
+"La chevelure dorée is quite as pretty by daylight, Ernest," said De
+Concressault. "Bon dieu! it is such a relief to see eyes that are not
+tinted, and a skin whose pink and white is not born from the mysterious
+rites of the toilet."
+
+Vaughan nodded, with his Manilla between his teeth.
+
+"That cousin of yours is queer style, mon garçon," said Kerroualle.
+"How some of those islanders contrive to iron themselves into the
+stiffness and flatness they do, is to me the profoundest enigma. But
+what Church of England meaning lies hid in his coat-tails? They are, for
+all the world, like our révérends pères! What is it for?"
+
+"High Church. Next door shop to yours, you know. Our ecclesiastics are
+given to balancing themselves on a tight rope between their 'mother' and
+their 'sister,' till they tumble over into their sister's open arms--the
+Catholics say into salvation, the Protestants into damnation; into
+neither, I myself opine, poor simpletons. Ruskinstone is fearfully
+architectural. The sole things he'll see here will be façades,
+gurgoyles, and clerestories, and his soul knows no warmer loves than
+'stone dolls,' as Newton calls them. I say, Gaston, what do you think of
+_my_ love of the Français; isn't she _chic_, isn't she mignonne, isn't
+she spirituelle?"
+
+"Yes," assented De Kerroualle, "prettier than either Bluette or Madame
+de Mélusine would allow, or--relish."
+
+Ernest frowned. "I've done with Bluette; she's a pretty face, but--ah,
+bah! one can't amuse oneself always with a little paysanne, for she's
+nothing better, after all; and I'm half afraid the Mélusine begins to
+bore me."
+
+"Better not tell her so, mon ami," said De Kerroualle; "she'd be a nasty
+enemy."
+
+"Pooh! a woman like that loves and forgets."
+
+"Sans doute; but they also sometimes revenge. Poor little Bluette you
+may safely turn over; but Madame la Baronne won't so easily be jilted."
+
+Vaughan laughed. "Oh, I'm not going to break her heart. Don't you know,
+Gaston, 'on a bien de la peine à rompre, même quand on ne s'aime plus."
+
+"I shouldn't have said you found it so," smiled De Concressault, "for
+you change your loves as you change your gloves. La chevelure dorée will
+be the next, eh?"
+
+"Poor little thing!" said Ernest, bitterly. "I wish her a better fate."
+
+He went to call on la chevelure dorée, nevertheless, the morning after,
+and found her in the salon alone, greatly to his surprise and pleasure.
+Nina Gordon _was_ pretty _even_ in the morning--as Byron says--and she
+was much more, she was fascinating, and as perfectly demonstrative and
+natural as any peasant girl out of the meadows of Arles, ignorant of the
+magic words toilette, cosmétique, and crinoline.
+
+She received him with evident pleasure and perfect unreserve, which even
+this daring and skeptical _Lion_ could not twist or contort into
+boldness, and began to talk fast and gaily.
+
+"Do I like Paris?" she said, in answer to his question. "Oh yes; or at
+least I should, if I could see it differently. I detest sight-seeing,
+crowding one's brains with pictures, statues, palaces, Holy Families
+jostling Polinchinelle, races, mixing up with grand masses, Versailles,
+clouding St. Cloud--the Trianon rattled through in five minutes--all in
+inextricable muddle. _I_ should like to see Paris at leisure, with some
+one with whom I had a 'rapport,' my thoughts undisturbed, and my
+historical associations fresh and fervent."
+
+"I wish I were honored with the office of your guide," said Ernest,
+smiling. "Do you think you would have a 'rapport' with me?"
+
+She smiled in return. "Yes, I think I should. I cannot tell why. But as
+it is, my warmest souvenir of Condé is chilled by the offer of an ice,
+and my tenderest thought of Louise de la Vallière is shivered with the
+suggestion of dinner."
+
+Vaughan laughed. "Bravo!" thought he. "Thank God this is no tame English
+icicle. I would give much," he said, "to be able to take my cousin's
+place, and show you Paris. We would have no such vulgar gastronomical
+interruptions; we would go through it all perfectly. I would make you
+hear the very whispers with which La Vallière, under the old oaks of St.
+Germain, unknowingly, told her love to Louis. In the forest glades of
+St. Cloud you should see Cinq-Mars and the Royal Hunt riding out in the
+_chasse de nuit_; in the gloomy walls of the prisons you should hear
+André Chénier reciting his last verses, and see Egalité completing his
+last toilet. The glittering 'Cotillons' on the terraces of Versailles,
+the fierce canaille surging through the salons of the Tuileries, the
+Templars dying in the green meadows at the back of St. Antoine--they
+should all rise up for you under my incantations."
+
+Positively Ernest, bored and blasé, accustomed to look at Paris through
+the gas-lights of his _Lion's_ life, warmed into romance to please the
+eyes that now beamed upon him.
+
+"Ah! that would be delightful," said the girl, her eyes sparkling. "Mr.
+Ruskinstone, you know, is terrible to me, for he goes about with
+'Ruskin' in one hand, 'Murray' in the other, and a Phrase-book or two in
+his pocket (of course he wants it, as he's a 'classical scholar'), and
+no matter whatever associations cling around a place, only looks at it
+in regard to its architectural points. I beg your pardon," she said,
+interrupting herself with a blush, "I forgot he was your cousin; but
+really that constant cold stone does tease me so."
+
+At that moment the heavy father, as Ernest irreverently styled the tall,
+pompous head of one of the first banks in London, who was worth a
+million if he was worth a sou, entered, and the Rev. Eusebius after
+him, who had been spending a lively morning taking notes among the
+catacombs. He was prepared to be as cold as a refrigerator, and the
+banker to follow his example, at finding this _bête noire_ of the
+Chaussée d'Antin tête-à-tête with Nina. But Ernest had a sort of haughty
+high breeding and careless dignity which warned people off from any
+liberties with him; and Gordon remembered that he knew Paris and its
+_haute volée_ so well that he might be a useful acquaintance if kept at
+arm's length from Nina, and afterwards dropped. Unlucky man! he actually
+thought his weak muscles were strong enough to cope with a _Lion's_!
+
+Vaughan took his leave, after offering his box at the Opéra-Comique to
+Mr. Gordon, and drove to the Jockey Club, pondering much on this new
+species of the _beau sexe_. He was too used to women not to know at a
+glance that she had nothing bold about her, and yet he was too skeptical
+to credit that a girl could possibly exist who was neither a coquette
+nor a prude. As soon as the door closed on him his friends began to open
+their batteries of scandal.
+
+"How sad it is to see life wasted as my cousin wastes his," said the
+Warden, balancing a paper-knife thoughtfully, with a depressed air;
+"frittered away on mere trifles, as valuless and empty as soap-bubbles,
+but not, alas! so innocent."
+
+"What do you mean?" Nina asked, quickly.
+
+"What do I mean, Miss Gordon?" repeated Eusebius, reproachfully; "what
+can I mean but the idle whirl of gaiety, the vitiating pleasures, the
+debts and the vices which are to be laid at poor Ernest's door. Ever
+since we were boys together, and he was expelled from Rugby for going
+to Coventry fair and staying there all night, he has been going rapidly
+down the road to ruin."
+
+"He looks very comfortable in his descent," smiled the young lady. "Pray
+why, after all, shouldn't horses, operas, and Manillas, be as legitimate
+objects to set one's affections upon as Norman arches and Gregorian
+chants? He has his dissipations, you have yours. Chacun à son goût!"
+
+The Warden had his reasons for conciliating the young heiress, so he
+made a feeble effort to smile. "You know as well as I that you do not
+think what you say, Miss Gordon. Were it merely Vaughan's tastes that
+were in fault it would not be of such fearful consequence, but
+unfortunately it is his principles."
+
+"He is utterly without any," said Miss Selina Ruskinstone, who, ten
+years before, had been deeply and hopelessly in love with Ernest, and
+never forgave him for not reciprocating the passion.
+
+"He is a skeptic, a gambler, a spendthrift; and a more heartlessless
+flirt never lived," averred Miss Augusta, who hated the whole of
+Ernest's sex--even the Chapter--_pour cause_.
+
+"Gentlemen can't help seeming flirts sometimes, some women pay such
+attention to them," said Nina, with a mischievous laugh. "Poor Mr.
+Vaughn! I hope he's not as black as he is painted. His physiognomy tells
+a different tale; he is just my ideal of 'Ernest Maltravers.' How kind
+his eyes are; have you ever looked into them, Selina?"
+
+Miss Ruskinstone gave an angry sneer, vouchsafing no other response.
+
+"My dear Nina, how foolishly you talk, about looking into a young man's
+eyes," frowned her father. "I am surprised to hear you."
+
+Her own eyes opened in astonishment. "Why mayn't I look at them? It is
+by the eyes that, like a dog, I know whom to like and whom to avoid."
+
+"And pray does your prescience guide you to see a saint in a ruined
+_Lion_ of the Chaussée d'Antin?" sneered Selina, with another
+contemptuous sniff.
+
+"Not a saint. I'm not good enough to appreciate the race," laughed Nina.
+"But I do not believe your cousin to be all you paint him; or, at least,
+if circumstances have led him into extravagance, I have a conviction
+that he has a warm heart and a noble character au fond."
+
+"We will hope so," said the Warden, meekly, with an expression which
+plainly said how vain a hope it was.
+
+"I think we have wasted a great deal too much conversation on a
+thankless subject," said Selina, with asperity. "Don't you think it
+time, Mr. Gordon, for us to go to the Louvre?"
+
+That day, as they were driving along the Boulevards, they passed Ernest
+with Bluette in his carriage going to the Pré Catalan: they all knew
+her, from having seen her play at the Odéon. Selina and Augusta turned
+down their mouths, and turned up their eyes. Gordon pulled up his
+collar, and looked a Brutus in spectacles. Nina colored, and looked
+vexed. Triumph glittered in Eusebius's meek eyes, but he sighed a
+pastor's sigh over a lost soul.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+"LE LION AMOUREUX."
+
+
+The morning after, as they were going into the Exposition des Beaux
+Arts, they met Vaughan; and no ghost would have been more unwelcome to
+the Warden than the distingué figure of his fashionable cousin. Nina was
+the only one who looked pleased to recognise him, and she, as she
+returned his smile, forgot that the evening before it had been given to
+Bluette.
+
+"Are you coming in too?" she asked.
+
+"I was not, but I will with pleasure," said Ernest. And into the
+Exhibition with them he went, to Ruskinstone's wrath and Gordon's
+annoyance.
+
+Vaughan was a connoisseur in art. The Warden knew no more than what he
+took verbatim from the god of his idolatry, Mr. John Ruskin. It was very
+natural that Nina should listen to the friend of Ingres and Vernet
+instead of to the second-hand worshipper of Turner. Vaughan, by
+instinct, dropped his customary tone of compliment--compliment he never
+used to women he delighted to honor--and talked so charmingly, that Nina
+utterly forgot the luckless Eusebius, and started when a low, sweet
+voice said, close beside her, "What, Ernest, you here?"
+
+She turned, and saw a woman about eight-and-twenty, dressed in
+perfection of taste, with an exquisite figure, and a face of brunette
+beauty; the rouge most undiscoverable, and the eyes artistically tinted
+to make them look larger, which, Heaven knows, was needless. She darted
+a quick look at Vaughan's companion, which Nina gave back with a dash of
+hauteur. A shade came over his face as he answered her greeting.
+
+"Will you not introduce me to your friend?" said the new comer. "She is
+of your nation, I fancy, and you know I am entêtée of everything
+English."
+
+Ernest looked rather gloomy at the compliment, but turning to Nina,
+begged to introduce her to Madame de Mélusine. The gay, handsome
+baronne, taking in all the English girl's points as rapidly as a groom
+at Tattersall's does a two-year-old's, was chatting volubly to Nina,
+when the others came up. Gordon, though wont to boast that he belonged
+to the aristocracy of money, was always ready to fall in the dust before
+the noblesse of blood, and was gratified at the introduction,
+remembering to have read in the _Moniteur_ the name of De Mélusine at
+the ball at the Tuileries. And the widow was very charming even to the
+professedly stoical eyes of a Brutus of sixty-two. She soon floated off,
+however, with her party, giving Vaughan a gay "A ce soir!" and
+requesting to be allowed the honor of calling on the Gordons.
+
+"Is she a great friend of yours?" asked Nina, when she and he were a
+little in advance of the others.
+
+"I have known her some time."
+
+"And you are very intimate, I suppose, as she called you by your
+Christian name?"
+
+He smiled a smile that puzzled Nina. "Oh! we soon get familiar here!"
+
+"Where are you going to see her again this evening?" she persevered,
+playing with her parasol fringe.
+
+"At her own house--a house that will charm you. By the way, it once
+belonged to Bussy Rabutin, and it has all Louis Quatorze furniture."
+
+"Is it a dinner?--a ball?"
+
+"No, an Opera supper--she is famed for her Sillery and her mots. Ten to
+one I shall not go; what amuses one once palls with repetition."
+
+"I don't understand that," said Nina, quickly; "what I like, I like pour
+toujours."
+
+"Pauvre enfant! you little know life," muttered Ernest. "Ah! Miss
+Gordon, you are at the happy age when one can believe in the feelings
+and friendships, and all the charming little romances of existence. But
+I have passed it, and so that I am amused for a moment, so that
+something takes time off my hands, I look no further, and expect no
+more. I know well enough the champagne will cease to sparkle, but I
+drink it while it foams, and don't trouble myself to lament over it.
+Qu'importe? when one bottle's empty, there is another!"
+
+"Ah! it is such women as Madame de Mélusine who have taught you that
+doctrine," cried Nina, with an energy that rather startled Ernest,
+though his nerves were as strong as any man's in Paris. "My romances, as
+you term them, still I believe sleep in your heart, but the world you
+live in has stifled them. Do you think amusement will always be enough
+for you?--do you think you will never want something better than your
+empty champagne foam?"
+
+"I hope I shall not, mademoiselle," said Vaughan, bitterly, "for I am
+certain I do not believe in it, and am quite sure I should never get it.
+Leave me to the roses of my Tritericæ; they are all I shall ever enjoy,
+and they, at the best, are withered."
+
+"Nina, love," interrupted Selina, coming up with much amiability, "I was
+_obliged_ to come and tell you not to be _quite_ so energetic. All the
+people in the room are looking at you."
+
+"I dare say they are," said Vaughan, calmly. "It is not often the
+Parisians have the pleasure of seeing beauty unaffected, and
+fascinations careless of their own charms. Nature, Selina, is unhappily
+as rare one side the Channel as the other, and we men appreciate it when
+we do see it."
+
+When Vaughan parted from them soon after, he swore at himself for three
+things. First, for having driven Bluette, en plein jour, through the
+Boulevards, though he had driven Bluette, and such as Bluette, a
+thousand times before; secondly, for having been so weak as to
+introduce Madame de Mélusine to the Gordons; and, thirdly, for
+having--he the thorough-paced _Lion_, whose manual was Rochefoucauld,
+and tutor in love, De Kock--actually talked romance as if he were Werter
+or Paul Flemming, or some other sentimental simpleton.
+
+Vaughan, to his great disgust, felt a fit of blue devils stealing on
+him, hurled one or two rose notes waiting for him into the fire with an
+oath, smoked half a dozen Manillas fiercely, and then, to get
+excitement, went to a dinner at the Rocher de Cancale, played écarté
+with a beau joueur, went to an Opera supper--_not_ to the De
+Mélusine's--then to Mabille and came home at seven in the morning after
+a night such as would have raised every hair off Brutus's head, given a
+triumphant glitter to the Warden's small blue eyes, and possibly even
+staggered the hot faith of his young champion. Pauline de Mélusine was
+as good as her word--she did call on the Gordons--and Brutus, stoic
+though he was, was well pleased; for the baronne, though her nobility
+only dated from the Restoration, and was not received by the exclusive
+Legitimists of the old Faubourg St. Germain, had a very pleasant set of
+her own, and figured among the nouvelle noblesse and bourgeois décorés
+who fill the vacant places of the De Rochefoucauld, the De Rohan, and
+the Montmorency, in the "imperial" salons of the Tuileries, where once
+the noblest blood in Europe was gathered.
+
+"It is painful to me to frequent Ernest's society," the Warden was wont
+to say, "for every word he utters impresses me but more sadly with the
+conviction of his lost state. But we are commanded to be in the world
+though not of it, and, if I shun him, how can I hope to benefit him?"
+
+"True; and, as your cousin, it would scarcely be charitable to avoid
+him entirely, terrible as we know his habits to be. But there is no
+necessity to be too intimate, and I do not wish Nina to be too much with
+him," the banker was accustomed to answer.
+
+"_Anglice_, Vaughan gets us good introductions, and makes Paris pleasant
+to us; we'll use him while we want him: when we don't, we will give him
+his congé."
+
+That's the reading of most of our dear friends' compliments and
+caresses, isn't it?
+
+Vaughan knew perfectly well that they would like to make a cat's-paw of
+him, and was the last man likely to play that simple and certainly not
+agreeable rôle unless it suited him. But he had reasons of his own for
+forcing Gordon to be civil and obliged to him, despite the prejudices of
+that English, and therefore, of course, opinionated gentleman. It amused
+him to mortify Eusebius, whom he saw at a glance was bewitched with the
+prospect of Nina's _dot_, and it amused him very much to see Nina's
+joyous laughter as he leaned over her chair at the Opéra Comique, to
+hear her animated satire on Madame de Mélusine, for whom, knowing
+nothing of her, the young lady had conceived hot aversion, and to listen
+to her enthusiasm when she poured out to him her vivid imaginings.
+
+Gradually the cafés, and the Boulevards, and the boudoirs missed Ernest
+while he accompanied Nina through the glades of St. Cloud, or down the
+Seine to Asnières, or up the slopes of Père la Chaise, in his new
+pursuit; and often at night he would leave the coulisses, or a
+lansquenet, or the gas-lights of the Maison Dorée, and the Closerie des
+Lilas, to watch her thorough enjoyment of a vaudeville, her fervent
+feeling in an opera, or to waltz with her at a ball, and note her glad
+recognition of him.
+
+To this girl, Ernest opened his heart and mind as he--being a reserved,
+proud, and skeptical man--had never done to any one; there was a
+sympathy and confidence between them, and she learned much of his inner
+nature as she talked to him soft and low under the forest trees of
+Fontainebleau, such talk as could not be heard in Bluette's boudoir,
+under the wax-lights of the Quartier Bréda, or in the flow of the
+Sillery at la Mélusine's soupers. All this was new to the tired _Lion_,
+and amused him immensely. La chevelure dorée was twisting the golden
+meshes of its net round him, as De Concressault told him one day.
+
+"Nonsense," said Ernest; "have I not two loves already on my hands more
+than I want?"
+
+"Dethrone them, and promote la petite."
+
+Vaughan turned on his friend with his eyes flashing.
+
+"Bon Dieu! do you take her for a ballet-girl or a grisette?"
+
+"Well, if you don't like that, marry her then, mon cher. You will
+satisfy your fancy, and get cinquante mille francs de rente--at a
+sacrifice, of course; but, que veux-tu? There is no medal without its
+reverse, though a 'lion marié' is certainly an anomaly, an absurdity,
+and an intense pity."
+
+"Tais-toi," said Ernest, impatiently; "tu es fou! Caught in the toils of
+a wretched intrigante, in the power of any tailor in the Rue Vivienne,
+any jeweller in the Palais Royal, my money spent on follies, my life
+wasted in play, the turf, and worthless women, I have much indeed to
+offer to a young girl who has wealth, beauty, genius, and heart!"
+
+"All the more reason why you should make a good coup," said Emile,
+calmly, after listening with pitying surprise to his friend in his new
+mood. "You have a handsome face, a fashionable reputation, and a good
+name. Bah! you can do anything. As for your life, all women like a
+mauvais sujet, and unless the De Mélusine turn out a Brinvilliers, I
+don't see what you have to fear."
+
+"When I want your counsel, Emile, I will ask it," said Vaughan, shortly;
+"but, as I have no intention of going in for the prize, there is no need
+for you to bet on the chance of the throw."
+
+"Comme tu veux!" said the Parisian, shrugging his shoulders. "That homme
+de paille, your priestly cousin, will take her back to the English fogs,
+and make her a much better husband than you'd ever be, mon garçon."
+
+Vaughan moved restlessly.
+
+"The idiot! if I thought so---- The devil take you, Emile! why do you
+talk of such things?"
+
+At that minute Nina was sitting by one of the windows of their hotel,
+watching for Ernest, with a bouquet he had sent her on a table by her
+side; and the Rev. Eusebius was talking in a very low tone to her
+father. She caught a few words. "Last night--Vaughan at the Frères
+Provençaux--a souper au cabinet--Mademoiselle Céline, première
+danseuse--quite terrible," &c., &c.
+
+Nina flushed scarlet, and turned round. "If you blame your cousin, Mr.
+Ruskinstone, why were you there yourself?"
+
+The Warden colored too. With him, as with a good many, foreign air
+relaxed the severity of the Decalogue, and what was sin at home, where
+everybody knew it, was none at all abroad--under the rose. Some dear
+pharisees will not endanger their souls by a carpet-dance in England,
+but if a little bird followed them in their holiday across the Channel,
+it might chance to see them disporting under a domino noir.
+
+"I had been," he stammered, "to see, as you know, a beautiful specimen
+of the arcboutant in a ruined chapel of the Carmélites, some miles down
+the Seine. It was very late, and I was very tired, so turned into the
+Frères Provençaux to take some little refreshment, and I there saw my
+unhappy cousin in society which _ought_, Miss Gordon, to disqualify him
+for yours. It is very painful to me to mention such things to you. I
+never thought you overheard----"
+
+"Then, if it is very painful to you," Nina burst in, impetuously, her
+_bouche de rose_, as De Kerroualle called it, curving haughtily, "why
+are you ceaselessly raking up every possible bit of scandal that you can
+against your cousin? His life does not clash with yours, his acts do not
+matter to you, his extravagance does not rob you. I used to fancy
+charity should cover a multitude of sins, but it seems to me that,
+now-a-days, clergymen, like Dr. Watt's naughty dogs, only delight to
+bark and bite."
+
+"You are cruelly unjust," answered the Warden, in those smooth tones
+that irritate one much more than "hard swearing." "I have no other wish
+than Christian kindness to poor Ernest. If, in my place as pastor, I
+justly condemn his errors and vices, it is only through a loving desire
+to wean him from his downward course."
+
+"Your love is singularly vindictive," said his vehement young opponent,
+her cheeks hot and her eyes bright. "No good was ever yet done to a man
+by proclaiming his faults right and left. _I_ should like you much
+better, Mr. Ruskinstone, if you said, candidly, I don't like my cousin,
+and I have never forgiven him for thrashing me at Rugby, and playing
+football better than I did."
+
+Eusebius winced at this little touch up of his bygone years, but he
+smiled a benign, superior, pitying smile. "Such petitesses, I thank
+Heaven, are utterly beneath me, and I should have fancied Miss Gordon
+was too generous to suppose them. God forbid that I should envy poor
+Vaughan his dazzling qualities. I sorrow over him as a relative and a
+precious human soul, but as a minister of our holy Church I neither can,
+nor will, countenance his gross violations of all her divinest laws."
+With which peroration the Warden, with a sigh, took up a work on "The
+Early English Piscini and Aspersoria," and became immersed therein.
+
+"Poor Mr. Vaughan!" cried Nina, impatiently. "Probably he is too wise to
+concern himself about what people buzz in his absence, or else he need
+be cased in mail to avoid being stung to death with the musquito bites
+of scandal."
+
+Gordon came down on her with his heavy artillery. "Silence, Nina! you do
+not know what you are defending. I fear that no slander can darken Mr.
+Vaughan's character more than he merits."
+
+"A gambler--a roué--a lover of married woman, of dancing-girls,"
+murmured Eusebius, in an aside, meant, like those on the stage, to tell
+killingly with the audience.
+
+Nina flushed as scarlet as the camellias in her bouquet, and put up her
+head with a haughty gesture. "Here comes the subject of your
+vituperation, Mr. Ruskinstone, so you can repeat your denunciations, and
+favor him with a sermon in person--unless, indeed, the secular
+recollections of Rugby intimidate the religious arm."
+
+I fear something as irreverent as "Little devil!" rose to the Warden's
+pious lips as he flashed a fierce glance at her from his pale-blue eyes,
+for he loved not her, but the splendid _dot_ which the banker was sure
+to pay down if his son-in-law were to his taste. He caught his cousin's
+glance as he came into the salons, and in the superb scorn gleaming in
+Ernest's dark eyes, Eusebius saw that they were not merely enemies,
+but--rivals: a Warden with Church principles, all the cardinal virtues,
+strict morality, and money; and a _Lion_ with Paris principles (if any),
+great fascinations, debts, entanglements, and an empty purse. Which will
+win, with Nina for the cup and Gordon for the umpire?
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+MISCHIEF.
+
+
+"Qui cherchez-vous, petite?"
+
+The speaker was la Mélusine, and the hearer was Nina who considerably
+resented the half-patronising, half mocking, yet intensely amiable
+manner the widow chose to assume towards her. Gordon was stricken with
+warm admiration of madame, and never inquired into _her_ morality, only
+too pleased when she condescended to talk to or invite him. They had met
+at a soirée at some intimate friends of Vaughan's in the Champs Elysées.
+(Ernest was a favorite wherever he went, and the good-natured French
+people at once took up his relatives to please him.) He was not there
+himself, but the baronne's quick eyes soon caught and construed her
+restless glances through the crowded rooms.
+
+"Je ne cherche personne, madame," said Nina, haughtily. Dressed simply
+in white tulle, with the most exquisite flowers to be had out of the
+Palais Royal in the famous golden hair, which gleamed in the gaslight
+like sunshine, she aroused the serpent which lay hid in the roses of
+madame's smiles.
+
+Pauline laughed softly, and flirted her fan. "Nay, nay, mignonne, those
+soft eyes are seeking some one. Who is it? Ah! it is that méchant
+Monsieur Vaughan n'est-ce pas? He is very handsome, certainly, but
+
+ On dit an village
+ Qu'Argire est volage."
+
+"Madame's own thoughts possibly suggest the supposition of mine," said
+Nina, coldly.
+
+"Comme ces Anglaises sont impolies," thought the baronne. "No, indeed,"
+she said, laughing carelessly, "I know Ernest too well to let my
+thoughts dwell on him. He is charming to talk to, to waltz with, to
+flirt with, but from anything further Dieu nous garde! Lauzun himself
+were not more dangerous or more unstable."
+
+"You speak as bitterly, madame, as if you had suffered from the
+fickleness," said Nina, with a contemptuous curl of her soft lips. Sweet
+temper as she was, she could thrust a spear in her enemy's side when she
+liked.
+
+Madame's eyes glittered like a rattlesnake's. Nina's chance ball shot
+home. But madame was a woman of the world, and could mask her batteries
+with a skill of which Nina, with her impetuous _abandon_, was incapable.
+She smiled very sweetly, as she answered, "No, petite I have unhappily
+seen too much of the world not to know that we must never put our trust
+in those charming mauvais sujets. At your age, I dare say I should not
+have been proof against your countryman's fascinations, but now, I know
+just how much his fondest vows are worth, and I have been deaf to them
+all, for I would not let my heart mislead me against my reason and my
+conscience. Ah, petite! you little guess what the traitor word 'love'
+means here, in Paris. We women grow accustomed to our fate, but the
+lesson is hard sometimes."
+
+"You have been reading 'Mes Confidences,' lately?" asked Nina, with a
+sarcastic flash of her brilliant eyes.
+
+"How cruel! Do you suppose I can have no _émotions_ except I learn them
+second-hand through Lamartine or Delphine Gay? You are very satirical,
+Miss Gordon----How strange!" said the baronne, interrupting herself;
+"your bouquet is the fac-simile of mine! Look! De Kerroualle sent you
+that I fancy? You know he raffoles of you. I was very silly to use mine,
+but Mr. Vaughan sent me such a pretty note with it, that I had not the
+resolution to disappoint him. Poor Ernest!" And Madame sighed softly, as
+if bewailing in her tender heart the woes her obduracy caused. The blood
+flamed up in Nina's cheeks, and her hand clenched hard on Ernest's
+flowers: they _were_ the fac-similes of the widow's; delicate pink
+blossoms, mixed with white azalias. "Is he here to-night, do you know?"
+madame continued. "I dare say not; he is behind the coulisses, most
+likely. Céline, the new danseuse from the Fenice, makes her début
+to-night. Here comes poor Gaston to petition for a valse. Be kind to
+him, pray."
+
+She herself went off to the ball-room, and the effect of her exordium
+was to make Nina very disagreeable to poor De Kerroualle, whom she
+really liked, and who was _entêté_ about her. Not long afterwards, Nina
+saw in the distance Vaughan's haughty head and powerful brow, and her
+silly little heart beat as quick as a pigeon's just caught in the trap:
+he was talking to the widow.
+
+"Look at our young English friend," Pauline was saying, "how she is
+flirting with Gaston, and De Lafitolle, and De Concressault. Certainly,
+when your Englishwomen do coquet, they go further than any of us."
+
+"Est-ce possible?" said Ernest, raising his eyebrows.
+
+"Méchant!" cried madame, with a chastising blow of her fan. "But, do you
+know, I admire the petite very much. I believe all really beautiful
+women had that rare golden hair of hers--Lucrezia Borgia (I could never
+bear Grisi as _Lucrezia_, for that very reason). La Cenci, the Duchess
+of Portsmouth, Ænone--and Helen, I am sure, netted Paris with those gold
+threads. Don't you think it is very lovely?"
+
+"I do, indeed," said Vaughan, with unconscious warmth.
+
+Madame laughed gaily, but there was a disagreeable glitter in her eye.
+"What, fickle already? Ah well, I give you full leave."
+
+"And example, madame," said Ernest, as he bowed and left her side, glad
+to have struck the first blow of his freedom from this handsome tyrant,
+who was as capricious and exacting as she was clever and captivating.
+But fetters made of fairer roses were over Ernest now, and he never
+bethought himself of the probable vengeance of that bitterest foe, a
+woman who is piqued.
+
+"Tout beau!" thought Pauline, as she saw him waltzing with Nina. "Mais
+je vous donnerai encore l'échec et mat, mon brave joueur."
+
+"Did you give Madame de Mélusine the bouquet she carries this evening?"
+asked Nina, as he whirled her round.
+
+"No," said Ernest, astonished. "Why do you ask?"
+
+"Because she said you did," answered Nina, never accustomed to conceal
+anything; "and, besides, it is exactly like mine."
+
+"Infernal woman!" muttered Ernest. "How could you for a moment believe
+that I would have so insulted you?"
+
+"I didn't believe it," said Nina, lifting her frank eyes to his. "But
+how very late you are; have you been at the ballet?"
+
+His face grew stern. "Did she tell you that?"
+
+"Yes. But why did you go there, instead of coming to dance with me? Do
+you like those danseuses better than you do me? What was Céline's or
+anybody's début, to you?"
+
+Ernest smiled at the native indignation of the question. "Never think
+that I do not wish to be with you; but--I wanted oblivion, and one
+cannot shake off old habits. Did you miss me among all those other men
+that you have always round you?"
+
+"How unkind that is!" whispered Nina, indignantly. "You know I always
+do."
+
+He held her closer to him in the waltz, and she felt his heart beat
+quicker, but she got no other answer.
+
+That night Nina stood before her toilette-table, putting her flowers in
+water, and some hot tears fell on the azalias.
+
+"I will have faith in him," she cried, passionately; "though all the
+world be witness against him, I will believe in him. Whatever his life
+may have been, his heart is warm and true; they shall never make me
+doubt it."
+
+Her last thoughts were of him, and when she slept his face was in her
+dreams, while Ernest, with some of the wildest men of his set, smoked
+hard and drank deep in his chambers to drive away, if he could, the
+fiends of Regret and Passion and the memory of a young, radiant,
+impassioned face, which lured him to an unattainable future.
+
+"Nina dearest," said Selina Ruskinstone, affectionately, the morning
+after, "I hope you will not think me unkind--you know I have no wish
+but for your good--but _don't_ you think it would be better to be a
+little more--more reserved, a little less free, with Mr. Vaughan?"
+
+"Explain yourself more clearly," said Nina, tranquilly. "Do you wish me
+to send to Turkey for a veil and a guard of Bashi-Bazouks, or do you
+mean that Mr. Vaughan is so attractive that he is better avoided, like a
+mantrap or a Maëlstrom?"
+
+"Don't be ridiculous," retorted Augusta; "you know well enough what we
+mean, and certainly you do run after him a great deal too much."
+
+"You are so _very_ demonstrative," sighed Selina, "and it is so easily
+misconstrued. It is not feminine to court any man so unblushingly."
+
+Nina's eyes flashed, and the blood colored her brow. "I am not afraid of
+being misconstrued by Mr. Vaughan," she said, haughtily; "gentlemen are
+kinder and wiser judges in those things than our sex."
+
+"I wouldn't advise you to trust to Ernest's tender mercies," sneered
+Augusta.
+
+"My dear child, remember his principles," sighed Selina; "his life--his
+reputation----"
+
+"Leave both him and me alone," retorted Nina, passionately. "I will not
+stand calmly by to hear him slandered with your vague calumnies. You
+preach religion often enough; practice it now, and show more common
+kindness to your cousin: I do not say charity, for I am sick of the cant
+word, and he is above your pity. You think me utterly lost because I
+dance, and laugh, and enjoy my life, but, bad as _my_ principles are, I
+should be shocked--yes, Selina, and I should think I merited little
+mercy myself, were I as harsh and bitter upon any one as you are upon
+him. How can _you_ judge him?--how can you say what nobility, and truth,
+and affection--that will shame your own cold pharisaism--may lie in his
+heart unrevealed?--how can you dare to censure _him_?"
+
+In the door of the salon, listening to the lecture his young champion
+was giving these two blue, opinionated, and strongly pious ladies, stood
+Ernest, his face even paler than usual, and his eyes with a strange
+mixture of joy and pain in them. Nina colored scarlet, but went forward
+to meet him with undisguised pleasure, utterly regardless of the
+sneering lips and averted eyes of the Miss Ruskinstones. He had come to
+go with them to St. Germain, and, with a dexterous manoeuvre, took the
+very seat in the carriage opposite Nina that Eusebius had planned for
+himself. But the Warden was no match for the _Lion_ in such affairs,
+and, being exiled to the barouche with Gordon and Augusta, took from
+under the seat a folio of the "Stones of Venice," and read sulkily all
+the way.
+
+"My dear fellow," said Vaughan, when they reached St. Germain, "don't
+you think you would prefer to sit in the carriage, and finish that
+delightful work, to coming to see some simple woods and terraces? If you
+would, pray don't hesitate to say so; I am sure Miss Gordon will excuse
+your absence."
+
+The solicitous courtesy of Ernest's manner was boiling oil to the fire
+raging in the Warden's gentle breast, and Eusebius, besides, was not
+quick at retorts. "I am not guilty of any such bad taste," he said,
+stiffly, "though I do discover a charm in severe studies, which I
+believe you never did."
+
+"No, never," said Ernest, laughing; "my genius does not lie that way;
+and I've no vacant bishopric in my mind's eye to make such studies
+profitable. Even you, you know, light of the Church as you are, want
+recreation sometimes. Confess now, the chansons à boire last night
+sounded pleasant after long months of Faithandgrace services!"
+
+Eusebius looked much as I have seen a sleek tom-cat, who bears a
+respectable character generally, surprised in surreptitiously licking
+out of the cream-jug. He had the night before (when he was popularly
+supposed to be sitting under Adolphe Monod) tasted rather too many
+petits verres up at the Pré Catalan, utterly unconscious of his cousin's
+proximity. The pure-minded soul thus cruelly caught looked prayers of
+piteous entreaty to Vaughan not to damage his milk-white reputation by
+further revelation of this unlucky detour into the Broad Road; and
+Ernest, who, always kind-hearted, never hit a man when he was down,
+contented himself with saying:
+
+"Ah! well, we are none of us pure alabaster, though some of the
+sepulchres _do_ contrive to whiten themselves up astonishingly. My
+father, poor man, once wished to put me in the Church. Do you think I
+should have graced it, Selina?"
+
+"I can't say I do," sneered Selina.
+
+"You think I should _disgrace_ it? Very probably. I am not good at
+'canting.'" And giving Nina his arm, the Warden being much too confused
+to forestall him, he whispered: "when is that atrocious saint going to
+take himself over the water? Couldn't we bribe his diocesan to call him
+before the Arches Court? Surely those long coats, so like the little
+wooden men in Noah's Ark, and that straightened hair, so mathematically
+parted down the centre, look 'perverted' enough to warrant it."
+
+Nina shook her head. "Unhappily, he is here for six months for ill
+health!--the sick-leave of clergymen who wish for a holiday, and are too
+holy to leave their flock without an excuse to society."
+
+Vaughan laughed, then sighed. "Six months--and you have been here four
+already! Eusebius hates me cordially--all my English relatives do, I
+believe; we do not get on together. They are too cold and conventional
+for me. I have some of the warm Bohemian blood, though God knows I've
+seen enough to chill it to ice by this time; but it is _not_ chilled--so
+much the worse for me," muttered Ernest "Tell me," he said,
+abruptly--"tell me why you took the trouble to defend me so generously
+this morning?"
+
+She looked up at him with her frank, beaming regard. "Because they dare
+to misjudge you, and they know nothing, and are not worthy to know
+anything of your real self."
+
+He pressed his lips together as if in bodily pain. "And what do you
+know?"
+
+"Have you not yourself said that you talk to me as you talk to no one
+else?" answered Nina, impetuously; "besides--I cannot tell why, but the
+first day I met you I seemed to find some friend that I had lost before.
+I was certain that you would never misconstrue anything I said, and I
+felt that I saw further into your heart and mind than any one else could
+do. Was it not very strange?" She stopped, and looked up at him. Ernest
+bent his eyes on the ground, and breathed fast.
+
+"No, no," he said at last; "yours is only an ideal of me. If you knew me
+as I really am, you would cease to feel the--the interest that you
+say----"
+
+He stopped abruptly; facile as he was at pretty compliments, and versed
+in tender scenes as he had been from his school-days, the longing to
+make this girl love him, and his struggle not to breathe love to her,
+deprived him of his customary strength and nonchalance.
+
+"I do not fear to know you as you are," said Nina, gently. "I do not
+think you yourself allow all the better things that there are in you.
+People have not judged you rightly, and you have been too proud to prove
+their error to them. You have found pleasure in running counter to the
+prudish and illiberal bigots who presumed to judge you; and to a world
+you have found heartless and false you have not cared to lift the domino
+and mask you wore."
+
+Vaughan sighed from the bottom of his heart, and walked on in silence
+for a good five minutes. "Promise me, Nina," he said at length with an
+effort, "that no matter what you hear against me, you will not condemn
+me unheard."
+
+"I promise," she answered, raising her eyes to his, brighter still for
+the color in her checks. It was the first time he had called her Nina.
+
+"Miss Gordon," said Eusebius, hurriedly overtaking them, "pray come with
+me a moment: there is the most exquisite specimen of the Flamboyant
+style in an archway----"
+
+"Thank you for your good intentions," said Nina, pettishly, "but really,
+as you might know by this time, I never can see any attractions in your
+prosaic and matter-of-fact-fact study."
+
+"It might be more profitable than----"
+
+"Than thinking of La Vallière and poor Bragelonne, and all the gay
+glories of the exiled Bourbons?" laughed Nina. "Very likely; but romance
+is more to my taste than granite. You would never have killed yourself,
+like Bragelonne, for the beaux yeux of Louise de la Beaume-sur-Blanc,
+would you?"
+
+"I trust," said Eusebius, stiffly, "that I should have had a deeper
+sense of the important responsibilities of the gift of life than to
+throw it away because a silly girl preferred another."
+
+"You are very impolitic," said Ernest, with a satirical smile. "No lady
+could feel remorse at forsaking you, if you could get over it so
+easily."
+
+"He _would_ get over it easily," laughed Nina. "You would call her
+Delilah, and all the Scripture bad names, order Mr. Ruskin's new work,
+turn your desires to a deanship, marry some bishop's daughter with high
+ecclesiastical interest, and console yourself in the bosom of your
+Mother Church--eh, Mr. Ruskinstone?"
+
+"You are cruelly unjust," sighed Eusebius. "You little know----"
+
+"The charms of architecture? No; and I never shall," answered his
+tormentor, humming the "Queen of the Roses," and waltzing down the
+forest glade, where they were walking. "How severe you look!" she said
+as she waltzed back. "Is _that_ wrong, too? Miriam danced before the ark
+and Jephtha's daughter."
+
+The Warden appeared not to hear. Certainly his mode of courtship was
+singular.
+
+"Ernest," he said, turning to his cousin as the rest of the party came
+up, "I had no idea your sister was in Paris. I have not seen her since
+she was fourteen. I should not have known her in the least."
+
+"Margaret is in India with her husband," answered Vaughan. "What are you
+dreaming of? Where have you seen her?"
+
+"I saw her in your chambers," answered the Warden, slowly. "I passed
+three times yesterday, and she was sitting in the centre window each
+time."
+
+"Pshaw! You dreamt it in your sleep last night. Margaret's in Vellore, I
+assure you."
+
+"I saw her," said the Warden, softly; "or, at least, I saw some lady,
+whom I naturally presumed to be your sister."
+
+Ernest, who had not colored for fifteen years, and would have defied man
+or woman to confuse him, flushed to his very temples.
+
+"You are mistaken," he said, decidedly. "There is no woman in my rooms."
+
+Eusebius raised his eyebrows, bent his head, smiled and sighed. More
+polite disbelief was never expressed. The Miss Ruskinstones would have
+blushed if they could; as they could not, they drew themselves bolt
+upright, and put their parasols between them and the reprobate. Nina,
+whose hand was still in Vaughan's arm, turned white, and flashed a
+quick, upward look at him; then, with a glance at Eusebius, as fiery as
+the eternal wrath that that dear divine was accustomed to deal out so
+largely to other people, she led Ernest up to her father, who being
+providentially somewhat deaf, had not heard this by-play, and said, to
+her cousin's horror, "Papa, dear, Mr. Vaughan wants you to dine with him
+at Tortoni's to-night, to meet M. de Vendanges. You will be very happy,
+won't you?"
+
+Ernest pressed her little hand against his side, and thanked her with
+his eyes.
+
+Gordon was propitiated for that day; he was not likely to quarrel with a
+man who could introduce him to "Son Altesse Monseigneur le Duc de
+Vendanges."
+
+
+
+
+V.
+
+MORE MISCHIEF--AND AN END.
+
+
+In a little cabinet de peinture, in a house in the Place Vendôme, apart
+from all the other people, who having come to a déjeûner were now
+dispersed in the music rooms, boudoirs, and conservatories, sat Madame
+de Mélusine, talking to Gordon, flatteringly, beguilingly,
+bewitchingly, as that accomplished widow could. The banker found her
+charming, and really, under her blandishments, began to believe, poor
+old fellow, that she was in love with him!
+
+"Ah! by-the-by, cher monsieur," began madame, when she had soft-soaped
+him into a proper frame of mind, "I want to speak to you about that
+mignonne Nina. You cannot tell, you cannot imagine, what interest I take
+in her."
+
+"You do her much honor, madame," replied her bourgeois gentilhomme,
+always stiff, however enraptured he might feel internally.
+
+"The honor is mine," smiled Pauline. "Yes, I do feel much interest in
+her; there is a sympathy in our natures, I am certain, and--and,
+Monsieur Gordon, I cannot see that darling girl on the brink of a
+precipice without stretching out a hand to snatch her from the abyss."
+
+"Precipice--abyss--Nina! Good Heavens! my dear madame, what do you
+mean?" cried Gordon--a fire, an elopement, and the small-pox, all
+presenting themselves to his mind.
+
+"No, no," repeated madame, with increasing vehemence, "I will not permit
+any private feelings, I will not allow my own weakness to prevent me
+from saving her. It would be a crime, a cruelty, to let your innocent
+child be deceived, and rendered miserable for all time, because I lack
+the moral courage to preserve her. Monsieur, I speak to you, as I am
+sure I may, as one friend to another, and I am perfectly certain that
+you will not misjudge me. Answer me one thing; no impertinent curiosity
+dictates the question. Do you wish your daughter married to Mr.
+Vaughan?"
+
+"Married to Vaughan!" exclaimed the startled banker; "I'd sooner see her
+married to a crossing sweeper. She never thought of such a thing.
+Impossible! absurd! she'll marry my friend Ruskinstone as soon as she
+comes of age. Marry Vaughan! a fellow without a penny----"
+
+Pauline laid her soft, jewelled hand on his arm:
+
+"My dear friend, _he_ thinks of it if you do not, and I am much mistaken
+if dear Nina is not already dazzled by his brilliant qualities. Your
+countryman is a charming companion, no one can gainsay that; but, alas!
+he is a roué, a gambler, an adventurer, who, while winning her young
+girl's affections, has only in view the wealth which he hopes he will
+gain with her. It is painful to me to say this" (and tears stood in
+madame's long, velvet eyes). "We were good friends before he wanted more
+than friendship, while poor De Mélusine was still living, and his true
+character was revealed to me. It would be false delicacy to allow your
+darling Nina to become his victim for want of a few words from me,
+though I know, if he were aware of my interference, the inference he
+would basely insinuate from it. But you," whispered madame, brushing the
+tears from her eyes, and giving him an angelic smile, "I need not fear
+that you would ever misjudge me?"
+
+"Never, I swear, most generous of women!" said the banker, kissing the
+snow-white hand, very clumsily, too. "I'll tell the fellow my mind
+directly--an unprincipled, gambling----"
+
+"Non, non, je vous en prie, monsieur!" cried the widow, really
+frightened, for this would not have suited her plans at all. "You would
+put me in the power of that unscrupulous man. He would destroy my
+reputation at once in his revenge."
+
+"But what am I to do?" said the poor gulled banker. "Nina's a will of
+her own, and if she take a fancy to this confounded----"
+
+"Leave that to me," said la baronne, softly. "I have proofs which will
+stagger her most obstinate faith in her lover. Meanwhile give him no
+suspicion, go to his supper on Tuesday, and--you are asked to Vauvenay,
+accept the invitation--and conclude the fiançailles with Monsieur le
+Ministre as soon as you can."
+
+"But--but, madame," stammered this new Jourdain to his enchanting
+Dorimène, "Vauvenay is an exile. I shall not see you there?"
+
+"Ah, silly man," laughed the widow, "I shall be only two miles off. I am
+going to stay with the Salvador; they leave Paris in three weeks.
+Listen--your daughter is singing 'The Swallows.' Her voice is quite as
+good as Ristori's."
+
+Three hours after, madame held another tête-à-tête in that boudoir. This
+time the favored mortal was Vaughan. They had had a pathetic interview,
+of which the pathos hardly moved Ernest as much as the widow desired.
+
+"You love me no longer, Ernest," she murmured, the tears falling down
+her cheeks--her rouge was the product of high art, and never washed
+off--"I see it, I feel it; your heart is given to that English girl. I
+have tried to jest about it; I have tried to affect indifference, but I
+cannot. The love you once won will be yours to the grave."
+
+Ernest listened, a satirical smile on his lips.
+
+"I should feel more grateful," he said, calmly, "if the gift had not
+been given to so many; it will be a great deal of trouble to you to
+love us all to our graves. And your new friend Gordon, do you intend
+cherishing his grey hairs, too, till the gout puts them under the sod?"
+
+She fell back sobbing with exquisite _abandon_. No deserted Calypso's
+_pose_ was ever more effective.
+
+"Ernest, Ernest! that I should live to be so insulted, and by you!"
+
+"Nay, madame, end this vaudeville," said he bitterly. "I know well
+enough that you hate me, or why have you troubled yourself to coin the
+untruths about me that you whispered to Miss Gordon?"
+
+"Ah! have you no pity for the first mad vengeance dictated by jealousy
+and despair?" murmured Pauline. "Once there was attraction in this face
+for you, Ernest; have some compassion, some sympathy----"
+
+Well as he knew the worth of madame's tears, Ernest, chivalric and
+generous at heart, was touched.
+
+"Forgive me," he said, gently, "and let us part. You know now, Pauline,
+that she has my deepest, my latest love. It were disloyalty to both did
+we meet again save in society."
+
+"Farewell, then," murmured Pauline. "Think gently of me, Ernest, for I
+_have_ loved you more than you will ever know now."
+
+She rose, and, as he bent towards her, kissed his forehead. Then,
+floating from the room, passed the Reverend Eusebius, standing in the
+doorway, looking in on this parting scene. The widow looked at herself
+in her mirror that night with a smile of satisfaction.
+
+"C'est bien en train," she said, half aloud. "Le fou! de penser qu'il
+puisse me braver. Je ne l'aime plus, c'est vrai, mais je ne veux pas
+qu'elle réussisse."
+
+Nina went to bed very happy. Ernest had sat next her at the déjeûner;
+and afterwards at a ball had waltzed often with her and with nobody
+else; and his eyes had talked love in the waltzes though his tongue
+never had.
+
+Ernest went to his chambers, smoked hard, half mad with the battle
+within him, and took three grains of opium, which gave him forgetfulness
+and sleep. He woke, tired and depressed, to hear the gay hum of life in
+the street below, and to remember he had promised Nina to meet them at
+Versailles.
+
+It was Sunday morning. In England, of course, Gordon would have gone up
+to the sanctuary, listened to Mr. Bellew, frowned severely on the cheap
+trains, and, after his claret, read edifying sermons to his household;
+but in Paris there would be nobody to admire the piety, and the "grandes
+eaux" only play once a week, you know--on Sundays. So his Sabbath
+severity was relaxed, and down to Versailles he journied. There must be
+something peculiar in continental air, for it certainly stretches our
+countrymen's morality and religion uncommonly: it is only up at
+Jerusalem that our pharisees worship. Eusebius dare not go--he'd be sure
+to meet a brother-clerical, who might have reported the dereliction at
+home--so that Vaughan, despite Gordon's cold looks, kept by Nina's side
+though he wasn't alone with her, and when they came back in the _wagon_
+the banker slept and the duenna dozed, and he talked softly and low to
+her--not quite love, but something very like it--and as they neared
+Paris he took the little hand with its delicate Jouvin glove in his, and
+whispered,
+
+"Remember your promise: I can brave, and have braved most things, but I
+could not bear your scorn. _That_ would make me a worse man than I have
+been, if, as some folks would tell you, such a thing be possible."
+
+It was dark, but I dare say the moonbeams shining on the chevelure dorée
+showed him a pair of truthful, trusting eyes that promised never to
+desert him.
+
+The day after he had, by dint of tact and strategy, planned to spend
+entirely with Nina. He was going with them to the races at Chantilly,
+then to the Gaité to see the first representation of a vaudeville of a
+friend of his, and afterwards he had persuaded Gordon to enter the
+Lion's den, and let Nina grace a petit souper at No. 10, Rue des Mauvais
+Sujets, Chaussée d'Antin.
+
+The weather was delicious, the race-ground full, if not quite so
+crowded as the Downs on Derby Day. Ernest cast away his depression, he
+gave himself up to the joy of being loved, his wit had never rung finer
+nor his laugh clearer than as he drove back to Paris opposite Nina. He
+had never felt in higher spirits than, after having given carte blanche
+to a cordon bleu for the entertainment, he looked round his salons,
+luxurious as Eugène Sue's, and perfumed with exotics from the Palais
+Royal, and thought of one rather different in style to the women that
+had been wont to drink his Sillery and grace his symposia.
+
+He knew well enough she loved him, and his heart beat high as he put a
+bouquet of white flowers into a gold bouquetière to take to her.
+
+On his lover-like thoughts the voice of one of his parrots--Ernest had
+almost as many pets as there are in the Jardin des Plantes--broke in,
+screaming "Bluette! Bluette! Sacre bleu, elle est jolie! Bluette!
+Bluette!"
+
+The recollection was unwelcome. Vaughan swore a "sacre bleu!" too.
+"Diable! she mustn't hear that François, put that bird out of the way.
+He makes a such a confounded row."
+
+The parrot, fond of him, as all things were that knew him, sidled up,
+arching its neck, and repeating what De Concressault had taught it: "Fi
+donc, Ernest! Tu es volage! Tu ne m'aimes plus! Tu aimes Pauline!"
+
+"Devil take the bird!" thought its master; "even he'll be witness
+against me." And as he went down stairs to his cab, a chorus of birds
+shouting "Tu aimes Pauline!" followed him, and while he laughed, he
+sighed to think that even these unconscious things could tell her how
+little his love was worth. He forgot all but his love, however, when he
+leaned over her chair in the Gaités and saw that, strenuously as De
+Concressault and De Kerroualle sought to distract her attention, and
+many as were the lorgnons levelled at the chevelure dorée, all her
+thoughts and smiles were given to him.
+
+Ernest had never, even in his careless boyhood, felt so happy as he did
+that night as he handed her into Gordon's carriage, and drove to the
+Chaussée d'Antin; and though Gordon sat there heavy and solemn, looming
+like an iceberg on Ernest's golden future, Vaughan forgot him utterly,
+and only looked at the sunshine beaming on him from radiant eyes that,
+skeptic in her sex as he was from experience, he felt would always be
+true to him. The carriage stopped at No. 10, Rue des Mauvais Sujets. He
+had given her one or two dinners with the Senecterre, the De Salvador,
+and other fine ladies--grand affairs at the Frères Provençaux that would
+have satisfied Brillat-Savarin--but she had never been to his rooms
+before, and she smiled joyously in his face as he lifted her out--the
+smile that had first charmed him at the Français. He gave her his arm,
+and led her across the salle, bending his head down to whisper a
+welcome. Gordon and Selina and several men followed. Selina felt that it
+was perdition to enter the _Lion's_ den, but a fat old vicomte, on whom
+she'd fixed her eye, was going, and the "femmes de trente ans" that
+Balzac champions risk their souls rather than risk their chances when
+the day is far spent, and good offers grow rare.
+
+Ernest's Abyssinian, mute, subordinate to that grand gentleman, M.
+François, ushered them up the stairs, making furtive signs to his
+master, which Vaughan was too much absorbed to notice. François, in all
+his glory, flung open the door of the salon. In the salon a sight met
+Ernest's eyes which froze his blood more than if all the dead had arisen
+out of their graves on the slopes of Père la Chaise.
+
+The myriad of wax-lights shone on the rooms, fragrant with the perfume
+of exotics, gleamed on the supper-table, gorgeous with its gold plate
+and its flowers, lighted up the aviary with its brilliant hues of
+plumage, and showed to full perfection the snowy shoulders, raven hair,
+and rose-hued dress of a woman lying back in a fauteuil, laughing, as De
+Cheffontaine, a man but slightly known to Ernest, leaned over her,
+fanning her. On a sofa in an alcove reclined another girl, young, fair,
+and pretty, the amber mouthpiece of a hookah between her lips, and a
+couple of young fellows at her feet.
+
+The brunette was Bluette, who played the soubrette rôles at the Odéon;
+the blonde was Céline Gamelle, the new première danseuse. Bluette rose
+from the depths of her amber satin fauteuil, with her little _pétillant_
+eyes laughing, and her small plump hands stretched out in gesticulation.
+"Méchant! Comme tu es tard, Ernest. Nous avons été ici si longtemps--dix
+minutes au moins! And dis is you leetler new Ingleesh friend. How do you
+do, my dear?"
+
+Nina, white as death, shrank from her, clinging with both hands to
+Ernest's arms. As pale as she, Vaughan stood staring at the actress, his
+lips pressed convulsively together, the veins standing out on his broad,
+high forehead. The bold _Lion_ hunted into his lair, for once lost all
+power, all strength.
+
+Gordon looked over Nina's shoulder into the room. He recognized the
+women at a glance, and, with his heavy brow dark as night, he glared on
+Ernest in a silence more ominous than words or oaths, and snatching
+Nina's arm from his, he drew her hand within his own, and dragged her
+from the room.
+
+Ernest sprang after him. "Good God! you do not suppose me capable of
+this. Stay one instant. Hear me----"
+
+"Let us pass, sir," thundered Gordon, "or by Heaven this insult shall
+not go unavenged."
+
+"Nina, Nina!" cried Ernest, passionately, "do you at least listen!--you
+at least will not condemn----"
+
+Nina wrenched her hands from her father, and turned to him, a passion of
+tears falling down her face. "No, no! have I not promised you?"
+
+With a violent oath Gordon carried her to her carriage. It drove away,
+and Ernest, his lips set, his face white, and a fierce glare in his dark
+eyes that made Bluette and Céline tremble, entered his salons a second
+time, so bitter an anguish, so deadly a wrath marked in his expressive
+countenance, that even the Frenchmen hushed their jests, and the women
+shrunk away, awed at a depth of feeling they could not fathom or brave.
+
+The fierce anathemas of Gordon, the "Christian" lamentations of
+Eusebius, the sneers of Selina, the triumphs of Augusta, all these vials
+of wrath were poured forth on Ernest, in poor little Nina's ears, the
+whole of the next day. She had but one voice among many to raise in his
+defence, and she had no armor but her faith in him. Gordon vowed with
+the same breath that she should never see Vaughan again, and that she
+should engage herself to Ruskinstone forthwith. Eusebius poured in at
+one ear his mild milk-and-water attachment, and, in the other, details
+of Ernest's scene in the boudoir with Madame de Mélusine, or, at least,
+what he had seen of it, _i. e._ her parting caress. Selina rang the
+changes on her immodesty in loving a man who had never proposed to her;
+and Augusta drew lively pictures of the eternal fires which were already
+being kept up below, ready for the _Lion's_ reception. Against all these
+furious batteries Nina stood firm. All their sneers and arguments could
+not shake her belief, all her father's commands--and, when he was
+roused, the old banker was very fierce--could not move her to promise
+not to see Ernest again, or alter her firm repudiation of the warden's
+proposals. The thunder rolled, the lightning flamed, the winds screamed
+all to no purpose, the little reed that one might have fancied would
+break, stood steady.
+
+The day passed, and the next passed, and there were no tidings of
+Ernest. Nina's little loyal heart, despite its unhesitating faith, began
+to tremble lest it should have wrecked itself: but then, she thought of
+his eyes, and she felt that all the world would never make her mistrust
+him.
+
+On the _surlendemain_ the De Mélusine called. Gordon and Eusebius were
+out, and Nina wished her to be shown up. Ill as the girl felt, she rose
+haughtily and self-possessed to greet madame, as, announced by her tall
+chasseur, with his green plume, the widow glided into the room.
+
+Pauline kissed her lightly (there are no end of Judases among the dear
+sex), and, though something in Nina's eye startled her, she sat down
+beside her, and began to talk most kindly, most sympathisingly. She was
+_chagrinée, désolée_ that her _chère_ Nina should have been so insulted;
+every one knew M. Vaughan was quite _entêté_ with that little, horrid,
+coarse thing, Bluette; but it was certainly very shocking; men were such
+_démons_. The affair was already _répandue_ in Paris; everybody was
+talking of it. Ernest was unfortunately so well known; he could not be
+in his senses; she almost wished he _was_ mad, it would be the only
+excuse for him; wild as he was, she should scarcely have thought, &c.,
+&c., &c. "Ah! chère enfant," madame went on at the finish, "you do not
+know these men--I do. I fear you have been dazzled by this naughty
+fellow; he _is_ very attractive, certainly: if so, though it will be a
+sharp pang, it will be better to know his real character at once. Voyez
+donc! he has been persuading you that you were all the world to him,
+while at the same time, he has been trying to make me believe the same.
+See, only two days ago he sent me this."
+
+She held out a miniature. Nina, who hitherto had listened in haughty
+silence, gave a sharp cry of pain as she saw Vaughan's graceful figure,
+stately head, and statue-like features. But, before the widow could
+pursue her advantage, Nina rallied, threw back her head, and said, her
+soft lips set sternly:
+
+"If you repulsed his love, why was he obliged to repulse yours? Why did
+you tell him on Saturday night that 'you had loved him more than he
+would ever know now?'"
+
+The shot Eusebius had unconsciously provided, struck home. Madame was
+baffled. Her eyes sank under Nina's, and she colored through her rouge.
+
+"You have played two rôles, madame," said Nina, rising, "and not played
+them with you usual skill. Excuse my English ill-breeding, if I ask you
+to do me the favor of ending this comedy."
+
+"Certainly, mademoiselle, if it is your wish," answered the widow, now
+smiling blandly. "If it please you to be blind, I have no desire to
+remove the bandage from your eyes. Seulement, je vous prie de me
+pardonner mon indiscrétion, et j'ai l'honneur, mademoiselle, de vous
+dire adieu!"
+
+With the lowest of _révérences_ madame glided from the room, and, as the
+door closed, Nina bowed her head on the miniature left behind in the
+_déroute_, and burst into tears.
+
+Scarcely had la Mélusine's barouche rolled away, when another visitor
+was shown in, and Nina, brushing the tears from her cheeks, looked up
+hurriedly, and saw a small woman, finely dressed, with a Shetland veil
+on, through which her small black eyes roved listlessly.
+
+"Mademoiselle," she said, in very quick but very bad English, "I is
+come to warn you against dat ver wrong man, Mr. Vaughan. I have like
+him, helas! I have like him too vell, but I do not vish you to suffer
+too."
+
+Nina knew the voice in a moment, and rose like a little empress, though
+she was flushed and trembling. "I wish to hear nothing of Mr. Vaughan.
+If this is the sole purport of your visit, I shall be obliged by your
+leaving me."
+
+"But mademoiselle----"
+
+"I have told you I wish to hear nothing," interposed Nina, quietly.
+
+"Ver vell, ma'amselle; den read dat. It is a copy, and I got de
+original."
+
+She laid a letter on the sofa beside Nina. Two minutes after, Bluette
+joined her friend Céline Gamelle in a fiacre, and laughed heartily,
+clapping her little plump hands. "Ah, mon Dieu! Céline, comme elle est
+fière, la petite! Je ne lui ai pas dit un seul mot--elle m'a arrêtée si
+vite, si vite! Mais la lettre fera notre affaire n'est pas? Oui, oui!"
+
+The letter unfolded in Nina's hand. It was a promise of marriage from
+Ernest Vaughan to Bluette Lemaire. Voiceless and tearless, Nina sat
+gazing on the paper: first she rose, gasping for breath; then she threw
+herself down, sobbing convulsively, till she heard a step, caught up the
+miniature and letter, dreading to see her father, and, instead, saw
+Ernest, pale, worn, deep lines round his mouth and eyes, standing in the
+doorway. Involuntarily she sprang towards him. Ernest pressed her to
+heart, and his hot tears fell on the chevelure dorée, as he bent over
+her, murmuring, "_You_ have not deserted me. God bless you for your
+noble faith." At last he put her gently from him, and, leaning against
+the mantelpiece, said, with an effort, between his teeth, "Nina, I came
+to bid you farewell, and to ask your forgiveness for the wrong I have
+done you."
+
+Nina caught hold of him, much as Malibran seized hold of _Elvino_:
+"Leave me! leave me! No, no; you cannot mean it!"
+
+"I have no strength for it now I see you," said Ernest, looking down
+into her eyes; and the bold, reckless _Lion_ shivered under the clinging
+clasp of her little hands. "I need not say I was not the cause of the
+insult you received the other night. Pauline de Mélusine was the agent,
+women willing to injure me the actors in it. But there is still much for
+you to forgive. Tell me, at once, what have you heard of me?"
+
+She silently put the miniature and letter in his hand. The blood rushed
+to his very temples, and, sinking his head on his arms, his chest rose
+and fell with uncontrollable sobs. All the pent-up feelings of his
+vehement and affectionate nature poured out at last.
+
+"And you have not condemned me even on these?" he said at length, in a
+hoarse whisper.
+
+"Did I not promise?" she murmured.
+
+"But if I told you they were true?"
+
+She looked at him through her tears, and put her hand in his. "Tell me
+nothing of your past; it can make no difference to my love. Let the
+world judge you as it may, it cannot alter me."
+
+Ernest strained her to him, kissing her wildly. "God bless you for your
+trust! would to God I were more worthy of it! I have nothing to give you
+but a love such as I have never before known; but most would tell you
+all _my_ love is worthless, and my life has been one of reckless
+dissipation and of darker errors still, until you awoke me to a deeper
+love--to thoughts and aspirations that I thought had died out for ever.
+Painful as it is to confess----"
+
+"Hush!" interrupted Nina, gently. "Confess nothing; with your past life
+I can have nothing to do, and I wish never to hear anything that it
+gives you pain to tell. You say that you love me now, and will never
+love another--that is enough for me."
+
+Ernest kissed the flushed cheeks and eloquent lips, and thanked her with
+all the fiery passion that was in him; and his heart throbbed fiercely
+as he put her promise to the test.
+
+"No, my darling! Priceless as your love is to me I will not buy it by
+concealment. I will not sully your ears with the details of my life. God
+forbid I should! but it is only due to you to know that I did give both
+these women the love-tokens they brought you. Love! It is desecration of
+the name, but I knew none better then! Three years ago, Bluette Lemaire
+first appeared at the Odéon. She is illiterate, coarse, heartless, but
+she was handsome, and she drew me to the coulisses. I was infatuated
+with her, though her ignorance and vulgarity constantly grated against
+all my tastes. One night at her petit souper I drank more Sillery than
+was wise. I have a stronger head than most men: perhaps there was some
+other stimulant in it; at any rate, she who was then poor, and is always
+avaricious, got from me a promise to marry her, or to pay twenty
+thousand francs. Three months after I gave it I cared no more for her
+than for my old glove. France is too wise to have Breach of Promise
+cases, and give money to coarse and vengeful women for their pretended
+broken hearts; but I had no incentive to create a scene by breaking with
+her, and so she kept the promise in her hands. What Pauline de Mélusine
+is, you can judge. Twelve months ago I met her at Vichy; the love she
+gave me, and the love I vowed her, were of equal value--the love of
+Paris boudoirs. That I sent her that picture only two days ago, is, of
+course, false. On my word, as a man of honor, since the moment I felt
+your influence upon me I have shunned her. Now, my own love, you know
+the truth. Will you send me from you, or will you still love and still
+forgive?"
+
+In an agony of suspense he bent his head to listen for her answer. Tears
+rained down her cheeks as she put her arms round his neck, and
+whispered:
+
+"Why ask? Are you not all the world to me? I should love you little if I
+condemned you for any errors of your past. I know your warm and noble
+heart, and I trust to it without a fear. There is no doubt between us
+now!"
+
+Oh, my prudent and conventional young ladies, standing ready to accuse
+my poor little Nina, are you any wiser in your generation? You who have
+had all nature taken out of you by "finishing," whose heads are crammed
+with "society's" laws, and whose affections are measured out by rule,
+who would have been cold, and dignified, and read Ernest a severe
+lesson, and sent him back hopeless and hardened to go ten times worse
+than he had gone before--believe me, that impulse points truer than "the
+world," and that the dictates of the heart are better than the
+regulations of society. Take my word for it, that love will do more for
+a man than lectures; and faith in him be more likely to keep him
+straight than all your moralising; and before you judge him severely for
+having drunk a little too deep of the Sillery of life, remember that his
+temptations are not your temptations, nor his ways your ways, and be
+gentle to dangers which society and custom keep out of your own path.
+The stern thorn crows you offer to us when we are inclined to ask your
+absolution, are not the right means to win us from the rose wreaths of
+our bacchanalia.
+
+Nina, as you see, loved her _Lion_ too well to remember dignity, or
+take her stand on principle; and gallantly did the young lady stand the
+bombardment from all sides that sought to break her resolutions and
+crush her "misplaced affections." Gordon chanced to come in that day and
+light upon Ernest, and the fury into which he worked himself ill
+beseemed so respectable a pharisee. Vaughan kept tranquilly haughty, and
+told the banker, calmly, that he "thanked God he had his daughter's
+love, and his money he would never have stooped to accept." Gordon
+forbade him the house, and carried Nina back to England; but before she
+went they had a parting interview, in which Ernest offered to leave her
+free. But such freedom would have been worse than death to Nina, and,
+before they separated, she told him that in three months more she should
+be of age, and then, come what might, she would be his if he would take
+her without wealth. Take her he would have done from the arms of Satanus
+himself, but to disentangle himself from all his difficulties was a task
+that beat the Augean stables hollow. The three months of his probation
+he worked hard; he sold off all his pictures, his stud, and his
+_meubles_; he sold, what cost him a more bitter pang, his encumbered
+estates in Surrey; he paid off all his debts, Bluette's twenty thousand
+francs included; and shaking himself free of the accumulated
+embarrassments of fifteen years, he crossed the water to claim his last
+love. No poor little Huguenot was ever persecuted for her faith more
+than poor little Nina for her engagement. Every relative she had thought
+it his duty to write admonitory letters, plentifully interspersed with
+texts. Eusebius and his 4000_l._ a year, and his perspective bishopric,
+were held up before her from morning to night; the banker, whose
+deception in the Mélusine had turned him into sharper vinegar than
+before, told her with chill stoicism that she must of course choose her
+own path in life, but that if that path led her into the Chaussée
+d'Antin, she need never expect a sou from him, for all his property
+would be divided between her two brothers. But Nina was neither to be
+frightened nor bribed. She kept true to her lover, and disinherited
+herself.
+
+They were married a week or two after Nina's majority; and Gordon knew
+it, though he could not prevent it. They did not miss the absence of
+bridesmaids, bishop, déjeûner, and the usual fashionable crowd. It was a
+marriage of the heart, you see, and did not want the trappings with
+which they gild that bitter pill so often swallowed now-a-days--a
+"mariage de convenance." Nina, as she saw further still into the wealth
+of deep feeling and strong affection which, at her touch, she had awoke
+in his heart, felt that money, and friends, and the world's smile were
+well lost since she had won him. And Ernest--Ernest's sacrifice was
+greater; for it is not a little thing, young ladies, for a man to give
+up his accustomed freedom, and luxuries, and careless vie de garçon, and
+to have to think and work for another, even though dearer than himself.
+But he had long since seen so much of life, had exhausted all its
+pleasures so rapidly, that they palled upon him, and for some time he
+had vaguely wanted something of deeper interest, of warmer sympathy.
+Unknown to himself, he had felt the "besoin d'être aimé"--a want the
+trash offered him by the women of his acquaintance could never
+satisfy--and his warm, passionate nature found rest in a love which,
+though the strongest of his life, was still returned to him fourfold.
+
+After some months of delicious _far niente_ in the south of France, they
+came back to Paris. Though anything but rich, he was not absolutely
+poor, after he had paid his debts, and the necessity to exertion rousing
+his dormant talents, the _Lion_ turned _littérateur_. He was too
+popular with men to be dropped because he had sold his stud or given up
+his petits soupers. The romance of their story charmed the Parisians,
+and, though (behind his back) they sometimes jested about the "Lion
+amoureux," there were not a few who envied him his young love, and the
+sunshine that shone round them in his inexpensive appartement garni.
+
+Ernest _was_ singularly happy--and suddenly he became the star of the
+literary, as he had been of the fashionable world. His mots were
+repeated, his vaudevilles applauded, his feuilletons adored. The world
+smiled on Nina and her _Lion_; it made little difference to them--they
+had been as contented when it frowned.
+
+But it made a good deal of difference across the Channel. Gordon began
+to repent. Ernest's family was high, his Austrian connexions very
+aristocratic: there would be something after all in belonging to a man
+so well known. (Be successful, ami lecteur, and all your relatives will
+love you.) Besides, he had found out that it is no use to put your faith
+in princes, or clergymen. Eusebius had treated him very badly when he
+found he could not get Nina and her money, and spoke against the poor
+banker everywhere, calling him, with tender pastoral regret, a "worldly
+Egyptian," a "Dives," a "whitened sepulchre," and all the rest of it.
+
+Probably, too, stoic though he was, he missed the chevelure dorée; at
+any rate, he wrote to her stiffly, but kindly, and settled two thousand
+a year upon her. Vaughan was very willing she should be friends with her
+father, but nothing would make him draw a sou of the money. So Nina--the
+only sly thing she ever did in her life--after a while contrived to buy
+back the Surrey estate, and gave it to him, with no end of prayers and
+caresses, on the Jour de l'An.
+
+"And you do not regret, my darling," smiled Ernest, after wishing her
+the new year's wishes, "having forgiven me for once drinking too much
+Sillery, and all the other naughty things of my vie de garçon?"
+
+"Regret!" interrupted Nina, vehemently--"regret that I have won your
+love, live your life, share your cares and joys, regret that my
+existence is one long day of sunshine? Oh, why ask! you know I can never
+repay you for the happiness of my life."
+
+"Rather can I never repay you," said Vaughan, looking down into her
+eyes, "for the faith that made you brave calumny and opposition, and
+cling to my side despite all. I was heart-sick of the world, and you
+called me back to life. I was weary of the fools who misjudged me, and I
+let them think me what they might."
+
+"Ah, how happy you make me!" cried Nina. "I should have been little
+worthy of your love if I had suffered slander to warp me against you, or
+if any revelations you cared enough for me to make of your past life,
+had parted us:
+
+ Love is not love
+ That alters where it alteration finds,
+ Or bends with the remover to remove.
+
+There, monsieur!" she said, throwing her arms round him with a laugh,
+while happy tears stood in her eyes--"there is a grand quotation for
+you. Mind and take care, Ernest, that you never realise the Ruskinstone
+predictions, and make me repent having caught and caged such a terrible
+thing as a hunted PARIS LION!"
+
+
+
+
+SIR GALAHAD'S RAID.
+
+
+
+
+SIR GALAHAD'S RAID.
+
+AN ADVENTURE ON THE SWEET WATERS.
+
+
+For the punishment of my sins may the gods never again send me to Pera!
+That I might have plenty on my shoulders I am frankly willing to
+concede; all I protest is, that when one submissively acknowledges the
+justice of ones future terminating in Tophet, it comes a little hard to
+get purgatory in this world into the bargain. Purgatory lies _perdu_ for
+one all over the earth. I have had fifty times more than my share
+already, and the gout still remains an untried experience, a Gehenna
+grimly waiting to avenge every morsel of white truffle and every glass
+of comet claret with which I innocently solace my frail mortality.
+Purgatory!--I have been chained in it fifty times; _et vous_?
+
+When you rush to a Chancellérie, with the English Arms gorgeous above
+its doorway, on the spur of a frightfully mysterious and autocratic
+telegram, that makes it life or death to catch the train for England in
+ten minutes, and have time enough to smoke about two dozen very big
+cheroots, cooling your heels in the bureau, and then hear (when properly
+tortured into the due amount of frantic agony for the intelligence to be
+fully appreciated) that his Excellency is gone snipe-shooting to ----,
+and that the First Secretary is in his bath, and has given orders not to
+be disturbed; your informant languidly pricking his cigar with his
+toothpick, and politely intimating, by his eyebrows, that you and your
+necessities may go to the deuce--what's _that_? When you are doing the
+sanitary at Weedon, by some hideous conjunction of evil destinies, in
+the very Ducal week itself, and thinking of the rush with which Tom
+Alcroft will land the filly, or the close finish with which Fordham will
+get the cup, while you are not there to see, are sorely tempted to
+realize the Parisian vision of Anglo suicide, and load the apple-trees
+with suspended human fruit;--what's _that_? When, having got leave, and
+established yourself in cosy hunting-quarters, with some cattle not to
+be beat in stay, blood, and pace, close to a killing pack that never
+score a blank day, there falls a bitter, black frost, locking the
+country up in iron bonds, and making every bit of ridge and furrow like
+a sheet of glass--what's _that_?
+
+Bah! I could go on ad infinitum, and cite "circles of purgatory" in
+which mortal man is doomed to pass his time, beside which Dante's Caïna,
+Antenora, and Ptolomea sink into insignificance. But of all Purgatories,
+chiefest in my memory, is----Pera. Pera in the old Crimean time--Pera
+the "beautiful suburb" of fond "fiction"--Pera, with the dirt, the
+fleas, the murders, the mosquitoes, the crooked streets, the lying
+Greeks, the stench, the hubbub, the dulness, and the everlasting "Bono
+Johnny."
+
+"Call a dog Hervey, and I shall love him," said Johnson, so dear was his
+friend to him:--"call a dog Johnny, and I shall kick him," so abominable
+grew that word in the eternal Turkish jabber! Tell me, O prettiest,
+softest-voiced, most beguiling, feminine Æothen, in as romantic periods
+as you will, of bird-like feluccas darting over the Bosphorus, of curled
+caïques gliding through fragrant water-weeds; of Arabian Nights
+reproduced, when up through the darkness peals the roll of the drums
+calling the Faithful to prayers; of the nights of Ramadan, with the
+starry clusters of light gleaming all down Stamboul, and flashing,
+firefly-like, through the dark citron groves;--tell me of it as you
+will, I don't care; you may think me a Goth, _ce m'est bien égal_, and
+_you_ were not in cavalry quarters at Pera. I wasn't exacting; I did not
+mind having ants in my jam, nor centipedes in my boots, nor a shirt in
+six months, nor bacon for a luxury that strongly resembled an old file
+rusted by sea-water, nor any little trifle of that sort up in the front;
+all that is in the fortune of war: but I confess that Pera put me fairly
+out of patience, specially when a certain trusty friend of mine, who has
+no earthly fault, that I wot of, except that of perpetually looking at
+life through a Claude glass (which is the most aggravating opticism to a
+dispassionate and unblinded mind that the world holds), _would_ poetize
+upon it, or at least on the East in general, which came pretty much to
+the same thing.
+
+The sun poured down on me till (conscience, probably) I remembered the
+scriptural threat to the wicked, "their brains shall boil in their
+skulls like pots;"--Sir Galahad, as I will call him, would murmur to
+himself, with his cheroot in his teeth, Manfred's _salut_ to the sun,
+looking as lovingly at it as any eagle. Mosquitoes reduced me to the
+very borders of madness,--Sir Galahad would placidly remark, how
+Buckland would revel here in all those gorgeous beetles. A Greek told
+crackers till I had to double-thong him like a puppy,--Sir Galahad would
+shout to me to let the fellow alone, he looked so deuced picturesque, he
+must have him for a study. I made myself wretched in a ticklish caïque,
+the size of a cockle-shell, where, when one was going full harness to
+the Great Effendi's, it was a moral impossibility to be doubled without
+one's sash swinging into the water, one's sword sticking over the side,
+and the liveliest sensation of cramp pervading one's body,--Sir Galahad,
+blandly indifferent, would discourse, with superb Ruskin obscurity, of
+"tone," and "coloring," and "harmonized light," while he looked down the
+Golden Horn, for he was a little Art-mad, and painted so well that if
+he had been a professional, the hanging committee would have shut him
+out to a certainty.
+
+Now he was a good fellow, a _beau sabreur_, who had fetched some superb
+back strokes in the battery at Balaclava, who could send a line
+spinning, and land his horse in a gentleman riders' race, and pot the
+big game, and lead the first flight over Northamptonshire doubles at
+home, as well as a man wants to do; but I put it to any dispassionate
+person, whether this persistent poetism of his, flying in the face of
+facts and of fleas, was not enough to make anybody swear in that
+mosquito-purgatorio of Pera?
+
+Sir Galahad was a capital fellow, and the men would have gone after him
+to the death; the fair, frank, handsome face, a little womanish perhaps,
+was very pleasant to look at, and he got the Victoria not long ago for a
+deed that would suit Arthur's Table; but in Pera, I avow, he made me
+swear hard, and if he would just have set his heel on his Claude glass,
+cursed the Turks, and growled refreshingly, I should have loved him
+better. He was philosophic and he was poetic; and the combination of
+temperaments lifted him in a mortifying altitude above ordinary
+humanity, that was baked, broiled, grumbling, savage, bitten, fleeced,
+and holding its own against miserable rats, Greeks, and Bono Johnnies,
+with an Aristides thieving its last shirt, and a Pisistratus getting
+drunk at its case-bottle! That sublime serenity of his in Pera ended in
+making me unholy and ungenerous; if he would but have sworn once at the
+confounded country, I should have borne it, but he never did, and I
+longed to see him out of temper, I pined and thirsted to get him
+disenchanted. "_Tout vient a point, à qui sait attendre_," they say; a
+motto, by the way, that might be written over the Horse Guards for the
+comfort of gloomy souls, when, in the words of the Psalmist, "Promotion
+cometh neither from the south, nor from the east, nor from the
+west"--by which lament one might conclude David of Israel to have been a
+sufferer by the Purchase-system!
+
+"Delicious!" said Sir Galahad, sending a whiff of Turkish tobacco into
+the air one morning after exercise, when he and I, having ridden out a
+good many miles along the Sweet Waters, turned the horses loose, bought
+some grapes and figs of an old Turk, dispossessed him of his bit of
+cocoa-matting, and flung ourselves under a plane-tree. And the fellow
+looked round him through his race-glass at the cypress woods, the
+mosques and minarets, the almond thickets, the "soft creamy distance,"
+as he called it in his _argot d'atelier_, and the Greek fishermen near,
+drawing up a net full of silvery prismatic fishes, with a relish
+absolutely exasperating. Exasperating--when the sun was broiling one's
+brain through the linen, and there wasn't a drop of Bass or soda and B
+to be got for love or money, and one thought thirstily of days at home
+in England, with the birds whirring up from the stubble in the cool
+morning, and the cold punch uncorked for luncheon, under the home woods
+fringing the open.
+
+"One wants Hunt to catch that bit of color," murmured Sir Galahad,
+luxuriously eying a mutilated Janissary's tomb covered with scarlet
+creepers.
+
+"Hunt be hanged!" said I (meaning no disrespect to that eminent
+Pre-Raphaelite, whose "Light of the World" I took at first sight to be a
+policeman going his night rounds, and come out in his shirt by mistake;
+by the way, it is a droll idea to symbolize the "light of the world" by
+a watchman with a dark lantern, _lux in tenebras_ with a vengeance!).
+"Give me the sweet shady side of Pall Mall, and the devil may take the
+Sweet Waters. What's the Feast of Bairam beside the Derby-day, or your
+confounded coloring beside a well-done cutlet? What's lemonade by
+Brighton Tipper, and a veiled bundle by a pretty blonde, and an eternity
+of Stamboul by an hour of Piccadilly?"
+
+Sir Galahad smiled superior, and shied a date at me.
+
+"Goth! can't you be content to feed like the Patriarchs and live an
+idyl?"
+
+"No! I'd rather feed like a Parisian and live an idler! Eat grapes if
+you choose; I agree with Brillat-Savarin, and don't like my wine in
+pills."
+
+"My good fellow, you're all prose."
+
+"And you're all poetry. You're as bad as that pretty little commissariat
+girl who lisped me to death last night at the Embassy with platitudes of
+bosh about the 'poetry of marriage.'"
+
+"The deuce!" said Sir Galahad, with a whistle, "that must be like most
+other poetry nowadays--uncommon dull prose, sliced up in uneven lengths!
+Didn't you tell her so?"
+
+"Couldn't; I should have pulled the string for a shower-bath of
+sentiment! When a woman's bolted on romance you only make the pace worse
+if you gall her with the curb of common sense. When romance is in,
+reason's out,--excuse the personality!"
+
+He didn't hear me; he was up like a retriever who scents a wild duck or
+a water-rat among the sedges, for sweeping near us with soft gliding
+motion, as pretty as a toy and as graceful as a swan, came a caïque,
+with the wife of a Pacha of at least a hundred tails in it, to judge by
+the costliness of her exquisite attire. Now, women were not rare, but
+then they were always veiled, which is like giving a man a nugget he
+mustn't take out of the quartz, a case of champagne he mustn't undo, a
+cover-side he is never to beat, a trout stream in which he must never
+fling a fly; and Sir Galahad, whose loves were not, I admit, quite so
+saintly as Arthur's code exacted, lost his head in a second as the
+caïque drifted past us, and, raising herself on her cushions, the Leilah
+Duda, or Salya within it, glanced toward the myrtle screen that half hid
+us, with the divinest antelope eyes in the world, and letting the
+silver gauze folds of her veil float half aside, showed us the beautiful
+warm bloom, the proud lips, and the chestnut tresses braided with pearls
+and threaded with gold, of your genuine Circassian beauty. Shade of Don
+Juan! what a face it was!
+
+A yataghan might have been at his throat, a bowstring at his neck,
+eunuchs might have slaughtered, and pachas have impaled him, Galahad
+would have seen more of that loveliness: headlong he plunged down the
+slope, crushing through the almond thickets and scattering the green
+tree-frogs right and left; the caïque was just rounding past as he
+reached the water's edge, and the beauty's veil was drawn in terror of
+her guard. But as the little cockle-shell, pretty and ticklish as a
+nautilus, was moored to a broad flight of marble stairs, the Circassian
+turned her head towards the place where the Unbeliever stood in the
+sunlight--her eyes were left her, and with them women speak in a
+universal tongue. Then the green lattice gate shut, the white
+impenetrable walls hid her from sight, and Sir Galahad stood looking
+down the Sweet Waters in a sort of beatific vision, in love for the
+1360th time in his life. And certainly he had never been in love with
+better reason; for is there anything on earth so divine as your
+antelope-eyed and gold-haired Circassian?
+
+"I shall be inside those walls or know the reason why," said he, whom
+two gazelle eyes had fired and captured, there by the side of the sunny
+Sweet Waters, where the lazy air was full of syringa and rose odors, and
+there was no sound but the indolent beating of the tired oars on the
+ripples.
+
+"Which reason you will rapidly find," I suggested, "in a knock on the
+head from the Faithful!"
+
+"Well! a very picturesque way of coming to grief; to go off the scene in
+the sick-wards, from raki and fruit, would be commonplace and
+humiliating, but to die in a serail, stabbed through and through by
+green-eyed jealousy, would be piquant and refreshing to the last degree;
+do you really think there's a chance of it?" said Galahad, rather
+anxiously--the eager wistful anxiety of a man who, athirst for the
+forest, hears of the rumored slot of an outlying deer--while he shouted
+the Greek fishermen to him, and learned after sore travail through a
+slough of mixed Italian, Turkish, and Albanian, that the white palace,
+with its green lattice and its hanging gardens, belonged to a rich
+merchant of Constantinople, and that this veiled angel was the favorite
+of his harem, Leilah Derran, a recent purchase in Circassia, and the
+queen of the Anderùn.
+
+"The old rascal!" swore Galahad, in his wrath, which was not, however, I
+think, caused by any particular Christian disgust at polygamy. "A fat
+old sinner, I'll be bound, who sits on his divan puffing his chibouque
+and stuffing his sweetmeats, as yellow as Beppo, and as round as a ball.
+Bah! what pearls before swine! It's enough to make a saint swear. Those
+heavenly eyes!..." And Galahad went into a somewhat earthly reverie,
+colored with a thirsty jealousy of the purchaser and the possessor of
+this Circassian gazelle, as he rode reluctantly back towards Pera.
+
+The Circassian was in his head, and did not get out again. He let
+himself be bewitched by that lovely face which had flashed on him for a
+second, and began to feel himself as aggrieved by that innocent and
+unoffending Turkish lord of hers, as if the unlucky gentleman had stolen
+his own property! The antelope eyes had looked softly and hauntingly
+sad, moreover: I demonstrated to him that it was nothing more than the
+way that the eyelashes drooped, but nobody in love (very few people out
+of it) have any taste for logic; he was simply disgusted with my
+realism, and saw an instant vision for himself of this loveliest of
+slaves, captive in a bazaar and sold into the splendid bondage of the
+harem as into an inevitable fate, mournful in her royalty as a
+nightingale in a cage stifled with roses, and as little able to escape
+as the bird. A vision which intoxicated and enraptured Sir Galahad, who,
+in the teeth of every abomination of Pera, had been content to see only
+what he wished to see, and had maintained that the execrable East, to
+make it the East of Hafiz and all the poets, only wanted--available
+Haidees!
+
+"Hang it! I think it's nothing _but_ Hades," said an Aide, overhearing
+that statement one night, as we stumbled out of a half-café,
+half-gambling-booth pandemonium into the crooked, narrow, pitch-dark
+street, where dogs were snarling over offal, jackals screaming, Turkish
+bands shrieking, cannon booming out the hour of prayer, women yelling
+alarms of fire, a Zouave was spitting a Greek by way of practice, and an
+Irishman had just potted a Dalmatian, in as brawling, rowing,
+pestiferous, unodorous an earthly Gehenna as men ever succeeded in
+making.
+
+Sir Galahad was the least vain of mortals; nevertheless, being as
+well-beloved by the "maidens and young widows," for his fair handsome
+face, as Harold the Gold-haired, he would have been more than mortal if
+he had not been tolerably confident of "killing," and luxuriously
+practised in that pleasant pastime. That if he could once get the
+antelope eyes to look at him, they would look lovingly before long, he
+was in comfortable security; but how to get into a presence, which it
+was death for an unbeliever and a male creature to approach, was a
+knottier question, and the difficulty absorbed him. There were several
+rather telling Englishwomen out there, with whom he had flirted _faute
+de mieux_, at the cavalry balls we managed to get up in Pera, at the
+Embassy costume-ball, on board yacht-decks in the harbor, and in picnics
+to Therapia or the Monastery. But they became as flavorless as
+twice-told tales, and twice-warmed entremets, beside the new piquance,
+the delicious loveliness, the divine difficulty of this captive
+Circassian. That he had no more earthly business to covet her than he
+had to covet the unlucky Turkish trader's lumps of lapis-lazuli and
+agate, never occurred to him; the stones didn't tempt him, you see, but
+the beauty did. That those rich, soft, unrivalled Eastern charms,
+"merely born to bloom and drop," should be caged from the world and only
+rejoice the eyes of a fat old opium-soddened Stamboul merchant, seemed a
+downright reversal of all the laws of nature, a tampering with the
+balance of just apportionment that clamored for redress; but, like most
+other crying injustice, the remedy was hard to compass.
+
+Day after day he rode down to the same place on the Sweet Waters on the
+chance of the caïque's passing; and, sure enough, the caïque did pass
+nine times out of ten, and, when opportunity served for such a hideous
+Oriental crime not to be too perilous, the silver gauze floated aside
+unveiling a face as fair as the morning, or, when that was impossible,
+the eyes turned on him shyly and sadly in their lustrous appeal, as
+though mutely bewailing such cruel captivity. Those eyes said as plainly
+as language could speak that the lovely Favorite plaintively resisted
+her bondage, and thought the Frank with his long fair beard, and his six
+feet of height, little short of an angel of light, though he might be an
+infidel.
+
+Given--hot languid days, nothing to do, sultry air heavy with orange and
+rose odors, and those "silent passages," repeating themselves every time
+that Leilah Derran's caïque glided past the myrtle screen, where her
+Giaour lay _perdu_, the result is conjectural: though they had never
+spoken a word, they had both fallen in love. Voiceless _amourettes_ have
+their advantages:--when a woman speaks, how often she snaps her spell!
+For instance, when the lips are divine but the utterance is slangy, when
+the mouth is adorably rosebud but what it says is most horrible horsy!
+
+A tender pity, too, gave its spur to his passion; he saw that, all Queen
+of the Serail though she might be, this fettered gazelle was not happy
+in her rose-chains, and to Galahad, who had a wonderful twist of the
+knight-errant and lived decidedly some eight centuries too late, no
+wiliest temptation would have been so fatal as this.
+
+He swore to get inside those white inexorable walls, and he kept his
+oath: one morning the latticed door stood ajar, with the pomegranates
+and the citrons nodding through the opening; he flung prudence to the
+winds and peril to the devil, and entered the forbidden ground where it
+was death for any man, save the fat Omar himself, to be found. The
+fountains were falling into marble basins, the sun was tempered by the
+screen of leaves, the lories and humming-birds were flying among the
+trumpet-flowers, altogether a most poetic and pleasant place for an
+erratic adventure; more so still when, as he went farther, he saw
+reclining alone by the mosaic edge of a fountain his lovely Circassian
+unveiled. With a cry of terror she sprang to her feet, graceful as a
+startled antelope, and casting the silver shroud about her head, would
+have fled; but the scream was not loud enough to give the alarm--perhaps
+she attuned it so--and flight he prevented. Such Turkish as he had he
+poured out in passionate eloquence, his love declaration only made the
+more piquant by the knowledge that in a trice the gardens might swarm
+with the Mussulman's guards and a scimitar smite his head into the
+fountain. But the danger he disdained, _la belle_ Leilah remembered;
+rebuke him she did not, nor yet call her eunuchs to rid her of this
+terrible Giaour, but the antelope eyes filled with piteous tears and she
+prayed him begone--if he were seen here, in the gardens of the women, it
+were his death, it were hers! Her terror at the infidel was outweighed
+by her fear for his peril; how handsome he was with his blue eyes and
+fair locks, after the bald, black-browed, yellow, obese little Omar!
+
+"Let me see again the face that is the light of my soul and I will obey
+thee; thou shalt do with thy slave as thou wilt!" whispered Galahad in
+the most impassioned and poetical Turkish he could muster, thinking the
+style of Hafiz understood better here than the style of Belgravia, while
+the almond-eyed Leilah trembled like a netted bird under his look and
+his touch, conscious, pretty creature, that were it once known that a
+Giaour had looked on her, poison in her coffee, or a sullen plunge by
+night into the Bosphorus, would expiate the insult to the honor of Omar,
+a master whom she piteously hated. She let her veil float aside,
+nevertheless, blushing like a sea-shell under the shame of an
+unbeliever's gaze--a genuine blush that is banished from Europe--his
+eyes rested on the lovely youth of her face, his cheek brushed the
+
+ Loose train of her amber dropping hair,
+
+his lips met her own; then, with a startled stifled cry, his coy gazelle
+sprang away, lost in the aisles of the roses, and Galahad quitted the
+dangerous precincts, in safety so far, not quite clear whether he had
+been drinking or dreaming, and of conviction that Pera had changed into
+Paradise. For he was in love with two things at once, a romance and a
+woman; and an anchorite would fairly have lost his head after the divine
+dawn of beauty in Leilah Derran.
+
+The morrow, of course, found him at the same place, at the same hour,
+hoping for a similar fortune, but the lattice door was shut, and defied
+all force; he was just about to try scaling the high slippery walls by
+the fibres of a clinging fig-tree, when a negress, the sole living thing
+in sight, beckoned him, a hideous Abyssinian enough for a messenger of
+Eros; a grinning good-natured black, who had been bought in the same
+bazaar and of the same owner as the lovely Circassian, to whose service
+she was sworn. She told him by scraps of Turkish, and signs, that Leilah
+had bidden her watch for and warn him, that it were as much as both
+their lives were worth for him to be seen again in the women's gardens,
+or anywhere near her presence; that the merchant Omar was a monster of
+jealousy, and that the rest of the harem, jealous of her supremacy and
+of the unusual liberty her ascendancy procured her, would love nothing
+so well as to compass her destruction. Further meeting with her infidel
+lover she pronounced impossible, unless he would see her consigned to
+the Bosphorus; an ice avalanche of intelligence, which, falling on the
+tropical Eden of his passion, had the effect, as it was probably meant
+that it should have, of drowning the lingering remnant of prudence and
+sanity that had remained to him after his lips had once touched the
+exquisite Eastern's.
+
+Under the circumstances the negress was his sole hope and chance; he
+pressed her into his service and made her Mercury and mediatrix in one.
+She took his messages, sent in the only alphabet the pretty gazelle
+could read, i. e. flowers, plotted against her owner with true Eastern
+finesse, wrought on the Circassian's tenderness for the Giaour, and her
+terrified hatred of her grim lord Omar, and threw herself into the
+intrigue with the avidity of all womanhood, be it black or be it white,
+for anything on the face of the earth that has the charm of being
+forbidden. The affair was admirably _en train_, and Galahad was
+profoundly happy; he was deliciously in love,--a pleasant spice as
+difficult to find in its full flavor as it is to bag a sand grouse;--and
+had an adventure to amuse him that might very likely cost him his head,
+and might fairly claim to rise into the poetic. The only reward he
+received (or ever got, for that matter) for the Balaclava brush, where
+he cut down three gunners, and had a ball put in his hip, had been a
+cavil raised by a critic, not there, of doubt whether he had ever
+ridden inside the lines at all; but his Circassian would have
+recompensed him at once for a score of years of Chersonnesus
+campaigning, and unprofessional chroniclers: he was perfectly happy, and
+his soft, careless, _couleur de rose_ enjoyment of the paradise was
+aggravating to behold,--when one was in Pera, and the heat broiled alive
+every mortal thing that wasn't a negro, and Bass was limited, and there
+were no Dailies, and one thought even lovingly and regretfully of the
+old "beastly shells," that had at least this merit, that they scattered
+bores when they burst!
+
+"Old fellow!--want something to do?" he asked me one day. I nodded,
+being silent and savage from having had to dance attendance on the
+Sultan at an Embassy reception. Peace to his _manes_ now! but I know I
+wished him heartily in Eblis at that time.
+
+"Come with me to-night then, if you don't mind a probability of being
+potted by a True Believer," went on Leilah Derran's lover, going into
+some golden water Soyer had sent me.
+
+"For the big game? Like it of all things; but you know I'm tied by the
+leg here."
+
+Galahad laughed. "Oh, I only want you an hour or two. I've got six days'
+leave for the pigs and the deer: but the hills won't see much of me, I'm
+going to make a raid in the rose-gardens. It may be hot work, so I
+thought you would like it."
+
+Of course I did, and asked the programme which Sir Galahad, as lucidly
+as a man utterly in love can tell anything, unfolded to me. Fortune
+favored him; it was the night of the Feast of Bairam, when all the world
+of Turkey lights its lamps and turns out; he had got leave under pretext
+of a shooting trip into Roumelia, but the game he was intent on was the
+captive Circassian, who in the confusion and _tintamarre_ attendant on
+Bairam, was to escape to him by the rose-gardens, and being carried off
+as swiftly as Syrian stallions could take them, would be borne away by
+her infidel lover on board a yacht, belonging to a man whom he knew who
+was cruising in the Bosphorus, which would steam them away down the
+Dardanelles before the Turk had a chance of getting in chase. Nothing
+could be better planned for everybody but the luckless Mussulman who was
+to be robbed,--and the whole thing had a fine flavor about it of dash
+and difficulty, of piquance and poetry, of Mediæval errantry and
+Oriental coloring, that put Leilah's Giaour most deliciously in his
+element, setting apart the treasure that he would carry off in that
+rich, soft, antelope-eyed, bright-haired Circassian loveliness which
+made all the dreams in Lalla Rookh and Don Juan look pale.
+
+So his raid was planned, and I agreed to go with him to cover the rear
+in case of pursuit, which was likely enough to be hot and sharp, for the
+Moslems, for all their apathy, lack the philosophic gratitude which your
+British husband usually exhibits towards his despoiler--but then, to be
+sure, an Englishman can't make a fresh purchase unless he's first robbed
+of the old! Night came; and the nights, I am forced to admit, have a
+witching charm of their own in the East, that the West never knows. The
+Commander of the Faithful went to prayer, with the roar of cannon and
+the roll of drums pealing down the Golden Horn, and along the
+cypress-clad valleys. The mosques and minarets, starred and circled with
+a myriad of lamps, gleamed through the dark foliage, and were mirrored
+in the silvery sheet of the waves. The caïques, as they swept along,
+left tracks of light in the phosphor-lit waves, and while the chant of
+the Muezzin rang through the air, the children of Allah, from one end of
+the Bosphorus to the other, held festival on the most holy eve of
+Bairam. A splendid night for a lyric of Swinburne's!--a superb scene for
+an amorous adventure! And as we mingled amongst the crowds of the
+Faithful, swarming with their painted lanterns, their wild music, their
+gorgeous colors, their booming guns, in street and caïque, on land and
+sea, Sir Galahad, though an infidel, had certainly entered the Seventh
+Heaven. He had never been more intensely in love in his life; and, if
+the fates should decree that the dogs of Islam should slay him at her
+feet, in the sanctuary of her rose-paradise, he was ready to say in his
+pet poet's words, with the last breath of his lips,
+
+ It was ordained to be so, sweet and best
+ Comes now beneath thine eyes and on thy breast.
+ Still kiss me! Care not for the cowards! Care
+ Only to put aside thy beauteous hair
+ My blood will hurt!
+
+In the night of the feast all the world was astir, Franks and Moslems,
+believers and unbelievers, and we made our way through the press
+unwatched to where Omar's house was illumined, the cressets, and
+wreaths, and stars of light sparkling through the black foliage. Under
+the walls, hidden by a group of planes, we fastened the stallions in
+readiness, and Galahad, at the latticed door, gave the signal word,
+"Kef," low whispered. The door unclosed, and, true to her tryst, in the
+silvery Bosphorus moonlight, crouching in terror and shame, was the
+veiled and trembling Circassian.
+
+But not in peace was her capture decreed to be made; scarce had the door
+flown open, when the shrill yell of "Allah hu! Allah hu!" rung through
+the air; and from the dark aisles of the gardens poured Mussulmans,
+slaves, and eunuchs, the Turk with a shoal at his back, giving the alarm
+with hideous bellowings, while their drawn scimitars flashed in the
+white starlight, and their cries filled the air with their din. "Make
+off, while I hold the gate!" I shouted to Galahad, who, catching Leilah
+Derran in his arms before the Moslems could be nigh us, held her close
+with one hand, while with his right he levelled his revolver, as I did,
+and backed--facing the Turks. At sight of the lean shining barrels, the
+Moslems paused in their rush for a second--only a second; the next,
+shouting to Allah till the minarets gave back the echo, they sprang at
+us, their curled naked yataghans whirling above their heads, their jetty
+eyeballs flaming like tigers' on the spring. Our days looked
+numbered;--I gave them the contents of one barrel, and in the moment's
+check we gained the outside of the gardens; the swarm rushed after us,
+their shots flying wide, and whistling with a shrill hiss harmlessly
+past; we reserved further fire, not wishing to kill, if we could manage
+to cut our way through without bloodshed, and backed to the plane-trees,
+where the horses were waiting. There was a moment's blind but breathless
+struggle, swift and indistinct to remembrance, as a flash of lightning;
+the Turks swarmed around us, while we beat them off, and hurled them
+asunder somehow. Omar sprang like a rattlesnake on to his spoiler, his
+yataghan circling viciously in the air, to crash down upon Galahad's
+skull, who was encumbered by the clinging embrace of his stolen
+Circassian. I straightened my left arm with a remnant of "science" that
+savored more of old Cambridge than of Crimean custom; the Moslem went
+down like an ox, and keeping the yelling pack at bay with the levelled
+death-dealer, I threw myself into saddle just as Galahad flung himself
+on his stallion, and the Syrians, fleet as Arab breeding could make
+them, tore down the beach in the rich Eastern night, while the balls
+shrieked through the air past our ears, and the shouts of our laughter,
+with the salute of a ringing English cheer in victorious farewell,
+answered the howls of our distant and baffled pursuers.
+
+Sir Galahad's Raid was a triumph!
+
+On we went through the hot fragrant air, through the silvery moonlight,
+through the deep shade of cypress and pine woods; on we went through
+gorge, and ravine, and defile, through stretches of sweet wild
+lavender, of shining sands, of trampled rose-fields, with the
+phosphor-lit sea gleaming beside us, and the Islam Feast of Bairam left
+far distant behind. On and on--while the glorious night itself was
+elixir, and one shouted to the starry silence Robert Browning's grand
+challenge--
+
+ How good is man's life, the mere living! how fit to employ
+ All the heart, and the soul, and the senses, for ever in joy!
+
+That ride was superb!
+
+We never drew rein till some ten miles farther on, where we saw against
+the clear skies the dark outline of the yacht with a blue light burning
+at her mast-head, the signal selected; then Galahad checked the good
+Syrian, who had proved pace as fleet as the "wild pigeon blue" is ever
+vouched in the desert, and bent over his prize who, through that long
+ride, had been held close to his breast, with her arms wound about him,
+and the beautiful veiled face bowed on his heart. The moon was bright as
+day, and he stooped his head to uplift the envious veil, and see the
+radiant beauty that never again would be shrouded, and to meet once more
+the lips which his own had touched before but in one single caress; he
+bowed his head, and I thought that my disinterested ungrudging
+friendship made the friendships of antiquity look small; when----an oath
+that chilled my blood rang through the night and over the seas,
+startling the echoes from rock and hill; the veiled captive reeled from
+the saddle with a wailing scream, hurled to earth by the impetus with
+which his arms loosed her from him; and away into the night, without
+word or sign, plunging headlong down the dark defile, riding as men may
+ride from a field that reeks with death, far out of sight into the heart
+of the black dank woods, his Syrian bore Sir Galahad. And lo! in the
+white moonlight, against the luminous sea, slowly there rose before me,
+unveiled and confessed--THE NEGRESS!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The history of that night we never learnt. Whether Leilah Derran herself
+played the cruel trick on her Giaour lover (but this _he_ always
+scouted), whether Omar himself was a man of grim humor, whether the
+Abyssinian, having betrayed her mistress, was used as a decoy-bird,
+dressed like the Circassian, to lure the infidels into the rose-gardens
+where the Faithful intended to dispatch them hastily to Eblis--no one
+knows. We could never find out. The negress escaped me before my
+surprise let me stay her, and the fray made the place too hot for close
+investigation. Nor do I know where Galahad tore in that wild night-ride,
+whose spur was the first maddened pain and rage of shame that his life
+had tasted. I never heard where he spent the six days of his absence;
+but when he joined us again, six weeks in the sick-wards would not have
+altered him more; all he said to me was one piteous phrase--"For God's
+sake don't tell the fellows!"--and I never did; I liked him well enough
+not to make chaff of him. Unholily had I thirsted to see him
+disenchanted, ungenerously had I pined to see him goaded out of temper:
+I had my wish, and I don't think I enjoyed it. I saw him at last in
+passion that I had much to do to tame down from a deadly vengeance that
+would have rung through the Allied Armies; and I saw him loathe the
+East, curse romance, burn all the poets with Hafiz at their head, and
+shun a woman's beauty like the pestilence. To this day I believe that
+the image of Leilah Derran haunts his memory, and that a certain remorse
+consumes him for his lost gazelle, whom _he_ always thought paid penalty
+for their love under the silent waves of the Bosphorus, with those lost
+ones whose souls, according to the faith of Stamboul, flit ceaselessly
+above its waters, in the guise of its white-winged unrestful sea-gulls.
+He is far enough away just now--in which of the death-pots where we are
+simmering and fritting away in little wretched driblets men and money
+that would have sufficed Cæsar or Scipio to conquer an Empire, matters
+not to his story. When he reads this, he will remember the bitterest
+night of his life, and the fiasco that ended SIR GALAHAD'S RAID!
+
+
+
+
+'REDEEMED.'
+
+
+
+
+"REDEEMED."
+
+AN EPISODE WITH THE CONFEDERATE HORSE.
+
+
+
+Bertie Winton had got the Gold Vase.
+
+The Sovereign, one of the best horses that ever had a dash of the
+Godolphin blood in him, had led the first flight over the
+ridge-and-furrow, cleared the fences, trying as the shire-thorn could
+make them, been lifted over the stiffest doubles and croppers, passed
+the turning-flags, and been landed at the straight run-in with the stay
+and pace for which his breed was famous, enrapturing the fancy, who had
+piled capfuls of money on him, and getting the Soldiers' Blue Riband
+from the Guards, who had stood crackers on little Benyon's mount--Ben,
+who is as pretty as a girl, with his _petites mains blanches_, riding
+like any professional.
+
+Now, I take it--and I suppose there are none who will disagree with
+me--that there are few things pleasanter in this life than to stand, in
+the crisp winter's morning, winner of the Grand Military, having got the
+Gold Vase for the old corps against the best mounts in the Service.
+
+Life must look worth having to you, when you have come over those black,
+barren pastures and rugged ploughed lands, where the field floundered
+helplessly in grief, with Brixworth brook yawning gaunt and wide beneath
+you, and the fresh cold north wind blowing full in your teeth, and have
+ridden in at the distance alone, while the air is rent by the echoing
+shouts of the surging crowd, and the best riding-men are left "nowhere"
+behind. Life must look pleasant to you, if it had been black as thunder
+the night before. Nevertheless, where Bertie Winton sat, having brought
+the Sovereign in, winner of the G. M., with that superb bay's head a
+little drooped, and his flanks steaming, but scarce a hair turned, while
+the men who had won pots of money on him crowded round in hot
+congratulation, and he drank down some Curaçoa punch out of a
+pocket-pistol, with his habitual soft, low, languid laugh, he had that
+in his thoughts which took the flavor out of the Curaçoa, and made the
+sunny, cheery winter's day look very dull and gray to him. For Bertie,
+sitting there while the cheers reeled round him like mad, with a
+singularly handsome, reckless face, long tawny moustaches, tired blue
+eyes, and a splendid length and strength of limb, knew that this was the
+last day of the old times for him, and that he had sailed terribly near
+the wind of--dishonor.
+
+He had been brought to _envisager_ his position a little of late, and
+had seen that it was very bad indeed--as bad as it could be. He had run
+through all his own fortune from his mother, a good one enough, and owed
+almost as much again in bills and one way and another. He had lost
+heavily on the turf, gamed deeply, travelled with the most expensive
+adventuresses of their day, startled town with all its worst crim.
+cons.; had every vice under heaven, save that he drank not at all; and
+now, having shot a Russian prince at Baden the August before, about
+Lillah Lis, had received on the night just passed, from the Horse
+Guards, a hint, which was a command, that his absence was requested from
+her Majesty's Service--a mandate which, politely though inexorably
+couched, would have taken a more forcible and public form but for the
+respect in which his father, old Lion Winton, as he was called, was held
+by the Army and the authorities. And Bertie, who for five-and-thirty
+years had never thought at all, except on things that pleasured him,
+and such bagatelles as _barrière_ duels abroad, delicately-spiced
+intrigues, bills easily renewed, the _cru_ of wines, and the siege of
+women, found himself pulled up with a rush, and face to face with
+nothing less than ruin.
+
+"I'm up a tree, Melcombe," he said to a man of his own corps that day as
+he finished a great cheroot before mounting.
+
+"Badly?"
+
+"Well, yes. It'll be smash this time, I suppose."
+
+"Bother! That's hard lines."
+
+"It's rather a bore," he answered, with a little yawn, as he got into
+the saddle; and that was all he ever said then or afterwards on the
+matter; but he rode the Sovereign superbly over the barren wintry
+grass-land, and landed him winner of the Blue Riband for all that,
+though Black Care, for the first time in his life, rode behind him and
+weighted the race.
+
+Poor Bertie! nobody would have believed him if he had said so, but he
+had been honestly and truly thinking, for some brief time past, whether
+it would not be possible and worth while for him to shake himself free
+of this life, of which he was growing heartily tired, and make a name
+for himself in the world in some other fashion than by winging Russians,
+importing new dancers, taking French women to the Bads, scandalizing
+society, and beggaring himself. He had begun to wonder whether it was
+not yet, after all, too late, and whether if----when down had come the
+request from the Horse Guards for him to sell out, and the rush of all
+his creditors upon him, and away forever went all his stray shapeless
+fancies of a possible better future. And--consolation or aggravation,
+whichever it be--he knew that he had no one, save himself, to thank for
+it; for no man ever had a more brilliant start in the race of life than
+he, and none need have made better running over the course, had he only
+kept straight or put on the curb as he went down-hill. Poor Bertie! you
+must have known many such lives, or I can't tell where your own has been
+spent; lives which began so brilliantly that none could rival them, and
+which ended--God help them!--so miserably and so pitifully that you do
+not think of them without a shudder still?
+
+Poor Bertie!--a man of a sweeter temper, a more generous nature, a more
+lavish kindliness, never lived. He had the most versatile talents and
+the gentlest manners in the world; and yet here he was, having fairly
+come to ruin, and very nearly to disgrace.
+
+It was little wonder that his father, looking at him and thinking of all
+he might have been, and all he might have done, was lashed into a
+terrible bitterness of passionate grief, and hurled words at him of a
+deadly wrath, in the morning that followed on the Grand Military. Fiery
+as his comrades the Napiers, of a stern code as a soldier, and a lofty
+honor as a man, haughty in pride and swift to passion, old Sir Lionel
+was stung to the quick by his son's fall, and would have sooner, by a
+thousand-fold, have followed him to his grave, than have seen him live
+to endure that tacit dismissal from the service of the country--the
+deepest shame, in his sight, that could have touched his race.
+
+"I knew you were lost to morality, but I did not know till now that you
+were lost to honor!" said the old Lion, with such a storm of passion in
+him that his words swept out, acrid and unchosen, in a very whirlwind.
+"I knew you had vices, I knew you had follies, I knew you wasted your
+substance with debtors and gamblers like yourself, on courtesans and
+gaming-tables, in Parisian enormities, and vaunted libertinage, but I
+did not think that you were so utterly a traitor to your blood as to
+bring disgrace to a name that never was approached by shame until _you_
+bore it!"
+
+Bertie's face flushed darkly, then he grew very pale. The indolence
+with which he lay back in an écarte-chair did not alter, however, and he
+stroked his long moustaches a little with his habitual gentle
+indifferentism.
+
+"It is all over. Pray do not give it that tremendous earnestness," he
+said, quietly. "Nothing is ever worth that; and I should prefer it if we
+kept to the language of gentlemen!"
+
+"The language of gentlemen is _for_ gentlemen," retorted the old man,
+with fiery vehemence. His heart was cut to the core, and all his soul
+was in revolt against the degradation to his name that came in the train
+of his heir's ruin. "When a man has forgot that he has been a gentleman,
+one may be pardoned for forgetting it also! You may have no honor left
+for your career to shame; _I_ have--and, by God, sir, from this hour you
+are no son of mine. I disown you--I know you no longer! Go and drag out
+all the rest of a disgraced life in any idleness that you choose. If you
+were to lie dying at my feet, I would not give you a crust!"
+
+Bertie raised his eyebrows slightly.
+
+"_Soit!_ But would it not be possible to intimate this quietly? A scene
+is such very bad style--always exhausting, too!"
+
+The languid calmness, the soft nonchalance of the tone, were like oil
+upon flame to the old Lion's heart, lashed to fury and embittered with
+pain as it was. A heavier oath than print will bear broke from him, with
+a deadly imprecation, as he paced the library with swift, uneven steps.
+
+"It had been better if your 'style' had been less and your decency and
+your honor greater! One word more is all you will ever hear from my
+lips. The title must come to you; that, unhappily, is not in my hands to
+prevent. It must be yours when I die, if you have not been shot in some
+gambling brawl or some bagnio abroad before then; but you will remember,
+not a shilling of money, not a rood of the land are entailed; and, by
+the heaven above us, every farthing, every acre shall be willed to the
+young children. _You_ are disinherited, sir--disowned for ever--if you
+died at my feet! Now go, and never let me see your face again."
+
+As he spoke, Bertie rose.
+
+The two men stood opposite to each other--singularly alike in form and
+feature, in magnificence of stature, and distinction of personal beauty,
+save that the tawny gold of the old Lion's hair was flaked with white,
+and that his blue eyes were bright as steel and flashing fire, while the
+younger man's were very worn. His face, too, was deeply flushed and his
+lips quivered, while his son's were perfectly serene and impassive as he
+listened, without a muscle twitching, or even a gleam of anxiety coming
+into his eyes.
+
+They were of different schools.
+
+Bertie heard to the end; then bowed with a languid grace. "It will be
+fortunate for Lady Winton's children! Make her my compliments and
+congratulations. Good-day to you."
+
+Their eyes met steadily once--that was all; then the door of the library
+closed on him; Bertie knew the worst; he was face to face with beggary.
+As he crossed the hall, the entrance to the conservatories stood open;
+he looked through, paused a moment, and then went in. On a low chair,
+buried among the pyramids of blossom, sat a woman reading, aristocrat to
+the core, and in the earliest bloom of her youth, for she was scarcely
+eighteen, beautiful as the morning, with a delicate thorough-bred
+beauty, dark lustrous eyes, arched pencilled brows, a smile like
+sunshine, and lips sweet as they were proud. She was Ida Deloraine, a
+ward of Sir Lionel, and a cousin of his young second wife's.
+
+Bertie went up to her and held out his hand.
+
+"Lady Ida, I am come to wish you good-bye."
+
+She started a little and looked up.
+
+"Good-bye! Are you going to town?"
+
+"Yes--a little farther. Will you give me that camellia by way of _bon
+voyage_?"
+
+A soft warmth flushed her face for a moment; she hesitated slightly,
+toying with the snowy blossom; then she gave it him. He had not asked it
+like a love gage.
+
+He took it, and bowed silently over her hand.
+
+"You will find it very cold," said Lady Ida, with a trifle of
+embarrassment, nestling herself in her dormeuse in her warm bright nest
+among the exotics.
+
+He smiled--a very gentle smile.
+
+"Yes, I am frozen out. Adieu!"
+
+He paused a moment, looking at her--that brilliant picture framed in
+flowers; then, without another word, he bowed again and left her, the
+woman he had learned too late to love, and had lost by his own folly for
+ever.
+
+"Frozen out? What could he mean?--there is no frost," thought Lady Ida,
+left alone in her hot-house warmth among the white and scarlet blossoms,
+a little startled, a little disappointed, a little excited with some
+vague apprehension, she could not have told why; while Bertie Winton
+went on out into the cold gray winter's morning from the old
+Northamptonshire Hall that would know him no more, with no end so likely
+for him as that which had just been prophesied--a shot in a gambling
+hell.
+
+_Facilis descensus Averni_--and he was at the bottom of the pit. Well,
+the descent had been very pleasant. Bertie set his teeth tight, and let
+the waters close over his head and shut him out of sight. He knew that a
+man who is down has nothing more to do with the world, save to quietly
+accept--oblivion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a hot summer night in Secessia.
+
+The air was very heavy, no wind stirring the dense woods crowning the
+sides of the hills or the great fields of trodden maize trampled by the
+hoofs of cavalry and the tramp of divisions. The yellow corn waved above
+the earth where the dead had fallen like wheat in harvest-time, and the
+rice grew but the richer and the faster because it was sown in soil
+where slaughtered thousands rotted, unsepulchred and unrecorded. The
+shadows were black from the reared mountain range that rose frowning in
+the moonlight, and the stars were out in southern brilliancy, shining as
+calmly and as luminously as though their rays did not fall on graves
+crammed full with dead, on flaming homesteads, crowded sick-wards,
+poisonous waters that killed their thousands in deadly rivalry with shot
+and shell, and vast battalions sleeping on their arms in wheat-fields
+and by river-swamps, in opposing camps, and before beleaguered cities,
+where brethren warred with brethren, and Virginia was drenched with
+blood. There was no sound, save now and then the challenge of some
+distant picket or the faint note of a trumpet-call, the roar of a
+torrent among the hills, or the monotonous rise and fall from miles away
+in the interior, of the negroes' funeral song, "Old Joe,"--more
+pathetic, somehow, when you catch it at night from the far distance
+echoing on the silence as you sit over a watch-fire, or ride alone
+through a ravine, than many a grander requiem.
+
+It was close upon midnight, and all was very still; for they were in the
+heart of the South, and on the eve of a perilous enterprise, coined by a
+bold brain and to be carried out by a bold hand.
+
+It was in the narrow neck of a valley, pent up between rocky shelving
+ridges, anywhere you will between Maryland and Georgia--for he who did
+this thing would not care to have it too particularly drawn out from the
+million other deeds of "derring-do" that the mighty story of the Great
+War has known and buried. Eight hundred Confederate Horse, some of
+Stuart's Cavalry, had got driven and trapped and caged up in this
+miserable defile, misled and intercepted; with the dense mass of a
+Federal army marching on their rear, within them by bare fifteen miles,
+and the forward route through the crammed defile between the hills, by
+which alone they could regain Lee's forces, dammed up by a deep, rapid,
+though not broad river; by a bridge strongly fortified and barricaded;
+and, on the opposite bank, by some Federal corps a couple of thousand
+strong, well under cover in rifle-pits and earthworks, thrown up by keen
+woodsmen and untiring trench-diggers. It was close peril, deadly as any
+that Secessia had seen, here in the hot still midnight, with the columns
+of the Federal divisions within them by eight hours' march, stretching
+out and taking in all the land to the rear in the sweep of their
+semicircular wings; while in front rose, black and shapeless in the deep
+gloom of the rocks above, the barricades upon the bridge, behind which
+two thousand rifles were ready to open fire at the first alarm from the
+Federal guard. And alone, without the possibility of aid, caged in among
+the trampled corn and maize that filled the valley, imprisoned between
+the two Federal forces as in the iron jaws of a trap, the handful of
+Southern troopers stood, resolute to sell their lives singly one by one,
+and at a costly price, and perish to a man, rather than fall alive into
+the hands of their foes.
+
+When the morning broke they would be cut to pieces, as the chaff is cut
+by the whirl of the steam-wheels. They knew that. Well, they looked at
+it steadily; it had no terrors for them, the Cavaliers of Old Virginia,
+so that they died with their face to the front. There was but one chance
+left for escape; aid there could be none; and that chance was so
+desperate, that even to them--reckless in daring, living habitually
+between life and death, and ever careless of the issue--it looked like
+madness to attempt it. But one among them had urged it on their
+consideration--urged it with passionate entreaty, pledging his own life
+for its success; and they had given their adhesion to it, for his name
+was famous through the Confederacy.
+
+He had won his spurs at Manasses, at Antietam, at Chancellorsville; he
+had been in every headlong charge with Stuart; he had been renowned for
+the most dashing Border raids and conspicuous staff service of any
+soldier in Secessia; he had galloped through a tempest of the enemy's
+balls, and swept along their lines to reconnoitre, riding back through
+the storm of shot to Lee, as coolly as though he rode through a summer
+shower at a review; and his words had weight with men who would have
+gone after him to the death. He stood now, the only man dismounted, in
+true Virginia uniform; a rough riding-coat, crossed by an undressed
+chamois belt, into which his sabre and a brace of revolvers were thrust,
+a broad Spanish sombrero shading his face, great Hessians reaching above
+his knee, and a long silken golden-colored beard sweeping to his
+waist,--a keen reconnoitrer, a daring raider, a superb horseman, and a
+soldier heart and soul.
+
+When he had laid before them the solitary chance of the perilous
+enterprise that he had planned, each man of the eight hundred had sought
+the post of danger for himself; but there he was, inexorable--what he
+had proposed he alone would execute. The Federals were ignorant of their
+close vicinity, for their near approach had been unheard, the trodden
+maize and rice, and the angry foaming of the torrent above, deadening
+the sound of their horses' hoofs; and the Union-men, satisfied that the
+"rebels" were entrapped beyond escape, were sleeping securely behind
+their earth-works, the passage of the river blockaded by their
+barricade, while the Southerners were drawn up close to the head of the
+bridge in sections of threes, screened by the intense shadow of the
+overhanging rocks; shadow darker from the brilliance of the full summer
+moon that, shining on the enemy's encampment, and on the black boiling
+waters thundering through the ravine, was shut out from the defile by
+the leaning pine-covered walls of granite. It was terribly still, that
+awful silence, only filled with the splashing of the water and the
+audible beat of the Federal sentinel's measured tramp, as they were
+drawn up there by the bridge-head; and though they had cast themselves
+into the desperate effort with the recklessness of men for whom death
+waited surely on the morrow, it looked a madman's thought, a madman's
+exploit, to them, as their leader laid aside his sword and pistols, and
+took up a small barrel of powder, part of some ammunition carried off
+from some sappers and miners' stores in the raid of the past day, the
+sight of which had brought to remembrance a stray, half-forgotten story
+told him in boyhood of one of Soult's Army--the story on which he was
+about to act now.
+
+"For God's sake, take care!" whispered the man nearest him; and though
+he was a veteran who had gone through the hottest of the campaign since
+Bull's Run, his voice shook, and was husky as he spoke.
+
+The other laughed a little--a slight, soft, languid laugh.
+
+"All right, my dear fellow," he whispered back. "There's nothing in it
+to be alarmed at; a Frenchman did it in the Peninsula, you know. Only if
+I get shot, or blown up, and the alarm be given, do you take care to
+bolt over and cut your way through in the first of the rush, that's
+all."
+
+Then, without more words, he laid himself down at full length with a
+cord tied round his ankle, that they might know his progress, and the
+cask of gunpowder, swathed in green cloth, that it should roll without
+noise along the ground; and, creeping slowly on his way, propelling the
+barrel with his head, and guiding it by his hands, was lost to their
+sight in the darkness. By the string, as it uncoiled through their
+hands, they could tell he was advancing; that was all.
+
+The chances were as a million to one that his life would pay the forfeit
+for that perilous and daring venture; a single shot and he would be
+blown into the air a charred and shapeless corpse; one spark on that
+rolling mass that he pushed before him, and the explosion would hurl him
+upward in the silent night, mangled, dismembered, blackened, lifeless.
+But his nerve was not the less cool, nor did his heart beat one throb
+the quicker, as he crept noiselessly along in the black shade cast by
+the parapet of the bridge, with the tramp of the guard close above on
+his ear, and rifles ready to be levelled on him from the covered
+earthworks if the faintest sound of his approach or the dimmest streak
+of moonlight on his moving body told the Federals of his presence. He
+had looked death in the teeth most days through the last five years; it
+had no power to quicken or slacken a single beat of his pulse as he
+propelled himself slowly forward along the black, rugged, uneven ground,
+and on to the passage of the bridge, as coolly, as fearlessly, as he
+would have crept through the heather and bracken after the slot of a
+deer on the moor-side at home.
+
+He heard the challenge and the tramp of the sentinel on the opposite
+bank; he saw the white starlight shine on the barrels of their
+breech-loaders as they paced to and fro in the stillness, filled with
+the surge and rush of the rapid waters beneath him. Shrouded in the
+gloom, he dragged himself onward with slow and painful movement,
+stretched out on the ground, urging himself forward by the action of his
+limbs so cautiously that, even had the light been on him, he could
+scarcely have been seen to move, or been distinguished from the earth on
+which he lay. Eight hundred lives hung on the coolness of his own; if he
+were discovered, they were lost. And, without haste, without excitation,
+he drew himself along under the parapet until he came to the centre of
+the bridge, placed the barrel close against the barricades, uncovered
+the head of the cask, and took his way back by the same laborious,
+tedious way, until he reached the Virginian Troopers gathered together
+under the shelving rocks.
+
+A deep hoarse murmur rolling down the ranks, the repressed cheer they
+dared not give aloud, welcomed him and the dauntless daring of his act;
+man after man pressed forward entreating to take his place, to share his
+peril; he gave it up to none, and three times more went back again on
+that deadly journey, until sufficient powder for his purpose was lodged
+under the Federal fortifications on the bridge. Two hours went by in
+that slow and terrible passage; then, for the last time, he wound a
+saucisson round his body serpent-wise, and, with that coil of powder
+curled around him, took his way once more in the same manner through the
+hot, dark, heavy night.
+
+And those left behind in the impenetrable gloom, ignorant of his fate,
+knowing that with every instant the crack of the rifles might roll out
+on the stillness, and the ball pierce that death-snake twisted round his
+limbs, and the rocks echo with the roar of the exploding powder,
+blasting him in the rush of its sheet of fire and stones, sat mute and
+motionless in their saddles, with a colder chill in their bold blood,
+and a tighter fear at their proud hearts, than the Cavaliers of the
+South would have known for their own peril, or than he knew for his.
+
+Another half-hour went by--an eternity in its long drawn-out
+suspense--then in the darkness under the rocks his form rose up amongst
+them.
+
+"Ready?"--"Ready."
+
+The low whisper passed all but inaudible from man to man. He took back
+his sabre and pistols and thrust them into his belt, then stooped,
+struck a slow match, and laid it to the end of the saucisson, whose
+mouth he had fastened to the barrels on the bridge, and rapidly as the
+lightning, flung himself across the horse held for him, and fell into
+line at the head of the troop.
+
+There was a moment of intense silence while the fire crept up the long
+stick of the match; then the shrill, hissing, snake-like sound, that
+none who have once heard ever forget, rushed through the quiet of the
+night, and with a roar that startled all the sleeping echoes of the
+hills, the explosion followed; the columns of flame shooting upward to
+the starlit sky, and casting their crimson lurid light on the black
+brawling waters, on the rugged towering rocks, on the gnarled trunks of
+the lofty pines, and on the wild, picturesque forms and the bold,
+swarthy, Spanish-like faces of the Confederate raiders. With a shock
+that shook the earth till it rocked and trembled under them, the pillar
+of smoke and fire towered aloft in the hush of the midnight, blasting
+and hurling upward, in thunder that pealed back from rock to rock,
+lifeless bodies, mangled limbs, smouldering timbers, loosened stones,
+dead men flung heavenward like leaves whirled by the wind, and iron torn
+up and bent like saplings in a storm, as the mass of the barricades
+quivered, oscillated, and fell with a mighty crash, while the night was
+red with the hot glare of the flame, and filled with the deafening din.
+
+The Federals, sleeping under cover of their intrenchments, woke by that
+concussion as though heaven and earth were meeting, poured out from pit
+and trench, from salient and parallel, to see their fortifications and
+their guard blown up, while the skies were lurid with the glow of the
+burning barricades, and the ravine was filled with the yellow mist of
+the dense and rolling smoke. Confused, startled, demoralized, they ran
+together like sheep, vainly rallied by their officers, some few hundred
+opening an aimless desultory fire from behind their works, the rest
+rushing hither and thither, in that inextricable intricacy, and nameless
+panic, which doom the best regiments that were ever under arms, when
+once they seize them.
+
+"Charge!" shouted the Confederate leader, his voice ringing out clear
+and sonorous above the infernal tempest of hissing, roaring, shrieking,
+booming sound.
+
+With that resistless impetus with which they had, over and over again,
+broken through the granite mass of packed squares and bristling
+bayonets, the Southerners, raising their wild war-whoop, thundered on to
+the bridge, which, strongly framed of stone and iron, had withstood the
+shock, as they had foreseen; and while the fiery glare shone, and the
+seething flame hissed, on the boiling waters below, swept, full gallop,
+over the torn limbs, the blackened bodies, the charred wood, the falling
+timbers, the exploding powder, with which the passage of the bridge was
+strewn, and charged through the hellish din, the lurid fire, the heavy
+smoke, at a headlong pace, down into the Federal camp.
+
+A thousand shots fell like hail amongst them, but not a saddle was
+emptied, not even a trooper was touched; and with their line unbroken,
+and the challenge of their war-shout pealing out upon the uproar, they
+rode through the confusion worse confounded, and cutting their way
+through shot and sabre, through levelled rifles, and through piled
+earthworks, with their horses breathing fire, and the roar of the
+opening musketry pealing out upon their rear, dashed on, never drawing
+rein, down into the darkness of the front defile, and into the freshness
+of the starry summer night, saved by the leader that they loved,
+and--FREE!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Tarnation cheeky thing to do. Guess they ain't wise to rile us that
+way," said a Federal general from Vermont, as they discussed this
+exploit of the Eight Hundred at the Federal head-quarters.
+
+"A splendid thing!" said an English visitor to the Northern camp, who
+had come for a six months' tour to see the war for himself, having been
+in his own time the friend of Paget and Vivian and Londonderry, the
+comrade of Picton, of Mackinnon, and of Arthur Wellesley. "A magnificent
+thing! I remember Bouchard did something the same sort of thing at
+Amarante, but not half so pluckily, nor against any such odds. Who's the
+fellow that led the charge? I'd give anything to see him and tell him
+what I think of it. How Will Napier would have loved him, by George!"
+
+"Who's the d----d rebel, Jed?" said the General, taking his gin-sling.
+
+"Think he's an Englishman. We'd give ten thousand dollars for him, alive
+or dead: he's fifty devils in one, that _I_ know," responded the Colonel
+of Artillery, thus appealed to, a gentlemanlike, quiet man, educated at
+West Point.
+
+"God bless the fellow! I'm glad he's English!" said the English visitor,
+heartily, forgetting his Federal situation and companions. "Who is he?
+Perhaps I know the name."
+
+"Should say you would. It's the same as your own--Winton. Bertie Winton,
+they call him. Maybe he's a relative of yours!"
+
+The blood flushed the Englishman's face hotly for a second; then a stern
+dark shadow came on it, and his lips set tight.
+
+"I have no knowledge of him," he said, curtly.
+
+"Haven't you now? That's curious. Some said he was a son of yours,"
+pursued the Colonel.
+
+The old Lion flung back his silvery mane with his haughtiest
+imperiousness.
+
+"No, sir; he's no son of mine."
+
+Lion Winton sat silent, the dark shadow still upon his face. For five
+years no rumor even had reached him of the man he had disowned and
+disinherited; he had believed him dead--shot, as he had predicted, after
+some fray in a gaming-room abroad; and now he heard of him thus in the
+war-news of the American camp! His denial of him was not less stern,
+nor his refusal to acknowledge even his name less peremptory, because,
+with all his wrath, his bitterness, his inexorable passion, and his
+fierce repudiation of him as his son, a thrill of pleasure stirred in
+him that the man still lived--a proud triumph swept over him, through
+all his darker thoughts, at the magnificent dash and daring of a deed
+wholly akin to him.
+
+Bertie, a listless man about town, a dilettante in pictures, wines, and
+women, spending every moment that he could in Paris, gentle as any young
+beauty, always bored, and never roused out of that habitual languid
+indolent indifferentism which the old man, fiery and impassioned himself
+as the Napiers, held the most damnable effeminacy with which the present
+generation emasculates itself, had been incomprehensible, antagonistic,
+abhorrent to him. Bertie, the Leader of the Eight Hundred, the reckless
+trooper of the Virginian Horse, the head of a hundred wild night raids,
+the hero of a score of brilliant charges, the chief in the most daring
+secret expeditions and the most intrepid cavalry skirmishes of the
+South, was far nearer to the old Lion, who had in him all the hot fire
+of Crawford's school, with the severe simplicity of Wellington's stern
+creeds. "He is true to his blood at last," he muttered, as he tossed
+back his silky white hair, while his blue flashing eyes ranged over the
+far distance where the Southern lines lay, with something of eager
+restlessness; "he is true to his blood at last!"
+
+There was fighting some days later in the Shenandoah Valley.
+
+Longstreet's corps, with two regiments of cavalry, had attacked
+Sheridan's divisions, and the struggle was hot and fierce. The day was
+warm, and a brilliant sun poured down into the green cornland and
+woodland wealth of the valley as the Southern divisions came up to the
+attack in beautiful precision, and hurled themselves with tremendous
+_élan_ on the right front of the Federals, who, covered by their
+hastily thrown-up breastworks, opened a deadly fire that raked the whole
+Confederate line as they advanced. Men fell by the score under the
+murderous mitraille, but the ranks closed up shoulder to shoulder,
+without pause or wavering, only maddened by the furious storm of shot,
+as the engagement became general and the white rolling clouds of smoke
+poured down the valley, and hid conflict and combatants from sight, the
+thunder of the musketry pealing from height to height; while in many
+places men were fighting literally face to face and hand to hand in a
+death-struggle--rare in these days, when the duello of artillery and the
+rivalry of breech-loaders begins, decides, and ends most battles.
+
+On Longstreet's left, two squadrons of Virginian Cavalry were drawn up,
+waiting the order to advance, and passionately impatient of delay as
+regiment after regiment were sent up to the attack and were lost in the
+whirling cloud of dust and smoke, and they were kept motionless, in
+reserve. At their head was Bertie Winton, unconscious that, on a hill to
+the right, with a group of Federal commanders, his father was looking
+down on that struggle in the Shenandoah. Bertie was little altered, save
+that on his face there was a sterner look, and in his eyes a keener and
+less listless glance; but the old languid grace, the old lazy
+gentleness, were there still. They were part of his nature, and nothing
+could kill them in him. In the five years that had gone by, none whom he
+had known in Europe had ever heard a word of him or from him; he had cut
+away all the moorings that bound him to his old life, and had sought to
+build up his ruined fortunes, like the penniless soldier that he was, by
+his sword alone. So far he had succeeded: he had made his name famous
+throughout the States as a bold and unerring cavalry leader, and had won
+the personal friendship and esteem of the Chiefs of the Southern
+Confederacy. The five years had been filled with incessant adventures,
+with ever present peril, with the din of falling citadels, with the
+rush of headlong charges, with daring raids in starless autumn nights,
+with bivouacs in trackless Western forests, with desert-thirst in
+parching summer heats, with winters of such frozen roofless misery as he
+had never even dreamed--five years of ceaseless danger, of frequent
+suffering, of habitual renunciation; but five years of _life_--real,
+vivid, unselfish--and Bertie was a better man for them. What he had done
+at the head of Eight Hundred was but a sample of whatever he did
+whenever duty called, or opportunity offered, in the service of the
+South; and no man was better known or better trusted in all Lee's
+divisions than Bertie Winton, who sat now at the head of his regiment,
+waiting Longstreet's orders. An aide galloped up before long.
+
+"The General desires you to charge and break the enemy's square to the
+left, Colonel."
+
+Bertie bowed with the old Pall Mall grace, turned, and gave the word to
+advance. Like greyhounds loosed from leash, the squadrons thundered down
+the slope, and swept across the plain in magnificent order, charging
+full gallop, riding straight down on the bristling steel and levelled
+rifles of the enemy's kneeling square. They advanced in superb
+condition, in matchless order, coming on with the force of a whirlwind
+across the plain; midway they were met by a tremendous volley poured
+direct upon them; half their saddles were emptied; the riderless
+chargers tore, snorting, bleeding, terrified, out of the ranks; the line
+was broken; the Virginians wavered, halted, all but recoiled; it was one
+of those critical moments when hesitation is destruction. Bertie saw the
+danger, and, with a shout to the men to come on, he spurred his horse
+through the raking volley of shot, while a shot struck his sombrero,
+leaving his head bare, and urging the animal straight at the Federal
+front, lifted him in the air as he would have done before a fence, and
+landed him in the midst of the square, down on the points of the
+levelled bayonets. With their fierce war-cheer ringing out above the
+sullen uproar of the firing, his troopers followed him to a man, charged
+the enemy's line, broke through the packed mass opposed to them, cut
+their way through into the centre, and hewed their enemies down as
+mowers hew the grass. Longstreet's work was done for him; the Federal
+square was broken, never again to rally.
+
+But the victory was bought with a price; as his horse fell, pierced and
+transfixed by the crossed steel of the bayonets, a dozen rifles covered
+the Confederate leader; their shots rang out, and Bertie Winton reeled
+from his saddle and sank down beneath the press as his own Southerners
+charged above him in the rush of the onward attack. On an eminence to
+the right, through his race-glass, his father watched the engagement,
+his eyes seldom withdrawn from the Virginian cavalry, where, for aught
+he knew, one of his own blood and name might be--memories of Salamanca
+and Quatre Bras, of Moodkee and Ferozeshah, stirring in him, while the
+fire of his dead youth thrilled through his veins with the tramp of the
+opposing divisions, and he roused like a war-horse at the scent of the
+battle as the white shroud of the smoke rolled up to his feet, and the
+thunder of the musketry echoed through the valley. Through his glass, he
+saw the order given to the troopers held in reserve; he saw the
+magnificent advance of that charge in the morning light; he saw the
+volley poured in upon them; and he saw them under that shock reel,
+stagger, waver, and recoil. The old soldier knew well the critical
+danger of that ominous moment of panic and of confusion; then, as the
+Confederate Colonel rode out alone and put his horse at that leap on to
+the line of steel, into the bristling square, a cry loud as the
+Virginian battle-shout broke from him. For when the charger rose in the
+air, and the sun shone full on the uncovered head of the Southern
+leader, he knew the fair English features that no skies could bronze,
+and the fair English hair that blew in the hot wind. He looked once more
+upon the man he had denied and had disowned; and, as Bertie Winton
+reeled and fell, his father, all unarmed and non-combatant as he was,
+drove the spurs into his horse's flanks, and dashing down the steep
+hill-side, rode over the heaps of slain, and through the pools of gore,
+into the thick of the strife.
+
+With his charger dead under him, beaten down upon one knee, his
+sword-arm shivered by a bullet, while the blood poured from his side
+where another shot had lodged, Bertie knew that his last hour had come,
+as the impetus of the charge broke above him--as a great wave may sweep
+over the head of a drowning man--and left him in the centre of the foe.
+Kneeling there, while the air was red before his sight that was fast
+growing blind from the loss of blood, and the earth seemed to reel and
+rock under him, he still fought to desperation, his sabre in his left
+hand; he knew he could not hold out more than a second longer, but while
+he had strength he kept at bay.
+
+His life was not worth a moment's purchase,--when, with a shout that
+rang over the field, the old Lion rode down through the carnage to his
+rescue, his white hair floating in the wind, his azure eyes flashing
+with war-fire, his holster-pistol levelled; spurred his horse through
+the struggle, trampled aside all that opposed him, dashed untouched
+through the cross-fire of the bullets, shot through the brain the man
+whose rifle covered his son who had reeled down insensible, and
+stooping, raised the senseless body, lifted him up by sheer manual
+strength to the level of his saddle-bow, laid him across his holsters,
+holding him up with his right hand, and, while the Federals fell asunder
+in sheer amazement at the sudden onslaught, and admiration of the old
+man's daring, plunged the rowels into his horse, and, breaking through
+the reeking slaughter of the battle-field, rode back, thus laden with
+his prisoner, through the incessant fire of the cannonade up the heights
+to the Federal lines.
+
+"If you were to lie dying at my feet!"--his father remembered those
+words, that had been spoken five years before in the fury of a deadly
+passion, as Bertie lay stretched before him in his tent, the blood
+flowing from the deep shot-wound in his side, his eyes closed, his face
+livid, and about his lips a faint and ghastly foam.
+
+Had he saved him too late? had he too late repented?
+
+His heart had yearned to him when, in the morning light, he had looked
+once more upon the face of his son, as the Virginian Horse had swept on
+to the shock of the charge; and all of wrath, of bitterness, of hatred,
+of dark, implacable, unforgiving vengeance, were quenched and gone for
+ever from his soul as he stooped over him where he lay at his feet,
+stricken and senseless in all the glory of his manhood. He only knew
+that he loved the man--he only knew that he would have died for him, or
+died with him.
+
+Bertie stirred faintly, with a heavy sigh, and his left hand moved
+towards his breast. Old Sir Lion bent over him, while his voice shook
+terribly, like a woman's.
+
+"Bertie! My God! don't you know _me_?"
+
+He opened his eyes and looked wearily and dreamily around; he did not
+know what had passed, nor where he was; but a faint light of wonder, of
+pleasure, of recognition, came into his eyes, and he smiled--a smile
+that was very gentle and very wistful.
+
+"I am glad of that--before I die! Let us part friends--_now_. They will
+tell you I have--redeemed--the name."
+
+The words died slowly and with difficulty on his lips, and as his
+father's hand closed upon his in a strong grasp of tenderness and
+reconciliation, his lids closed, his head fell back, and a deep-drawn,
+labored sigh quivered through all his frame; and Lion Winton, bowing
+down his grand white crest, wept with the passion of a woman. For he
+knew not whether the son he loved was living or dead--he knew not
+whether he was not at the last too late.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Three months further on, Lady Ida Deloraine sat in her warm bright nest
+among the exotics, gazing out upon the sunny lawns and the green
+woodlands of Northamptonshire. Highest names and proudest titles had
+been pressed on her through the five years that had gone, but her
+loveliness had been unwon, and was but something more thoughtful, more
+brilliant, more exquisite still than of old. The beautiful warmth that
+had never come there through all these years was in her cheeks now, and
+the nameless lustre was in her eyes, which all those who had wooed her
+had never wakened in their antelope brilliancy, as she sat looking
+outward at the sunlight; for in her hands lay a camellia, withered,
+colorless, and yellow, and eyes gazed down upon the marvellous beauty of
+her face which had remembered it in the hush of Virginian forests, in
+the rush of headlong charges, in the glare of bivouac fires, in the
+silence of night-pickets, and in the din of falling cities.
+
+And Bertie's voice, as he bent over her, was on her ear.
+
+"That flower has been on my heart night and day; and since we parted I
+have never done that which would have been insult to your memory. I have
+tried to lead a better and a purer life; I have striven to redeem my
+name and my honor; I have done all I could to wash out the vice and the
+vileness of my past. Through all the years we have been severed I have
+had no thought, no hope, except to die more worthy of you; but now--oh,
+my God!--if you knew how I love you, if you knew how my love alone saved
+me----"
+
+His words broke down in the great passion that had been his redemption;
+and as she lifted her eyes upward to his own, soft with tears that had
+gathered but did not fall, and lustrous with the light that had never
+come there save for him, he bowed his head over her, and, as his lips
+met hers, he knew that the redeemed life he laid at her feet was dearer
+to her than lives, more stainless, but less nobly won.
+
+
+
+
+OUR WAGER.
+
+
+
+
+OUR WAGER;
+
+OR,
+
+HOW THE MAJOR LOST AND WON.
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+INTRODUCES MAJOR TELFER OF THE 50TH DASHAWAY HUSSARS.
+
+
+The softest of lounging-chairs, an unexceptionable hubble-bubble bought
+at Benares, the last _Bell's Life_, the morning papers, chocolate milled
+to a T, and a breakfast worthy of Francatelli,--what sensible man can
+ask more to make him comfortable? All these was my chum, Hamilton
+Telfer, Major (50th Dashaway Hussars), enjoying, and yet he was in a
+frame of mind anything but mild and genial.
+
+"The deuce take the whole sex!" said he, stroking his moustache
+savagely. "They're at the bottom of all the mischief going. The idea of
+my father at seventy-five, with hair as white as that poodle's, making
+such a fool of himself, when here am I, at six-and-thirty, unmarried;
+it's abominable, it's disgusting. A girl of twenty, taking in an old man
+of his age, for the sake of his money----"
+
+"But are you sure, Telfer," said I, "that the affair's really on the
+tapis?"
+
+"Sure! Yes," said the Major, with immeasurable disgust. "I never saw her
+till last night, but the governor wrote no end of rhapsodies about her,
+and as I came upon them he was taking leave of her, holding her hand in
+his, and saying, 'I may write to you, may I not?' and the young
+hypocrite lifted her eyes so bewitchingly, 'Oh yes, I shall long so much
+to hear from you!' She colored when she saw me--well she might! If she
+thinks she'll make a fool of my father, and reign paramount at Torwood,
+give me a mother-in-law sixteen years younger than myself, and fill the
+house and cumber the estates with a lot of wretched little brats, she'll
+find herself mistaken, for I'll prevent it, if I live."
+
+"Don't be too sure of that," said I. "From what I know of Violet
+Tressillian, she's not the sort of girl to lure her quarry in vain."
+
+"Of course she'll try hard," answered Telfer. "She comes of a race that
+always were poor and proud; she's an orphan, and hasn't a sou, and to
+catch a man like my father worth 15,000_l._ a year, with the surety of a
+good dower and jointure house whenever he die, is one of the best things
+that could chance to her; but I'll be shot if she ever shall manage it."
+
+"_Nous verrons._ I bet you my roan filly Calceolaria against your colt
+Jockeyclub that before Christmas is out Violet Tressillian will be
+Violet Telfer."
+
+"Done!" cried the Major, stirring his chocolate fiercely. "You'll lose,
+Vane; Calceolaria will come to my stables as sure as this mouthpiece is
+made of amber. Whenever this scheming little actress changes her name,
+it sha'n't be to the same cognomen as mine. I say, it's getting deuced
+warm--one must begin to go somewhere. What do you say to going abroad
+till the 12th? I've got three months' leave--that will give me one away,
+and two on the moor. Will you go?"
+
+"Yes, if you like; town's emptying gradually, and it is confoundedly
+hot. Where shall it be?--Naples--Paris----"
+
+"Paris in July! Heaven forbid! Why, it would be worse than London in
+November. By Jove! I'll tell you where: let's go to Essellau."
+
+"And where may that be? Somewhere in the Arctic regions, I hope, for
+I've spent half my worldly possessions already in sherry and seltzer and
+iced punch, and if I go where it's warmer still, I shall be utterly
+beggared."
+
+"Essellau is in Swabia, as you ought to know by this, you Goth. It's
+Marc von Edenburgh's place, and a very jolly place, too, I can tell you;
+the sport's first-rate there, and the pig-sticking really splendid. He's
+just written to ask me to go, and take any fellows I like, as he's got
+some English people--some friends of his mother's. (A drawback that--I
+wonder who they are.) Will you come, Vane? I can promise you some fun,
+if only at the trente-et-quarante tables in Pipesandbeersbad."
+
+"Oh yes, I'll come," said I. "I hope the English won't be some horrid
+snobs he's picked up at some of the balls, who'll be scraping
+acquaintance with us when we come back."
+
+"No fear," said Telfer; "Marc's as English as you or I, and knows the
+good breed when he sees them. He'd keep as clear of the Smith, Brown,
+and Robinson style as we should. It's settled, then, you'll come. All
+right! I wish I could settle that confounded Violet, too, first. I hope
+nothing will happen while I'm in Essellau. I don't think it can. The
+Tressillian leaves town to-day with the Carterets, and the governor must
+stick here till parliament closes, and it's sure to be late this year."
+
+With which consolatory reflection the Major rose, stretched himself,
+yawned, sighed, stroked his moustache, fitted on his lavender gloves,
+and rang to order his tilbury round.
+
+Telfer was an only son, and when he heard it reported that his father
+intended to give him a _belle-mère_ in a young lady as attractive as she
+was poor, who, if she caught him, would probably make a fool of the old
+gentleman in the widest sense of the word, he naturally swore very
+heartily, and anything but relished the idea. Hamilton Telfer, senior,
+had certainly been a good deal with Violet that season, and Violet, a
+girl poor as a rat and beautiful as Semele, talked to him, and sang to
+him, and rode with him more than she did with any of us; so people
+talked and talked, and said the old member would get caught, and the
+Major, when he heard it, waxed fiercely wroth at the folly his parent
+had fallen into while he'd been off the scene down at Dover with his
+troop, but, like a wise man, said nothing, knowing, both by experience
+and observation, that opposition in such affairs is like a patent Vesta
+among hayricks. Telfer was a particular chum of mine: we'd lounged about
+town, and shot on the moors, and campaigned in India together, and I
+don't believe there was a better soldier, a cooler head, a quicker eye,
+or a steadier hand in the service than he was. He was six-and-thirty
+now, and had seen life pretty well, I can tell you, for there was not a
+get-at-able corner of the globe that he hadn't looked at through his
+eye-glass. Tall and muscular, with a stern, handsome face, with the
+prospect of Torwood (where there's some of the best shooting in England,
+I give you my word), and 15,000_l._ a year, Telfer was a great card in
+the matrimonial line, but hadn't let himself be played as yet, for the
+petty trickery the women used in trying to get him dealt to them
+disgusted him, and small wonder. Men liked him cordially, women thought
+him cold and sarcastic; and he was much more genial, I admit, at mess,
+or at lansquenet, or in the smoking-room of the U. S., than he was in
+boudoirs and ball-rooms, as the mere knowledge that mammas and their
+darlings were trying to hook him made him get on his stilts at once.
+
+"I don't feel easy in my mind about the governor," said he, as we drove
+along to the South-Eastern Station a few days after on our way to
+Essellau. "As I was bidding him good-bye this morning, Soames brought
+him a letter in a woman's hand. Heaven knows he may have a score of fair
+correspondents for anything I care, but if I thought it was the
+Tressillian, devil take her----"
+
+"And the devil won't have had a prettier prize since Proserpine was
+stolen," said I.
+
+"No, confound it, I saw she was handsome enough," swore the Major,
+disgusted; "and a pretty face always did make a fool of my father,
+according to his own telling. Well, thank God, I don't take that
+weakness after him. I never went mad about any woman. You've just as
+much control over love, if you like, as over a quiet shooting pony; and
+if it don't suit you to gallop, you can rein up and give over the sport.
+Any man who's anything of a philosopher needn't fall in love unless he
+likes."
+
+"Were you never in love, then, old boy?" I asked.
+
+"Of course I have been. I've made love to no end of women in my time;
+but when one love was died out I took another, as I take a cigar, and
+never wept over the quenched ashes. You need never fall in love unless
+it's convenient, and as to caring for a girl who don't care for you,
+that's a contemptible weakness, and one I don't sympathize with at all.
+Come along, or the train will be off."
+
+He went up to the carriages, opened a door, shut it hastily, and turned
+away, with the frigid bow with which Telfer, in common with every other
+Briton, can say, "Go to the devil," as plainly as if he spoke.
+
+"By Jove!" said I, "what's that eccentric move? Did you see the Medusa
+in that carriage, or a baby?"
+
+"Something quite as bad," said he, curtly. "I saw the Tressillian and
+her aunt. For Heaven's sake, let's get away from them. I'd rather have a
+special train, if it cost me a fortune, than travel with that girl,
+boxed up for four hours in the same compartment with such a little
+intrigante."
+
+"Calm your mind, old fellow; if she's aiming at your governor she won't
+hit you. She can't be your wife and your mother-in-law both," laughed
+Fred Walsham, a good-natured little chap in the Carabiniers, a friend of
+Von Edenburgh, who was coming with us.
+
+"I'll see her shot before she's either," said Telfer, fiercely stroking
+his moustache.
+
+"Hush! the deuce! hold your tongue," said Walsham, giving him a push.
+For past us, so close that the curling plumes in her hat touched the
+Major's shoulder, floated the "little intrigante" in question, who'd
+come out of her carriage to see where a pug of hers was put. She'd heard
+all we said, confound it, for her head was up, her color bright, and she
+looked at Telfer proudly and disdainfully, with her dark eyes flashing.
+Telfer returned it to the full as haughtily, for he never shirked the
+consequences of his own actions ('pon my life, they looked like a great
+stag and a little greyhound challenging each other), and Violet swept
+away across the platform.
+
+"You've made an enemy for life, Telfer," said Walsham, as we whisked
+along.
+
+"So much the better, if I'm a rock ahead to warn her off a marriage with
+the governor," rejoined the Major, smoking, as he always did, under the
+officials' very noses. "I hope I sha'n't come across her again. If the
+Tressillian and I meet, we shall be about as amicable as a rat and a
+beagle. Take a weed, Fred. I do it on principle to resist unjust
+regulations. Why shouldn't we take a pipe if we like? A man whose
+olfactory nerves are so badly organized as to dislike Cavendish is too
+great a muff to be considered."
+
+As ill luck would have it, when we crossed to Dover, who should cross,
+too, but the Tressillian and her party--aunt, cousins, maid, courier,
+and pug. Telfer wouldn't see them, but got on the poop, as far away as
+ever he could from the spot where Violet sat nursing her dog and
+reading a novel, provokingly calm and comfortable to the envious eyes of
+all the _malades_ around her.
+
+"Good Heavens!" said he, "was anything ever so provoking? Just because
+that girl's my particular aversion, she must haunt me like this. If
+she'd been anybody I wanted to meet, I should never have caught a
+glimpse of her. For mercy's sake, Vane, if you see a black hat and white
+feather anywhere again, tell me, and we'll change the route
+immediately."
+
+Change the route we did, for, going on board the steamer at Düsseldorf,
+there, on the deck, stood the Tressillian. Telfer turned sharp on his
+heel, and went back as he came. "I'll be shot if I go down the Rhine
+with her. Let's cut across into France." Cut across we did, but we
+stopped at Brussels on our way; and when at last we caught sight of the
+tops of the fir-trees around Essellau, Telfer took a long whiff at his
+pipe with an air of contentment. "I should say we're safe now. She'll
+hardly come pig-sticking into the middle of Swabia."
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+VIOLET TRESSILLIAN.
+
+
+Essellau was a very jolly place, with thick woods round it, and the
+river Beersbad running in sight; and his pretty sister, the Comtesse
+Virginie, his good wines, and good sport, made Von Edenburgh's a
+pleasant house to visit at. Marc himself, who is in the Austrian service
+(he was winged at Montebello the other day by a rascally Zouave, but he
+paid him off for it, as I hope his countrymen will eventually pay off
+all the Bonapartists for their _galimatias_)--Marc himself was a jolly
+fellow, a good host, a keen shot, and a capital écarté player, and made
+us enjoy ourselves at Essellau as he had done before, hunting and
+shooting with Telfer down at Torwood.
+
+"I've some countrywomen of yours here, Telfer," said Marc, after we'd
+talked over his English loves, given him tiding of duchesses and
+danseuses, and messages from no end of pretty women that he'd flirted
+with the Christmas before. "They're some friends of my mother's, and
+when they were at Baden-Baden last year, Virginie struck up a desperate
+young lady attachment with one of them----"
+
+"Are they good-looking?--because, if they are, they may be drysalters'
+daughters, and I shan't care," interrupted Fred.
+
+Telfer stroked his moustache with a contemptuous smile--_he_ wouldn't
+have looked at a drysalter's daughter if she'd had all the beauty of
+Amphitrite.
+
+"Come and see," said Marc. "Virginie will think you're neglecting her
+atrociously."
+
+Horribly bored to be going to meet some Englishwomen who might turn out
+to be Smiths or Joneses, and would, to a dead certainty, spoil all his
+pleasure in pig-sticking, shooting, and écarté, by flirting with him
+whether he would or no, the Major strode along corridors and galleries
+after Von Edenburgh. When at length we reached the salon where Virginie
+and her mother and friends were, Telfer lifted his eyes from the ground
+as the door opened, started as if he'd been shot, and stepped back a
+pace or two, with an audible, "If that isn't the very devil!"
+
+There, in a low chair, sat the Tressillian, graceful as a Sphakiote
+girl, with a toilet as perfect as her profile, dark hair like waves of
+silk, and dark eyes full of liquid light, that, when they looked
+irresistible, could do anything with any man that they liked. Violet
+certainly looked as unlike that unlucky ogre and scapegoat, the devil,
+as a young lady ever could. But worse than a score of demons was she in
+poor Telfer's eyes: to have come out to Essellau only to be shut up in a
+country-house for a whole month with his pet aversion!--certainly it
+_was_ a hard case, and the fierce lightning glance he flashed on her was
+pardonable under the circumstances. But nobody's more impassive than the
+Major: I've seen him charge down into the Sikhs with just the same calm,
+quiet expression as he'd wear smoking and reading a novel at home; so he
+soon rallied, bowed to the Tressillian, who gave him an inclination as
+cold as the North Pole, shook hands with her aunt and cousins (three
+women I hate: the mamma's the most dexterous of manoeuvrers, and the
+girls the arrantest of flirts), and then sat down to a little quiet chat
+with Virginie von Edenburgh, who's pretty, intelligent, and unaffected,
+though she's a belle at the Viennese court. Telfer was pleasant with the
+little comtesse; he'd known her from childhood, and she was engaged to
+the colonel of Marc's troop, so that Telfer felt quite sure she'd no
+designs upon him, and talked to her _sans géne_, though to have wholly
+abstained from bitterness and satire would have been an impossibility to
+him, with the obnoxious Tressillian seated within sight. Once he fixed
+her with his calm gray eyes, she met them with a proud flashing glance;
+Telfer gave back the defiance, and _guerre à outrance_ was declared
+between them. It was plain to see that they hated one another by
+instinct, and I began to think Calceolaria wasn't so safe in my stables
+after all, for if the Major set his face against anything, his father,
+who pretty well worshipped him, would never venture to do it in
+opposition; he'd as soon think of leaving Torwood to the country, to be
+turned into an infirmary or a museum.
+
+That whole day Telfer was agreeable to the Von Edenburgh, distantly
+courteous to the Carterets, and utterly oblivious of the very existence
+of the Tressillian. When we were smoking together, after dinner, he
+began to unburden himself of his mighty wrath.
+
+"Where the deuce did you pick up that girl, Marc?" asked he, as we stood
+looking at the sun setting over the woods of Essellau, and crimsoning
+the western clouds.
+
+"What girl?" asked Marc.
+
+"That confounded Tressillian," answered the Major, gloomily.
+
+"I told you the Carterets were friends of my mother's, and last year,
+when the Tressillian came with them to Baden, Virginie met her, and they
+were struck with a great and sudden love for one another, after the
+insane custom of women. But why on earth, Telfer, do you call her such
+names? I think her divine; her eyes are something----"
+
+"I wish her eyes had been at the devil before she'd bewitched my poor
+father with them," said Telfer, pulling a rose to pieces fiercely. "I
+give you my word, Marc, that if I didn't like you so well, I'd go
+straight off home to-morrow. Here have I been turning out of my route
+twenty times, on purpose to avoid her, and then she must turn up at the
+very place I thought I was sure to be safe from her. It's enough to make
+a man swear, I should say, and not over-mildly either."
+
+"But what's she done?" cried Von Edenburgh, thinking, I dare say, that
+Telfer had gone clean mad. "Refused you--jilted you--what is it?"
+
+"Refused me! I should like to see myself giving her the chance," said
+the Major, with intense scorn. "No but she's done what I'd never
+forgive--tried to cozen the poor old governor into marrying her. She's
+no money, you know, and no home of her own; but, for all that, for a
+girl of twenty to try and hook an old man of seventy-five, to cheat him
+into the idea that he's made a conquest, and chisel him into the belief
+that she's in love with him--faugh! the very idea disgusts one. What
+sort of a wife would a woman make who could act such a lie?"
+
+As he spoke, a form swept past him, and a beautiful face full of scorn
+and passion gleamed on him through the _demi-lumière_.
+
+"By Jove! you've done it now, Telfer," said Walsham. "She was behind us,
+I bet you, gathering those roses; her hands are full of them, and she
+took that means of showing us she was within earshot. You _have_ set
+your foot in it nicely, certainly."
+
+"_Ce m'est bien égal_," said Telfer, haughtily. "If she hear what I say
+of her, so much the better. It's the truth, that a young girl who'd sell
+herself for money, as soon as she's got what she wanted will desert the
+man who's given it to her; and I like my father too well to stand by and
+see him made a fool of. The Tressillian and I are open foes now--we'll
+see which wins."
+
+"And a very fair foe you have, too," thought I, as I looked at Violet
+that night as she stood in the window, a wreath of lilies on her
+splendid hair, and her impassioned eyes lighting into joyous laughter as
+she talked nonsense with Von Edenburgh.
+
+"Isn't she first-rate style, in spite of your prejudice?" I said to
+Telfer, who'd just finished a game at écarté with De Tintiniac, one of
+the best players in Europe. If the Major has any weakness, écarté is one
+of them. He just glanced across with a sarcastic smile.
+
+"Well got up, of course; so are all actresses--on the stage."
+
+Then he dropped his glass and went back to his cards, and seemed to
+notice the splendid Tressillian not one whit more than he did her pup.
+
+Whether his discourteous speeches had piqued Violet into showing off her
+best paces, or whether it's a natural weakness of her sex to shine in
+all times and places that they can, certain it was that I never saw the
+Tressillian more brilliant and bewitching than she was that night.
+Waltzing with Von Edenburgh, singing with me, talking fun with Fred, or
+merely lying back in her chair, playing lazily with her bouquet, she was
+eminently dangerous in whatever she did, and there wasn't a man in the
+castle who didn't gather round her, except her sworn foe the Major. Even
+De Tintiniac, that old campaigner at the green tables, who has long ago
+given over any mistress save hazard, glanced once or twice at the superb
+eyes beaming with the _droit de conquête_, but Telfer never looked up
+from his cards.
+
+Telfer and she parted with the chilliest of "good nights," and met again
+in the morning with the most frigid of "good mornings," and to that
+simple exchange of words was their colloquy limited for an entire
+fortnight. Unless I'd been witness of it, I wouldn't have credited that
+any two people could live for that space of time in the same
+country-house and keep so distant. Nobody noticed it, for there were no
+end of guests at Essellau, and the Tressillian had so many liege
+subjects ready to her slightest bidding, that the Major's _lèse-majesté_
+wasn't of such consequence. But when day after day came, and he spent
+them all boar-hunting, shooting, fishing, or playing rouge-et-noir and
+roulette at the gaming-tables in Pipesandbeersbad, and when he was in
+the drawing-rooms at Essellau she saw him amusing and agreeable, and
+unbending to every one but herself, I don't know anything of woman's
+nature if I didn't see Violet's delicate cheek flush, and her eyes
+flash, whenever she caught the Major's cool, contemptuous, depreciating
+glance, much harder to her sex to bear than spoken ridicule or open war.
+Occasionally he cast a sarcasm, quick, sharp, and relentless as a Minié
+ball, at her, which she fired back with such rifle-powder as she had in
+her flask; but the return shot fell as harmlessly as it might have done
+on Achilles's breast.
+
+"A man is very silly to marry," he was saying one evening to Marc,
+"since, as Emerson says, from the beginning of the world such as are in
+the institution want to get out, and such as are out want to get in."
+
+Violet, sitting near at the piano, turned half round. "If all others are
+of my opinion, Major Telfer, you will never be tempted, for no one will
+be willing to enter it with you."
+
+The shot fell short. Telfer neither smiled nor looked annoyed, but
+answered, tranquilly,--
+
+"Possibly; but my time is to come. When I own Torwood, ladies will be as
+kind to me as they are now to my father; for it is wonderful what a
+charm to renew youth, reform rakes, buy love, and make the Beast the
+Beauty, is '_un peu de poudre d'or_,' in the eyes of the _beau sexe_."
+
+The Tressillian flushed scarlet, but soon recovered herself.
+
+"I have heard," she said, pulling her bouquet to pieces with impatience,
+"that when people look through smoked glass the very sun looks dusky,
+and so I suppose, through your own moral perceptions, you view those of
+others. You know what De la Fayette wrote to Madame de Sablé: '_Quelle
+corruption il faut avoir dans l'esprit pour être capable d'imaginer tout
+cela!_'"
+
+"It does not follow," answered Telfer, impassively. "De la Fayette was
+quite wrong. Suard was nearer the truth when he said that Rochefoucauld,
+'_a peint les hommes comme il les à vus. Il n'appartenait qu'à un homme
+d'une réputation bien pure et bien distinguée d'oser flétrir ainsi le
+principe de toutes les actions humaines._'"
+
+"And Major Telfer is so unassailable himself that he can mount his
+pedestal and censure all weaker mortals," said Violet, sarcastically.
+"Your judgments are, perhaps, not always as infallible as the gods'."
+
+"You are gone very wide of the original subject, Miss Tressillian,"
+answered Telfer, coldly. "I was merely speaking of that common social
+fraud and falsehood, a _mariage de convenance_, which, as I shall never
+sin in that manner myself, I am at liberty to censure with the scorn I
+feel for it."
+
+He looked hard at her as he spoke. The Tressillian's eyes answered the
+stare as haughtily.
+
+"Some may not be all _mariages de convenance_ that you choose to call
+such. It does not necessarily follow, because a girl marries a rich man,
+that she marries him for his money. There _may_ be love in the case, but
+the world never gives her the grace of the doubt."
+
+"What hardy hypocrisy," thought Telfer. "She'd actually try to persuade
+me to my face that she was in love with the poor old governor and his
+gout!"
+
+"Pardon me," he said, with his most cynical smile. "In attributing
+disinterested affection to ladies, I think '_quelque disposition qu'ait
+le monde à mal juger, il fait plus souvent grace au faux mérite qu'il ne
+fait injustice au véritable_.'"
+
+The Tressillian's soft lips curved angrily; she turned away, and began
+to sing again, at Walsham's entreaty. Telfer got up and lounged over to
+Virginie, with whom he laughed, talked, waltzed, and played chess for
+the rest of the evening.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+FROM WHICH IT WOULD APPEAR, THAT IT IS SOMETIMES WELL TO BEGIN WITH A
+LITTLE AVERSION.
+
+
+After this split, Telfer and the Tressillian were rather further off
+each other than before; and whenever riding, and driving, at dinner, or
+in lionizing, they came by chance together, he avoided her silently as
+much as ever he could, without making a parade of it. Violet could see
+very well how cordially he hated her, and, woman-like, I dare say mine,
+and Edenburgh's, and Walsham's, and all her devoted friends' admiration
+was valueless, as long as her vowed enemy treated her with such careless
+contempt.
+
+One morning the two foes met by chance. Telfer and I, after a late night
+over at Pipesandbeersbad, with lansquenet, cheroots, and cognac, had
+betaken ourselves out to whip the Beersbad, whose fish, for all their
+boiling by the hot springs, are first-rate, I can assure you. Telfer
+tells you he likes fishing, but I never see that he does much more than
+lie full length under the shadiest tree he can find, with his cap over
+his eyes and his cigar in his mouth, doing the _dolce_ lazily enough. A
+three-pound trout had no power to rouse him; and he's lost a salmon
+before now in the Tweed because it bored him to play it! Shade of old
+Izaak! is _that_ liking fishing? But few things ever did excite him,
+except it was a charge, or a Kaffir scrimmage; and then he looked more
+like a concentrated tempest than anything else, and woe to the turban
+that his sabre came down upon.
+
+That part of the stream we'd tried first had been whipped before us, or
+the fish wouldn't bite; and I, who haven't as much patience as I might
+have, went up higher to try my luck. Telfer declined to come; he was
+comfortable, he said, and out of the sun; he preferred "Indiana" and his
+cheroot to catching all the fish in the Beersbad, so I bid him good-bye,
+and left him smoking and reading at his leisure under the linden-trees.
+I went further on than I had meant, up round a bend of the river, and
+was too absorbed in filling my basket to notice a storm coming up from
+the west, till I began to find myself getting wet to the skin, and the
+lightning flying up and down the hills round Essellau. I looked for the
+Major as I passed the lime-trees, but he wasn't there, and I made the
+best of my way back to the castle, supposing he'd got there before me;
+but I was mistaken.
+
+"I've seen nothing of him," said Marc. "He's stalking about the woods, I
+dare say, admiring the lightning. That's more than the poor Tressillian
+does, I bet. She went out by herself, I believe, just before the storm,
+to get a water-lily she wanted to paint, and hasn't appeared since. By
+Jove! if Telfer should have to play knight-errant to his 'pet aversion,'
+what fun it would be."
+
+Marc had his fun, for an hour afterwards, when the storm had blown over,
+up the terrace steps came Violet and the Major. They weren't talking to
+each other, but they were actually walking together; and the courtesy
+with which he put a dripping rose-branch out of her path with his stick,
+was something quite new.
+
+It seems that Telfer, disliking disagreeable sensations, and classing
+getting wet among such, had arisen when the thunder began to growl, and
+slowly wended his way homewards. But before he was halfway to Essellau
+the rain began to drip off his moustache, and seeing a little marble
+temple (the Parthenon turned into a summer-house!) close by, he thought
+he might as well go in and have another weed till it grew finer. Go in
+he did; and he'd just smoked half a cigar, and read the last chapter of
+"Indiana," when he looked up, and saw the Tressillian's pug, looking a
+bedraggled and miserable object, at his feet, and the Tressillian
+herself standing within a few yards of him. If Telfer had abstained from
+a few fierce mental oaths, he would have been of a much more pacific
+nature than he ever pretended to be; and I don't doubt that he looked
+hauteur concentrated as he rose at his enemy's entrance. Violet made a
+movement of retreat, but then thought better of it. It would have seemed
+too much like flying from the foe. So with a careless bow she sank on
+one of the seats, took off her hat, shook the rain-drops off her hair,
+and busied herself in sedulous attentions to the pug. The Major thought
+it incumbent on him to speak a few sentences about the thunder that was
+cracking over their heads; Violet answered him as briefly; and Telfer
+putting down his cigar with a sigh, sat watching the storm in silence,
+not troubling himself to talk any more.
+
+As she bent down to pat the pug she caught his eyes on her with a cold,
+critical glance. He was thinking how pure her profile was and how
+exquisite her eyes, and--of how cordially he should hate her if his
+father married her. Her color rose, but she met his look steadily, which
+is a difficult thing to do if you've anything to conceal, for the
+Major's eyes are very keen and clear. Her lips curved with a smile half
+amused, half disdainful. "What a pity, Major Telfer," she said, with a
+silvery laugh, "that you should be condemned to imprisonment with one
+who is unfortunately such a _bête noire_ to you as I am! I assure you, I
+feel for you; if I were not coward enough to be a little afraid of that
+lightning, I would really go away to relieve you from your sufferings. I
+should feel quite honored by the distinction of your hatred if I didn't
+know, you, on principle, dislike every woman living. Is your judgment
+always infallible?"
+
+Beyond a little surprise in his eyes, Telfer's features were as
+impassive as ever. "Far from it," he answered, quietly "I merely judge
+people by their actions."
+
+The Tressillian's luminous eyes flashed proudly. "An unsafe guide, Major
+Telfer; you cannot judge of actions until you know their motives. I know
+perfectly well why you dislike and avoid me: you listened to a foolish
+report, and you heard me giving your father permission to write to me.
+Those are your grounds, are they not?"
+
+Telfer, for once in his life, _was_ astonished, but he looked at her
+fixedly. "And were they not just ones?"
+
+"No," said Violet, vehemently,--"no, they were most rankly unjust; and
+it is hard, indeed, if a girl, who has no friends or advisers that she
+can trust, may not accept the kindness and ask the counsels of a man
+fifty-five years older than herself without his being given to her as a
+lover, and the world's whispering that she is trying to entrap him. You
+pique yourself on your clear-sightedness, Major Telfer, but for once
+your judgment failed you when you attributed such mean and mercenary
+motives to me, and supposed, because, as you so generously stated, I had
+'no money and no home,' I must necessarily have no heart or conscience,
+but be ready to give myself at any moment to the highest bidder, and
+take advantage of the kindness of your noble-minded, generous-hearted
+father to trick him into marriage." She stopped, fairly out of breath
+with excitement. Telfer was going to speak, but she silenced him with a
+haughty gesture. "No; now we are started on the subject, hear me to the
+end. You have done me gross injustice--an offence the Tressillians never
+forgive--but, for my own sake, I wish to show you how mistaken you were
+in your hasty condemnation. At the beginning of the season I was
+introduced to your father. He knew my mother well in her girlhood, and
+he said I reminded him of her. He was very kind to me, and I, who have
+no real friend on earth, of course was grateful to him, for I was
+thankful to have any one on whom I could rely. You know, probably as
+well as I do, that there is little love lost between the Carterets and
+myself, though, by my father's will, I must stay with them till I am of
+age. I have one brother, a boy of eighteen; he is with his regiment
+serving out in India, and the climate is killing him by inches, though
+he is too brave to try and get sick leave. Your father has been doing
+all he can to have him exchanged; the letters I have had from him have
+been to tell me of his success, and to say that Arthur is gazetted to
+the Buffs, and coming home overland. There is the head and front of my
+offending, Major Telfer; a very simple explanation, is it not? Perhaps
+another time you will be more cautious in your censure."
+
+A faint flush came over the Major's bronzed cheek; he looked out of the
+portico, and was silent for a minute. The knowledge that he has wronged
+another is a keen pang to a proud man of an honor almost fastidious in
+his punctilio of right. He swung quickly round, and held out his hand to
+her.
+
+"I beg your pardon; I have misjudged you, and I am thoroughly ashamed of
+myself for it," he said, in a low voice.
+
+When the Major does come down from his hauteur, and let some of his
+winning cordial nature come out, no woman living, unless she were some
+animated Medusa, could find it in her heart to say him nay. His frank
+self-condemnation touched Violet, despite herself, and, without
+thinking, she laid her small fingers in his proffered hand. Then the
+Tressillian pride flashed up again; she drew it hastily away, and walked
+out into the air.
+
+"Pray do not distress yourself," she said, with an effort (not
+successful) to seem perfectly calm and nonchalant. "It is not of the
+slightest consequence; we understand each other's sentiments now, and
+shall in future be courteous in our hate like two of the French
+_noblesse_, complimenting one another before they draw their swords to
+slay or to be slain. It has cleared now, so I will leave you to the
+solitude I disturbed. Come, Floss." And calling the pug after her,
+Violet very gracefully swept down the steps, but with a stride the Major
+was at her side.
+
+"Nay, Miss Tressillian," he said, gently, "it is true I've given you
+cause to think me as rude as Orson or Caliban, but I am not quite such a
+bear as to let you walk home through these woods alone."
+
+Violet made an impatient movement. "Pray don't trouble yourself. We are
+close to the castle, and--pardon me, but truth-telling seems the order
+for the day--I much prefer you in your open enmity to your simulated
+courtesy. We have been rude to each other for three weeks; in another
+one you will be gone, so it is scarcely worth while to begin politeness
+now."
+
+"As you please," said Telfer, coldly.
+
+He'd made great advances and concessions for him, and was far too
+English when repulsed to go on making any more. But he was
+astonished--extremely so--for he'd been courted and sought since he was
+in jackets, and couldn't make out a young girl like the Tressillian
+treating him so lightly. He walked along beside her in profound silence,
+but though neither of them spoke a word, he didn't leave her side till
+she was safe on the terrace at Essellau. The Major was very grave that
+night at dinner, and occasionally he looked at Violet with a strange,
+inquiring glance, as the young lady, in the most brilliant of spirits,
+fired away French repartees with Von Edenburgh and De Tintiniac, her
+face absolutely _rayonnant_ in the gleam of the wax lights. I thought
+the spirits were a little too high to be real. Late at night, as he and
+I and Marc were smoking on the terrace, before turning in, Telfer
+constrained himself to tell us of the scene in the summer-house. He'd
+abused her to us. Common honor, he said, obliged him to tell us the
+truth about her.
+
+"I am sorry," said he, slowly, between the whiffs of his meerschaum. "If
+there is one thing I hate, it is injustice. I was never guilty of
+misjudging anybody before in my life, that I know of; and, I give you my
+word, I experienced a new sensation--I absolutely felt humbled before
+that girl's great, flashing, truthful eyes, to think that I'd been
+listening to report and judging from prejudice like any silly, gossiping
+woman."
+
+"It seems to have made a great impression on you, Telfer," laughed Marc.
+"Has your detestation of Violet changed to something as warm, but more
+gentle? Shall we have to say the love wherewith he loves her is greater
+than the hate wherewith he hated her?"
+
+"Not exactly," answered the Major, calmly, with a supercilious twist of
+his moustaches. "But I like pluck wherever I see it, and she's a true
+Tressillian."
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+IN WHICH THE MAJOR PROVOKES A QUARREL IN BEHALF OF THE FAIR TRESSILLIAN.
+
+
+"Well, Telfer," said I, two mornings after, "if you want to be at the
+moor by the 12th, we must start soon; this is the 6th. It will be sharp
+work to get there as it is."
+
+"What, do you think of not going at all?" said Telfer, laying down the
+_Revue des deux Mondes_ with a yawn. "We are very well here. Marc
+bothers me tremendously to stay on another month, and the shooting's as
+good as we shall get at Glenattock. What do you say, Vane?"
+
+"Just as you like," I answered. "The pigs are as good as the grouse, for
+anything I know. They put me in mind of getting my first spear at
+Burampootra. I only thought you wanted to be off out of sight of the
+Tressillian."
+
+He laughed slightly. "Oh! the young lady's no particular eyesore to me
+now I don't regard her in the light of a _belle-mère_. Well, shall we
+stop here, then?"
+
+"_Comme vous voulez._ I don't care."
+
+"No philosopher ever moves when he's comfortable," said the Major,
+laughing. "I'll write and tell Montague he can shoot over Glenattock if
+he likes. I dare say he can find some men who'll keep him company and
+fill the box. I say, old fellow, I've won Calceolaria, but I sha'n't
+have her, because I consider the bet drawn. Our wager was laid on the
+supposition that the Tressillian wished to marry the governor, but as
+she never has had the desire, I've neither lost nor won."
+
+"Well, we'll wait and see," said I. "Christmas isn't come yet. Here
+comes Violet. She looks well, don't she? Confess now, prejudice apart,
+that you admire her, _nolens volens_."
+
+Telfer looked at her steadily as she came into the billiard-room in her
+hat and habit, as she'd been riding with Lucy Carteret, Marc, and De
+Tintiniac. "Yes," he said, slowly, under his breath, "she is very good
+style, I admit."
+
+Lucy Carteret challenged Telfer to a game; she has a tall, _svelte_
+figure, and knows she looks well at billiards. He played lazily, and let
+her win easily enough, paying as little attention to the _agaceries_ and
+glances she lavished upon him as if he'd been an automaton. When they'd
+played it out, he went up to the Tressillian, who was talking to Marc in
+the window, and, to my supreme astonishment, asked her to have a game.
+
+"Thank you, no," answered Violet, coldly; "it is too warm for
+billiards."
+
+This was certainly the first time the Major had ever been refused in any
+of his overtures to her sex, and I believe it surprised him exceedingly.
+He bent his head, and soon after he went for a walk in the rosery with
+Lucy Carteret, whom he hates. We always hate those manoeuvring,
+_maniéré_ girls, who are everlastingly flinging bait after us, whether
+or no we want to nibble; and just in proportion as they fixatrice, and
+crinoline, and cosmetique to hook us, will leave us to die in the sun
+when they've once trapped us into the basket.
+
+That night, when Telfer sat down to écarté, Violet was singing in
+another room, out of which her voice came distinctly to us. I noticed he
+didn't play quite as well as usual. I don't suppose he could be
+listening, though, for he doesn't care for music, and still less for
+the Tressillian.
+
+"Mademoiselle," said De Tintiniac, going up to her afterwards, "you can
+boast of greater conquests than Orpheus. He only charmed rocks, but you
+have distracted the two most inveterate _joueurs_ in Europe."
+
+Telfer looked annoyed. Violet laughed. "Pardon me if I doubt your
+compliment. If you were so kind as to listen to me, I have not enough
+vanity to think that your opponent would yield to what _he_ would think
+such immeasurable weakness."
+
+"You are not magnanimous, Miss Tressillian," said Telfer, in a low tone,
+leaning down over the piano. "You are ceaselessly reminding me of a
+hasty prejudice, unjustly formed, of which I have told you I am heartily
+ashamed."
+
+"A hasty prejudice!" repeated Violet. "I beg your pardon, Major Telfer;
+I think ours is a very strong and lasting enmity, as mutual as it is
+well founded. Don't contradict me; you know you could have shot me with
+as little remorse as a partridge."
+
+"But can you never forget," continued Telfer, impatiently, "that my
+enmity, as you please to term it, was grafted on erroneous opinions and
+false reports, and will you never credit that when I see myself in the
+wrong, I am too just to others to continue in it?"
+
+The Tressillian laughed--a mischievous, _provoquant_ laugh. "No, I
+believe neither in sudden conversions nor sudden friendships. Pray do
+not trouble yourself to be 'just' to me; you see I did not droop and die
+under the shadow of your wrath."
+
+"Oh no," said Telfer, with a sardonic twist of his moustaches, "one
+would not accuse you of too much softness, Miss Tressillian."
+
+She colored, and the pride of her family flashed out of her eyes. The
+Tressillians are all deucedly proud, and would die sooner than yield an
+inch. "If by softness you mean weakness, you are right," she said,
+haughtily. "As I have told you, we never forgive injustice."
+
+Telfer frowned. If there was one thing he hated more than another, it
+was a woman who had anything hard about her. He smiled his chilliest
+smile. "Those are harsh words from a lady's lips--not so becoming to
+them as something gentler. You remind me, Miss Tressillian, of a young
+panther I once had, beautiful to look at, but eminently dangerous to
+approach, much less to caress. Everybody admired my panther, but no one
+dared to choose it for a pet."
+
+With this uncourteous allegory the Major turned away, leaving Violet to
+make it out as best she might. It was good fun to watch the
+Tressillian's face: I only, standing near, had caught what he said, for
+he had spoken very low. First she looked haughty and annoyed, then a
+little troubled and perplexed: she sat quiet a minute, playing
+thoughtfully with her bracelets; then shook her head with a movement of
+defiance, and began to sing a Venetian barcarole with more _élan_ and
+spirit than ever.
+
+"By Jove! Telfer," said I, as we sat in the smoking-room that night,
+"your would-have-been mother-in-law has plenty of pluck. She'd have kept
+you in good training, and made a better boy of you; it's quite a loss to
+your morals that your father didn't marry her."
+
+Telfer didn't look best pleased. He stretched himself full length on one
+of the divans, and answered not.
+
+"I shouldn't be surprised if, with all her beauty, she hangs on hand,"
+said Walsham, "for she hasn't a rap, you know; her governor gamed it all
+away, and she's certainly a bit of a flirt."
+
+"I don't think so," said Telfer, shortly.
+
+"Oh, by George! don't you? but I do," cried Fred. "Why, she takes a turn
+at us all, from old De Tintiniac, with his padded figure and coulisses
+compliments, to Marc, young and beautiful, as the novels say,--but we'll
+spare his blushes--from Vane, there, with his long rent-roll, to poor
+me, who she knows goes on tick for my weeds and gloves. She flirts with
+us all, one after the other, except you, whom she don't dare to touch.
+Tell me where you get your _noli me tangere_ armor, Telfer, and I'll
+adopt it to-morrow, for the girls make such desperate love to me I know
+some of them will propose before long."
+
+Telfer smoked vigorously during Fred's peroration, and his brow
+darkened. "I do not consider Miss Tressillian a flirt," he said, slowly.
+"She's too careless in showing you her weak points to be trying to trap
+you. What _I_ call a coquette is a woman who is all things to all men,
+whose every languishing glance is a bait, and whose every thought is a
+conquest."
+
+"And pray how can you tell but what the Tressillian's naturalness and
+carelessness may be only a superior bit of acting? The highest art, you
+know, is to imitate nature so close that you can't tell which is which,"
+laughed Walsham.
+
+Telfer didn't seem to relish the suggestion, but went on smoking
+fiercely.
+
+"Not that I want to speak against the girl," Fred went on; "she's very
+amusing, and well enough, I dare say, if she weren't so devilish proud."
+
+"You seem rather inconsistent," said Telfer, impatiently. "First, you
+accuse her of being too free, and then blame her for being too
+reserved."
+
+Walsham laughed.
+
+"If I'm inconsistent, you're a perfect weathercock. A month ago you were
+calling Violet every name you could think of, and now you snap us all
+off short if we say a word against her."
+
+Telfer looked haughty enough to extinguish Fred upon the spot; Fred
+being a small, lively little chap, with not the slightest dignity about
+him.
+
+"I know little or nothing of Miss Tressillian, but as I was the first
+to prejudice you all against her, it is only common honor to take her
+part when I think her unjustly attacked."
+
+Fred gave me a wink of intense significance, but remonstrated no
+further, for Telfer had something of the dark look upon him that our men
+knew so well when he led them down to the slaughter at Alma and
+Balaklava.
+
+"I tell you," continued the Major, after a little silence, "that I am
+disgusted with myself for having listened to whispers and reports, and
+believed in them just because they suited the bias of my prejudice. It
+didn't matter to me whom my father married, as far as money went, for
+beyond 10,000_l._ or so, it must all come in the entail; but I couldn't
+endure the idea of his being chiselled by some Becky Sharp or Blanche
+Armory, and I made up my mind that the Tressillian was of that genre.
+I've changed my opinion now. I don't think she either is an actress or
+an intrigante; and I should be a coward indeed if I hesitated to say so,
+out of common justice to a young girl who has no one to defend her."
+
+"Bravo, my boy!" said Walsham; "I thought the Tressillian's bright eyes
+wouldn't let you hate her long. You're quite right, though 'pon my life
+it is really horrid how women contrive to damage each other. If there's
+an unlucky girl who has made the best match of the season--she might be
+an angel from heaven--her bosom-friends would manage gently to spread
+abroad the interesting facts that she's a 'dreadful flirt,' 'has a snub
+nose,' is an awful temper, had a ballet-girl for her mamma, or something
+detrimental. An attractive woman is the target for all her sex to shoot
+their sneers at, and if the poor thing isn't so riddled with arrows that
+she's no beauty left, it isn't her sisters' fault."
+
+"I believe you," said Telfer. "My gauge of a woman's fascinations is the
+amount of hatred all the others bear her. It often amuses me to hear the
+tone that ladies take in talking of some girl whom we admire. She's a
+charming creature--a darling--their particular friend but ... there's
+always a 'but' to neutralize the praise, and with their honeyed hatred
+they contrive to damn the luckless object irretrievably. If another
+man's a good shot, or whip, or billiard-player, we're not spiteful to
+him for it. We think him a good fellow, and like him the better; but the
+dear _beau sexe_ cannot bear a rival, and never rest while one of their
+acquaintance has diamonds a carat larger, dresses a trifle more costly,
+has finer horses, or more conquests. The only style of friend I ever
+heard women speak well of is some plain and timorous individual,
+good-natured to foolery, and weak as water, who never comes in their
+orbit, and whom we never look at; and then what a darling she is, and
+how eloquently they will laud her to the skies, despising her miserably
+all the while for not having been born pretty!"
+
+"True enough," Marc began. "Why do the Carterets treat the Tressillian
+so disagreeably?--only because, though without their fortune, she makes
+ten times their coups; and get themselves up how they may, they know
+none of us care to waltz with them if she's in the room. Let's drink her
+health in Marcobrunnen--she's magnificent eyes."
+
+"And first-rate style," said I.
+
+"And a deuced pretty foot," cried Fred.
+
+"_Et une taille superbe_," added de Tintiniac, just come in. "_En
+vérité, elle est chouette cette Violette Anglaise._"
+
+So we chanted the Tressillian's praises. Telfer drank the toast in
+silence--_I_ thought with a frown on his brow at the freedom with which
+we discussed his fair foe.
+
+Little Countess Virginie's wedding was to come off in another month, and
+Marc begged us so hard to stay on till then, that, Telfer seeming very
+willing, I consented, though it would be the first September I had ever
+spent out of the English open since I was old enough to know partridges
+from pheasants. The Tressillian being Virginie's pet friend, after young
+ladies' custom of contracting eternal alliances (which ordinarily
+terminate in a quarrel about the shade of a ponceau ribbon, or a mauve
+flower, or a cornet's eyes, some three months after the signing and
+sealing thereof), was of course to be one of the _filles d'honneur_. So,
+as I said to Telfer, he'd have time for a few more battles before the
+two enemies parted to meet again--nobody could tell when.
+
+I began to think that the Major had really been wounded, and that his
+opponent's bright eyes wouldn't let him come out of the fight wholly
+scathless, as I saw him leaning against the wall at a ball in the
+Redoute at Pipesandbeersbad, watching Violet with great earnestness as
+she whirled round in a _deux temps_, bewitching as was her wont all the
+frequenters of the Bad. Rich English dyspeptics, poverty-stricken
+princes, Austrian diplomats, come to cure their hypochondria; French
+_décorés_, to try their new cabals and martingales; British snobs, to
+indulge the luxury of grumbling,--all of them found some strange
+attraction in the "Violette Anglaise."
+
+Violet sank on a seat after her valse. Telfer quietly displaced a young
+dragoon from Lucca, and sat down by her.
+
+"I am going to stay on another month, Miss Tressillian; are you not
+sorry to hear it?" he said, with a smile, but I thought a little anxiety
+in his eyes.
+
+The color flushed over her face, and she answered, with a laugh, not
+quite a real one: "Of course I am very sorry. I would go away myself to
+let you enjoy your last week in peace if I were not engaged to Virginie.
+Cannot you get me leave of absence from her? I know you would throw your
+whole heart into the petition."
+
+Telfer curled his moustaches impatiently.
+
+"Truth has come out of her well at last," he said, with a dash of
+bitterness, "and has disguised herself in Miss Tressillian's tulle
+illusion."
+
+Violet colored brighter still.
+
+"Well," she said, quickly, "was it not your decision that we should
+never waste courtesy on one another? Was not your own desire _guerre à
+outrance_?"
+
+"No," answered Telfer, his brow darkening; "that I certainly must deny.
+I did you injustice, and I offered you an apology. No man could do more
+than acknowledge he was in the wrong. I offered you the palm-branch
+once; you were pleased to refuse it. I am not a man, Miss Tressillian,
+to run the chance of another repulse. My friendship is not so cheap that
+I shall intrude it where it is undesired." He spoke with a laugh, but
+his eyes had a grave anger in them that Violet didn't quite relish.
+
+She looked a little bit frightened up at him. The proud, brilliant
+Tressillian was as pale and quiet as a little child after a good
+scolding. But she soon rallied, and flashed up haughtier than ever.
+
+"Major Telfer, you make one great error--one very common to your sex.
+You drop us one day, and take us up the next, and then think that we
+must be grateful to you for the supreme honor you do us. You are cold to
+us, absolutely rude, as long as it pleases your lordly will, and then,
+at the first word of courtesy and kindness, you expect us to rise and
+make you a _révérence_ in the utmost humiliation and thanksgiving. You
+men"--and Violet began destroying her bouquet with immense
+energy--"treat us exactly as a cat will treat a mouse. You yourself, for
+instance, in a moment's hasty judgment, construed all my actions by the
+light of your own unjust suspicions, and believing everything, no matter
+how unfounded, spoke against me to all your acquaintance, and treated me
+with, as you must admit, but scanty courtesy, for one whom I have heard
+piques himself on his high breeding. And now, when you discover that
+your suspicions had no foundation, and your hatred no grounds, you
+wonder that I find it difficult to be as grateful as you seem to think I
+should be for your having so kindly misjudged me."
+
+As the young lady gave all this forth with much vehemence and spirit,
+Telfer's lips set, and the blood forced itself through the bronze of his
+cheeks. He bent towards her till his moustache touched her hair.
+
+"You have no mercy, Violet Tressillian," he said, between his teeth.
+"Take care that no one is as pitiless to you in return."
+
+She started, and her bouquet fell to the ground. Telfer gave it her back
+without looking at her, and turned round to an Austrian with his usual
+impassive air.
+
+"Do you know where De Tintiniac is, Staumgaurn? In the roulette room?
+All right. I am going there now."
+
+He did go there, and I've a notion that the croupier of Pipesandbeersbad
+made something that night out of the Major's preoccupation.
+
+Violet, meanwhile, was waltzing with Staumgaurn and a dozen others, but
+looked rather white--not using any rouge but what nature had given
+her--and by the end of the evening her bouquet had utterly come to
+grief. Days went on till a fortnight of our last month had gone, and
+Telfer, to my sorrow (not surprise, for I always thought the Tressillian
+was a dangerous foe, and that, like Ringwood, he'd find himself unhorsed
+by a woman), grew grave and stern, haunted with ten times more
+recklessness than usual, and threw away his guineas at the Redoute in a
+wild way, quite new with him, for though he liked play _pour s'amuser_,
+he had too much control over his passions ever to let play get
+ascendancy over him. I used to think he had the strongest passions and
+the strongest will over them of any man I knew; but now a passion least
+undesired and most hopeless of any that ever entered his soul, seemed to
+have mastered him. Not that he showed it; with the Tressillian he was
+simply distantly courteous; but I, who was on the _qui vive_ for his
+first sign of being conquered, saw his eyebrows contract when somebody
+was paying her desperate court, and his glance lighten and flash when
+she passed near him. They had never been alone since the night of the
+ball, and Violet was too proud to try for a reconciliation, even if
+she'd cared for one.
+
+One night we were at a ball at the Prince Humbugandschwerinn's. The
+Tressillian had been waltzing with all her might, and had all the men in
+the room, Humbugandschwerinn himself included, round her. Telfer leaned
+against a console ten minutes, watching her, and then abruptly left the
+ball-room, and did not return again. He came instead into the card-room,
+and sat down to _écarté_ with De Tintiniac, and lost two games at ten
+Napoleons a side. Generally, he played very steadily, never giving his
+attention to anything but the game; but now he was listening to what a
+knot of men were saying, who were laughing, chatting, and sipping
+coffee, while they talked about--the Tressillian.
+
+"I mark the king and play," said Telfer, his eyes fixed fiercely on a
+young fellow who was discussing Violet much as he'd have discussed his
+new Danish dog or English hunter. He was Jack Snobley, Lord
+Featherweight's son, who was doing the grand, a confounded young
+parvenu, vulgar as his cotton-spinning ancestry could make him, who
+could appreciate the Tressillian about as much as he could Dannecker's
+Ariadne, which work of art he pronounced, in my hearing, "a pretty girl,
+but the dawg very badly done--too much like a cat." "I take your three
+to two," continued Telfer, his brow lowering as he heard the young fool
+praising and criticising Violet with small ceremony. The Major had the
+haughtiest patrician principles, and to hear a snob like this
+sandy-haired honorable, speaking of the woman _he_ chose to champion as
+he might have done of some ballerina or Chaumière belle, was rather too
+much for Telfer's self-control.
+
+When the game was done, he rose, and walked quietly over to where
+Snobley stood. He looked him down with that cold, haughty glance that
+has cowed men bolder than Lord Featherweight's hopeful offspring, and
+said a word or two to him in a low tone, which caused that gentleman to
+flush up red and look fierce with all his might.
+
+"What's the girl to you, that I mayn't speak as I choose of her?" he
+retorted; the Sillery, of which he'd taken a good deal too much, working
+up in his weak brain. "I've heard that she jilted you, and that was why
+you've been setting them all against her, and saying she wanted to hook
+your old governor."
+
+The Sillery must have indeed obscured Jack's reason with a vengeance to
+make him venture this very elegant and refined speech with the Major,
+most fastidious in his ideas of good breeding, and most direful in his
+wrath, of any man I ever knew. Telfer's cheek turned as white with
+passion as the bronze would let it; his gray eyes grew almost black as
+they stared at the young snob. He was so supremely astonished that this
+ill-bred boy had actually dared thus to address him!
+
+"Mr. Snobley," he said, with his chilled and most ironical smile, and
+his quietest, most courteous voice, "you must learn good manners before
+you venture to parley with gentlemen. Allow me to give you your first
+lesson." And stooping, as if to a very little boy--young Snobley was a
+good foot shorter than he--the Major struck him on the lips with his
+left-hand French kid glove. It was a very gentle blow--it would scarcely
+have reddened the Tressillian's delicate skin--but on the Hon. Jack it
+had electric effect. He was beginning to swear, to look big, to talk of
+satisfaction, insult, and all the rest of it; but Telfer laughed, bent
+his head, told him he was quite ready to satisfy him to any extent he
+required; and, turning away, sat down to _écarté_ calm and impassive as
+ever, and pleased greatly with himself for having silenced this silly
+youth. The affair was much less exciting to him than it was to any other
+man in the room. "It's too great an honor for him, the young brute, for
+me to be called out by him, as if he were one of us. I hate snobs; Lord
+Featherweight's grandfather was butler to mine, and he himself was a
+cotton-spinner in Lancashire, and then this little contemptible puppy
+dares to----"
+
+Telfer finished his sentence with a puff of smoke from his meerschaum,
+as he sat in his bedroom after the ball, into which sanctuary I had
+followed him to talk a little before turning in.
+
+"To discuss the Tressillian," said I. "But that surprises me less, old
+fellow, than that you should champion her. What's it for? Has hate
+turned to the other thing? Have you come to think that, though she'd
+make a very bad mother-in-law, she'd make a charming wife? 'Pon my life,
+if you have----"
+
+"Hush! Don't jest!"
+
+I knew by the tone of those three little monosyllables that the Major
+was done for--caught, conquered, and fettered by his dangerous foe.
+
+Telfer sat silent for some minutes, looking out of the window where the
+dawn was rising over the hills, with a settled gloom upon his face. Then
+he rose, and began swinging about the room with his firm cavalry tread,
+his arms crossed on his chest, and his head bent down.
+
+"By Heaven! Vane," he said at length, in a tone low, but passionate and
+bitter, "I have gone on like a baby or a fool, playing with tools till
+they have cut me. Against my will, against my judgment, against reason,
+hope, everything, I have lingered in that girl's fascinations till I am
+bound by them hand and foot. I cannot deceive myself, I cannot shut the
+truth out; it was not honor, nor chivalry, nor friendship that made me
+to-night insult the man who spoke jestingly of her; it was love--love as
+mad, as reckless, as misplaced, as ever cursed a man and drove him to
+his ruin." He paused, breathing hard, with his teeth set, then broke out
+again: "I, who held love in such disdain, who have so long kept my
+passions in such strong control, who thought no woman had the power to
+move me against my will--I love at last, despite myself, though I know
+that she is pitiless, that nothing I have said has been able to touch
+her into softer feeling, and that, mad as my passion is for her, if her
+nature be as hard and haughty as I fear, I dare not, if I could, make
+her my wife. No, Vane, no," he went on, hastily, as I interrupted. "She
+does not love me, she has no gentler feeling in her; I thought she had,
+but I was mistaken. I tried her several times, but she will never
+forgive my first injustice to her; and to one with so little softness in
+her nature I dare not trust my peace. It were a worse hell even than
+that I now endure, to have her with me, loving her as I do, and feel
+that her cold heart gave no response to mine; to possess her glorious
+beauty, and yet know that her love and her soul were dead in their chill
+pride to me----"
+
+He paused again, and leaned against the window, his chest heaving, and
+hot tears standing in his haughty eyes, wrung from the very anguish of
+his soul. The pride that had never before bent to any human thing, was
+now cast in the dust before a woman who never did, and probably never
+would, love him in return.
+
+
+
+
+V.
+
+THE DUEL, AND ITS CONSEQUENCES.
+
+
+The contemptible young puppy, for whom Telfer considered the honor of a
+ball from his pistol a great deal too good in the morning, sent
+Heavysides, of the 40th, a chum of his found up at the Bad, to claim
+"satisfaction," the valor produced in him by Sillery over night having
+been kept up since by copious draughts of cognac and Seltzer. Having
+signified to Heavysides that the Major would do Mr. Snobley the favor of
+shooting him in the retired valley of Königshöhle at sunrise the next
+day, I went to tell Telfer, who had a hearty laugh at the young fellow's
+challenge.
+
+"I'd give him something to shoot me through the heart," said he,
+bitterly, "but I don't suppose he will. He's practised at pigeons, not
+at men, probably. I won't hurt him much, but a little lesson will do him
+good. Mind nobody in the house gets wind of the affair. Though I make a
+fool of myself in her defence, there is no need that she or others
+should know it. But if the boy should do for me, tell her, Vane--tell
+her," said the Major, shading his eyes with his hand, "that I have
+learnt to love her as I never dreamt I should love any woman, and that I
+do not blame her for the just lesson she has read me for the rudeness
+and the unjust prejudice I indulged in so long towards her. She
+retaliated fairly upon me, and God forbid that she should have one hour
+of her life embittered through remorse for me."
+
+His voice sank into a whisper as he spoke; then, with an effort, he
+forced himself into calmness, and went to play billiards with Marc. This
+was the man who, three months before, had told me with such contemptuous
+decision that "we need never fall in love unless it's convenient; and
+as to caring for a girl who doesn't care for us, that was a weakness
+with which he couldn't sympathize at all!"
+
+Late that night, Telfer and I, coming down the stairs, met the
+Tressillian going up them to her room. The Major stopped her, and held
+out his hand, with a softened light in his eyes. "Will you not bid me
+good-bye? I may not see you again."
+
+There was a sadness in his smile bitterly significant to me, but very
+likely she didn't see it, not having any key to it, as I had.
+
+Violet turned pale, and I fancied her lips twitched, but it might be the
+flickering of the light of the staircase lamps on her face. At any rate,
+being a young lady born and bred in good society, she put her hand in
+his, with a simple "What! are you going away?"
+
+"Perhaps. At any rate, let us part in peace."
+
+The proud man laughed as he said it, though he was enduring tortures.
+Violet heard the laugh, and didn't see the straining anxiety in his
+gaze.
+
+She drew her hand rapidly away. "Certainly. _Bon voyage_, Major Telfer,
+and good night," she answered, carelessly; and, with a graceful bend,
+the Tressillian floated on up the stairs with the dignity of a young
+empress.
+
+Telfer looked after the white gossamer dress and the beautiful head,
+with its wreath of scarlet flowers, and an iron sternness settled on his
+face. All hope was gone now. She could not have parted with him like
+this if she had cared for him one straw more than for the flowers in her
+hair. Yet, in the morning, he was going to risk his life for her. Ah,
+well! I've always seen that in love there's one of the two who gives all
+and gets nothing.
+
+In the morning, by five o'clock, in the valley of Königshöhle, a snug
+bit of pasture land between two rocks, where no gendarme could pounce
+upon us, young Snobley made his appearance to enjoy the honor of being
+a target for one of the best shots in Europe. Snobley had a good deal of
+swagger and would-be dash, and made a great show of pluck, which your
+man of true pluck never does. Telfer stood talking to me up to the last
+minute, took his pistol carelessly in his hand, and, without taking any
+apparent aim, fired.
+
+If Telfer made up his mind to shoot off your fifth waistcoat-button,
+your fifth waistcoat-button would be irrevocably doomed; and therefore,
+having determined to himself to lodge a bullet in this young puppy's
+left wrist, in the left wrist did the ball lodge. Snobley was
+"satisfied," very amply satisfied, I fancy, by his looks. He'd fired,
+and sent his shot right into the trunk of a chestnut growing some seven
+yards off his opponent, to Heavyside's supreme scorn.
+
+"That'll teach him not to talk of young ladies in his Mabille slang,"
+said Telfer, lighting his cigar. "I hope the little snob may be the
+better for my lesson. Now I am _en route_, I'll go over to
+Pipesandbeersbad, breakfast at the Hôtel de France, and go and see
+Humbugandschwerinn: he wants me to look at some English racers Brookes
+has just sent him over. Make my excuses at Essellau; and I say, Vane,
+see if you can't get us away in a day or two; have some call home, or
+something, for I shall never stand this long."
+
+With which not over-clear speech the Major mounted his horse and
+cantered off towards the Bad.
+
+I rode back; went to my own room, had some chocolate, read Pigault le
+Brun, and about noon, seeing Virginie, the Tressillian, and several
+others out on the terrace, went to join them. Marc slipped his arm
+through mine and drew me aside.
+
+"I say, Vane, what's all this about Telfer striking some fellow for
+talking about the Tressillian? Staurmgaurn was over here just now, and
+told me there was a row in the card-room at Humbugandschwerinn's
+between Telfer and another Englishman. I knew nothing about it. Is it
+true?"
+
+"So far true," I answered, "that Telfer put a ball in the youth's wrist
+at seven o'clock this morning; and serve him right too--he's an impudent
+young snob."
+
+"By Jove!" cried Marc, "what in the world made him take the
+Tressillian's part? Have the _beaux yeux_ really made an impression on
+the most unimpressionable of men?"
+
+"The devil they have," said I, crossly; "but I wish she'd been at the
+deuce first, for he's too good a fellow to waste his best years pining
+after a pair of dark eyes."
+
+Marc shrugged his shoulders. "_C'est vrai_; but we're all fools some
+time or other. The idea of Telfer's chivalry! I declare it's quite like
+the old days of Froissart and Commines--fighting for my lady's favor."
+And away he went, singing those two famous lines from Alcyonée:
+
+ Pour mériter son coeur, pour plaire à ses beaux yeux,
+ J'ai fait la guerre aux rois: je l'aurais faite aux dieux;
+
+and I thought to myself that if the Tressillian proved a De Longueville,
+I could find it in my soul to shoot her without remorse.
+
+But as I turned away from Marc, I came upon her, looking pale and ill
+enough to satisfy anybody. The color flushed into her cheeks as she saw
+me; we spoke of the weather, the chances of storm, Floss's new collar,
+and other trifles; then she asked me, bending over her little dog,--
+
+"Is Captain Staurmgaurn's news true, that your friend has--has been
+quarrelling with a young Englishman?"
+
+"Yes," I answered. "I wonder Staurmgaurn told you; it is scarcely a
+topic to interest ladies. Telfer has given the young gentleman a
+well-merited lesson."
+
+"Have they fought?" she asked, breathlessly, laying her hand on my arm,
+and looking as white as a ghost.
+
+"Yes, they have," said I; "and he fought, Miss Tressillian, for one who
+gave him a very cold adieu last night."
+
+Her head drooped, she trembled perceptibly, and the color rushed back to
+her cheeks.
+
+"Is he safe?" she asked, in the lowest of whispers.
+
+"Quite," I answered, quickly, as De Tintiniac lounged up to us; and I
+left my words, like a prudent diplomatist, to bear fruit as best they
+might.
+
+I wondered if she cared for him, or if it was merely a girl's natural
+feeling for a man who had let himself be shot at, rather than hear a
+light word spoken of her. But they were both so deuced proud, Heaven's
+special intervention alone seemed likely to bring them together.
+
+The Major didn't come home from Pipesandbeersbad till between two and
+three that night, and he's told me since that being _un peu fou_ with
+his self-willed and vehement passion, never went to bed at all, but sat
+and walked about his room smoking, unable to sleep, in a frame of mind
+that, when sane, a few months before, he would have pronounced spoony
+and contemptible in the lowest degree. At eight he strode forth into the
+park, brushing off the dew with his impatient steps, glad of the fresh
+morning air upon his brow, which was as burning as our first headache
+from "that cursed punch of Jones's," the day after our "first wine,"
+which acute suffering any gentleman who ever tasted that delicious
+_mélange_ of rum and milk and lemons, will keenly recall among other
+passed-away passages of his green youth.
+
+Telfer strode on and on, over the molehills and through the ferns, down
+this slope and up that, under the oaks, and lindens, and fir-trees
+gleaming red beneath the October sun, with very little notion of where
+he was going or what he was doing, a great stag-hound of Marc's
+following at his heels. The path he took, without thinking, led him to
+the top of a rock overhanging the Beersbad, where that historic stream
+was but a few yards in width; and here Telfer, lying down with his head
+against a plane-tree, struck a fusee and lighted a cigar--for a weed's a
+pleasant companion in any stage of existence: if we're happy we smoke in
+the fulness of our hearts, and build airy castles on each fragrant
+cloud; and if we're unhappy, we smoke to console ourselves, and draw in
+with each whiff philosophy and peace. So the Major smoked and thought,
+till a bark from the staghound made him look up. On the top of the
+cliffs on the other side of the stream, looking down into the valleys
+below, with her head turned away from him, stood Violet Tressillian; and
+at the sight of that graceful figure, with its indescribable high-bred
+air, I don't doubt the Major's once unimpressive heart beat faster than
+it had ever done in a charge or a skirmish. She was full twenty feet
+above him, and the rocks on which she stood sloped precipitately down to
+a ledge exactly opposite that on which he lay smoking--a ledge in
+reality but a few inches wide, but to which the treacherous boughs and
+ferns waving over it gave a semblance of a firm broad footing--a
+semblance which (like a good many other things one meets with) it
+utterly failed to carry out when you came to try it.
+
+Violet, not seeing Telfer lying _perdu_ among the grass at the foot of
+his plane-tree, walked along to the edge of the cliff, her eyes on the
+ground, so deep in thought that she never noticed the river beneath, but
+began to descend the slope, little Floss coming with exceeding
+trepidation after her. Telfer sprang up to warn her. "Violet! Violet! go
+back! go back! Oh! my God, do you not hear?"
+
+His passionate tones startled her. Never dreaming he was there, she
+looked hurriedly up; her foot slipped; unable to stay her descent, she
+came down the steep cliff with an impetus which, to a certainty, would
+send her over the narrow ledge into the river below--a fall of full
+thirty feet. To see her perish thus before his eyes--die thus while he
+stood calmly by! A whole age of torture was crowded into the misery of
+that one brief moment. There was but one way to save her. He sprang
+across the gulf that parted them, while the river in its straitened bed
+hissed and foamed beneath him, and, standing on the narrow ledge, where
+there seemed scarce footing for a dog, he caught her as she fell in his
+iron grasp, as little swayed by the shock as the rock on which he stood.
+Holding her tight to him with one arm, he swung himself down by the
+other to a less dangerous position, on a flat plateau of cliff, and
+leaning against one of the linden-trees on its summit, he bent over her;
+his eyes dim, and his pulses beating with the emotions he had controlled
+while he wanted cool thought and firm nerve to save her, but over which
+he had no more power now. He pressed her to his heart, forgetting pride,
+and doubt, and fear; and Violet, by way of answer, only burst into a
+passion of tears. Who would have recognized the proud, brilliant
+Tressillian, in the pale, trembling woman who sobbed on his breast with
+the _abandon_ of a child, and who, at his passionate kisses, only
+blushed like a wild rose?
+
+Telfer evidently thought the transformation complete, for he forgot all
+his reserve resolutions and hauteur, and poured out the tenderest love
+for a girl who, three months before, he had wished at the devil! And the
+Tressillian was conquered at last; she was pitiless no longer, and,
+having vanquished him, was, woman-like, ready to be a slave to her
+captive; and her eyes were never more dangerous than now, when, shy and
+softened, they looked up through their tears into Telfer's.
+
+What old De Tintiniac said of her was true, that all her beauty wanted
+to make it perfect was for her to be in love!
+
+So at least I thought, when, several hours afterwards, I met them coming
+across the park, and I knew by the gleam of the Major's eyes that he
+had lost Calceolaria and won Violet.
+
+"How strange it is," laughed Telfer that evening, when they were alone
+in the conservatory, "that you and I, who so hated each other, should
+now be so dear to one another. Oh, Violet! how ashamed I have been since
+of my unjustifiable prejudices, my abominable discourtesy----"
+
+"You _were_ dreadfully rude," said the Tressillian, smiling; "and judged
+me very cruelly by all the false reports that women chose to gossip of
+me. But you are wrong. I never hated you. Your father had spoken of you
+as so generous, so noble, so chivalrous a soldier, so kind a son, that I
+was prepared to admire you immensely, and when you looked so sternly on
+me at our first introduction, and I overheard your bitter words about me
+at the station, I really was never more vexed and disappointed in my
+life. And then a demon entered into me, and I thought--forgive me,
+Hamilton--that I would try to make you repent your hasty judgment and
+recant your prejudices. But I could not always fight you with the
+coolness I wished; your indifference began to pique me more and more.
+Wounds from you ranked as they did from no one else, and something
+besides pride made me feel your neglect so keenly. I had meant--yes, I
+must tell you all," and the Tressillian, in her soft repentance, looked,
+Telfer thought, more bewitching than in her most brilliant moments--"I
+had wished," she went on in a whisper, with her color bright, "to make
+you regret your injustice, to conquer your stubborn pride, and to
+revenge myself on you for all the wrong you had done me in thoughts and
+words. But, you see, I wasn't so strong as I fancied; I thought I could
+fence with the buttons on, but I was mistaken, and--and--when I heard
+that you had fought for me, I knew then that----" And Violet stopped
+with a smile and a sigh; the sigh for the past, I suppose, and the smile
+for the present.
+
+"Well, _nous sommes quittes_, dearest," smiled Telfer. "Thank Heaven! we
+no longer need reproach each other. Too many elevate the one they love
+into an ideal of such superhuman excellence, that at the first shadow of
+mortality they see their poor idol is shivered from its pedestal. But we
+have seen the worst side of each other's character, Violet, and
+henceforth love shall cover all faults, and subdue all pride between
+us."
+
+Telfer kept his word. They had had their last quarrel, and buried their
+last suspicion before their marriage, and were not, like the generality,
+doves first and tigers after. The governor, of course, was charmed that
+a match on which he had secretly set his heart had brought itself about
+so neatly without his interference. He had begun to despair of his son's
+ever giving Torwood a mistress, and the diamonds he gave Violet, in the
+excess of his pleasure, brought her no end of female enemies, for they
+were some of the finest water in the kingdom. Seldom, indeed, has
+slander been productive of such good fruits, for rarely, _very_ rarely,
+does that Upas-tree put forth any but Dead Sea apples.
+
+Violet Tressillian _was_ Violet Telfer before the Christmas recess, but
+I considered the bet drawn. So Telfer and I exchanged the roan filly and
+the colt, and Calceolaria in the Torwood stables, and Jockey Club in my
+stalls, stand witnesses to this day of OUR WAGER, AND HOW THE MAJOR LOST
+AND WON.
+
+
+
+
+OUR COUNTRY QUARTERS.
+
+
+
+
+OUR COUNTRY QUARTERS.
+
+
+I remember well the day that we (that is the 110th Lancers) were ordered
+down to Layton Rise. Savage enough we all were to quit P---- for that
+detestable country place. Many and miserable were the tales we raked up
+of the _ennui_ we had experienced at other provincial quarters; sadly we
+dressed for Lady Dashwood's ball, the last _soirée_ before our
+departure. And then the bills and the _billets-doux_ that rained down
+upon our devoted heads!
+
+However, by some miracle we escaped them all; and on a bright April
+morning, 184-, we were _en route_ for this Layton Rise, this _terra
+incognita_, as grumpy and as seedy as ever any poor demons were. But
+there was no help for it; so leaving, we flattered ourselves, a great
+many hearts the heavier for this order from the Horse Guards, we, as I
+said, set out for Layton Rise.
+
+The only bit of good news that provoking morning had brought was that my
+particular chum, Drummond Fane, a captain of ours, who had been cutting
+about on leave from Constantinople to Kamtchatka for the last six
+months, would join us at Layton. Fane was really a good fellow, a
+perfect gentleman (_ça va sans dire_, as he was one of _ours_),
+intensely plucky, knew, I believe, every language under the sun, and, as
+he had been tumbling about in the world ever since he went to Eton at
+eight years old, had done everything, seen everything, and could talk on
+every possible subject. He was a great favorite with ladies: I always
+wonder they did not quite spoil him. I have seen a young lady actually
+neglect a most eligible heir to a dukedom, that her mamma had been at
+great pains to procure for her, if this "fascinating younger son" were
+by. For Fane _was_ the younger son of the Earl of Avanley, and would, of
+course, every one said, one day retrieve his fortunes by marriage with
+some heiress in want of rank.
+
+He has been my great friend ever since I, a small youth, spoiled by
+having come into my property while in the nursery, became his fag at
+Eton: and when I bought my commission in the 110th, of which he was a
+captain, our intimacy increased.
+
+But _revenons à nos moutons_. On the road we naturally talked of Layton,
+wondering if there was any one fit to visit, anybody that gave good
+dinners, if there was a pack of hounds, a billiard-room, or any pretty
+girls. Suddenly the Honorable Ennuyé L'Estrange threw a little light on
+the matter, by recollecting, "now he thought of it, he believed that was
+where an uncle of his lived; his name was Aspi--Aspinall--no! Aspeden."
+"Had he any cousins?" was the inquiry. He "y'ally could not remember!"
+So we were left to conjure up imaginary Miss Aspedens, more handsome
+than their honorable cousin, who might relieve for us the monotony of
+country quarters. The sun was very bright as we entered Layton Rise; the
+clattering and clashing that we made soon brought out the inhabitants,
+and, lying in the light of a spring day, it did not seem such a very
+miserable little town after all. Our mess was established at the one
+good inn of the one good street of the place, and I and two other young
+subs fixed our residence at a grocer's, where a card of "Lodgings to let
+furnished" was embordered in vine-leaves and roses.
+
+As I was leaning out of the window smoking my last cigar before mess,
+with Sydney and Mounteagle stretched in equally elegant attitudes on
+equally hard sofas, I heard our grocer, a sleek little Methodist,
+addressing some party in the street with--"I fear me I have done evil in
+admitting these young servants of Satan into mine habitation!" "Well,
+Nathan," replied a Quaker, "thou didst it for the best, and verily these
+officers seem quiet and gentlemanly youths." "Gentlemanlike," I should
+say we were, _rather_--but "quiet!"--how we shouted over the innocent
+"Friend's" mistake. Here the voices again resumed. "Doubtless, when the
+Aspedens return, there will be dances and devices of the Evil One, and
+Quelps will make a good time of it; however, the custom of ungodly men I
+would not take were it offered!" So these Aspedens were out--confound
+it! But the clock struck six; so, flinging the remains of my cigar on
+the Quaker's broad-brimmed hat, adorned with which ornament he walked
+unconsciously away, we strolled down to the mess-room.
+
+A few hours later some of them met in my room, and having sent out for
+some cards, which the grocer kindly wrapped in a tract against gambling,
+we had just sat down to loo, when the door was thrown open, and Captain
+Fane announced. A welcome addition!
+
+"Fane, by all that's glorious!"--"Well, young one, how are you?" were
+the only salutations that passed between two men who were as true
+friends as any in England. Fane was soon seated among us, and telling us
+many a joke and tale. "And so," said he, "we're sent down to ruralize?
+(Mounteagle, you are 'loo'd.') Any one you know here?"
+
+"Not a creature! I am awfully afraid we shall be found dead of _ennui_
+one fine morning. I'll thank you for a little more punch, Fitzspur,"
+said Sydney. "I suppose, as usual, Fane," he continued, "you left at the
+very least twelve dozen German princesses, Italian marchesas, and French
+countesses dying for you?"
+
+"My dear fellow," replied Fane, "you are considerably under the mark
+(I'll take 'miss,' Paget!); but really, if women _will_ fall in love
+with you, how _can_ you help it? And if you _will_ flirt with them, how
+can they help it?"
+
+"I see, Fane, _your_ heart is as strong as ever," I added, laughing.
+
+"Of course," answered the gallant captain; "disinterested love is
+reserved for men who are too rich or too poor to mind its attendant
+evils. (The first, I must say, very rarely profit by the privilege!) No!
+I steel myself against all bright eyes and dancing curls not backed by a
+good dowry. Heiresses, though, somehow, are always plain; I never could
+do my duty and propose to one, though, of course, whenever I _do_
+surrender my liberty, which I have not the smallest intention of at
+present, it will be to somebody with at least fifty thousand a year.
+Hearts trumps, Mount?"
+
+"Yes--hurrah! Paget's loo'd at last.--Here, my dear, let us have lots
+more punch!" said Mounteagle, addressing the female domestic, who was
+standing open-mouthed at the glittering pool of half-sovereigns.
+
+I will spare the gentle reader--if I _may_ flatter myself that I
+entertain a _few_ such--a recital of the conversation which followed,
+and which was kept up until the very, very "small hours;" also I will
+leave it to her imagination to picture how we spent the next few days,
+how we found out a few families worth visiting, how we inspired the
+Layton youths with a vehement passion for smoking, billiards, and the
+cavalry branch of the service, and how we and our gay uniforms and our
+prancing horses were the admiration of all the young damsels in the
+place.
+
+One morning after parade, Fane and I, having nothing better to do,
+lighted our cigars and strolled down one of those shady lanes which
+almost reconcile one to the country--_out_ of the London season. Seeing
+the gate of a park standing invitingly open, we walked in and threw
+ourselves down under the trees. "Now we are in for it," said Fane, "if
+we are trespassing, and any adventurous-minded gamekeeper appears. Whose
+park is this?"
+
+"Mr. Aspeden's, Ennuyé told me. It's rather a nice place," I replied.
+
+"And that castle, of which mine eyes behold the turrets afar off?" he
+asked.
+
+"Lord Linton's, I believe; the father of Jack Vernon, of the Rifles, you
+know," I answered.
+
+"Indeed! I never saw the old gentleman, but I remember his daughter
+Beatrice,--we had rather a desperate flirtation at Baden-Baden. She's a
+showy-looking girl," said the captain, stretching himself on the grass.
+
+"Why did you not allow her the sublime felicity of becoming Lady
+Beatrice Fane?" I asked, laughing.
+
+"My dear fellow, she had not a _sou_! That old marquis is as poor as a
+church-mouse. You forget that I am only a younger son, with not much
+besides my pay, and cannot afford to marry anywhere I like. I am not in
+your happy position, able to espouse any pretty face I may chance to
+take a fancy to. It would be utter madness in me. Do you think _I_ was
+made for a little house, one maid-servant, dinner at noon, and six small
+children? _Very_ much obliged to you, but love in a cottage is not _my_
+style, Fred; besides _j'aime à vivre garçon_!" added Fane.
+
+"_Et moi aussi!_" said I. "Really the girls one meets seem all tarlatan
+and coquetry. I have never seen one worth committing matrimony for."
+
+"Hear him!" cried Fane. "Here is the happy owner of Wilmot Park, at the
+advanced age of twenty, despairing of ever finding anything more worthy
+of his affection than his moustaches! Oh, what will the boys come to
+next? But, eureka! here comes a pretty girl if you like. Who on earth is
+she?" he exclaimed, raising his eye-glass to a party advancing up the
+avenue who really seemed worthy the attention.
+
+Pulling at the bridle of a donkey, "what wouldn't go," with all her
+might, was indeed a pretty girl. Her hat had fallen off and showed a
+quantity of bright hair and a lovely face, with the largest and darkest
+of eyes, and a mouth now wreathing with smiles. Unconscious of our
+vicinity, on she came, laughing, and beseeching a little boy, seated on
+the aforesaid donkey, and thumping thereupon with, a large stick, "not
+to be so cruel and hurt poor Dapple." At this juncture the restive steed
+gave a vigorous stride, and toppling its rider on the grass, trotted off
+with a self-satisfied air; but Fane, intending to make the rebellious
+charger a means of introduction, caught his bridle and led him back to
+his discomfited master. The young lady, who was endeavoring to pacify
+the child, looked prettier than ever as she smiled and thanked him. But
+the gallant captain was not going to let the matter drop _here_, so,
+turning to the youthful rider, he asked him to let him put him on "the
+naughty donkey again." Master Tommy acquiesced, and, armed with his
+terrible stick, allowed himself to be mounted. Certainly Fane was a most
+unnecessary length of time settling that child, but then he was talking
+to the young lady, whom he begged to allow him to lead the donkey home.
+
+"Oh! no, she was quite used to Dapple; she could manage him very well,
+and they were going farther." So poor Fane had nothing for it but to
+raise his hat and gaze at her through his eye-glass until some trees hid
+her from sight.
+
+"'Pon my word, that's a pretty girl!" said he, at length. "I wonder who
+she can be! However, I shall soon find out. Have another weed, Fred?"
+
+There was to be a ball that night at the Assembly Rooms, which we were
+assured only the "_best_ families" would attend for Layton was a very
+exclusive little town in its way. Some of us who were going were
+standing about the mess-room, recalling the many good balls and pretty
+girls of our late quarters, when Fane, who had declined to go, as he
+said he had a horror of "bad dancing, bad perfumes, bad ventilation, and
+bad champagne, and really could not stand the concentration of all of
+them, which he foresaw that night," to our surprise declared his
+intention of accompanying us.
+
+"I suppose, Fane, you hope to see your heroine of the donkey again?"
+asked Sydney.
+
+"Precisely," was Fane's reply; "or if not, to find out who she is. But
+here comes Ennuyé, got up no end to fascinate the belles of Layton!"
+
+"The Aspedens are home; I saw 'em to-day," were the words of the
+honorable cornet, as he lounged into the room. "My uncle seems rather a
+brick, and hopes to make the acquaintance of all of you. He will mess
+with us to-morrow."
+
+"Have you any _belles cousines_?"--"Are they going to-night?" we
+inquired.
+
+"Yaas, I saw one; she's rather pretty," said L'Estrange.
+
+"Dark eyes--golden hair--about eighteen?" demanded Fane, eagerly.
+
+"Not a bit of it," replied the cornet, curling his moustache, and
+contemplating himself in the glass with very great satisfaction; "hair's
+as dark as mine, and eyes--y'ally I forget. But, let's have loo or
+whist, or something; we need not go for ages!" So down we sat, and soon
+nothing was heard but "Two by honors and the trick!" "Game and game!"
+&c., until about twelve, when we rose and adjourned to the ball-room.
+
+No sooner had we entered the room than Fane exclaimed, "There's my
+houri, by all that's glorious! and looking lovelier than ever. By Jove!
+that girl's too good for a country ball-room!" And there, in truth,
+waltzing like a sylph, was, as Sydney called her, the "heroine of the
+donkey." The dance over, we saw her join a party at the top of the room,
+consisting of a handsome but _passée_ woman, a lovely Hebe-like girl
+with dancing eyes, and a number of gentlemen, with whom they seemed to
+be keeping up an animated conversation.
+
+"Ennuyé is with them--he will introduce me," said Fane, as he swept up
+the room.
+
+I watched him bow, and, after talking a few minutes, lead off his
+"houri" for a _valse_; and disengaging myself from a Cambridge friend
+whom I had met with, I professed my intention of following his example.
+
+"What? Who did you say? That girl at the top there? Why, man, that's my
+cousin Mary, and the other lady is my most revered aunt, Mrs. Aspeden.
+Did you not know I and Ennuyé were related? Y'ally I forget how,
+exactly," he continued, mimicking the cornet. "But do you want to be
+introduced to her? Come along then."
+
+So, following my friend, who was a Trinity-man, of the name of
+Cleaveland, I soon made acquaintance with Mrs. Aspeden and her daughter
+Mary.
+
+"_Who_ is he?" I heard Mrs. Aspeden ask, in a low tone, of Tom
+Cleaveland, as I led off Mary to the _valse_.
+
+"A very good fellow," was the good-natured Cantab's reply, "with lots of
+tin and a glorious place. The shooting at Wilmot is really----"
+
+"_Bien!_" said his aunt, as she took Lord Linton's arm to the
+refreshment-room, satisfied, I suppose, on the strength of my "lots of
+tin," that I was a safe companion for her child.
+
+I found Mary Aspeden a most agreeable partner for a _dance_; she was
+lively, agreeable, and a coquette, I felt sure (women with those dancing
+eyes always are), and I thought I could not do better than amuse myself
+by getting up a flirtation with her. What an intensely good opinion I
+had of myself then! So I condescended to dance, though it was not
+Almack's, and actually permitted myself to be amused. Strolling through
+the rooms with Mary Aspeden on my arm, we entered one in which was an
+alcove fitted up with a _vis-à-vis_ sofa (whoever planned that Layton
+ball-room had a sympathy in the bottom of his heart for _tête-à-tête_),
+and here Fane was seated, talking to his "houri" with the soft voice and
+winning smiles which had gained the heart, or at least what portion of
+that member they possessed, of so many London belles, and which would do
+their work _here_ most assuredly.
+
+"There is my cousin Florence--ah! she does not observe us. Who is the
+gentleman with her?" said Miss Aspeden.
+
+"My friend, Captain Fane," I replied. "You have heard of their rencontre
+this morning?"
+
+"Indeed! is he Tommy's champion, of whom he has done nothing but talk
+all day, and of whom I could not make Florence say one word?" asked
+Mary. "You must know our donkey is the most determined and resolute of
+animals: if she 'will, she will,' you may depend upon it!" she
+continued.
+
+"Do you honor those most untrue lines upon ladies by a quotation?" I
+asked.
+
+"I do not think they _are_ so very untrue," laughed Mary, "except in
+confining obstinacy to us poor women and exempting the 'lords of the
+creation.' The Scotch adage knows better. 'A wilful _man_----' You know
+the rest."
+
+"Quite well," I replied; "but another poet's lines on _you_ are far more
+true. 'Ye are stars of the----'" I commenced.
+
+"Mary, my love, let me introduce you to Lord Craigarven," said Mrs.
+Aspeden, coming up with Lord Linton's heir-apparent.
+
+At the same time I was introduced to Mr. Aspeden, a hearty Englishman,
+loving his horses, his dogs, and his daughter; and as much the inferior
+of his aristocratic-looking wife in _intellect_ as he was her superior
+in _heart_. When we parted that night he gave Fane and me a most
+hospitable general invitation, and, what was more, an especial one for
+the next night. As we walked home "i' the grey o' the morning," I asked
+Fane who his "houri" was.
+
+"A niece of Mr. Aspeden's, and cousin to your friend Cleaveland," was
+the reply. "Those Aspedens really seem to be uncle and aunt to every
+one. She is staying there now."
+
+"So is Tom Cleaveland," said I. "But, pray, are your expectations quite
+realized? Is she as charming as she looks, this Miss Florence----"
+
+"Aspeden?" added Fane. "Yes, quite. But here are my quarters; so good
+night, old fellow."
+
+We had soon established ourselves as _amis de la maison_ at Woodlands,
+the Aspedens' place, and found him, as his nephew had stated, "rather a
+brick," and her daughter and niece something more. All of us, especially
+Fane and I, spent the best part of our time there, lounging away the
+days between the shady lanes, the little lake, and the music or
+billiard-rooms. Fane seemed entirely to appropriate Florence, and to
+fascinate her as he had fascinated so many others. I really felt angry
+with him; for, as Tom Cleaveland had candidly told me that poor Florie
+had not a rap--her father had run through all his property and left her
+an orphan, and a very poor one too--of course Fane could not marry her,
+but would, I feared, "ride away" some day, like the "gay dragoon,"
+heartwhole _himself_--but would _she_ come out as scatheless? Poor
+Mounteagle, too, was getting quite spooney about Florence, and, owing to
+Fane, she paid him no more heed than if he had been an old dried-up
+Indianized major. _He_, poor fellow! followed her about everywhere,
+asked her to dance in quite an insane manner, and made the most
+horrible revokes in whist and mistakes in pool that can be imagined.
+
+"By George! she is pretty, and no mistake!" said Sydney, as Florence
+rode past us one day as we were sauntering down Layton, looking
+charmingly _en amazone_.
+
+"Pretty! I should rather think so. She is more beautiful than any other
+woman upon earth!" cried Mounteagle.
+
+"Y'ally! well, I can't see _that_," replied Ennuyé. "She has tolerably
+good eyes, but she is too _petite_ to please me."
+
+"Ah! the adjutant's girls have rendered L'Estrange _difficile_. He
+cannot expect to meet _their_ equals in a hurry!" said Fane, in a very
+audible aside.
+
+Poor Ennuyé was silenced--nay, he even blushed. The adjutant's girls
+recalled an episode in which the gallant cornet had shone in a rather
+verdant light. Fane had effectually quieted him.
+
+"I wonder if Florence Aspeden will marry Mount?" I remarked to Fane,
+when the others had left us. "She does not seem to pay him much heed
+_yet_; but still----"
+
+"The devil, no!" cried Fane, in an unusually energetic manner. "I would
+stake my life she would not have such a muff as that, if he owned half
+the titles in the peerage!"
+
+"You seem rather excited about the matter," I observed. "It would not be
+such a bad match for her, for you know she has no tin; but I am sure,
+with your opinion on love-matches, you would not counsel Mount to such a
+step."
+
+"Of course not!" replied Fane, in his ordinary cool tones. "A man has no
+right to marry for love, except he is one of those fortunate individuals
+who own half a county, or some country doctor or parson of whom the
+world takes no notice. There may be a few exceptions. But yet," he
+continued, with the air of a person trying to convince himself against
+his will, "did you ever see a love match turn out happily? It is all
+very well for the first week, but the roses won't bloom in winter, and
+then the cottage walls look ugly. Then a fellow cannot live as he did
+_en garçon_, and all his friends drop him, and altogether it is an act
+no wise man would perpetrate. But I shall forget to give you a message I
+was intrusted with. They are going to get up some theatricals at
+Woodlands. I have promised to take _Sir Thomas Clifford_ (the piece is
+the 'Hunchback'). and they want you to play _Modus_ to Mary Aspeden's
+_Helen_. Do, old fellow. Acting is very good fun with a pretty girl----"
+
+"Like the _Julia_ you will have, I suppose," I said. "Very well, I will
+be amiable and take it. Mary will make a first-rate _Helen_. Come and
+have a game of billiards, will you?"
+
+"Can't," replied the gallant captain. "I promised to go in half an hour
+with--with the Aspedens to see some waterfall or ruin, or something, and
+the time is up. So, _au revoir, monsieur_."
+
+Many of ours were pressed into the service for the coming theatricals,
+and right willingly did we rehearse a most unnecessary number of times.
+Many merry hours did we spend at Woodlands, and I sentimentalized away
+desperately to Mary Aspeden; but, somehow or other, always had an
+uncomfortable suspicion that she was laughing at me. She never seemed
+the least impressed by all my gallantries and pretty speeches, which was
+peculiarly mortifying to a moustached cornet of twenty, who thought
+himself irresistible. I began, too, to get terribly jealous of Tom
+Cleaveland, who, by right of his cousinship, arrived at a degree of
+intimacy _I_ could not attain.
+
+One morning Fane and I (who were going to dine there that evening), the
+Miss Aspedens, and, of course, that Tom Cleaveland, were sitting in the
+drawing-room at Woodlands. Fane and Florence were going it at some
+opera airs (what passionate emphasis that wicked fellow gave the loving
+Italian words as his rich voice rolled them out to her accompaniment!),
+the detestable Trinity-man had been discoursing away to Mary on
+boat-racing, outriggers, bumping, and Heaven knows what, and I was just
+taking the shine out of him with the description of a shipwreck I had
+had in the Mediterranean, when Mary, who sat working at her _broderie_,
+and provokingly giving just as sweet smiles to the one as to the other,
+interrupted me with--
+
+"Goodness, Florie, there is Mr. Mills coming up the avenue. He is my
+cousin's admirer and admiration!" she added, mischievously, as the door
+opened, and a little man about forty entered.
+
+There was all over him the essence of the country. You saw at once he
+had never passed a season in London. His very boots proclaimed he had
+never been presented; and we felt almost convulsed with laughter as he
+shook hands with us all round, and attempted a most _empressé_ manner
+with Florence.
+
+"Beautiful weather we have now," remarked Mrs. Aspeden.
+
+"She is indeed!" answered the little squire, with a gaze of admiration
+at Florence.
+
+Fane, who was leaning against the mantelpiece, looking most superbly
+haughty and unapproachable, shot an annihilating glance at the small
+man, which would have quite extinguished him had he seen it.
+
+"The country is very pretty in June," said Mrs. Aspeden, hazarding
+another original remark.
+
+"Lovely--too lovely!" echoed Mr. Mills, with a profound sigh, at which
+the country must have felt exceedingly flattered.
+
+"Glorious creature your new mare is, Mr. Mills," cried the Cantab;
+"splendid style she took the fences in yesterday."
+
+"Wilkins may well say she is the _belle_ of the county!" continued Mr.
+Mills, dreamily. "I beg your pardon, what did you say? my mother took
+the fences well? No, she never hunts."
+
+"Pray tell Mrs. Mills I am very much obliged for the beautiful azalias
+she sent me," interposed Florence, with her sweet smile.
+
+"I--I am sure anything we have _you_ are welcome to. I--I--allow me----"
+And the poor squire, stooping for Florence's thimble, upset a tiny
+table, on which stood a vase with the azalias in question, on the back
+of a little bull of a spaniel, who yelled, and barked, and flew at the
+squire's legs, who, for his part, became speechless from fright,
+reddened all over, and at last, stammering out that he wanted to see Mr.
+Aspeden, and would go to him in the grounds, rushed from the room.
+
+We all burst out laughing at this climax of the poor little man's
+misery.
+
+"I will not have you laugh at him so," said Florence, at length. "I know
+him to be truly good and charitable, for all his peculiarities of
+manner."
+
+"It is but right Miss Aspeden should defend a _soupirant_ so charming in
+every way," said the captain, his moustache curling contemptuously.
+
+"Oh! Florie's made an out-and-out conquest, and no mistake!" cried Tom
+Cleaveland.
+
+Florence did not heed her cousin, but looked up in Fane's face, utterly
+astonished at his sarcastic tones. No man could have withstood that look
+of those large, beautiful eyes, and Fane bent down and asked her to sing
+"_Roberto, oh tu che adoro!_"
+
+"Yes, that will just do. Robert is his name; pity he is not here to hear
+it. 'Robert Mills, _oh tu che adoro!_'" sang the inexorable Cantab, as
+he walked across the room and asked Mary to have a game of billiards.
+For once I had the pleasure of forestalling him, but he, nevertheless,
+came and marked for us in a very amiable manner. "How well you play,
+Mary," said he. "Really, stunningly for a woman. Do you know Beauchamp
+of Kings won three whole pools the other day without losing a life!"
+
+"Indeed!" said Mary. "What good fun it is to see Mr. Mills play; he
+holds his queue as if he were afraid of it."
+
+"I say, Mary," said Cleaveland, "you don't think that Florence will
+marry that contemptible little wretch, do you? Hang it, I should be
+savage if she had not better taste. There's a cannon."
+
+"She has better taste," replied Mary, in a low tone, as Mrs. Aspeden and
+Fane entered the room.
+
+I never could like Mrs. Aspeden--peace be with her now, poor woman--but
+there was such a want of delicacy and tact, and such open manoeuvring
+in all she did, which surprised me, clever woman as she was.
+
+No sooner had she approached the billiard-table that day, than she
+began:
+
+"Florence was called away from her singing to a conference with her
+uncle, and--with somebody else, I fancy." (Fane darted a keen look of
+inquiry at her.) "Poor dear girl! being left so young an orphan, I have
+always felt such a great interest and affection for her, and I shall
+rejoice to see her happily settled as--as I trust there is a prospect of
+now," she continued.
+
+Could she mean Florence Aspeden had engaged herself to Mr. Mills? A
+roguish smile on Mary's face reassured me, but Fane walked hastily to
+the window, and stood with folded arms looking out upon the sunny
+landscape.
+
+Inveterate flirt that he was, his pride was hurt at the idea of a rival,
+and _such_ a rival, winning in a game in which _he_ deigned to have
+_ever_ so small a stake, _ever_ such a passing interest!
+
+The dinner passed off heavily--_very_ heavily--for gay Woodlands, for
+the gallant captain and Florence were both of them _distraits_ and
+_gênés_, and he hardly spoke to the poor girl. Oh, wicked Fane!
+
+We sat but little time after the ladies had retired, and Tom and Mr.
+Aspeden going after some horse or other, Fane and I ascended to the
+drawing-room alone. It was unoccupied, and we sat down to await them, I
+amusing myself with teaching Master Tommy, the young heir of Woodlands,
+some comic songs, wherewith to astonish his nurse pretty considerably,
+and Fane leaning back in an arm-chair, with Florence's dog upon his knee
+in _that_, for _him_, most extraordinary thing, a "brown study."
+
+Suddenly some voices were heard in the next room.
+
+"Florence, it is your duty, recollect."
+
+"Aunt, I can recollect nothing, save that it would be far, far worse
+than death to me to marry Mr. Mills. I hold it dread sin to marry a man
+for whom one can have nothing but contempt. Once for all, I cannot,--I
+will not."
+
+Here the voice was broken with sobs. Fane had raised his head eagerly at
+the commencement of the dialogue, but now, recollecting that we were
+listeners, rose, and closed the door. I did not say a word on the
+conversation we had just heard, for I felt out of patience with him for
+his heartless flirtation; so, taking up a book on Italy, I looked over
+the engravings for a little time, and then, Tommy having been conveyed
+to the nursery in a state of rebellion, I reminded Fane of a promise he
+had once made to accompany me to Rome the next winter, and asked him if
+he intended to fulfil it.
+
+"Really, my dear fellow, I cannot tell what I may possibly do next
+winter; I hate making plans for the future. We may none of us be alive
+then," said he, in an unusually dull strain for him: "I half fancy I may
+exchange into some regiment going on foreign service. But _l'homme
+propose_, you know. By the by, poor Castleton" (his elder brother) "is
+very ill at Brussels."
+
+"Yes. I was extremely sorry to hear it, in a letter I had from Vivian
+this morning," I replied. "He is at Brussels also, and mentions a
+_belle_ there, Lady Adeliza Fitzhowden, with whom, he says, the world is
+associating _your_ name. Is it true, Fane?"
+
+"_Les on dit font la gazette des fous!_" cried the captain, impatiently,
+stroking Florence's little King Charles. "I saw Lady Adeliza at Paris
+last January, but I would not marry her--no! not if there were no other
+woman upon earth! I thought, Fred, really you were too sensible to
+believe all the scandal raked up by that gossiping Vivian. I do hope you
+have not been propagating his most unfounded report?" asked my gallant
+friend, in quite an excited tone.
+
+At this moment the ladies entered. Florence with her dark eyes looking
+very sad under their long lashes, but they soon brightened when Fane
+seated himself by her side, and began talking in a lower tone, and with
+even more _tendresse_ than ever.
+
+I had the pleasure of quite eclipsing Tom Cleaveland, I thought, as I
+turned over the leaves of Mary's music, and looked unutterable things,
+which, however, I fear were all lost, as Mary _would_ look only at the
+notes of the piano, and I firmly believe never heard a word I said.
+
+How Florence blushed as Fane whispered his soft good night; she looked
+so happy, poor girl, and he, heartless demon, talked of going into
+foreign service! By the by, what put that into his head, I wonder?
+
+The night of our grand theatricals at length arrived, and we were all
+assembled in the library, converted for the time into a green-room.
+Mounteagle was repeating to himself, for the hundredth time, his part of
+_Lord Tinsel_; I, in my _Modus_ dress, which I had a disagreeable idea
+was not becoming, was endeavoring to make an impression on the
+not-to-be impressed Mary, and Florence was looking lovelier than ever in
+her rich old-fashioned dress, when Fane entered, and bending, offered
+her a bouquet of rare flowers. She blushed deeply as she took it. Oh!
+Fane, Fane, what will you have to answer for?
+
+We were waiting the summons for the first scene, when, to Mary's horror,
+I suddenly exclaimed that I could not play!
+
+"Good Heavens! why not?" was the general inquiry.
+
+"Why!" I said. "I never thought of it until now, but certainly _Modus_
+ought to appear without moustaches, and, hang it, I cannot cut mine
+off."
+
+"Take my life, but spare my moustaches!" cried Mary, in tragic tones.
+"Certainly though, Mr. Wilmot, you are right; _Modus_ ought not to be
+seen with the characteristic 'musk-toshes,' as nurse calls them; of an
+English officer. What is to be done?"
+
+"Please, sir, will you come? Major Vaughan says the group is agoing to
+be set for the first scene, and you are wanted, sir," was a flunkey's
+admonition to Fane, who went off accordingly, after advising me to add a
+dishevelled beard to my tenderly cared-for moustaches, which would seem
+as if _Modus_ had entirely neglected his toilette.
+
+There was a general rush for part books, a general cry for things that
+were not forthcoming, and a general despair on the parts of the youngest
+amateurs at forgetting their cues just when they were most wanted.
+
+Fane, when he came off the stage after the first scene, leant against a
+pillar to watch the pretty one between _Julia_ and _Helen_, so near that
+he must have been seen by the audience, and presented a most handsome
+and interesting spectacle, I dare say, for young ladies to gaze at.
+Fixing his eyes on Florence, whose rendering of the part was really
+perfect as she uttered these words, "Helen, I'm constancy!" he
+unconsciously muttered aloud, "I believe it!"
+
+"So do I!" I could not help saying, "and therefore more shame to whoever
+wins such a heart to throw it away. 'Beneath her feet, a duke--a duke
+might lay his coronet!'" I quoted.
+
+"Are you in love yourself, Fred?" laughed the captain; then, stroking
+his moustaches thoughtfully for some minutes, he said at last, as if
+with an effort, "You are right, young one, and yet----"
+
+If I was right, what need was there for him to throw such passion into
+his part--what need was there for him to say with such _empressement_
+those words:
+
+ A willing pupil kneels to thee,
+ And lays his title and his fortune at thy feet?
+
+If he intended to go into foreign service, why did he not go at once?
+Though I confess it seemed strange to me why Fane--the courted, the
+flattered, the admired Fane--should wish to leave England.
+
+Reader, mind, the gallant captain is a desperate flirt, and I do not
+believe he will go into foreign service any more than I shall, but I
+_am_ afraid he will win that poor girl's heart with far less thought
+than you buy your last "little darling French bonnet," and when he is
+tired of it will throw it away with quite as little heed. But I was not
+so much interested in his flirtation as to forget my own, still I was
+obliged to confess that Mary Aspeden did not pay me as much attention as
+I should have wished.
+
+I danced the first dance with her, after the play was over--(I forgot to
+tell you we were very much applauded)--and Tom Cleaveland engaging her
+for the next, I proposed a walk through the conservatories to a
+sentimental young lady who was my peculiar aversion, but to whom I
+became extremely _dévoué_, for I thought I would try and pique Mary if I
+could.
+
+The light strains of dance music floated in from the distance, and the
+air was laden with the scent of flowers, and many a _tête-à-tête_ and
+_partie carrée_ was arranged in that commodious conservatory.
+
+Half hidden by an orange-tree, Florence Aspeden was leaning back in a
+garden-chair, close to where we stood looking out upon the beautiful
+night. Her fair face was flushed, and she was nervously picking some of
+the blossoms to pieces; before her stood Mounteagle, speaking eagerly. I
+was moving away to avoid being a hearer of his love-speech, as I doubted
+not it was, but my companion, with many young-ladyish expressions of
+adoration of the "sublime moonlight," begged me to stay "one moment,
+that she might see the dear moon emerge like a swan from that dark,
+beautiful cloud!" and in the pauses of her ecstatics I heard poor
+Mount's voice in a tone of intense entreaty.
+
+At that moment Fane passed. He glanced at the group behind the
+orange-trees, and his face grew stern and cold, and his lips closed with
+that iron compression they always have when he is irritated. His eyes
+met Florences, and he bowed haughtily and stiffly as he moved on, and
+his upright figure, with its stately head, was seen in the room beyond,
+high above any of those around him. A heavy sigh came through the orange
+boughs, and her voice whispered, "I--I am very sorry, but----"
+
+"Oh! _do_ look at the moonbeams falling on that darling little piece of
+water, Mr. Wilmot!" exclaimed my decidedly _moonstruck_ companion.
+
+"Is there no hope?" cried poor Mount.
+
+"None!" And the low-whispered knell of hope came sighing over the
+flowers. I thought how little she guessed there was none for her. Poor
+Florence!
+
+"Oh, this night! I could gaze on it forever, though it is saddening in
+its sweetness, do not you think?" asked my romantic demoiselle. "Ah!
+what a pretty _valse_ they are playing!"
+
+"May I have the pleasure of dancing it with you?" I felt myself obliged
+to ask, although intensely victimized thereby, as I hate dancing, and
+wonder whatever idiot invented it.
+
+Miss Chesney, considering her devotion to the moon, consented very
+joyfully to leave it for the pleasures (?) of a _valse à deux temps_.
+
+As we moved away, I saw that Florence was alone, and apparently occupied
+with sad thoughts. She, I dare say, was grieving over Fane's cold bow,
+and poor Mount had rushed away somewhere with his great sorrow. Fane
+came into my room next morning while I was at breakfast, having been
+obliged to get up at the unconscionable hour of ten, to be in time for a
+review we were to have that day on Layton Common for the glorification
+of the country around.
+
+The gallant captain flung himself on my sofa, and, after puffing away at
+his cigar for some minutes, came out with, "Any commands for London? I
+am going to apply for leave, and I think I shall start by the express
+to-morrow."
+
+"What's in the wind now?" I asked. "Is Lord Avanley unwell?"
+
+"No; the governor's all right, thank you. I am tired of rural felicity,
+that is all," replied Fane. "I must stay for this review to-day, or the
+colonel would make no end of a row. He is a testy old boy. I rather
+think I shall set out, or exchange into the Heavies."
+
+"What in the world have you got into your head, Fane?" I asked, utterly
+astonished to see him diligently smoking an extinguished cigar. "I am
+sorry you are going to leave us. The 110th will miss you, old fellow;
+and what _will_ the Aspedens say to losing their _preux chevalier_? By
+the way, speaking of them, poor Mount received his _congé_ last night, I
+expect."
+
+"What! are you sure? What did you say?" demanded Fane, stooping to
+relight his cigar.
+
+I told him what I had overheard in the conservatory.
+
+"Oh! well--ah! indeed--poor fellow!" ejaculated the captain. "But
+there's the bugle-call! I must go and get into harness."
+
+And I followed his example, turning over in my mind, as I donned my
+uniform, what might possibly have induced Fane to leave Layton Rise so
+suddenly. Was it, at last, pity for Florence? And if it were, would not
+the pity come too late?
+
+Layton Rise looked very pretty and bright under the combined influence
+of beauty and valor (that is the correct style, is it not?). The
+Aspedens came early, and drew up their carriages close to the
+flag-staff. Fane's eye-glass soon spied them from our distant corner of
+the field, and, as we passed before the flagstaff, he bent low to his
+saddle with one of those fascinating smiles which have gone deep to so
+many unfortunate young ladies' hearts. Again I felt angry with him, as I
+rode along thinking of that girl, her whole future most likely clouded
+for ever, and he going away to-morrow to enjoy himself about in the
+world, quite reckless of the heart he had broken, and---- But in the
+midst of my sentimentalism I was startled by hearing the sharp voice of
+old Townsend, our colonel, who was a bit of a martinet, asking poor
+Ennuyé "what he lifted his hand for?"
+
+"There was a bee upon my nose, colonel."
+
+"Well, sir, and if there were a whole hive of bees upon your nose, what
+right have you to raise your hand on parade?" stormed the colonel.
+
+There was a universal titter, and poor Ennuyé was glad to hide his
+confusion in the "charge" which was sounded.
+
+On we dashed our horses at a stretching gallop, our spurs jingling, our
+plumes waving in the wind, and our lances gleaming in the sunlight.
+Hurrah! there is no charge in the world like the resistless English
+dragoons'! On we went, till suddenly there was a piercing cry, and one
+of the carriages, in which the ponies had been most negligently left,
+broke from the circle and tore headlong down the common, at the bottom
+of which was a lake. One young lady alone was in it. It was impossible
+for her to pull in the excited little grays, and, unless they _were_
+stopped, down they would all go into it. But as soon as it was
+perceived, Fane had rushed from the ranks, and, digging his spurs into
+his horse, galloped after the carriage. Breathless we watched him. We
+would not follow, for we knew that he would do it, if any man could, and
+the sound of many in pursuit would only further exasperate the ponies.
+Ha! he is nearing them now. Another moment and they will be down the
+sloping bank into the lake. The girl gives a wild cry; Fane is straining
+every nerve. Bravo! well done---he has saved her! I rushed up, and
+arrived to find Fane supporting a half-fainting young lady, in whose
+soft face, as it rested on his shoulder, I recognized Florence Aspeden.
+Her eyes unclosed as I drew near, and, blushing, she disengaged herself
+from his arms. Fane bent his head over her, and murmured, "Thank God, I
+have saved you!" But perhaps I did not hear distinctly.
+
+By this time all her friends had gathered round them, and Fane had
+consigned her to her cousin's care, and she was endeavoring to thank
+him, which her looks, and blushes, and smiles did most eloquently; Mr.
+Aspeden was shaking Fane by the hand, and what further might have
+happened I know not, if the colonel (very wrathful at such an unseemly
+interruption to his cherished manoeuvres) had not shouted out, "Fall
+in, gentlemen--fall in! Captain Fane, fall in with your troop, sir!" We
+did accordingly fall in, and the review proceeded; but my friend
+actually made some mistakes in his evolutions, and kept his eye-glass
+immovably fixed on the point in the circle, and behaved altogether in a
+_distrait_ manner--Fane, whom I used to accuse of having too much _sang
+froid_--whom nothing could possibly disturb--whom I never saw agitated
+before in the whole course of my acquaintance!
+
+What an inexplicable fellow he is!
+
+The review over, we joined the Aspedens, and many were the
+congratulations Florence had heaped upon her; but she looked
+_distraite_, too, until Fane came up, and leaning his hand on the
+carriage, bent down and talked to her. Their conversation went on in a
+low tone, and as I was busy laughing with Mary, I cannot report it, save
+that from the bright blushes on the one hand, and the soft whispered
+tones on the other, Fane was clearly at his old and favorite work of
+winning hearts.
+
+"You seem quite _occupé_ this morning, Mr. Wilmot," said Mary, in her
+winning tones. "I trust you have had no bad news--no order from the
+Horse Guards for the Lancers to leave off moustaches."
+
+"No, Miss Aspeden," said Sydney; "if such a calamity as that had
+occurred, you would not see Wilmot here, he would never survive the loss
+of his moustaches--they are his first and only love."
+
+"And a first affection is never forgotten," added that provoking Mary,
+in a most melancholy voice.
+
+"It would be a pity if it were, as it seems such a fertile source of
+amusement to you and Miss Aspeden," I said, angrily, to Sydney, too much
+of a boy then to take a joke.
+
+"Captain Fane has an invitation for you and Mr. Sydney," said Mary, I
+suppose by way of _amende_. "We are going on the river, to a picnic at
+the old castle;--you will come?"
+
+The tones were irresistible, so I smoothed down my indignation and my
+poor moustache, and replied that I would have that pleasure, as did
+Sydney.
+
+"_Bien!_ good-bye, then, for we must hasten home," said Mary, whipping
+her ponies. And off bowled the carriage with its fair occupants.
+
+"You won't be here for this picnic, old fellow," I remarked to Fane, as
+we rode off the ground.
+
+"Well! I don't know. I hardly think I shall go just yet. You see I had
+six months' leave when I was in Germany, before I came down here, and I
+hardly like to ask for another so soon, and----"
+
+"It is so easy to find a reason for what one _wishes_," I added,
+smiling.
+
+"Come and look at my new chestnut, will you?" said Fane, not deigning to
+reply to my insinuation. "I am going to run her against Stuckup of the
+Guards' bay colt!"
+
+That beautiful morning in June! How well I remember it, as we dropped
+down the sunlit river, under the shade of the branching trees, the
+gentle plash of the oars mingling with the high tones and ringing
+laughter of our merry party, on our way to the castle picnic.
+
+"How beautiful this is," I said to Mary Aspeden; "would that life could
+glide on calmly and peacefully as we do this morning!"
+
+"How romantic you are becoming!" laughed Mary. "What a pity that I feel
+much more in mood to fish than to sentimentalize!"
+
+"Ah!" I replied, "with the present companionship I could be content to
+float on forever."
+
+"Hush! I beg your pardon, but _do_ listen to that dear thrush,"
+interrupted Mary, not the least disturbed, or even interested, by my
+pretty speeches.
+
+I was old enough to know I was not the least in love with Mary Aspeden,
+but I was quite too much of a boy not to feel provoked I did not make
+more impression. I was a desperate puppy at that time, and she served
+me perfectly right. However, feeling very injured, I turned my attention
+to Fane, who sat talking of course to Florence, and left Mary to the
+attentions of her Cantab cousin.
+
+"Miss Aspeden does not agree with you, Fred," said Fane. "She says life
+was not intended to glide on like a peaceful river; she likes the waves
+and storms," he added, looking down at her with very visible admiration.
+
+"No, not for myself," replied Florence, with a sweet, sad smile. "I did
+not mean _that_. One storm will wreck a _woman's_ happiness; but were I
+a man I should glory in battling with the tempest-tossed waves of life.
+If there be no combat there can be no fame, and the fiercer, the more
+terrible it is, the more renown to be the victor in the struggle!"
+
+"You are right," answered Fane, with unusual earnestness. "That used to
+be _my_ dream once, and I think even now I have the stuff in me for it;
+but then," he continued, sinking his voice, "I must have an end, an aim,
+and, above all, some one who will sorrow in my sorrow, and glory in my
+glory; who will be----"
+
+"Quite ready for luncheon, I should think; hope you've enjoyed your
+boating!" cried Mr. Aspeden's hearty voice from the shore, where, having
+come by land, he now stood to welcome us, surrounded by a crowd of
+anxious mammas, wondering if the boating had achieved the desirable end
+of a proposal from Captain A----; hoping Mr. B----, who had nothing but
+his pay, had not been paying too much attention to Adelina; and that
+Honoria had given sufficient encouragement to Mr. C----, who, on the
+strength of 1000_l._ a year, and a coronet in prospect, was considered
+an eligible _parti_ (his being a consummate scamp and inveterate gambler
+is nothing); and that D---- has too much "consideration for his family"
+to have any "serious intentions" to Miss E----, whom he is assisting to
+land. However, whatever proposals have been accepted or rejected, here
+we all were ready for luncheon, which was laid out on the grass, and
+Fane will be obliged to finish his speech another time, for little now
+is heard but _bons mots_, laughter, and champagne corks. The captain is
+more brilliant than ever, and I make Mary laugh if I cannot make her
+sigh. Luncheon over, what was to be done? See the castle, of course, as
+we were in duty bound, since it was what we came to do; and the
+_tête-à-tête_ of the boats are resumed, as ladies and gentlemen ascended
+the grassy slopes on which the fine old ruins stood. I looked for Mary
+Aspeden, feeling sure that I should conquer her in time (though I did
+not _want_ to in the least!), but she had gone off somewhere, I dare say
+with Tom Cleaveland; so I offered my arm to that same sentimental Miss
+Chesney who had bored me into a _valse à deux temps_ the night of the
+theatricals, and I have no doubt her mamma contemplated her as Mrs.
+Wilmot, of Wilmot Park, with very great gratification and security.
+Becoming rather tired of the young lady's hackneyed style of
+conversation, which consisted, as usual, of large notes of exclamation
+about "the _sweet_ nightingales!" "the _dear_ ruins!" "the _darling_
+flowers!" &c. &c., I managed to exchange with another sub, and strolled
+off by myself.
+
+As I was leaning against an old wall in no very amiable frame of mind,
+consigning all young ladies to no very delightful place, and returning
+to my old conclusion that they were all tarlatan and coquetry, soft
+musical voices on the other side of the wall fell almost unconsciously
+on my ear.
+
+"Oh! Florence, I am so unhappy!"
+
+"Are you, darling? I wish I could help you. Is it about Cyril Graham?"
+
+"Yes!" with a tremendous sigh. "I am afraid papa, and I am sure mamma,
+will never consent. I know poor dear Cyril is not rich, but then he is
+so clever, he will soon make himself known. But if that tiresome Fred
+Wilmot should propose, I know they will want me to accept him." (There
+is one thing, I never, _never will_!) "I do snub him as much as ever I
+can, but he is such a puppy, I believe he thinks I am in love with
+him--as if Cyril, were not worth twenty such as he, for all he is the
+owner of Wilmot Park!"
+
+Very pleasant this was! What a fool I must have made of myself to Mary
+Aspeden, and how nice it was to hear one's self called "a puppy!"
+
+"Of course, dear," resumed Florence, "as you love Cyril, it is
+impossible for you to love any one ever again; but I do not think Mr.
+Wilmot a puppy. He is conceited, to be sure, but I do not believe he
+would be so much liked by--by those who are his friends, if he were not
+rather nice. Come, dear, cheer up. I am sure uncle Aspeden is too kind
+not to let you marry Cyril when he knows how much you love one another.
+_I_ will talk to him, Mary dear, and bring him round, see if I do not!
+But--but--will you think me _very_ selfish if I tell you"--(a long
+pause)--"he has asked me--I mean--he wishes--he told me--he says he does
+love me!"
+
+"Who, darling? Let me think--Lord Athum?--Mr. Grant?"
+
+"No, Mary--Drummond--that is, Captain Fane--he said----Oh, Mary, I am so
+happy!"
+
+At this juncture it occurred suddenly to me that I was playing the part
+of a listener. (But may not much be forgiven a man who has heard himself
+called "a puppy"?) So I moved away, leaving the fair Florence to her
+blushes and her happiness, unshared by any but her friend. Between my
+astonishment at Fane and my indignation at Mary, I was fairly
+bewildered. Fane actually had proposed! _He_, the Honorable Drummond
+Fane, who had always declaimed against matrimony--who had been
+proof-hardened against half the best matches in the country--that
+desperate flirt who we thought would never fall in love, to have tumbled
+in headlong like this!
+
+Well, there was some satisfaction, I would chaff him delightfully about
+it; and I was really glad, for if Florence had given her heart to Fane,
+she was not the sort of girl to forget, nor he the sort of man to be
+forgotten, in a hurry. But in what an awfully foolish light I must have
+appeared to Mary Aspeden! There was one thing, she would never know I
+had overheard her. I would get leave, and go off somewhere--I would
+marry the first pretty girl I met with--she should _not_ think I cared
+for _her_. No, I would go on flirting as if nothing had happened, and
+then announce, in a natural manner, that I was going into the Highlands,
+and then _she_ would be the one to feel small, as she had made so _very_
+sure of my proposal. And yet, if I went away, that was the thing to
+please her. _Hang_ it! I did not know _what_ to do! My vanity was most
+considerably touched, though my heart was not; but after cooling down a
+little, I saw how foolishly I should look if I behaved otherwise than
+quietly and naturally, and that after all _that_ would be the best way
+to make Mary reverse her judgment.
+
+So, when I met her again, which was not until we were going to return, I
+offered her my arm to the boat where Fane and his _belle fiancée_ were
+sitting, looking most absurdly happy; and the idea of my adamantine
+friend being actually caught seemed so ridiculous, that it almost
+restored me to my good humor, which, sooth to say, the appellation of
+"puppy" had somewhat disturbed.
+
+And so the moon rose and shed her silver light over the young lady who
+had sentimentalized upon her, and a romantic cornet produced a
+concertina, and sent forth dulcet strains into the evening air, and
+Florence and her captain talked away in whispers, and Mary Aspeden sat
+with tears in her eyes, thinking, I suppose, of "Cyril" and I mused on
+my "puppyism;" and thus, wrapped each in our own little sphere, we
+floated down the river to Woodlands, and, it being late, with many a
+soft good night, and many a gentle "_Au revoir_," we parted, and Mr.
+Aspeden's castle picnic was over!
+
+I did not see Fane the next day, except at parade, until I was dressing
+for mess, when he stalked into my room, and stretching himself on a
+sofa, said, after a pause,
+
+"Well, old boy, I've been and gone and done it."
+
+"Been and gone and done what?" I asked, for, by the laws of retaliation,
+I was bound to tease him a little.
+
+"Confound you, what an idiot you are!" was the complimentary rejoinder.
+"Why, my dear fellow, the truth is, that, like most of my unfortunate
+sex, I have at last turned into that most tortuous path called love, and
+surrendered myself to the machinations of beautiful woman. The long and
+the short of it is--I am engaged to be married!"
+
+"Good Heavens! Fane!" I exclaimed, "what next? _You_ married! Who on
+earth is she? I know of no heiress down here!"
+
+"She is no heiress," said the captain; "but she is what is much
+better--the sweetest, dearest, most lovable----"
+
+"Of _course_!" I said, "but no heiress! My dear Fane, you cannot mean
+what you say?"
+
+"I should be sorry if I did not," was the cool reply; "and you must be
+more of a fool, Fred, than I took you for, if you cannot see that
+Florence Aspeden is worth all the heiresses upon earth, and is the
+embodiment of all that is lovely and winning in woman----"
+
+"No doubt of it, _tout cela saute aux yeux_," I answered. "But reflect,
+Fane; it would be utter madness in _you_ to marry anything but an
+heiress. Love in a cottage is not _your_ style. _You_ were not made for
+a small house, one maid-servant, and dinner----"
+
+"Ah!" laughed Fane, "you are bringing my former nonsense against me.
+Some would say I was committing worse folly now, but believe me, Fred,
+the folly even of the heart is better than the calculating wisdom of the
+world. I do not hesitate to say that if Florence had fortune I should
+prefer it, for such a _vaurien_ as I was made to spend money; but as she
+has not, I love her too dearly to think about it, and my father, I have
+no doubt, will soon get me my majority, and we shall get on stunningly.
+So marry for _love_, Fred, if you take my advice."
+
+"A _rather_ different opinion to that which you inculcated so
+strenuously a month ago," I observed, smiling; "but let me congratulate
+you, old fellow, with all my heart. 'Pon my word, I am very glad, for I
+always felt afraid you would, like Morvillier's _garçon_, resist all the
+attractions of a woman until the '_cent mille écus_,' and then, without
+hesitation, declare, '_J'épouse_.' But you were too good to be spoiled."
+
+"As for my goodness, there's not much of _that_," replied Fane; "I am
+afraid I am much better off than I deserve. I wrote to the governor last
+night: dear old boy! he will do anything _I_ ask him. By the by, Mary
+will be married soon too. I hope you are not _épris_ in that quarter,
+Fred?--pray do not faint if you are. _My_ Florence, who can do anything
+she likes with anybody (do you think any one _could_ be angry with
+_her_?) coaxed old Aspeden into consenting to Mary's marriage with a
+fellow she really is in love with--Graham, a barrister. I think she
+would have had more difficulty with the lady-mother, if a letter had not
+most opportunely come from Graham this morning, announcing the agreeable
+fact that he had lots of tin left him unexpectedly. I wish somebody
+would do the same by me. And so this Graham will fly down on the wings
+of love--represented in these days by the express train--to-morrow
+evening."
+
+"And how about the foreign service, Fane?" I could not help asking.
+"And do you intend going to London to-morrow?"
+
+"I made those two resolutions under very different circumstances to the
+_present_, my dear fellow," laughed Fane: "the first, when I determined
+to cut away from Florence altogether, as the only chance of forgetting
+her; sad the second, when I thought poor Mount was an accepted lover,
+and I confess that I did not feel to have stoicism enough to witness his
+happiness. But how absurd it seems that _I_ should have fallen in love,"
+continued he; "_I_, that defied the charms of all the Venuses upon
+earth--the last person any one would have taken for a marrying man. I am
+considerably astonished myself! But I suppose love is like the
+whooping-cough, one must have it some time or other." And with these
+words the gallant captain raised himself from the sofa, lighted a cigar,
+and, strolling out of the room, mounted his horse for Woodlands, where
+he was engaged of course to dinner that evening.
+
+And now, gentle reader, what more is there to tell? I fear as it is I
+have written too "much about nothing," and as thou hast, I doubt not, a
+fine imagination, what need to tell how Lord Avanley and Mr. Aspeden
+arranged matters, not like the cross papas in books and dramas, but
+amicably, as gentlemen should; how merrily the bells pealed for the
+double wedding; how I, as _garçon d'honneur_, flirted with the
+bridesmaids to my heart's content; how Fane is my friend, _par
+excellence_, still, and how his love is all the stronger for having
+"come late," he says. How all the young ladies hated Florence, and all
+the mammas and chaperones blessed her for having carried off the
+"fascinating younger son," until his brother Lord Castleton dying at the
+baths, Fane succeeded of course to the title; how she is, if possible,
+even more charming as Lady Castleton than as Florence Aspeden, and how
+they were _really_ heart-happy until the Crimean campaign separated
+them; and how she turns her beautiful eyes ever to the East and heeds
+not, save to repulse, the crowd of admirers who seek to render her
+forgetful of her soldier-husband.
+
+True wife as she is, may he live to come back with laurels hardly won,
+still to hold her his dearest treasure.
+
+_May 1, 1856._--Fane _has_ come back all safe. I hope, dear reader, you
+are as glad as I am. He has distinguished himself stunningly, and is now
+lieutenant-colonel of the dear old 110th. You have gloried in the charge
+of ours at Balaklava, but as I have not whispered to you my name, you
+cannot possibly divine that a rascally Russian gave me a cut on the
+sword-arm that very day in question, which laid me _hors de combat_, but
+got me my majority.
+
+Well may I, as well as Fane, bless the remembrance of Layton Rise, for
+if I had never made the acquaintance of Mary Aspeden--I mean Graham--I
+might never have known her _belle-soeur_ (who is now shaking her head
+at me for writing about her), and whom, either through my interesting
+appearance when I returned home on the sick-list, and my manifold
+Crimean adventures, or through the usual perversity of women, who will
+fall always in love with scamps who do not deserve half their
+goodness--(Edith, you shall _not_ look over my shoulder)--I prevailed on
+to accept my noble self and Lancer uniform, with the "_puppyism_" shaken
+pretty well out of it! And so here we are _very happy of course_.--"As
+yet," suggests Edith.
+
+Ah! Fane and I little knew--poor unhappy wretches that we were--what our
+fate was preparing for us when it led us discontented _blasés_ and
+_ennuyés_ down to our Country Quarters!
+
+
+
+
+THE CHALLONERS
+
+ BY E. F. BENSON
+
+ _12mo. Cloth, $1.50._
+
+ The theme is a father's concern lest his children become
+ contaminated by what he considers an unwholesome social
+ atmosphere. The book is filled with Mr. Benson's clever
+ observations on the English smart set, and the love-story
+ shows him at his best.
+
+
+MORGANATIC
+
+ BY MAX NORDAU
+
+ _12mo. Decorated cloth, $1.50._
+
+ This new book by the author of "Degeneration," has many of the
+ qualities which gave its predecessor such a phenomenal sale. It
+ is a study of morganatic marriage, and full of strong
+ situations.
+
+
+OLIVE LATHAM
+
+ By E. L. VOYNICH
+ Author of "Jack Raymond" and "The Gadfly." Cloth, $1.50
+
+"The author's knowledge of this matter has been painfully personal. Her
+husband, a Polish political refugee, at the age of twenty-two, was
+arrested and thrown into a vile Russian prison without trial, and spent
+five years of his life thereafter in Siberian exile, escaping in 1890
+and fleeing to England. Throughout 'Olive Latham' you get the impression
+that it is a veritable record of what one woman went through for
+love.... This painful, poignant, powerfully-written story permits one
+full insight into the cruel workings of Russian justice and its effects
+upon the nature of a well-poised Englishwoman. Olive comes out of the
+Russian hell alive, and lives to know what happiness is again, but the
+horror of those days in St. Petersburg, the remembrance of the
+inhumanity which killed her lover never leaves her.... It rings true. It
+is a grewsome study of Russian treatment of political offenders. Its
+theme is not objectionable--a criticism which has been brought against
+other books of Mrs. Voynich's."--_Chicago Record-Herald._
+
+"So vividly are the coming events made to cast their shadows before,
+that long before the half-way point is reached the reader knows that
+Volodya's doom is near at hand, and that the chief interest of the story
+lies not with him, but with the girl, and more specifically with the
+curious mental disorders which her long ordeal brings upon her. It is
+seldom that an author has succeeded in depicting with such grim horror
+the sufferings of a mind that feels itself slipping over the brink of
+sanity, and clutches desperately at shadows in the effort to drag itself
+back."--_New York Globe._
+
+
+BACCARAT
+
+ BY FRANK DANBY
+ AUTHOR OF "PIGS IN CLOVER"
+
+ _12 mo. Six illustrations in color. Cloth, $1.50._
+
+ The story of a young wife left by her husband at a Continental
+ watering place for a brief summer stay, who, before she is
+ aware, has drifted into the feverish current of a French Monte
+ Carlo.
+
+ A dramatic and intense book that stirs the pity. One cannot read
+ "Baccarat" unmoved.
+
+"The finished style and unforgettable story, the living characters, and
+compact tale of the new book show it to be a work on which care and time
+have been expended.
+
+"Much more dramatic than her first novel, it possesses in common with it
+a story of deep and terrible human interest."--_Chicago Tribune._
+
+
+THE ISSUE
+
+ By GEORGE MORGAN
+
+ Illustrated. Cloth, $1.50
+
+"Will stand prominently forth as the strongest book that the season has
+given us. The novel is a brilliant one, and will command wide
+attention."--_Philadelphia Public Ledger._
+
+"The love story running through the book is very tender and
+sweet."--_St. Paul Despatch._
+
+"Po, a sweet, lovable heroine."--_The Milwaukee Sentinel._
+
+"Such novels as 'The Issue' are rare upon any theme. It is a work that
+must have cost tremendous toil, a masterpiece. It is superior to 'The
+Crisis.'"--_Pittsburg Gazette._
+
+"The best novel of the Civil War that we have had."--_Baltimore Sun._
+
+
+ J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Beatrice Boville and Other Stories, by Ouida
+
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+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Beatrice Boville and Other Stories, by Ouida
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Beatrice Boville and Other Stories
+
+Author: Ouida
+
+Release Date: October 6, 2010 [EBook #33942]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BEATRICE BOVILLE AND OTHER STORIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was
+produced from scanned images of public domain material
+from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<div class="notebox">
+<p><b>TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:</b> Punctuation has been normalized. All other
+printer's errors have been retained.</p>
+</div>
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+
+<h1>BEATRICE BOVILLE<br />
+
+<small>AND</small><br />
+
+OTHER STORIES.</h1>
+
+<h3>BY</h3>
+
+<h2>"OUIDA."</h2>
+
+<h4>AUTHOR OF<br />
+<small>"STRATHMORE," "GRANVILLE DE VIGNE," "CHANDOS,"<br />
+"IDALIA," "RANDOLPH GORDON," ETC., ETC.</small></h4>
+
+<h3>Third Series.</h3>
+
+
+<h5>PHILADELPHIA:<br />
+J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY.<br />
+1905</h5>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'>[Pg vii]</span></p>
+<h2>CONTENTS.</h2>
+
+
+<table border="0" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0" summary="Table of Contents">
+<tr>
+ <td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#BEATRICE_BOVILLE"><b>BEATRICE BOVILLE.</b></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>I.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Of Earlscourt's Fiancee.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_9">9</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>II.&mdash;<span class="smcap">The First Shadow.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_13">13</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>III.&mdash;<span class="smcap">How Pride Sowed and Reaped.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_23">23</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>IV.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Where I saw Beatrice Boville again.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_33">33</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>V.&mdash;<span class="smcap">How in Perfect Innocence I played the part of a Rival.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_44">44</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>VI.&mdash;<span class="smcap">How Pride Bowed and Fell.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_51">51</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#A_LINE_IN_THE_DAILY"><b>A LINE IN THE "DAILY."</b></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>WHO DID IT, AND WHO WAS DONE BY IT.</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_65">65</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#HOLLY_WREATHS_AND_ROSE"><b>HOLLY WREATHS AND ROSE CHAINS.</b></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>I.&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Colonel of the "White Favors" and Cecil St. Aubyn.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_109">109</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>II.&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Canadian's Cold Bath warms up the Colonel.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_119">119</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>III.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Showing that Love-making on Holy Ground doesn't Prosper.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_132">132</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>IV.&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Colonel kills his Fox, but loses his Head after other Game.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_146">146</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#SILVER_CHIMES_AND_GOLDEN_FETTERS"><b>SILVER CHIMES AND GOLDEN FETTERS.</b></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>I.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Waldemar Falkenstein and Val&eacute;rie L'Estrange.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_161">161</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>II.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Falkenstein breaks Lances with "Longs Yeux Bleus.</span>"</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_174">174</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>III.&mdash;"<span class="smcap">Scarlet and White" makes a Hit, and Falkenstein feels the Weight of the Golden Fetters.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_188">188</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>IV.&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Golden Fetters are shaken off and Others are put on.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_202">202</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>V.&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Silver Chimes ring in a Happy New Year.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_215">215</a><span class='pagenum'>[Pg viii]</span></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#SLANDER_AND_SILLERY"><b>SLANDER AND SILLERY.</b></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>I.&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Lion of the Chauss&eacute;e d'Antin.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_225">225</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>II.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Nina Gordon.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_233">233</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>III.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Le Lion Amoureux.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_242">242</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>IV.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Mischief.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_252">252</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>V.&mdash;<span class="smcap">More Mischief, and an End.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_263">263</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#SIR_GALAHADS_RAID"><b>SIR GALAHAD'S RAID.</b></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>AN ADVENTURE ON THE SWEET WATERS.</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_285">285</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#REDEEMED"><b>"REDEEMED."</b></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>AN EPISODE WITH THE CONFEDERATE HORSE.</td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_307">307</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td colspan="2" align="center"><a href="#OUR_WAGER"><b>OUR WAGER; OR, HOW THE MAJOR LOST AND WON.</b></a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>I.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Introduces Major Telfer of the 50th Dashaway Hussars.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_333">333</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>II.&mdash;<span class="smcap">Violet Tressillian.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_339">339</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>III.&mdash;<span class="smcap">From which it would appear, that it is sometimes well to begin with a Little Aversion.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_346">346</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>IV.&mdash;<span class="smcap">In which the Major provokes a Quarrel in Behalf Of the Fair Tressillian.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_353">353</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td>V.&mdash;<span class="smcap">The Duel, and its Consequences.</span></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_367">367</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+ <td><a href="#OUR_COUNTRY_QUARTERS"><b>OUR COUNTRY QUARTERS.</b></a></td>
+ <td align="right"><a href="#Page_379">379</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+
+
+
+<hr class="sep1" />
+<hr class="sep4" />
+<h2><a name="BEATRICE_BOVILLE" id="BEATRICE_BOVILLE"></a>BEATRICE BOVILLE.</h2>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</a></span></p>
+<h2>I</h2>
+
+<h3>OF EARLSCOURT'S FIANCEE.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">"To compass her with sweet observances,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">To dress her beautifully and keep her true."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>That, according to Mr. Tennyson's lately-published opinion, is the
+devoir of that deeply-to-be-pitied individual, l'homme mari&eacute;. Possibly
+in the times of which the Idyls treat, Launcelot and Gunevere <i>might</i>
+have been the sole, exceptional mauvais sujets in the land, and woad,
+being the chief ingredient in the toilet-dress, mightn't come quite so
+expensive. But nowadays "sweet observances," rendered, I presume, by
+gifts from Hunt and Roskell's and boxes in the grand tier, tell on a
+cheque-book so severely; "keeping her true" is such an exceedingly
+problematical performance, to judge by Sir C. C.'s breathless work, and
+"dressing her beautifully" comes so awfully expensive, with crinoline
+and cashmeres, pink pearls, and Mechlin, and the beau sexe's scornful
+repudiation, not alone of a faded silk, like poor Enid's, but of the
+handsomest dress going, if it's damned by being "seen twice," that I
+have ever vowed that, plaise &agrave; Dieu, I will never marry, and with
+heaven's help will keep the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</a></span> vow better than I might most probably keep
+the matrimonial ones if I took them. Yet if ever I saw a woman for whom
+I could have fancied a man's committing that semisuicidal act, that
+woman was Beatrice Boville. Not for her beauty, for, except one of the
+loveliest figures and a pair of the most glorious eyes, she did not
+claim much; not for her money, for she had none; not for her birth, for
+on one side that was somewhat obscure; but for <i>herself</i>; and had I ever
+tried the herculean task of dressing anybody beautifully and keeping
+anybody true, it should have been she, but for the fact that when I knew
+her first she was engaged to my cousin Earlscourt. We had none of us
+ever dreamt he would marry, for he had been sworn to political life so
+long, given over so utterly to the battle-ground of St. Stephen's and
+the intrigues of Downing Street, that the ladies of our house were
+sorely wrathful when they heard that he had at last fallen in love and
+proposed to Beatrice Boville, who, though she was Lady Mechlin's niece,
+was the daughter of a West Indian who had married her mother, broken her
+heart, spent her money, deserted her, and never been heard of since; the
+more wrathful as they had no help for themselves, and were obliged to be
+contented with distinguishing her with refreshing appellations of a
+"very clever schemer," evidently a "perfect intrigante," and similar
+epithets with which their sex is driven for consolation under such
+trying circumstances. It's a certain amount of relief to us to call a
+man who has cut us down in a race "a stupid owl; very little in him!"
+but it is mild gratification to that enjoyed by ladies when they
+retaliate for injury done them by that delightful bonbon of a sentence,
+"No doubt a most artful person!" You see it conveys so much and proves
+three things in one&mdash;their own artlessness, their enemy's worthlessness,
+and their victim's folly.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</a></span> Being with Earlscourt at the time of his
+"singularly unwise, step," as they phrased it, I knew that he wasn't
+trapped in any way, and that he was loved irrespectively of his social
+rank; but where was the good of telling that to deeply-injured and
+perforce silenced ladies? "They knew better;" and when a woman says
+that, always bow to her superior judgment, my good fellow, even when she
+knows better than you what you did with yourself last evening, and
+informs you positively you were at that odious Mrs. Vanille's opera
+supper, though, to the best of your belief, you never stirred from the
+U. S. card-room; or you will be voted a Goth, and make an enemy for the
+rest of your natural life.</p>
+
+<p>In opposition to the rest of the family, <i>I</i> thought (and you must know
+by this time, amis lecteurs, that I hardly think marriage so enjoyable
+an institution as some writers do, but perhaps a little like a pipe of
+opium, of which the dreams are better than the awakening)&mdash;I thought
+that he could hardly have done better, as far as his own happiness went,
+as I saw her standing by him one evening in the window of Lady Mechlin's
+rooms at Lemongenseidlitz, where we all were that August, a brilliant,
+fascinating woman already, though then but nineteen, noble-hearted,
+frank, impetuous, with something in the turn of her head and the proud
+glance of her eyes, that told you, you might trust her; that she was of
+the stuff to keep her word even to her own hinderance; that neither
+would she tell a lie, nor brook one imputed to her; that she might err
+on the side of pride, on the side of meanness never; that she might have
+plenty of failings, but not anything petty, low, or ungenerous among
+them. The evening sun fell on them as they stood, on her high, white
+forehead, with its chestnut hair turned off it as you see it in old
+pictures, which Earlscourt was touching caressingly with his hand as he
+talked to her.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</a></span>
+They seemed well suited, and yet&mdash;his fault was pride,
+an unassailable, unyielding pride; hers was pride, too, pride in her own
+truth and honor, which would send you to the deuce if you ever presumed
+to doubt either; and I wondered idly as I looked at them, whether those
+two prides would ever come in conflict, and if so, whether either of
+them would give in in such a case&mdash;whether there would be submission on
+one side or on both, or on neither? Such metaphysical and romantic
+calculations are not often my line; but as they stood together, the sun
+faded off, and a cold, stormy wind blew up in its stead, which, perhaps,
+metaphorically suggested the problem to me. As one goes through life one
+gets up to so many sunny, balmy, cloudless days, and so often before the
+night is down gets wetted to the skin by a drenching shower, that one
+contracts an uncomfortable habit when the sun <i>does</i> shine, of looking
+out for squalls, a fear that, sans doute, considerably damps the
+pleasures of the noon. But the fear is natural, isn't it, more's the
+pity, when one has been often caught?</p>
+
+<p>I chanced to ask her that night what made her so fond of Earlscourt. She
+turned her fearless, flashing eyes half laughingly, half haughtily on
+me, the color brighter in her face:</p>
+
+<p>"I should have thought you would rather have asked how could I, or any
+other woman whom he stooped to notice, fail to love him? There are few
+hearts and intellects so noble: he is as superior to you ball-room
+loungers, you butterfly flutterers, as the stars to that chandelier."</p>
+
+<p>"Bien oblig&eacute;!" laughed I. "But that is just what I meant. Most young
+ladies are afraid of him; you never were?"</p>
+
+<p>She laughed contemptuously.</p>
+
+<p>"Afraid! You do not know much of me. It is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span> precisely his giant
+intellect that first drew me to him, when I heard his speech on the
+Austrian question. Do you remember how the Lords listened to him so
+quietly that you could have heard a feather fall? I like that silence of
+theirs when they hear what they admire, better than I do the cheers of
+the other house. Afraid of him! What a ludicrous idea! Do you suppose I
+should be afraid of any one? It is only those who are conceited or
+cowardly, who are timid. If you have nothing to assume, or to conceal,
+what cause have you to fear? I love, honor, reverence Lord Earlscourt,
+God knows; but fear him&mdash;never!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not even his anger, if you ever incurred it?" I asked her, amused with
+her haughty indignation.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not. Did I merit it, I would come to him frankly, and ask his
+pardon, and he would give it; if I did not deserve it, <i>he</i> would be the
+one to repent."</p>
+
+<p>She looked far more attractive than many a handsomer woman, and
+infinitely more noble than a more tractable one. She was admirably
+fitted for Earlscourt, if he trusted her; but it was just possible he
+might some day <i>mis</i>trust and <i>mis</i>understand her, and then there might
+be the devil to pay!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>II.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE FIRST SHADOW.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Lemongenseidlitz was a charming little Bad. Beatrice Boville and her
+aunt Lady Mechlin, Earlscourt and I, had been there six weeks. His
+brother peers&mdash;of whom there were scores at
+Lemongenseidlitz&mdash;complimented Earlscourt on his fianc&eacute;e.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"So you're caught at last?" said an octogenarian minister, who was as
+sprightly as a schoolboy. "Well, my dear fellow, you might have gone
+higher, sans doute, but on my honor I don't think you could have done
+better."</p>
+
+<p>It was the universal opinion. Beatrice was not the belle of the Bad,
+because there were dozens of beautiful women, and beautiful she was not;
+but she was more admired than any of them, and had Earlscourt wanted
+voices to justify his choice he would have had them, but he didn't; he
+was entirely independent of the opinions of others, and had he chosen to
+set his coronet on the brows of a peasant girl, would have cared little
+what any one thought or said. We all of us enjoyed that six weeks. Lady
+Mechlin lost to her heart's content at roulette, and was as complacent
+over her losses as any old dowager could be. Beatrice Boville shone
+best, as nice natures ever do, in a sunny atmosphere; and if she had any
+faults of impatient temper or pride, there was nothing to call them
+forth. Earlscourt, cold politician though he'd been, gave himself up
+entirely to the warmer, brighter existence, which he found in his new
+passion; and I, not being in love with anybody, made the pleasantest
+love possible wherever I liked. We all of us found a couleur de rose
+tint in the air of little Lemongenseidlitz, and I'd quite forgotten my
+presentiment, when, one night at the Kursaal, a cloud no bigger than a
+man's hand came up on the sunny horizon, and put me in mind of it.</p>
+
+<p>Earlscourt came into the ball room rather late; he had been talking with
+some French ministers on some international project which he was anxious
+to effect, and asked Lady Mechlin where Beatrice was.</p>
+
+<p>"She was with me a moment ago; she is waltzing, I dare say," said the
+old lady, whose soul was hankering after the ivory ball.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Very likely," he answered, as he looked among the dancers for her; he
+was restless without her, though he would have liked none to see the
+weakness, for he was a man who felt more than he told. He could not see
+her, and went through the rooms till he found her, which was in a small
+anteroom alone. She started as he spoke to her, and a start being a
+timorous and nervous thing of which Beatrice Boville was never guilty,
+he drew her to him anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"My darling, has anything annoyed you?"</p>
+
+<p>She answered him with her habitual candor:</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but I cannot tell you what, just now."</p>
+
+<p>"Cannot tell me! and why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I cannot. I can give no other reason. It is nothing of import
+to you, or you are sure I should not keep it from you."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but I am equally sure that anything that concerns you <i>is</i> of
+import to me. To whom should you tell anything, if not to me? I do not
+like concealment, Beatrice."</p>
+
+<p>His tone was grave; indeed, too much like reproof to a fractious child
+to suit Beatrice's pride. She drew away from him.</p>
+
+<p>"Nor I. You must think but meanly of me if you can impute anything like
+concealment to me."</p>
+
+<p>"How can I do otherwise? You tell me you have been annoyed, and refuse
+to say how, and by whom. Is that anything but concealment? If any one
+has offended or insulted you, I ought to be the first you came to. A
+woman, Beatrice, should have nothing hidden from the man who is, or will
+be, her husband."</p>
+
+<p>She threw her arms around him. Her moods were variable as a child's.
+Perhaps this very variability Earlscourt hardly understood, for it was
+utterly opposed to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span> his own character: you always found him the same;
+<i>she</i> would be all storm one moment, all sunshine the next.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you suppose I would hide anything from you? Do you think for a
+moment I would hold back anything you had a right to know? You might
+look into my heart; there would be no thought or feeling there I should
+wish to keep from you. But if you exact confidence, so do I. Would you
+think of taking as your wife one you could not trust?"</p>
+
+<p>He answered her a little sternly:</p>
+
+<p>"No; if I once ceased to believe in your truth or honor, as I believe in
+my own, I should part from you forever, though God knows what it would
+cost me!"</p>
+
+<p>"God knows what it would cost <i>me!</i> But I give you free leave. The
+instant you find a flaw in either, I am no longer worthy of your love;
+withdraw it, and I will never complain. But trust me you must and will;
+I merit your confidence, and I exact it. Look at me, Ernest. Do you
+believe I could ever deceive you?"</p>
+
+<p>He looked into her eyes long and earnestly.</p>
+
+<p>"No. When you do, your eyes will droop before mine. I trust you,
+Beatrice, fully, and I know you will never wrong it."</p>
+
+<p>She clung to him with caressant softness, softer in her than in a
+meeker-spirited woman, as she whispered, 'Never!' and a man would need
+have been obtuse and skeptical, indeed, who could then have doubted her.
+And so that cloud blew over, for a time, at the least&mdash;trusted, Beatrice
+Boville was soft and gentle as a lamb; mistrusted or misjudged, she was
+fiery as a young lioness, and Earlscourt, I thought, though originally
+won by her intellect, held her too much as a child to fully understand
+her character, and to see that, though she was his darling and
+plaything, she was also a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span> passionate, ardent, proud-spirited woman,
+stung by injustice and impatient of doubt. No two people could be more
+fitted to make each other's happiness, yet it struck me that it was just
+possible they might make each other's misery very completely, through
+want of comprehension on the one side, through want of explanation on
+the other.</p>
+
+<p>"Your marriage is fixed, isn't it, Earlscourt?" asked his sister, Lady
+Clive Edghill, who had come to Lemongenseidlitz, and, though compelled
+by him, as he compelled all the rest of the family, to show Beatrice
+strict courtesy, disliked her, because she was not an advantageous
+match, was much too young in their opinion, and had no money&mdash;the
+gravest crimes a woman can have in the eyes of any man's relatives. "The
+14th! Indeed! yours is a very short engagement!"</p>
+
+<p>"Is there any reason why it should be longer?"</p>
+
+<p>"O, dear, no! none that I am aware of. I wish, earnestly, my dear
+Earlscourt, I could congratulate you more warmly; but I can never say
+what I do not feel, and I had so much hoped&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Helena, as long as I have so much reason to congratulate
+myself, it matters very little whether you do or do not," smiled
+Earlscourt. He was too much of a lion to be stung by gnats.</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say. I sincerely trust you may ever have reason. But I heard
+some very disagreeable things about that Mr. Boville, Beatrice's father.
+Do you know that he was in a West India regiment, but was deprived of
+his commission even there?&mdash;a perfect blackleg and sharper, I
+understand. I suppose she has never mentioned him to you?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are very much mistaken; all that Beatrice knows of him, I know;
+that is but little, for Lady Mechlin<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span> took her long ago, when her mother
+died, from such unfit guardianship. Beatrice is as open as the day&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed! A little too frank, perhaps?"</p>
+
+<p>"Too frank? That is a paradox. No one can have too much candor. It is
+not a virtue of your sex, but it is one, thank God! which she possesses
+in a rare degree, though possibly it gains her enemies where it should
+gain her friends."</p>
+
+<p>"Still frankness <i>may</i> merge into indiscretion," said Helena, musingly.</p>
+
+<p>"I doubt it. An indiscreet woman is never frank, for she has always the
+memory of silly things said and done which require concealment."</p>
+
+<p>"I was merely thinking," Helena went on, regardless of a speech which
+she did not perhaps relish, pour cause, "merely from my deep interest in
+you, and my knowledge of all you will wish your wife to be, that perhaps
+Beatrice might be, in pure insouciance, a little too careless, a little
+too candid for so prominent a position as she will occupy. Last night,
+in passing a little anteroom in the Redoute, I saw her in such extremely
+earnest conversation with a man, a handsome man, about your height and
+age, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The anteroom! Earlscourt thought, with a pang, of the start she had
+given when he entered it the previous night. But he was not of a jealous
+temperament, nor a curious one; his mind was too constantly occupied
+with great projects and ambitions to be capable of joining petty things
+together into an elaborate mosaic; he had no petitesses himself, and
+trifles passed unheeded. He interrupted her decidedly:</p>
+
+<p>"What is there in that to build a pyramid of censure from? Doubtless it
+was one of her acquaintances&mdash;probably one of mine also. I should have
+thought you knew<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span> me better, Helena, than to attempt this gossiping
+nonsense with me."</p>
+
+<p>"O, I say no more. I only thought you, of all men, would wish C&aelig;sar's
+wife to be above&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The gnat-strings had been too insignificant to rouse him before, but at
+this one his eyebrows contracted, and he rose.</p>
+
+<p>"Silence! Never venture to make such a speech as that to me again. In
+insulting Beatrice you insult me. Unless you can mention her in terms of
+proper respect and reverence, never presume to speak her name to me
+again. Her enemies are my enemies, and, whoever they may be, I will
+treat them as such."</p>
+
+<p>Helena was sorely frightened; if she held anybody in veneration it was
+Earlscourt, and she would never have ventured so far with him but for
+the causeless hate she had taken to Beatrice, simply because Lady Clive
+had decided long ago that her brother was too vou&eacute; to public life ever
+to marry, and that her son would succeed to his title. She was sorely
+frightened, but she comforted herself&mdash;the little thorn she had thrust
+in might rankle after a while; as pleasant a consolation under failure
+as any lady could desire.</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice was coming along the corridor as Earlscourt left Helena's
+rooms, which were in the same hotel as Lady Mechlin's. She was stopping
+to look out of one of the windows at the sunset; she did not see him at
+first, and he watched her unobserved, and smiled at the idea of
+associating anything deceitful with her&mdash;smiled still more at the idea
+when she came up to him, with her frank, bright, regard, lifting her
+face for a caress, and patting both her hands through his arm.
+Accustomed to chill and reserved women in his own family, her abandon
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>
+had a great charm for him; but perhaps it led him into his error in
+holding her still as half a child.</p>
+
+<p>"You have been seeing my enemy?" she said, laughingly. "Your sister does
+not like me, does she?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not like you! Why should you think so? She may not like my marrying,
+perhaps, because she had decided for me that I should never do so; and
+no woman can bear any prophecies she makes to prove wrong."</p>
+
+<p>"Very possibly that may be one reason; but she does not think me good
+enough for you."</p>
+
+<p>Her tips curved disdainfully, and Earlscourt caught a glimpse of her in
+her fiery mood. He laughed at her where, with her, he had better have
+admitted the truth. Beatrice had too much pride to be wounded by it, and
+far too much good sense to measure herself by money and station.</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense, Beatrice; I should have thought you too proud to suppose such
+a thing," he said, carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>"It is the truth, nevertheless."</p>
+
+<p>"More foolish she, then; but if you and I do not, what can it signify?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing. As long as I am worthy of you in your
+eyes, what others think or say is nothing to me. I honor
+you too much to make the gauge between us a third
+person's opinion; or measure you or myself by a few
+stops higher or lower in the social ladder. Your sister
+thinks me below you in rank, soit! She is right; I am
+quite ready to admit it; but that I am your equal in all
+that makes men and women equal in the sight of Heaven,
+I know. When she finds me unworthy of you in thought
+or deed, then she may call me beneath you&mdash;not till
+then."</p>
+
+<p>Her cheeks were flushed; he could hear her quick
+breathings, and in her vehemence and haughty indignation
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>
+she picked the petals of her bouquet de corsage to
+pieces and flung them away. Another time he would have
+thought how well her pride became her, and given her
+some fond reply. Just now the thorn rankled as Lady
+Clive had hoped, and he answered her gravely, in the tone
+which it was as unwise to use to her as to prick a
+thorough-bred colt with both spurs.</p>
+
+<p>"You are quite right. Were I a king, you would be
+my equal as long as your heart was mine, your mind as
+noble, and your character as unsullied as I hope them to
+be now."</p>
+
+<p>She turned on him rapidly with the first indignant
+look she had ever given to him.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Hope!</i> You might say <i>know</i>, I think!"</p>
+
+<p>"I would have said 'know,' and meant it too, yesterday."</p>
+
+<p>"Yesterday? What do you mean? Why am I less
+worthy your confidence to-day than yesterday?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked wonderingly at him, her eyes full of inquiry
+and bewilderment. It was marvellous acting, if it
+was acting; yet he thought she could scarcely have so
+soon forgotten their scene in the anteroom the previous
+night. They had now come into the salon; he left her
+side and walked to the mantel-piece, leaning his arm on
+it, and speaking coldly, as he had never done to her since
+they first met.</p>
+
+<p>"Beatrice, do not attempt to act with me. You cannot
+have forgotten what we said in the anteroom last
+night. Nothing assumed ever deceives me, and you only
+lower yourself in my estimation."</p>
+
+<p>She clinched her hands till the rings he had given her crushed together.</p>
+
+<p>"Act! assume! Great Heaven, how dare you speak such words to
+me?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Dare? You speak like an angry child, Beatrice. When you are reasonable
+I will answer you."</p>
+
+<p>The tears welled into her eyes, but she would not let them fall.</p>
+
+<p>"Reasonable? Is there anything unreasonable in resenting
+words utterly undeserved? Would you be calm
+under them yourself, Lord Earlscourt? I remember
+now what you mean by yesterday; I did not remember
+when I asked you. Had I done so I should never have
+simulated ignorance and surprise. Only last night you
+promised to trust me. Is this your trust, to accuse me
+of artifice, of acting, of falsehood? I would bear no such
+imputation from any one, still less from you, who ought
+to know me so well. What happiness can we have if
+you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She stopped, the tears choking her voice, but he did
+not see them; he only saw her indignant attitude, her
+flushed cheeks, her flashing eyes, and put them down to
+her girlish passion.</p>
+
+<p>"Calm yourself, Beatrice, I beg. This sort of scene is
+very distasteful to me; to figure in a lover's quarrel
+hardly suits me. I am not young enough to find amusement
+in disputation and reconciliation, sparring one
+moment and caresses the next. My life is one of grave
+pursuits and feverish ambitions; I am often harassed,
+annoyed, worn out in body and mind. What I hoped
+for from you was, to borrow the gayety and brightness
+of your own youth, to find rest, and happiness, and distraction.
+A life of disputes, reproaches, and misconstruction,
+would be what I never would endure."</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice was silent; she leaned her forehead on her
+arms and did not answer him. His tone stung her
+pride, but his words touched her heart. Her passion
+was always short-lived, and no evil spirit possessed her
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span>
+long. She rebelled against the first part of his speech
+with all her might, but she softened to the last. She
+came up to him with her hands out.</p>
+
+<p>"I had no right to speak so impatiently to you. God
+knows, to make your life happy will be my only thought,
+and care, and wish. If I spoke angrily, forgive me!"</p>
+
+<p>Earlscourt knew that the nature so quick to acknowledge
+error was worth fifty unerring and unruffled ones;
+still he sighed as he answered her,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child, I forgive you. But, Beatrice, there is
+no foe to love so sure and deadly as dissension!" And
+as he drew her to him and felt her soft warm lips on his,
+he thought, half uneasily yet, "She has never told me
+who annoyed her&mdash;never mentioned her companion in
+the anteroom last night."</p>
+
+<p>Lady Clive had her wish; the thorn festered as promisingly
+as she could have desired. Ce n'est que le premier
+pas qui co&ucirc;te in quarrels as in all else. Dispute
+once, you are very sure to dispute again, whether with
+the man you hate or the woman you love.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>III.</h2>
+
+<h3>HOW PRIDE SOWED AND REAPED.</h3>
+
+
+<p>It only wanted three weeks to Beatrice Boville's marriage.
+We were all to leave Lemongenseidlitz together
+in a fortnight's time for old Lady Mechlin's house in
+Berks, where the ceremony was to take place.</p>
+
+<p>"Earlscourt is quite infatuated," said Lady Clive to
+me one evening. "Beatrice is very charming, of course,
+but she is not at all suited to him, she is so fiery, so impetuous, so
+self-reliant."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I think you are mistaken," said I. I admired Beatrice
+Boville&mdash;comme je vous ai dit&mdash;and I didn't like our
+family's snaps and snarls at her. "She may be impetuous,
+but, as her impulses are always generous, that
+doesn't matter much. She is only fiery at injustice, and,
+for myself, I prefer a woman who can stand up for her
+own rights and her friends' to one who'll sit by in&mdash;you'll
+call it meekness, I suppose? I call it cowardice and hypocrisy&mdash;to
+hear herself or them abused."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, mon ami," said Beatrice's voice at my
+elbow, as Lady Clive rose and crossed the room. "I am
+much obliged for your defence; I couldn't help hearing it
+as I stood in the balcony, and I wish very much I deserved
+it. I am afraid, though, I cannot dispute Helena's
+verdict of 'fiery,' 'impetuous,'&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And self-reliant?" I asked her. She laughed softly,
+and her eyes unconsciously sought Earlscourt, who was
+talking to Lady Mechlin.</p>
+
+<p>"Well? Not quite, now! But, by the way, why should
+people charge self-reliance on to one as something reprehensible
+and undesirable? A proper self-reliance is an
+indispensable ground-work to any success. If you cannot
+rely upon yourself, upon your power to judge and to
+act, you must rely upon some other person, possibly upon
+many people, and you become, perforce, vacillating and
+unstable.</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i6">'To thine own self be true,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And it shall follow, as the day the night,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Thou canst not then be false to any man.'"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>As she spoke a servant brought a note to her, and I
+noticed her cheeks grow pale as she saw the handwriting
+upon it. She broke it open, and read it hastily, an oddly
+troubled, worried look coming over her face, a look that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>
+Earlscourt could not help but notice as he stood beside
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"Is there anything in that letter to annoy you, Beatrice?"
+he asked, very naturally.</p>
+
+<p>She started&mdash;rather guiltily, I thought&mdash;and crushed
+the note in her hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Whom is it from? It troubles you, I think. Tell me,
+my darling, is it anything that vexes or offends you?" he
+whispered, bending down to her.</p>
+
+<p>She laughed, a little nervously for her, and tore the
+note into tiny pieces.</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you not tell me, Beatrice?" he said again,
+with a shade of annoyance on his face.</p>
+
+<p>"Because I would rather not," she said, frankly enough,
+letting the pieces float out of the window into the street
+below. The shadow grew darker in his face; he bent
+his head in acquiescence, and said no more, but I don't
+think he forgot either the note or her destroyal of it.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought there was implicit confidence <i>before</i> marriage
+whatever there is after," sneered his sister, as she passed
+him. He answered her calmly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I should say, Helena, that neither before nor after
+marriage would any man who respected his wife suffer
+curiosity or suspicion to enter into him. If he do, he
+has no right to expect happiness, and he will certainly
+not go the way to get it."</p>
+
+<p>That was the only reply he gave Lady Clive, but her
+thorn No. 2 festered in him, and when he bade Beatrice
+good night, standing alone with her in the little drawing
+room, he took both her hands in his, and looked straight
+into her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Beatrice, why would you not let me see that note this
+evening?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him as fearlessly and clearly.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"If I tell you why, I must tell you whom the note was
+from, and what it was about, and I would much rather
+do neither as yet."</p>
+
+<p>"That is very strange. I dislike concealment of all
+kinds, especially from you, who so soon will be my wife.
+It is inconceivable to me why you should need or desire
+any. I thought your life was a fair open book, every line
+of which I might read if I desired."</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice looked at him in amazement.</p>
+
+<p>"So you may. Do you suppose, if I had any secret from you that I feared
+you should know, I could have a moment's peace in your society, or look
+at you for an instant as I do now? I give you my word of honor that
+there was nothing either in the note that concerns you, or that you
+would wish me to tell you. In a few days you shall know all that was in
+it, but I ask you as a kindness not to press me now. Surely you do not
+think me such a child but that you can trust me in so small a trifle. If
+you say I am not worthy of your confidence, you imply that I am not
+worthy of your love. You spoke nobly to your sister just now, Ernest; do
+not act less nobly to me."</p>
+
+<p>He could not but admire her as she looked at him, with her fearless,
+unshadowed regard, her head thrown a little back, and her attitude
+half-commanding, half-entreating. He smiled in spite of himself.</p>
+
+<p>"You are a wayward, spoiled child, Beatrice. You must have your own
+way?"</p>
+
+<p>She gave a little stamp of her foot. She hated being called a spoiled
+child, specially by him, and in a serious moment.</p>
+
+<p>"If I have my own way, have I your full confidence too?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but, my dear Beatrice, the only way to gain confidence is never to
+excite suspicion." And Lady Clive's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span> thorn rankled &agrave; ravir; for even as
+he pressed his goodnight kisses on her lips, he thought, restlessly,
+"Shall we make each other happy?&mdash;am I too grave for her?&mdash;and is she
+too wilful for me? I want rest, not contention."</p>
+
+<p>The night after that there was a bal-masqu&eacute; at the Redoute. I was just
+coming out of my room as Beatrice came down the corridor; She had her
+mask in her hand, her dress was something white starred with gold, and
+round her hair she had a little band of pearls of Earlscourt's gift. I
+never saw her look better, specially when her cheeks flushed and her
+eyes brightened as Earlscourt opened his door next mine, and met her. He
+did not see me, the corridor was empty, and he bent down to her with
+fond words and caresses.</p>
+
+<p>"Do I look well?" she said, with child-like delight.</p>
+
+<p>"I am so glad, Ernest, I want to do you honor."</p>
+
+<p>In that mood he understood her well enough, and he pressed her against
+his heart with the passion that was in him, whose strength he so rarely
+let her see. Then he drew her hand through his arm, and led her down the
+stairs; and, as I laughed to find to what lengths our cold statesman
+could come at last, I thought Lady Clive's thorns would be innocuous,
+however well planted.</p>
+
+<p>Earlscourt never danced; nothing but what was calm and stately could
+possibly have suited him; but Beatrice did, and waltzed like a Willis,
+(though she liked even better than that standing on his arm and talking
+with his friends&mdash;diplomatic, military, and ministerial&mdash;on all sorts of
+questions, most of which she could handle nearly as well as they;) and
+about the middle of the evening, while she was waltzing with some man or
+other who had begged to be introduced to her, Earlscourt left the
+ball-room for ten minutes in earnest conversation with one of the French
+ministers, who was leaving the next morning. As he came<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span> back again, I
+asked him where Beatrice was, because Powell, of the Bays, was bothering
+my life out to introduce him to her.</p>
+
+<p>"In the ball room, isn't she? She is with Lady Mechlin, of course, if,
+the waltz is over."</p>
+
+<p>A familiar voice stopped him.</p>
+
+<p>"She is not in the ball room. Go where you found her the other night,
+and see if C&aelig;sar's promised wife be above suspicion!"</p>
+
+<p>I could have sworn the voice was Lady Clive's; a pink domino passed us
+too fast for detention, but Earlscourt's lips turned white at the subtle
+whisper, and he muttered a fierce oath&mdash;fiercer from him, because he's
+never stirred into fiery expletives. "There is some vile plot against
+her. I must sift it to the bottom;" and, pushing past me, he entered the
+ball room. Beatrice was not there; and wending his way through the
+crowd, he went in through several other apartments leading off to the
+right, and involuntarily I followed him, to see what the malicious
+whisper of the pink domino had meant. Earlscourt lifted the curtain that
+parted the anteroom from the other chamber&mdash;lifted it to see Beatrice
+Boville, as the pink domino had prophesied, and not alone! With her was
+a man, masked, but about Earlscourt's height, and seemingly about his
+age, who, as he saw us, let go her hand with a laugh, turned on to a
+balcony, which was but a yard or so from the street, and dropped on to
+the pave below. Beatrice started and colored, but I thought she must be
+the most desperate actress going, for she came up to Earlscourt with a
+smile, and was about to put her hand through his arm, but he signed her
+away from him.</p>
+
+<p>"Your acting is quite useless with me. I am not to be blinded by it
+again. I have believed in your truth as in my own&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"So you may still. Listen to me, Ernest!"</p>
+
+<p>"Hush! Do not add falsehood to falsehood."</p>
+
+<p>He spoke sternly and coldly; his pride, which was as strong as his love
+for her, would not gratify her by a sign of the torture within him, and
+even in his bitterest anger Earlscourt would never have been ungentle to
+a woman. That word acted like an incantation on her, the blood crimsoned
+her temples, her eyes literally flashed fire, and she threw back her
+head with the haughty, impatient gesture habitual to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Falsehood? Three times of late you have used that word to me."</p>
+
+<p>"And why? Because you merited it."</p>
+
+<p>She stood before him, the indignant flush hotter still upon her cheeks,
+her lips curved into scornful anger. If she was an actress, she knew her
+r&ocirc;le to perfection.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you speak that seriously, Lord Earlscourt? Do you believe that I
+have lied to you?"</p>
+
+<p>"God help me! What else can I believe?" he muttered, too low for her to
+hear it.</p>
+
+<p>She asked him the question again, fiercely, and he answered her briefly
+and sternly,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I believe that all your life with me has been a lie. I trusted you
+implicitly, and how do you return it? By carrying on clandestine
+intercourse with another man, giving him interviews that you conceal
+from me, having letters that you destroy, doubtless receiving caresses
+that you take care are unwitnessed; while you dare to smile in my face,
+and to dupe me with child-like tenderness, and to bid me 'trust' you and
+believe in you! Love shared to me is worthless, and on my wife,
+Beatrice, no stain must rest!"</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, a dark shadow spread over her countenance,
+her evil spirit rose up in her, and her bright,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>
+frank, fearless face grew almost as hard and cold as his,
+while her teeth were set together, till her lips, usually soft
+and laughing, were pressed into one straight haughty line.</p>
+
+<p>"Since you give me up so easily, far be it from me to
+dispute your will. We part from this hour, if you desire
+it. My honor is as dear to me as yours to you, and to
+those who dare to suspect it I never stoop to defend it!"</p>
+
+<p>"But, my God! Beatrice, what <i>am</i> I to believe?"</p>
+
+<p>"Whatever you please!"</p>
+
+<p>"What I please! Child, you must be mad. What <i>can</i> I
+believe, but that you are the most perfect of all actresses,
+that your art is the greatest of all sins, the art that clothes
+itself in innocence, and carries would-be truth upon its
+lips. Prove to me that I wrong you!"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head; the devil in her had still the victory;
+her eyes glittered, and her little teeth were clinched
+together.</p>
+
+<p>"What I exact is trust without proof. I am not your
+prisoner, Lord Earlscourt, to be tried coldly, and acquitted
+if you find legal evidence of innocence; convicted, if
+there be a link wanting. If you choose to trust me, I have
+told you often your trust will never be wronged; if you
+choose to condemn me, do. I shall not stoop to show
+you your injustice."</p>
+
+<p>Earlscourt's face grew dark and hard as hers, but it
+was wonderful how well his pride chained down all evidence
+of suffering; the only sign was in the hoarseness
+of, and quiver in, his voice.</p>
+
+<p>"Say nothing more&mdash;prevarication is guilt! God forgive
+you, Beatrice Boville! If you loved me, and knelt at
+my feet, I would not make you my wife after the art and
+the lies with which you have repaid my trust. Thank
+God, you do not already bear my name and my honor in
+your hands!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>With those words he left her. Beatrice stood still in
+the same place, her lips set in one scornful line, her eyes
+glittering, her brow crimson, her whole attitude defiant,
+wronged, and unyielding. Earlscourt passed me, his face
+white as death, and was out of sight in a second. I
+waited a moment, then I followed my impulse, and went
+up to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Beatrice, for Heaven's sake, what is all this?"</p>
+
+<p>She turned her large eyes on me haughtily.</p>
+
+<p>"Do <i>you</i> believe what your cousin does?"</p>
+
+<p>I answered her as briefly:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"No, I do not. There is some mistake here."</p>
+
+<p>She seized my arm, impetuously:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Promise me, on your honor, never to tell what I tell
+to you while I live. Promise me, on your faith as a gentleman."</p>
+
+<p>"On my honor, I promise. Well?"</p>
+
+<p>"The man whom you saw with me to-night is my
+father. Lord Earlscourt chose to condemn me without
+inquiry; so let him! But I tell you, that you may tell
+him if I die before him, that he wronged me. You know
+Mr. Boville's&mdash;my father's&mdash;character. I had not seen
+him since I was a child, but when he heard of my engagement
+to Lord Earlscourt he found me out, and wanted
+to force himself on him, and borrow money of him,
+and&mdash;" She stopped, her face was crimson, but she went
+on, passionately. "All my efforts, of course, were to
+keep them apart, to spare my father such degradation,
+and your cousin such an application. I could not tell
+Lord Earlscourt, for he is generous as the winds, and I
+knew what he would have done. My note was from my
+father; he wanted to frighten me into introducing him
+to Lord Earlscourt, but he did not succeed. I would
+not have your cousin disgraced or pained by&mdash;Arthur,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>
+that is all my crime! No very great one, is it?" And
+she laughed a loud, bitter laugh, as unlike her own as
+the stormy shadow on her face was like the usual sunshine.</p>
+
+<p>"But, great Heaven! why not have told this to Earlscourt?"</p>
+
+<p>She signed me to silence with a passionate gesture.</p>
+
+<p>"No! He dishonored me with suspicion; let him go.
+I forbid you ever to breathe a word of what I have
+told you to him. If he has pride, so have I. He would
+hold no dishonor greater than for another man to charge
+him with a lie. My truth is as untainted as his, and my
+honor as dear to me. He accused me wrongly; let him
+repent. I would have loved and reverenced him as never
+any woman yet could do; but once suspected, I could
+find no happiness with him. His bitter words are stamped
+into my heart. I shall never forget&mdash;I doubt if I shall
+ever forgive&mdash;them. I can bear anything but injustice
+or misconception. If any doubt me, they are free to do
+so; theirs is the sin, not mine. As he has sown so must
+he reap, and so must I!" A low, gasping sob choked
+her voice, but she stood like a little Pythoness, the pearl
+gleaming above her brow, her eyes unnaturally bright, the
+color burning in her face, her attitude what it was when
+he left her, defiant, wronged, unyielding. She swept away
+from me to a man who was coming through the other
+room, and he stared at her set lips and her gleaming eyes
+as she asked him, carelessly, "Count Avonyl, will you
+have the kindness to take me to Lady Mechlin?"</p>
+
+<p>That was the last I saw of her. She left the Bad
+with her aunt as soon as the day dawned, and when I
+went to our hotel, I found that Earlscourt had ordered
+post-horses immediately he quitted the ball room, and
+gone&mdash;where he did not leave word. So my presentiment<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>
+was verified; the pride of both had come in conflict, and
+the pride of neither had succumbed. How long it would
+sustain and satisfy them, I could not guess; but Lady
+Clive smiled again, as sweetly as ladies ever do when
+their thorns have thriven and brought forth abundant
+fruit. Some other time I will tell you how I saw Beatrice
+Boville again; but I often thought of</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Pauline, by pride<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Angels have fallen ere thy time!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>when I recalled her with the pearls above her brow, and her passionate,
+gleaming eyes, and her fearless, scornful, haughty anguish, as she had
+stood before me that night when Pride <i>v</i>. Pride caused the wreck of
+both their lives.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>IV.</h2>
+
+<h3>WHERE I SAW BEATRICE BOVILLE AGAIN</h3>
+
+
+<p>I don't belong to St. Stephen's myself, thank Heaven. Very likely they
+would have returned me for the county when the governor departed this
+life had I tried them; but as I generally cut the county, from not being
+one of the grass countries, and as I couldn't put forward any patriotic
+claims like Mr. Harper Twelvetrees, (who, as he's such a slayer of
+vermin, thought, I suppose, that he'd try his hand at the dry-rot and
+the red tapeworms, which, according to cotton grumblers, are sapping the
+nation,) I haven't solicited its suffrages. The odds at Tattersall's
+interest me more than the figures of the ways and means; and
+Diophantus's and Kettledrum's legerdemain at Newmarket and Epsom is more
+to my taste than our brilliant rhetorician's with the surplus. I don't<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>
+care a button about Lord Raynham and Sir C. Burrell's maids-of-all-work;
+they are not an attractive class, I should say, and, if they like to
+amuse their time tumbling out of windows, I can't see for the life of me
+why peers and gentlemen should rush to the rescue like Don Quixote to
+Dulcinea's. And as for that great question, Tea <i>v</i>. Paper, bohea
+delights the souls of old ladies and washerwomen&mdash;who destroy crumpets
+and character over its inebriating cups, and who will rush to crown Lord
+Derby's and Mr. Disraeli's brows with laurels if they ever go to the
+country with a teapot blazoned on their patriotic banners&mdash;more than it
+does mine, which prefers Bass and Burgundy, seltzer and Sillery; and,
+though I dare say Brown, Jones, and Robinson find the Divorce News
+exciting, and paper collars very showy and economical, as I myself am
+content with the <i>Times</i> and its compeers, and think, with poor Brummel,
+that life without daily clean linen were worthless, <i>that</i> subject
+doesn't absorb me as it does those gentlemen who find "the last tax of
+knowledge" so grandiloquent and useful a finishing period. So I have
+never stood for the county, nor essayed to stand for it, seeing that to
+one Bernal Osborne there are fifty prosers in St. Stephen's, and to be
+bored is, to a butterfly flutterer, as the young lady whose name heads
+this paper once obligingly called me, torture unparalleled by anything
+short of acid wine or the Chinese atrocities, though truly he who heads
+our Lower House with his vernal heart and his matchless brain were
+enough to make any man, coxcomb or hero, oppositionist or
+ministerialist, proud to sit in the same chamber with him. But there are
+nights now and then, of course, when I like to go to both Houses, to
+hear Lord Derby's rich, intricate oratory, or Gladstone's rhetoric,
+(which has so potent a spell even for his foes,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35]</a></span> and is yet charged so
+strangely against him as half a crime; possibly by the same spirit with
+which plain women reproach a pretty one for her beauty: what business
+has he to be more attractive than his compeers? of course it's a p&eacute;ch&eacute;
+mortel in their eyes!) and when Mrs. Breloques, who is a charming little
+woman, to whom no man short of a Goth could possibly say "No" to any
+petition, gave me a little blow with her fan, and told me, as I valued
+her friendship, to get an order and take her and Gwen to hear the Lords'
+debate on Tuesday, when my cousin Viscount Earlscourt, one of the best
+orators in the Upper House, was certain to speak, of course I obliged
+her. Her sister Gwen, who was a girl of seventeen, barely out, and whom
+I wished at Jerico, (three is so odious a number, one of the triad must
+ever be <i>de trop</i>,) was wrathful with the Upper House; it in no wise
+realized her expectations; the peers should have worn their robes, she
+thought, (as if the horrors of a chamber filled with Thames odors in
+June wasn't enough without being bored with velvet and ermine) she would
+have been further impressed by coronets also; they had no business to
+lounge on their benches as if they were in a smoking-room; they should
+have declaimed like Kean, not spoken colloquially; and&mdash;in fact, they
+shouldn't have been ordinary men at all. I think a fine collection from
+Madame Tussaud's, with a touch of the Roman antique, would have been
+much more to Gwen's ideal, and she wasn't at all content till Earlscourt
+rose; <i>he</i> reconciled her a little, for he had a grand-seigneur air, she
+said, that made up for the incongruities of his dress. It was a measure
+that he had much at heart; he had exerted for it all his influence in
+the cabinet, and he was determined that the bill should pass the Lords,
+though the majority inclined to throw it out. As he stood now<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">[Pg 36]</a></span> against
+the table, with his calm dignity of gesture, his unstrained flow of
+words, and his rich and ringing voice, which could give majesty to
+commonplace subjects, and sway even an apathetic audience as completely
+as Sheridan's Begum speech, every one in the House listened attentively,
+and each of his words fell with its due weight. I heard him with pride,
+often as I had done so before, though I noticed with pain that the lines
+in his forehead and his mouth were visibly deepened; that he seemed to
+speak with effort, for him, and looked altogether, as somebody had said
+to me at White's in the morning, as if he were wearing out, and would go
+down in his prime, like Canning and Pitt.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord Earlscourt looks very ill&mdash;don't you think so?" said Lelia
+Breloques.</p>
+
+<p>As I answered her, I heard a sharp-wrung sigh, and I looked for the
+first time at the lady next me. I saw a delicate profile, lips
+compressed and colorless, chestnut hair that I had last seen with his
+pearls gleaming above it: I saw, en deux mots, Beatrice Boville for the
+first time since that night eight months before, when she had stood
+before me in her passion and her pride. She never took her eyes off
+Earlscourt while he spoke, and I wondered if she regretted having lost
+him for a point of honor. Had she grown indifferent to him, that she had
+come to his own legislative chamber, or was her love so much stronger
+than her pride that she had sought to see him thus rather than not see
+him at all? When his speech was closed, and he had resumed his place on
+the benches, she leaned back, covering her eyes with her hand for a
+moment: and, as I said aloud (more for her benefit than Mrs.
+Breloques's) my regret that Earlscourt would wear himself out, I was
+afraid, in his devotion to public life, Beatrice started at the sound<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>
+of my voice, turned her head hastily, and her face was colorless enough
+to tell me she had not gratified her pride without some cost. Of course
+I spoke to her; she had been a favorite of mine always, and I had often
+wished to come across her again; but beyond learning that she was with
+Lady Mechlin in Lowndes Square, and had been spending the winter at Pau
+for her aunt's health, I had no time to hear more, for Lelia, having
+only come for Earlscourt's speech, bade me take her to her carriage,
+while Beatrice and her party remained for the rest of the debate; but
+the rencontre struck me as so odd, that I believe it occupied my
+thoughts more than Mrs. Breloques liked, who got into her carriage in
+not the best of humors, and asked me if <i>I</i> was going in for public life
+that I'd grown so particularly unamusing. We're
+always unamusing to one woman if we're thinking at all about another.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know who was at the House to-night, Earlscourt, to hear your
+speech?" I asked him, as I met him, a couple of hours afterwards, in one
+of the passages, as he was leaving the House. He had altered much in
+eight months; he stooped a little from his waist; he looked worn, and
+his lips were pale. Men said his stamina was not equal to his brain;
+physicians, that he gave himself too much work and too little sleep. I
+knew he was more wrapped in public life than ever; that in his place in
+the government he worked unwearyingly, and that he found time in spare
+moments for intellectual recreation that would have sufficed for their
+life's study for most men. Still, I thought possibly there might be a
+weakness still clinging round his heart, though he never alluded to it;
+a passion which, though he appeared to have crushed it out, might be
+sapping his health more than all his work for the nation.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Do you mean any one in particular? Persigny said he should attend, but
+I did not see him."</p>
+
+<p>"No, I meant among the ladies. Beatrice Boville was in the seat next
+me." I had no earthly business to speak of her so abruptly, for when I
+had seen him for the first time after he left the Bad when Parliament
+met that February, he had forbidden me ever to mention her name to him,
+and no allusion to her had ever passed his lips. The worn, stern
+gravity, that had become his habitual expression, changed for a moment;
+bullet-proof he might be, but my arrow had shot in through the chain
+links of his armor; a look of unutterable pain, eagerness, anxiety,
+passion, passed over his face; but, whatever he felt, he subdued it,
+though his voice was broken as he answered me:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Once for all, I bade you never speak that name to me. Without being
+forbidden, I should have thought your own feeling, your own delicacy,
+might&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Have checked me? O, hang it, Earlscourt, listen one second without
+shutting a fellow up. I never broached the subject before, by your
+desire; but, now I have once broken the ice, I must ask you one
+question: Are you sure you judged the girl justly? are you sure you were
+not too quick to slan&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He pressed his hand on his chest and breathed heavily as I spoke, but he
+wouldn't let me finish.</p>
+
+<p>"That is enough. Would any man sacrifice what he held dearest wantonly
+and without proof? She is dear to me <i>now</i>. You are the only living
+being so thoughtless or so merciless as to force her name upon me, and
+rake up the one folly, the one madness, the one crowning sorrow of my
+life. See that you never dare bring forward her name again."</p>
+
+<p>He went out before me into the soft night air. His<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span> carriage was
+waiting; he entered it, threw himself back on its cushions, and was
+driven off before I had time to break my word of honor to Beatrice
+Boville, which I felt sorely tempted to do just then. Who among the
+thousands that heard his briliant speech that night, or read it the next
+morning, who saw him pass in his carriage, and had him pointed out to
+them as the finest orator of his day, or dined with him at his
+ministerial dinners at his house in Park Lane, would have believed that,
+with all his ambition, fame, honors, and attainments, the one cross, the
+one shadow, the one dark thread, in the successful stateman's life, was
+due to a woman's hand, and that underneath all his strength lay that
+single weakness, sapping and undermining it?</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Did you</i> see that girl Boville at the House last night?" Lady Clive
+(who had smiled most sweetly ever since her thorns had brought forth
+their fruit&mdash;her son <i>would</i> be his heir&mdash;Earlscourt would never marry
+now!) said to me, the next day, at one of the Musical Society concerts.
+"Incredible effrontery, wasn't it, in her, to come and hear Earlscourt's
+speech? One would have imagined that conscience and delicacy might have
+made her reluctant to see him, instead of letting her voluntarily seek
+his own legislative chamber, and listen coolly for an hour and a half to
+the man whom she misled and deceived so disgracefully."</p>
+
+<p>I laughed to think how long a time a woman's malice <i>will</i> flourish,
+n'importe how victorious it may have been in crushing its object, or how
+harmless that object may have become.</p>
+
+<p>"You are very bitter about her still, Lady Clive. Is that quite fair?
+You know you were so much obliged to her for throwing Earlscourt away.
+You want Horace<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span> to come in for the title, don't you?" Which truism
+being unpalatable, Lady Clive averred that she had no wish on earth but
+for Earlscourt's happiness; that of course she naturally grieved for his
+betrayal by that little intrigante, but that had his marriage been a
+well-advised one, nobody would have rejoiced more, etc., etc., and bade
+me be silent and listen to Vieuxtemps, both of which commands I obeyed,
+pondering in my own mind whether I should go and call in Lowndes Square
+or not: if anybody heard of it, they would think it odd for me alone, of
+all the family, to continue acquainted with a girl whom report
+(circulated through Lady Clive) said had used Earlscourt so ill, and
+wrong constructions might get put upon it; but, thank God! I never have
+considered the qu'en dira-t-on. If constructions are wrong, to the deuce
+with them! they matter nothing to sensible people; and the man who lives
+in dread of "reports" will have to shift his conduct as the old man of
+immortal fable shifted his donkey, and won't ever journey in any peace
+at all. If anybody remarked my visiting Lowndes Square, I couldn't help
+it: I wanted to see Beatrice Boville again, and to Lowndes Square, after
+the concert, I drove my tilbury accordingly, which, as that turn-out is
+known pretty tolerably in those parts, I should be wisest to leave
+behind me when I don't want my calls noticed. By good fortune, I saw
+Beatrice alone. They were going to drive in the Park, and she was in the
+drawing room, dressed and waiting for her aunt. She was not altered: at
+her age sorrow doesn't tell physically as it does at Earlscourt's. In
+youth we have Hope; later on we know that of all the gifts of Pandora's
+box none are so treacherous and delusive as the one that Pandora left at
+the bottom. True, Beatrice had none of that insouciant, shadowless
+brightness that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span> had been her chief charm at Lemongenseidlitz, but she
+was one of those women whose attractions, dependent on fascination, not
+on beauty, grow more instead of less as time goes on. She met me with a
+trace of embarrassment; but she was always self-possessed under any
+amount of difficulties, and stood chatting, a trifle hurriedly, of all
+the subjects of the year, of anything, I dare say, rather than of that
+speech the night before, or of the secret of which I was her sole
+confidant. But I was not going to let her off so easily. I had come
+there for a definite purpose, and was not going away without
+accomplishing it. I was afraid every second that Lady Mechlin might come
+down, or some visitor enter, and as she sat in a low chair among the
+flowers in the window, leant towards her, and plunged into it <i>in medias
+res</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Boville, I want you to release me from my promise."</p>
+
+<p>She looked up, her face flushing slightly, but her lips and eyes
+shadowed already with that determined pride and hauteur that they had
+worn the last time I had seen her. She did not speak, but played with
+the boughs of a coronella near her.</p>
+
+<p>"You remember" (I went on speaking as briefly as possible, lest the old
+lady's toilet should be finished, and our t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te cut short) "I gave
+you my word of honor never to speak again of what you told me in the
+Kursaal last autumn until you gave me leave; that leave I ask you for
+now. Silence lies in the way of your own happiness, I feel sure, and not
+alone of yours. If you give me carte blanche, you may be certain I shall
+use it discreetly and cautiously. You made the prohibition in a moment
+of heat and passion; withdraw it now&mdash;believe me, you will never
+repent."</p>
+
+<p>The flush died out of her cheeks as I spoke; but her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span> little, white
+teeth were set together as they had been that night, and she answered me
+bitterly,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"You ask what is impossible; I cannot, in justice to myself, withdraw
+it. I would never have told you, but that I deemed you a man of honor,
+whom I could trust."</p>
+
+<p>"I do not think I have proved myself otherwise, Beatrice. I have kept my
+word to you, when I have been greatly tempted to break it, when I have
+doubted whether it were either right or wise to stand on such punctilio,
+when greater stakes were involved by my silence. Surely, if you once had
+elevated mind enough to comprehend and admire such a man as Earlscourt,
+and be won by the greatness of his intellect to prefer him to younger
+rivals, it is impossible you can have lowered your taste and found any
+one to replace him. No woman who once loved Earlscourt could stoop to an
+inferior man, and almost all men <i>are</i> his inferiors; it is impossible
+you can have grown cold towards him."</p>
+
+<p>She turned her eyes upon me luminous with her old passion&mdash;the color hot
+in her cheeks, and her attitude full of that fiery pride which became
+her so infinitely well.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> changed!&mdash;<i>I</i> grown cold to him! I love him more than all the
+world, and shall do to my grave. Do you think that any who heard him
+last night could glory in him as I did? Did you think any physical
+torture would not have been easier to bear than what I felt when I saw
+his face once more, and thought of what we <i>should have been</i> to one
+another, and of what we <i>are</i>? We women have to act, and smile, and wear
+a calm semblance, while our hearts are bursting; and so you fancy that
+we never feel."</p>
+
+<p>"But, great Heavens! Beatrice, if you love Earlscourt like this, why not
+give me leave to tell him? Why<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span> not write to him yourself? A word would
+clear you, a word restore you to him. Your anger, your pride, he would
+forgive in a moment."</p>
+
+<p>I'm a military man, not a diplomatist, or I shouldn't have added that
+last sentence.</p>
+
+<p>She rose, and looked at me haughtily and amazedly.</p>
+
+<p>"It is I who have to forgive, not he. I wronged him in no way; he
+wronged me bitterly. He dared to misjudge, to suspect, to insult me. I
+shall never stoop to undeceive him. He gave me up without a trial. I
+never will force myself upon him. He thanked God I was not his
+wife&mdash;could I seek to be his wife after that? Love him passionately I
+do, but forgive him I do <i>not</i>! I forbid you, on your faith as a
+gentleman, ever to tell him what I told you that night. I trusted to
+your honor; I shall hold you <i>dis</i>honored if you betray me."</p>
+
+<p>Just as she paused an open carriage rolled past. I looked down
+mechanically; in it was Earlscourt lying back on his cushions,
+returning, I believe, from a Cabinet Council. There, in the street,
+stood my tilbury, with the piebald Cognac that everybody in Belgravia
+knew. There, in the open window, stood Beatrice and I; and Earlscourt,
+as he happened to glance upwards, saw us both! His carriage rolled on;
+Beatrice grew as white as death, and her lips quivered as she looked
+after him; but Lady Mechlin entered, and I took them down to their
+barouche.</p>
+
+<p>"You are determined not to release me from my promise?" I asked
+Beatrice, as I pulled up the tiger-skin over her flounces.</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not; and I should think you are too much of a gentleman not
+to hold a promise sacred."</p>
+
+<p>Pride and determination were written in every line of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span> her face, in the
+very arch of her eyebrows, the very form of her brow, the very curve of
+her lips&mdash;a soft, delicate face enough otherwise, but as expressive of
+indomitable pride as any face could be. And yet, though I swore at her
+as I drove Cognac out of the square, I couldn't help liking her all the
+better for it, the little Pythoness! for, after all, it was natural and
+very intelligible to me&mdash;she had been misjudged and wrongly suspected,
+and the noblest spirits are always the quickest to rebel against
+injustice and resent false accusation.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>V.</h2>
+
+<h3>HOW IN PERFECT INNOCENCE I PLAYED THE PART OF A RIVAL.</h3>
+
+
+<p>The season whirled and spun along as usual. They were having stormy
+debates in the Lower House, and throwing out bills in the Upper; stifled
+by Thames odors one evening, and running down to Epsom the next morning;
+blackguarding each other in parliamentary language&mdash;which, on my honor,
+will soon want duels revived to keep it within decent breeding, if Lord
+Robert Cecil and others don't learn better manners, and remember the
+golden rule that "He alone resorts to vituperation whose argument is
+illogical and weak." We, luckier dogs, who weren't slaves to St.
+Stephen's, nor to anything at all except as parsons and moralists, with
+whom the grapes sont verts et bons pour des goujats, said to our own
+worldly vitiated tastes and evil leanings, spent our hours in the Ring
+and the coulisses, White's and the United, crush balls and opera
+suppers, and swore we were immeasurably bored, though we wouldn't have
+led any other life for half a million. The season whirled<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span> along.
+Earlscourt devoted himself more entirely than ever to public life; he
+filled one of the most onerous and important posts in the ministry, and
+appeared to occupy himself solely with home politics and foreign
+politics. Lady Mechlin, only a baronet's widow, though she had very
+tolerable society of her own, was not in <i>his</i> monde; and Beatrice
+Boville and he, with only Hyde Park Corner between them, might as well,
+for any chance of rapprochement, have been severally at Spitzbergen and
+Cape Horn. Two or three times they passed each other in Pall-Mall and
+the Ride; but Earlscourt only lifted his hat to Lady Mechlin, and
+Beatrice set her little teeth together, and wouldn't have solicited a
+glance from him to save her life. Earlscourt was excessively distant to
+me after seeing my tilbury at her door; no doubt he thought it strange
+for me to have continued my intimacy with a woman who had wronged him so
+bitterly. He said nothing, but I could see he was exceedingly
+displeased; and the more I tried to smooth it with him, the more
+completely I seemed to set my foot in it. It was exceedingly difficult
+to touch on any obnoxious subject with him; he was never harsh or
+discourteous, but he could freeze the atmosphere about him gently, but
+so completely, that no mortal could pierce through it; and, fettered by
+my promise to her and his prohibition to me, I hardly knew how to bring
+up her name. As the Fates would have it, I often met Beatrice myself, at
+the Regent Park f&ecirc;tes, at concerts, at a Handel Festival at Sydenham, at
+one or two dinner parties; and, as she generally made way for me beside
+her, and was one of those women who are invariably, though without
+effort, admired and surrounded in any society, possibly people remarked
+it&mdash;possibly our continued intimacy might have come round to Earlscourt,
+specially as Lady Clive and Mrs Breloques abused<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span> me roundly, each &agrave; sa
+mode, for countenancing that "abominable intrigante." I couldn't help
+it, even if Earlscourt took exception at me for it. I knew the girl was
+not to blame, and I took her part, and tried my best to tame the little
+Pythoness into releasing me from my promise. But Beatrice was firm; had
+she erred, no one would have acknowledged and atoned for it quicker, but
+innocent and wrongly accused, she kept silent, co&ucirc;te que co&ucirc;te, and in
+my heart I sympathized with her. Nothing stings so sharply, nothing is
+harder to forgive, than injustice; and, knowing herself to be frank,
+honorable, and open as the day, his charge of falsehood and deception
+rankled in her only more keenly as time went on. Men ran after her like
+mad; she had more of them about her than many beauties or belles. There
+was a style, a charm, a something in her that sent beauties into the
+shade, and by which, had she chosen, she could soon have replaced
+Earlscourt. Still, it needed to be no Lavater to see, by the passionate
+gleam of her eyes and the haughty pride on her brow, that Beatrice
+Boville was not happy.</p>
+
+<p>"Why <i>will</i> you let pride and punctilio wreck your own life, Beatrice?"
+I asked her, in a low tone, as we stood before one of Ed. Warren's
+delicious bits of woodland in the Water-Color Exhibition, where we had
+chanced to meet one day. "That he should have judged you as he did was
+not unnatural. Think! how was it possible for him to guess your father
+was your companion? Remember how very much circumstances were against
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Had they been ten times more against me, a man who cared for me would
+have believed in me, and stood by me, not condemned me on the first
+suspicion. It was unchivalrous, ungenerous, unjust. I tell you, his
+words<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span> are stamped into my memory forever. I shall never forgive them."</p>
+
+<p>"Not even if you knew that he suffered as much and more than you do?"</p>
+
+<p>She clinched her hands on the rolled-up catalogue with a passionate
+gesture.</p>
+
+<p>"No; because he <i>misjudged</i> me. Anything else I would have pardoned,
+though I am no patient Griselda, to put up tamely with any wrong; but
+<i>that</i> I never could&mdash;I never would!"</p>
+
+<p>"I regret it, then. I thought you too warm and noble-hearted a woman to
+retain resentment so long. I never blamed you in the first instance, but
+I must say I blame you now."</p>
+
+<p>She laughed, a little contemptuously, and glanced at me with her
+haughtiest air; and on my life, much as it provoked one, nothing became
+her better.</p>
+
+<p>"Blame me or not, as you please&mdash;your verdict will be quite bearable,
+either way. I am the one sinned against. I can have nothing explained to
+Lord Earlscourt. Had he cared for me, as he once vowed, he would have
+been less quick then to suspect me, and quicker now to give me a chance
+of clearing myself. But you remember he thanked God I had not his name
+and his honor in my hands. I dare say he rejoices at his escape."</p>
+
+<p>She laughed again, turning over the catalogue feverishly and
+unconsciously. <i>Those</i> were the words that rankled in her; and it was
+not much wonder if, to a proud spirit like Beatrice Boville's, they
+seemed unpardonable. As I handed her and Lady Mechlin into their
+carriage when they left the exhibition, Earlscourt, as ill luck would
+have it, passed us, walking on to White's, the fringe of Beatrice's
+parasol brushed his arm, and a hot color flushed into her cheeks at the
+sudden rencontre.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span> By the instinct of courtesy he bowed to her and Lady
+Mechlin, but passed up Pall-Mall without looking at Beatrice. How well
+society drills us, that we meet with such calm impassiveness in its
+routine those with whom we have sorrowed and joyed, loved and hated, in
+such far different scenes!</p>
+
+<p>Their carriage drove on, and I overtook him as he went up Pall-Mall. He
+was walking slowly, with his hand pressed on his chest, and his lips set
+together, as if in bodily pain. He looked at me, as I joined him, with
+an annoyed glance of unusual irritation for him, for he was always calm
+and untroubled, punctiliously just, and though of a proud temper, never
+quick to anger.</p>
+
+<p>"You passed that girl wonderfully coldly, Earlscourt," I began, plunging
+recklessly into the thick of the subject.</p>
+
+<p>"Coldly!" he repeated, bitterly. "It is very strange that you will
+pursue me with her name. I forbade you to intrude it upon me; was not
+that sufficient?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; because I think you judged her too harshly."</p>
+
+<p>"Think so, if you please, but never renew the topic to me. If she gives
+you her confidence, enjoy it. If you choose, knowing what you do, to be
+misled by her, be so; but I beg of you to spare me your opinions and
+intentions."</p>
+
+<p>"But why? I say you <i>do</i> misjudge her. She might err in impatience and
+pride; but I would bet you any money you like that you would prove her
+guilty of no indelicacy, no treachery, no underhand conduct, though
+appearances might be against her."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Might</i> be! You select your words strangely; you must have some deeper
+motive for your unusual blindness. I desire, for the last time, that you
+cease either<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span> the subject to me, or your acquaintance with me, whichever
+you prefer."</p>
+
+<p>With which, he went up the steps of White's, and I strolled on, amazed
+at the fierce acrimony of his tone, utterly unlike anything I had ever
+heard from him, wished their pride to the devil, called myself a fool
+for meddling in the matter at all, and went to have a quiet weed in the
+smoking-room of the U. S. to cool myself. I was heartily sick of the
+whole affair. If they wanted it cleared, they must clear it
+themselves&mdash;I should trouble myself no more about it. Yet I couldn't
+altogether dismiss Beatrice's cause from my mind. I thought her, to say
+the truth, rather harshly used. I liked her for her fearless, truthful,
+impassioned character. I liked her for the very courage and pride with
+which she preferred to relinquish any chance of regaining her forfeited
+happiness, rather than stoop to solicit exculpation from charges of
+which she knew she was innocent. Perhaps, at first, she did not consider
+sufficiently Earlscourt's provocation, and perhaps, now, she was too
+persisting in her resentment of it; still I liked her, and I was sorry
+to see her, at an age when life should have been couleur de rose, to one
+of her gay and insouciant nature, with a weary, passionate look on her
+face that she should not have had for ten years to come&mdash;a look that was
+rapidly hardening into stern and contemptuous sadness.</p>
+
+<p>"You tell me I am too bitter," she said to me one day, "how should I be
+otherwise? I, who have wronged no one, and have never in my life done
+anything of which I am ashamed, am called an intrigante by Lady Clive
+Edghill, and get ill-will from strangers, and misconstructions from my
+friends, merely because, thinking no harm myself, it never occurs to me
+that circumstances may look against me; and, hating falsehood, I cannot
+lie, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span> smile, and give soft words where I feel contempt and
+indignation. Mrs. Breloques yonder, with whom les pr&eacute;sens ont toujours
+raison, and les absens ont toujours tort, who has honeyed speeches for
+her bitterest foes, and poisoned arrows (behind their back) for her most
+trusting friends, who goes to early matins every morning, and pries out
+for a second all over the top of her prayer-book, who kisses 'darling
+Helena,' and says she 'never looked so sweetly,' whispering en petit
+comit&eacute; what a pity it is, when Helena is so pass&eacute;e, she <i>will</i> dress
+like a girl just out&mdash;she is called the sweetest woman possible&mdash;so
+amiable! and is praised for her high knowledge of religion. You tell me
+I am too bitter. I think not. Honesty does <i>not</i> prosper, and truth is
+at a miserable discount; straightforward frankness makes a myriad of
+foes, and adroit diplomacy as many friends. If you make a
+prettily-turned compliment, who cares if it is sincere? if you hold your
+tongue where you cannot praise, because you will not tell a conventional
+falsehood, the world thinks you very ill-natured, or odiously satirical.
+Society is entirely built upon insincerity and conventionality, from the
+wording of an acceptance of a dinner invitation, where we write 'with
+much pleasure,' thinking to ourselves 'what a bore!' to the giant
+hypocrisies daily spoken without a blush from pulpit and lecturn, and
+legitimatized both as permissible and praiseworthy. To truth and
+unconventionality society of course is adverse; and whoever dares to
+uphold them must expect to be hissed, as Paul by the Ephesians, because
+he shivered their silver shrines and destroyed the craft by which they
+got their wealth."</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice was right; her truth and fearlessness were her enemies with
+most people, even with the man who had loved her best. Had she been
+ready with an adroit<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span> falsehood and a quick excuse, Earlscourt's
+suspicions would never have been raised as they were by her frank
+admission that there was something she would rather not tell him, and
+her innocent request to be trusted. That must have been some very
+innocent and unworldly village schoolmaster, I should say, who first set
+going that venerable proverb, "Honesty is the best policy." He must have
+known comically little of life. A diplomatist who took it as his motto
+would soon come to grief, and ladies would soon stone out of their
+circles any woman b&ecirc;te enough to try its truth among them. There is no
+policy at greater discount in the world, and straightforward and candid
+people stand at very unequal odds with the rest of humanity; they are
+the one morsel of bread to a hogshead of sack, the handful of Spartans
+against a swarm of Persians, and they get the brunt of the battle and
+the worst of the fight.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>VI.</h2>
+
+<h3>HOW PRIDE BOWED AND FELL.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Beyond meeting Earlscourt at White's, or, for an hour, at the r&eacute;union of
+some fair leader of ton, I scarcely saw him that season, for he was more
+and more devoted to public life. He looked wretchedly ill, and his
+physicians said if he wished to live he must go to the south of France
+in July, and winter at Corfu; but he paid them no heed; he occupied
+himself constantly with political and literary work, and grudged the
+three or four hours he gave to sleep that did him little good.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you get me admittance to the Lords to-morrow<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span> night?" Beatrice
+asked me, one morning, when I met her in the Ride. I looked at her
+surprised.</p>
+
+<p>"To the Lords? Of course, if you wish."</p>
+
+<p>"I do wish it." Her hands clinched on her bridle, and the color flushed
+into her face, for Earlscourt just then passed us, riding with one of
+his brother ministers. He looked at us both, and his face changed
+strangely, though he rode on, continuing his conversation with the other
+man, while I went round the turn with Beatrice and the other fellows who
+were about her; le fruit d&eacute;fendu is always most attractive, and
+Beatrice's profound negligence of them all made them more mad about her
+than all the traps and witcheries, beguilements and attractions, that
+coquettes and beauties set out for them. She rode beautifully; and a
+woman who <i>does</i> sit well down on her saddle, and knows how to handle
+her horse, never looks better than en Amazone. Earlscourt met her three
+times at the turn of the Ride; and though you would not have told that
+he was passing any other than an utter stranger, I think it must have
+struck him that he had lost much in losing Beatrice Boville. I was
+riding on her off-side each time when we passed him. As I say, I never,
+thank God! have cared a straw for the qu'en dira-t-on? and if people
+remarked on my intimacy with my cousin's cast off fianc&eacute;e, so they
+might, but to Earlscourt I wished to explain it more for Beatrice's sake
+than my own; and as I rode out by Apsley House afterwards, I overtook
+him, and went up to Piccadilly with him, though his manner was decidedly
+distant and chill, so pointedly so that it would have been rude, had he
+not been too entirely a disciple of Chesterfield to be ever otherwise
+than courteous to his deadliest foe; but, disregarding his coldness, I
+said what I intended to say, and began an explanation that I considered
+only due to him.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, Earlscourt, for intruding on you a topic you have
+forbidden, but I shall be obliged to you to listen to me a moment. I
+wish to tell you my reasons for what, I dare say, seems strange to you,
+my continued intimacy with&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But I was not permitted to end my sentence; he divined what I was about
+to say, and stopped me, with a cold, wearied air.</p>
+
+<p>"I understand; but I prefer not to hear them. I have no desire to
+interfere with your actions, and less to be troubled with your motives.
+Of course, you choose your friendships as you please. All I beg is, that
+you obey the wish I expressed the other day, and intrude the subject no
+more upon me."</p>
+
+<p>And he bade me good morning, urged his mare into a sharp canter, and
+turned down St. James's Street. How little those in the crowd, who
+looked at him as he rode by, pointing him out to the women with them as
+Viscount Earlscourt, the most eloquent debater in the Lords, the
+celebrated foreign minister, author, and diplomatist, guessed that a
+woman's name could touch and sting him as nothing else could do, and
+that under the calm and glittering upper-current of his life ran a dark,
+slender, unnoticed thread that had power to poison all the rest! Those
+women, mon ami!&mdash;if we <i>do</i> satirize them a little bit now and then, are
+we doing any more than taking a very mild revenge? Don't they make fools
+of the very best and wisest of us, play the deuce with C&aelig;sar as with
+Catullus, and make Achilles soft as Amphimachus?</p>
+
+<p>The next morning I met Beatrice at a concert at the Marchioness of
+Pursang's. Lady Pursang would not have been, vous concevez, on the
+visiting list of Lady Mechlin, as she was one of the cr&egrave;me de la cr&egrave;me,
+but she had met Beatrice the winter before at Pau, had been very<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>
+delighted with her, and now continued the acquaintance in town. I
+happened to sit next our little Pythoness, who looked better, I think,
+that morning, than ever I saw her, though her face was set into that
+disdainful sadness which had become its habitual expression. She liked
+my society, and sought it, no doubt, because I was the only link between
+her and her lost past; and she was talking with me more animatedly than
+usual, thanking me for having got her admittance to the Lords that
+night, during a pause in the concert, when Earlscourt entered the room,
+and took the seat reserved for him, which was not far from ours. Music
+was one of his passions, the only d&eacute;lassement, indeed, he ever gave
+himself now; but to-day, though ostensibly he listened to Alboni and
+Arabella Goddard, Hall&eacute; and Vieuxtemps, and talked to the marchioness
+and other women of her set, in reality he was watching Beatrice, who,
+her pride roused by his presence, laughed and chatted with me and other
+men with her old gay abandon, and, impervious to d&eacute;r&eacute;glement though he
+was, I fancy even <i>he</i> felt it a severe trial of his composure when Lady
+Pursang, who had been the last five years in India with her husband, and
+who was ignorant of or had forgotten the name of the girl Earlscourt was
+to have married the year before, asked him, when the concert was over,
+to let her introduce him to her, yet Beatrice Boville, bringing him in
+innocent cruelty up to that little Pythoness, with whom he had parted so
+passionately and bitterly ten months before! Happy for them that they
+had that armor which the Spartans called heroism, the stoics philosophy,
+and we&mdash;simply style good breeding, or they would hardly have gone
+through that ordeal as well as they did when she introduced them to each
+other as strangers!&mdash;those two who had whispered such passionate love
+words, given and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span> received such fond caresses, vowed barely twelve
+months before to pass their lifetime together! Happy for them they were
+used to society, or they would hardly have bowed to each other as calmly
+and admirably as they did, with the recollection of that night in which
+they had parted so bitterly, so full as it was in the minds of both.
+Beatrice was standing in one of the open windows of the little cabinet
+de peinture almost empty, and when the marchioness moved away, satisfied
+that she had introduced two people admirably fitted to entertain one
+another, Earlscourt, with people flirting and talking within a few yards
+of him, was virtually alone with Beatrice&mdash;for there is, after all, no
+solitude like the solitude of a crowd&mdash;and <i>then</i>, for the first time in
+his life, his self-possession forsook him. Beatrice was silent and very
+pale, looking out of the window on to the Green Park, which the house
+overlooked, and Earlscourt's pride had a hard struggle, but his passion
+got the better of him, malgr&eacute; lui, and he leaned towards her.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you remember the last night we were together?"</p>
+
+<p>She answered him bitterly. She had not forgiven him. She had sometimes,
+I am half afraid, sworn to revenge herself.</p>
+
+<p>"I am hardly likely to forget it, Lord Earlscourt."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her longingly and wistfully; his pride was softened, that
+granite pride, hitherto so unassailable! and he bent nearer to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Beatrice! I would give much to be able to wash out the memories of that
+night&mdash;to be proved mistaken&mdash;to be convicted of haste, of sternness&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The tears rushed into her eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"You need only have given one little thing&mdash;all I asked of you&mdash;trust!"</p>
+
+<p>"Would to God I dare believe you now! Tell me,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span> answer me, did I judge
+you too harshly? Love at my age never changes, however wronged; it is
+the latest, and it only expires with life itself. I confess to you, you
+are dearer to me still than anything ever was, than anything ever will
+be. Prove to me, for God's sake, that I misjudged you! Only prove it to
+me; explain away what appeared against you, and we may yet&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He stopped; his voice trembled, his hand touched hers, he breathed short
+and fast. The Pythoness was very nearly tamed; her eyes grew soft and
+melting, her lips trembled; but pride was still strong in her. At the
+touch of his hand it very nearly gave way, but not wholly; it was there
+still, tenacious of its reign. She set her little teeth obstinately
+together, and looked up at him with her old hauteur.</p>
+
+<p>"No, as I told you then, you must believe in me <i>without</i> proof. I have
+not forgotten your bitter words, nor yet forgiven them. I doubt if I
+ever shall. You roused an evil spirit in me that night, Lord Earlscourt,
+which you cannot exorcise at a moment's notice. Remember what was your
+own motto, 'An indiscreet woman is never frank,'&mdash;yet from my very
+frankness you accused me of indiscretion, and of far worse than
+indiscretion&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"My God! if I accused you falsely, Beatrice, forgive me!"</p>
+
+<p>He must have loved her very much to bow his pride so far as that. <i>He</i>
+was at <i>her</i> feet&mdash;at <i>her</i> mercy now; he, whom she had vainly sued,
+sued her; but a perverse, fiery devil in her urged her to take her own
+revenge, compelled her to throw away her own peace.</p>
+
+<p>"You should have asked me that ten months ago; it is too late now."</p>
+
+<p>His face dyed white, his eyes filled with passionate anguish. He crushed
+her hand in his.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Too late! Great Heavens! Answer me, child, I entreat you&mdash;I beseech
+you&mdash;is it 'too late' because report is true that you have replaced me
+with your cousin&mdash;that you are engaged to Hervey? Tell me truth now, for
+pity's sake. I will be trifled with no longer."</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice threw back her haughty little head contemptuously, though
+ladies <i>don't</i> sneer at the idea of being li&eacute;es with me generally, I can
+assure you. Her heart throbbed triumphantly and joyously. She had
+conquered him at last. The man of giant intellect and haughty will had
+bowed to her. She held him by a thread, he who ruled the fate of
+nations!&mdash;and she loved him so dearly! But the Pythoness was not wholly
+tamed, and she could not even yet forget her wrongs.</p>
+
+<p>"You told me before I spoke falsehoods to you, Lord Earlscourt; my word
+would find no more credence now."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her, dropped her hand, and turned away, before Beatrice
+could detain him. Five minutes after he left the house. Little as I
+guessed it, he was jealous of me&mdash;I! who never in my own life rivalled
+any man who wished to <i>marry</i>! Beatrice had fully revenged herself. I
+wonder if she enjoyed it quite as much as she had anticipated, as she
+stood where he had left her looking out on the Green Park?</p>
+
+<p>I went with Beatrice and her party to the Lords that night; it was the
+tug of war for the bill which Earlscourt was so determined should pass,
+and a great speech was expected from him. We were not disappointed. When
+he rose he spoke with effort, and his oratory suffered from the slight
+hoarseness of his voice, for half the beauty of his rhetoric lay in the
+flexibility and music of his tones; still, it was emphatically a great
+speech, and Beatrice Boville listened to it breathlessly, with her eyes
+fixed on the face&mdash;weary, worn, but grandly intellectual&mdash;of the man<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>
+whom Europe reverenced, and she&mdash;a girl of twenty!&mdash;ruled. Perhaps her
+heart smote her for the lines she had added there; perhaps she felt her
+pride misplaced to him, great as he was, with his stainless honor and
+unequalled genius; perhaps she thought of how, with all his strength,
+his hand had trembled as it touched hers; and how, with all her love,
+she had been wilful and naughty to him a second time. His voice grew
+weaker as he ended, and he spoke with visible effort; still it was one
+of his greatest political triumphs: his bill passed by a large majority,
+and the papers, the morning after, filled their leading articles with
+admiration of Viscount Earlscourt's speech. But before those journals
+were out, Earlscourt was too ill almost to notice the success of his
+measures: as he left the House, the presiding devil of beloved Albion,
+that plays the deuce with English statesmen as with Italian
+cantatrices,&mdash;the confounded east wind,&mdash;had caught him, finished what
+over-exertion had begun, and knocked him over, prostrated with severe
+bronchitis. What pity it is that the body <i>will</i> levy such cruel black
+mail upon the mind; that a gust of wind, a horse's plunge, the effluvia
+of a sewer, the carelessness of a pointsman, can destroy the grandest
+intellect, sweep off the men whose genius lights the world, as
+ruthlessly as a storm of rain a cloud of gnats, and strike Peel and
+Canning, Macaulay and Donaldson, in the prime of their power, as
+heedlessly as peasants little higher than the brutes, dull as the clods
+of their own valley, who stake their ambitions on a surfeit of fat
+bacon, and can barely scrawl their names upon a slate!</p>
+
+<p>Unconscious that Earlscourt's jealousy had fastened so wrongly upon me,
+I was calling upon Beatrice late the next morning, ignorant myself of
+his illness, when his physician, who was Lady Mechlin's too, while
+paying her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span> a complimentary visit, regretted to me my cousin's sudden
+attack.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord Earlscourt would speak last night," he began. "I entreated him
+not; but those public men are so obstinate; to-day he is very ill&mdash;very
+ill indeed, though prompt measures stopped the worst. He has risen to
+dictate something of importance to his secretary; he would work his
+brain if he were dying; but it has taken a severe hold on him, I fear. I
+shall send him somewhere south as soon as he can leave the house, which
+will not be for some weeks. He would be a great loss to the country. We
+have not such another foreign minister. But I admit to you, Major
+Hervey&mdash;though of course I do not wish it to go further&mdash;that I <i>do</i>
+think very seriously of Lord Earlscourt's state of health."</p>
+
+<p>Beatrice heard him as she sat at her Davenport; her face grew white, and
+her eyes filled with great anguish. She thought of his words to her only
+the day before, and of how her pride had repelled him a second time. I
+saw her hand clinch on the pen she was playing with, and her teeth set
+tight together, her habitual action under any strong emotion, thinking
+to herself, no doubt, "And my last words to him were bitter ones!"</p>
+
+<p>When the physician had left, I went up to her.&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Beatrice, you must let me tell him <i>now</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>She did not answer, but her hand clinched tighter on the pen-handle.</p>
+
+<p>"His life is in your hands; for God's sake relinquish your pride."</p>
+
+<p>But her pride was strong in her, and dear to her still, strong and dear
+as her love; and the two struggled together. Earlscourt had bowed <i>his</i>
+pride to her; but she had not yielded up her own, and it cost her much
+to yield it even now. All the Pythoness in her was not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span> tamed yet. She
+was silent&mdash;she wavered&mdash;then her great love for him vanquished all
+else. She rose, white as death, her passionate eyes full of unshed
+tears, the bitterest, yet the softest, Beatrice Boville had ever known.</p>
+
+<p>"Take me to him. No one shall tell him but myself."</p>
+
+<p>Earlscourt was lying on a couch in his library; he had been unable to
+dictate or to write himself, for severe remedies had prostrated him
+utterly, and he could not speak above his breath, though he was loath to
+give up, and acknowledge himself as ill as he was. His eyes were closed,
+his forehead knitted together in pain, and his labored breathing told
+plainly enough how fiercely his foe had attacked him, and that it was by
+no means conquered yet. He had not slept all night, and had fallen into
+a short slumber now, desiring his attendants to leave him. I bade the
+groom of the chambers let us enter unannounced, and, opening the door
+myself, signed to Beatrice to go in, while her aunt and I waited in the
+anteroom. She stopped a moment at the entrance; her pride had its last
+struggle; but he turned restlessly, with a weary sigh, and by that sigh
+the Pythoness was conquered. Beatrice went forward and fell on her knees
+beside his sofa, bending down till her lips touched his brow, and her
+hot tears fell on his hands.</p>
+
+<p>"I was too proud last night to tell you you misjudged me. I have no
+pride now. I am your own&mdash;wholly your own. I never loved, I never should
+love, any but you. I forgive you now. O, how could you ever doubt me?
+Lord Earlscourt&mdash;Ernest&mdash;may we not yet be all we once were to one
+another?"</p>
+
+<p>Awakened by her kisses on his brow, bewildered by her sudden appearance,
+he tried to rise, but sank back exhausted. He did not disbelieve her
+now. He had no voice to speak to her, no strength to answer her; but he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span>
+drew her down closer and closer to him, as she knelt by him, and, as her
+heart beat once more against his, the little Pythoness, tamed at last,
+threw her arms round him and sobbed like a child on his breast. And
+so&mdash;Beatrice Boville took her best <span class="smcap">Revenge</span>!&mdash;while I shut the library
+door, invited Lady Mechlin to inspect Earlscourt's collection of French
+pictures, and asked what she thought of <i>Punch</i> this week.</p>
+
+<p>I don't know what his physicians would have said of the treatment, as
+they'd recommended him "perfect quiet;" all I do know is, that though
+Earlscourt went to the south of Europe as soon as he could leave the
+house, Beatrice Boville went with him; and he took his place on the
+benches and in the cabinet this season, without any trace of bronchia,
+or any sign of wearing out.</p>
+
+<p>Lady Clive, I regret to say, "does not know" Lady Earlscourt: anything
+for her beloved brother she <i>would</i> do, were it possible; but she hopes
+we understand that, for her daughters' sakes, she feels it quite
+impossible to countenance that "shocking little intrigante."</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="sep1" />
+<hr class="sep2" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span></p>
+<h1>A LINE IN THE "DAILY."</h1>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span></p>
+<hr class="sep3" />
+<hr class="sep4" />
+
+
+
+<h2><a name="A_LINE_IN_THE_DAILY" id="A_LINE_IN_THE_DAILY"></a>A LINE IN THE "DAILY."</h2>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2>WHO DID IT, AND WHO WAS DONE BY IT.</h2>
+
+
+<p>"Lieutenant-Colonel Fairlie's troop of Horse Artillery
+is ordered to Norwich to replace the 12th Lancers,
+en route to Bombay."&mdash;Those three lines in the papers
+spread dismay into the souls of Norfolk young ladies, and
+no less horror into ours, for we were very jolly at Woolwich,
+could run up to the Clubs and down to Epsom, and
+were far too material not to prefer ball-room belles to bluebells,
+strawberry-ice to fresh hautboys, the sparkle of champagne-cups
+to all the murmurs of the brooks, and the flutter
+of ballet-girls' wings to all the rustle of forest-leaves.
+But, unhappily, the Ordnance Office is no more given to
+considering the feelings of their Royal Gunners than the
+Horse Guards the individual desires of the two other
+Arms; and off we went to Norwich, repining bitterly, or,
+in modern English, swearing hard at our destinies, creating
+an immense sensation with our 6-pounders, as we
+flatter ourselves the Royals always contrive to do, whether
+on fair friends or fierce foes, and were looked upon spitefully
+by the one or two young ladies whose hearts were
+gone eastwards with the Twelfth, smilingly by the one or
+two hundred who, having fruitlessly laid out a great deal
+of tackle on the Twelfth, proceeded to manufacture fresh
+flies to catch us.</p>
+
+<p>We soon made up, I think, to the Norwich girls for the
+loss of the Twelfth. They set dead upon Fairlie, our<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>
+captain, a Brevet Lieutenant-Colonel, and a C. B. for "services
+in India," where he had rivalled Norman Ramsay
+at Fuentes d'Onor, had had a ball put in his hip, and had
+come home again to be worshipped by the women for his
+romantic reputation. They made an immense deal, too,
+of Levison Courtenay, the beauty of the troop, and called
+Belle in consequence; who did not want any flummery or
+flirtation to increase his opinion of himself, being as vain
+of his almond eyes as any girl just entered as the favorite
+for the season. There were Tom Gower, too, a capital
+fellow, with no nonsense about him, who made no end of
+chaff of Belle Courtenay; and Little Nell, otherwise Harcourt
+Poulteney Nelson, who had by some miracle escaped
+expulsion both from Carshalton and the College; and <i>votre
+humble serviteur</i> Phil Hardinge, first lieutenant; and one
+or two other fellows, who having cut dashing figures at our
+Woolwich reviews, cantering across Blackheath Common,
+or waltzing with dainty beauties down our mess-room, made
+the Artillery welcome in that city of shawls and oratorios,
+where according to the Gazetteer, no virtuous person ought
+to dwell, that volume, with characteristic lucidity, pronouncing
+its streets "ill-disposed."</p>
+
+<p>The Clergy asked us to their rectories&mdash;a temptation
+we were often proof against, there being three noticeable
+facts in rectories, that the talk is always slow, "the Church"
+being present, and having much the same chilling effect as
+the presence of a chaperone at a t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te; the daughters
+generally ugly, and, from leading the choir at morning
+services, perfectly convinced that they sing like Clara
+Novello, and that the harmonium is a most delightful
+instrument; and, last and worst, the wines are almost
+always poor, except the port which the reverend host
+drinks himself, but which, Dieu merci! we rarely or never
+touch.</p>
+
+<p>The County asked us, too; and there we went for good
+hock, tolerable-looking women, and first-rate billiard-tables.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>
+For the first month we were in Norfolk we voted it unanimously
+the most infernally slow and hideous county
+going; and I dare say we made ourselves uncommonly
+disagreeable, as people, if they are not pleased, be they
+ever so well bred, have a knack of doing.</p>
+
+<p>Things were thus quiescent and stagnant, when Fairlie
+one night at mess told us a bit of news.</p>
+
+<p>"Old fellows, whom do you think I met to-day?"</p>
+
+<p>"How should we know? Cut along."</p>
+
+<p>"The Swan and her Cygnets."</p>
+
+<p>"The Vanes? Oh, bravo!" was shouted at a chorus,
+for the dame and demoiselles in question we had known
+in town that winter, and a nicer, pleasanter, faster set of
+women I never came across. "What's bringing them
+down here, and how's Geraldine?"</p>
+
+<p>"Vane's come into his baronetcy, and his place is close
+by Norwich," said Fairlie; "his wife's health has been
+bad, and so they left town early; and Geraldine is quite
+well, and counting on haymaking, she informed me."</p>
+
+<p>"Come, that is good news," said Belle, yawning.
+"There'll be one pretty woman in the county, thank
+Heaven! Poor little Geraldine! I must go and call on
+her to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"She has existed without your calls, Belle," said Fairlie,
+dryly, "and don't look as if she'd pined after you."</p>
+
+<p>"My dear fellow, how should you know?" said Belle,
+in no wise disconcerted. "A little rogue soon makes 'em
+look well, and as for smiles, they'll smile while they're
+dying for you. Little Vane and I were always good
+friends, and shall be again&mdash;if I care."</p>
+
+<p>"Conceited owl!" said Fairlie, under his moustaches.
+"I'm sorry to hurt your feelings, then, but your pretty
+'friend' never asked after you."</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say not," said Belle, complacently. "Where
+a woman's most interested she's always quietest, and
+Geraldine&mdash;&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Lady Vane begged me to tell you you will always be
+welcome over there, old fellows," said Fairlie, remorselessly
+cutting him short. "Perhaps we shall find something
+to amuse us better than these stiltified Chapter
+dinners."</p>
+
+<p>The Vanes of whom we talked were an uncommonly
+pleasant set of people whom we had known at Lee, where
+Vane, a Q. C., then resided, his prospective baronetcy
+being at that time held by a third or fourth cousin. Fairlie
+had known the family since his boyhood; there were
+four daughters, tall graceful women, who had gained
+themselves the nickname of The Swan and her Cygnets;
+and then there were twins, a boy of eighteen, who'd just
+left Eton; and the girl Geraldine, a charming young lady,
+whom Belle admired more warmly than that dandy often
+admired anybody besides himself, and whom Fairlie liked
+cordially, having had many a familiar bit of fun with
+her, as he had known her ever since he was a dashing
+cadet, and she made her <i>d&eacute;but</i> in life in the first column
+of the <i>Times</i>. Her sisters were handsome women; but
+Geraldine was bewitching. A very pleasant family they
+were, and a vast acquisition to us. Miss Geraldine flirted
+to a certain extent with us all, but chiefly with the Colonel,
+whenever he was to be had, those two having a very
+free-and-easy, familiar, pleasant style of intercourse, owing
+to old acquaintance; and Belle spent two hours every
+evening on his toilette when we were going to dine there,
+and vowed she was a "deuced pretty little puss. Perhaps
+she might&mdash;he wasn't sure, but perhaps (it would be a
+horrid sacrifice), if he were with her much longer, he
+wasn't sure she mightn't persuade him to take compassion
+upon her, he <i>was</i> so weak where women were concerned!"</p>
+
+<p>"What a conceit!" said Fairlie thereat, with a contemptuous
+twist of his moustaches and a shrug of his
+shoulders to me. "I must say, if I were a woman, I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69]</a></span>
+shouldn't feel over-flattered by a lover who admired his
+own beauty first, and mine afterwards. Not that I pretend
+to understand women."</p>
+
+<p>By which speech I argued that his old playmate Geraldine
+hadn't thrown hay over the Colonel, and been taught
+billiards by him, and ridden his bay mare over the park
+in her evening dress, without interesting him slightly;
+and that&mdash;though I don't think he knew it&mdash;he was
+deigning to be a trifle jealous of his Second Captain, the
+all-mighty conqueror Belle.</p>
+
+<p>"What fools they must be that put in these things!"
+yawned Belle one morning, reading over his breakfast
+coffee in the <i>Daily Pryer</i> one of those "advertisements
+for a wife" that one comes across sometimes in the papers,
+and that make us, like a good many other things, agree
+with Goldsmith:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Reason, they say, belongs to man,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But let them prove it if they can;<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Wise Aristotle and Smiglicious,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">By ratiocinations specious,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Have strove to prove with great precision,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">With definition and division,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Homo est ratione pr&aelig;ditum,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">But for my soul I cannot credit 'em.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"What fools they must be!" yawned Belle, wrapping his
+dressing-gown round him, and coaxing his perfumy
+whiskers under his velvet smoking-cap. Belle was always
+inundated by smoking-caps in cloth and velvet, silk and
+beads, with blue tassels, and red tassels, and gold tassels,
+embroidered and filigreed, rounded and pointed; he had
+them sent to him by the dozen, and pretty good chaff he
+made of the donors. "Awful fools! The idea of advertising
+for a wife, when the only difficulty a man has is to
+keep from being tricked into taking one. I bet you, if I
+did like this owl here, I should have a hundred answers;
+and if it was known it was I&mdash;&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[Pg 70]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Little Geraldine's self for a candidate, eh?" asked
+Tom Gower.</p>
+
+<p>"Very possibly," said Belle, with a self-complacent
+smile. "She's a fast little thing, don't check at much,
+and she's deucedly in love with me, poor little dear&mdash;almost
+as much trouble to me as Julia Sedley was last
+season. That girl all but proposed to me; she did, indeed.
+Never was nearer coming to grief in my life.
+What will you bet me that, if I advertise for a wife, I
+don't hoax lots of women?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll bet you ten pounds," said I, "that you don't hoax
+one!"</p>
+
+<p>"Done!" said Belle, stretching out his hand for a
+dainty memorandum-book, gift of the identical Julia
+Sedley aforesaid, and entering the bet in it&mdash;"done!
+If I'm not asked to walk in the Close at noon and look
+out for a pink bonnet and a black lace cloak, and to
+loiter up the market-place till I come across a black hat
+and blue muslin dress; if I'm not requested to call at
+No. 20, and to grant an interview at No. 84; if I'm not
+written to by Agatha A. with hazel, and Belinda B. with
+black, eyes&mdash;all coming after me like flies after a sugar-cask,
+why you shall have your ten guineas, my boy, and
+my colt into the bargain. Come, write out the advertisement,
+Tom&mdash;I can't, it's too much trouble; draw it
+mild, that's all, or the letters we shall get will necessitate
+an additional Norwich postman. By George, what fun
+it will be to do the girls! Cut along, Tom, can't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"All right," said Gower, pushing away his coffee-cup,
+and drawing the ink to him. "Head it '<span class="smcap">Marriage</span>,' of
+course?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course. That word's as attractive to a woman as
+the belt to a prize-fighter, or a pipe of port to a college
+fellow."</p>
+
+<p>"'<span class="smcap">Marriage.</span>&mdash;A Bachelor&mdash;&mdash;'"</p>
+
+<p>"Tell 'em a military man; all girls have the scarlet
+fever."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Very well&mdash;'an Officer in the Queen's, of considerable
+personal attractions&mdash;&mdash;'"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear fellow, pray don't!" expostulated Belle, in
+extreme alarm; "we shall have such swarms of 'em!"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no! we must say that," persisted Gower&mdash;"'personal
+attractions, aged eight-and-twenty&mdash;&mdash;'"</p>
+
+<p>"Can't you put it, 'in the flower of his age,' or his
+'sixth lustre'? It's so much more poetic."</p>
+
+<p>"'&mdash;the flower of his age,' then (that'll leave 'em a
+wide range from twenty to fifty, according to their taste),
+'is desirous of meeting a young lady of beauty, talent,
+and good family,'&mdash;eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. All women think themselves beauties, if they're
+as ugly as sin. Milliners and confectioner girls talk
+Anglo-French, and rattle a tin-kettle piano after a fashion,
+and anybody buys a 'family' for half-a-crown at the
+Heralds' Office&mdash;so fire away."</p>
+
+<p>"'&mdash;who, feeling as he does the want of a kindred
+heart and sympathetic soul, will accord him the favor of
+a letter or an interview, as a preliminary to the greatest
+step in life.'"</p>
+
+<p>"A step&mdash;like one on thin ice&mdash;very sure to bring a
+man to grief," interpolated Belle. "Say something about
+property; those soul-and-spirit young ladies generally
+keep a look-out for tin, and only feel an elective affinity
+for a lot of debentures and consols."</p>
+
+<p>"'The advertiser being a man of some present and
+still more prospective wealth, requires no fortune,
+the sole objects of his search being love and domestic
+felicity.' Domestic felicity&mdash;how horrible! Don't it
+sound exactly like the end of a lady's novel, where the
+unlucky hero is always brought to an untimely end in a
+'sweet cottage on the banks of the lovely Severn.'"</p>
+
+<p>"'Domestic felicity'&mdash;bah! What are you writing
+about?" yawned Belle. "I'd as soon take to teetotalism:
+however, it'll tell in the advertisement. Bravo,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>
+Tom, that will do. Address it to 'L. C., care of Mrs.
+Greene, confectioner, St. Giles Street, Norwich.' Miss
+Patty'll take the letters in for me, though not if she
+knew their errand. Tip seven-and-sixpence with it, and
+send it to the <i>Daily Pryer</i>."</p>
+
+<p>We did send it to the <i>Daily</i>, and in that broadsheet we
+all of us read it two mornings after.</p>
+
+<div class="blockquot"><p>MARRIAGE.&mdash;A Bachelor, an Officer of the Queen's, of considerable
+personal attractions, and in the flower of his age,
+is desirous of meeting a young lady of beauty, accomplishments,
+and good family, who, feeling as he does the want of a kindred
+heart and sympathetic soul, will accord him the favor either of a
+letter or an interview, as a preliminary to the greatest step in
+life. The advertiser being a man of some present and still more
+prospective wealth, requires no fortune, the sole objects of his
+search being love and domestic felicity. Address, L. C., care of
+Mrs. Greene, confectioner, St. Giles Street, Norwich.</p></div>
+
+<p>"Whose advertisement do you imagine that is?" said
+Fairlie, showing the <i>Daily</i> to Geraldine, as he sat with
+her and her sisters under some lilac and larch trees in
+one of the meadows of Fern Chase, which had had the
+civility, Geraldine said, to yield a second crop of hay expressly
+for her to have the pleasure of making it. She
+leaned down towards him as he lay on the grass, and read
+the advertisement, looking uncommonly pretty in her
+dainty muslin dress, with its fluttering mauve ribbons,
+and a wreath she had just twisted up, of bluebells and
+pinks and white heaths which Fairlie had gathered as he
+lay, put on her bright hair. We called her a little flirt,
+but I think she was an unintentional one; at least, her
+agaceries were, all as unconscious as they were&mdash;her
+worst enemies (<i>i. e.</i> plain young ladies) had to allow&mdash;unaffected.</p>
+
+<p>"How exquisitely sentimental! Is it yours?" she
+asked, with demure mischief.</p>
+
+<p>"Mine!" echoed Fairlie, with supreme scorn.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It's some one's here, because the address is at Mrs.
+Greene's. Come, tell me at once, monsieur."</p>
+
+<p>"The only fool in the Artillery," said Fairlie, curtly:
+"Belle Courtenay."</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Courtenay!" echoed Geraldine, with a little
+flush on her cheeks, caused, perhaps, by the quick glance
+the Colonel shot at her as he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Courtenay!" said Katherine Vane. "Why,
+what can he want with a wife? I thought he had <i>l'embarras
+de choix</i> offered him in that line; at least, so he
+makes out himself."</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say," said Fairlie, dryly, "it's for a bet he's
+made, to see how many women he can hoax, I believe."</p>
+
+<p>"How can you tell it is a hoax?" said Geraldine,
+throwing cowslips at her greyhound. "It may be some
+medium of intercourse with some one he really cares for,
+and who may understand his meaning."</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps you are in his confidence, Geraldine, or perhaps
+you are thinking of answering it yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," said the young lady, waywardly, making
+the cowslips into a ball, "there might be worse investments.
+Your <i>b&ecirc;te noire</i> is strikingly handsome; he is the
+perfection of style; he is going to be Equerry to the
+Prince; his mother is just married again to Lord Chevenix;
+he did not name half his attractions in that line in
+the <i>Daily</i>."</p>
+
+<p>With which Geraldine rushed across the meadow after
+the greyhound and the cowslip ball, and Fairlie lay quiet
+plucking up the heaths by the roots. He lay there still,
+when the cowslip ball struck him a soft fragrant blow
+against his lips, and knocked the Cuba from between his
+teeth.</p>
+
+<p>"Why don't you speak?" asked Geraldine, plaintively.
+"You are not half so pleasant to play with as you were
+before you went to India and I was seven or eight, and
+you had La Grace, and battledoor and shuttlecock, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>
+cricket, and all sorts of games with me in the old garden
+at Charlton."</p>
+
+<p>He might have told her she was much less dangerous
+then than now; he was not disposed to flatter her, however.
+So he answered her quietly,</p>
+
+<p>"I preferred you as you were then."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!" said Geraldine, with a hot color in her cheeks
+"I do not think there are many who would indorse your
+complimentary opinion."</p>
+
+<p>"Possibly," said Fairlie, coldly.</p>
+
+<p>She took up her cowslips, and hit him hard with them
+several times.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't speak in that tone. If you dislike me, you can
+say so in warmer words, surely."</p>
+
+<p>Fairlie smiled <i>malgr&eacute; lui</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"What a child you are, Geraldine! but a child that is
+a very mischievous coquette, and has learned a hundred
+tricks and <i>agaceries</i> of which my little friend of seven or
+eight knew nothing. I grant you were not a quarter so
+charming, but you were, I am afraid&mdash;more true."</p>
+
+<p>Geraldine was ready to cry, but she was in a passion,
+nevertheless; such a hot and short-lived passion as all
+women of any spirit can go into on occasion, when they
+are unjustly suspected.</p>
+
+<p>"If you choose to think so of me you may," she said,
+with immeasurable hauteur, sweeping away from him, her
+mauve ribbons fluttering disdainfully. "I, for one, shall
+not try to undeceive you."</p>
+
+<p>The next night we all went up to a ball at the Vanes',
+to drink Rhenish, eat ices, quiz the women, flirt with the
+pretty ones in corners, lounge against doorways, criticise
+the feet in the waltzing as they passed us, and do, in fact,
+anything but what we went to do&mdash;dance,&mdash;according to
+our custom in such scenes.</p>
+
+<p>The Swan and her Cygnets looked very stunning; they
+"made up well," as ladies say when they cannot deny<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>
+that another is good-looking, but qualify your admiration
+by an assurance that she is shockingly plain in the morning,
+and owes all to her milliner and maids. Geraldine,
+who, by the greatest stretch of scepticism, could not be
+supposed "made up," was bewitching, with her sunshiny
+enjoyment of everything, and her untiring waltzing, going
+for all the world like a spinning-top, only a top tires, and
+she did not. Belle, who made a principle of never dancing
+except under extreme coercion by a very pretty hostess,
+could not resist her, and Tom Gower, and Little Nell,
+and all the rest, not to mention half Norfolk, crowded
+round her; all except Fairlie, who leaned against the
+doorway, seeming to talk to her father or the members, or
+anybody near, but watching the young lady for all that,
+who flirted not a little, having in her mind the scene in
+the paddock of yesterday, and wishing, perhaps, to show
+him that if he did not admire her more than when she
+was eight, other men had better taste.</p>
+
+<p>She managed to come near him towards the end of the
+evening, sending Belle to get her an ice.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," she said, with a comical <i>piti&eacute; d'elle-m&ecirc;me</i>, "do
+you dislike me so much that you don't mean to dance
+with me at all? Not a single waltz all night?"</p>
+
+<p>"What time have you had to give me?" said Fairlie,
+coldly. "You have been surrounded all the evening."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I have. I am not so disagreeable to other
+gentlemen as I am to you. But I could have made time
+for you if you had only asked for it. At your own ball
+last week you engaged me beforehand for six waltzes."</p>
+
+<p>Fairlie relented towards her. Despite her flirting, he
+thought she did not care for Belle after all.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," he said, smiling, "will you give me one after
+supper?"</p>
+
+<p>"You told me you shouldn't dance, Colonel Fairlie,"
+said Katherine Vane, smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"One can't tell what one mayn't do under temptation,"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>
+said Fairlie, smiling too. "A man may change his mind,
+you know."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes," cried Geraldine; "a man may change his
+mind, and we are expected to be eminently grateful to him
+for his condescension; but if <i>we</i> change our minds, how
+severely we are condemned for vacillation: 'So weak!'
+'Just like women!' 'Never like the same thing two minutes,
+poor things!'"</p>
+
+<p>"You don't like the same thing two minutes, Geraldine,"
+laughed Fairlie; "so I dare say you speak feelingly."</p>
+
+<p>"I changeable! I am constancy itself!"</p>
+
+<p>"Are you? You know what the Italians say of 'ocche
+azzure'?"</p>
+
+<p>"But I don't believe it, monsieur!" cried Geraldine:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Blue eyes beat black fifty to seven,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">For black's of hell, but blue's of heaven!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, mademoiselle," laughed Fairlie:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Done, by the odds, it is not true!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">One devil's black, but scores are blue!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>He whirled her off into the circle in the midst of our
+laughter at their ready wit. Soon after he bid her good
+night, but he found time to whisper as he did so.</p>
+
+<p>"You are more like <i>my</i> little Geraldine to-night!"</p>
+
+<p>The look he got made him determine to make her his
+little Geraldine before much more time had passed. At
+least he drove us back to Norwich in what seemed very
+contented silence, for he smoked tranquilly, and let the
+horses go their own pace&mdash;two certain indications that a
+man has pleasant thoughts to accompany him.</p>
+
+<p>I do not think he listened to Belle's, and Gower's, and
+my conversation, not even when Belle took his weed out
+of his mouth and announced the important fact: "Hardinge!
+my ten guineas, if you please. I've had a letter!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"What! an answer? By Jove!"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, an answer. I tell you all the pretty women
+in the city will know my initials, and send after me. I
+only hope they <i>will</i> be pretty, and then one may have a
+good deal of fun. I was in at Greene's this morning having
+mock-turtle, and talking to Patty (she's not bad-looking,
+that little girl, only she drops her 'h's' so. I'm like
+that fellow&mdash;what's his name?&mdash;in the 'Peau de Chagrin:'
+I don't admire my loves in cotton prints), when she gave
+me the letter. I left it on my dressing-table, but you can
+see it to-morrow. It's a horrid red daubed-looking seal,
+and no crest; but that she mightn't use for fear of being
+found out, and the writing is disguised, but that it would
+be. She <i>says</i> she has the three requisites; but where's the
+woman that don't think herself Sappho and Galatea combined?
+And she was nineteen last March. Poor little
+devil! she little thinks how she'll be done. I'm to meet
+her on the Yarmouth road at two, and to look out for a
+lady standing by the first milestone. Shall we go, Tom?
+It may lead to something amusing, you know, though certainly
+it won't lead to marriage."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! we'll go, old fellow," said I. "Deuce take you,
+Belle! what a lucky fellow you are with the women."</p>
+
+<p>"Luckier than I want to be," yawned Belle. "It's a
+horrid bore to be so set upon. One may have too much
+of a good thing, you know."</p>
+
+<p>At two the day after, having refreshed ourselves with a
+light luncheon at Mrs. Greene's of lobster-salad and pale
+ale, Belle, Gower, and I buttoned our gloves and rode
+leisurely up the road.</p>
+
+<p>"How my heart palpitates!" said Belle, stroking his
+moustaches with a bored air. "How can I tell, you know,
+but what I may be going to see the arbiter of my destiny?
+Men have been tricked into all sorts of tomfoolery by
+their compassionate feelings. And then&mdash;if she should
+squint or have a turn-up nose! Good Heavens, what a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>
+fearful idea! I've often wondered when I've seen men
+with ugly wives how they could have been cheated into
+taking 'em; they couldn't have done it in their senses, you
+know, nor yet with their eyes open. You may depend
+they took 'em to church in a state of coma from chloroform.
+'Pon my word, I feel quite nervous. You don't
+think the girl will have a parson and a register hid behind
+the milestone, do you?"</p>
+
+<p>"If she should, it won't be legal without a license,
+thanks to the fools who turn Hymen into a tax-gatherer,
+and won't let a fellow make love without he asks leave
+of the Archbishop of Canterbury," said Gower. "Hallo,
+Belle, here's the milestone, but where's the lady?"</p>
+
+<p>"Virgin modesty makes her unpunctual," said Belle,
+putting up his eye-glass.</p>
+
+<p>"Hang modesty!" swore Tom. "It's past two, and
+we left a good quarter of that salad uneaten. Confound
+her!"</p>
+
+<p>"There are no signs of her," said I. "Did she tell you
+her dress, Belle?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a syllable about it; only mentioned a milestone,
+and one might have found a market-woman sitting on
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"Hallo! here's something feminine. Oh, good gracious!
+this can't be it, it's got a brown stuff dress on, and
+a poke straw bonnet and a green veil. No, no, Belle. If
+you married her, that <i>would</i> be a case of chloroform."</p>
+
+<p>But the horrible brown stuff came sidling along the
+road with that peculiar step belonging to ladies of a certain
+age, characterized by Patty Greene as "tipputting,"
+sweeping up the dust with its horrible folds, making
+straight <i>en route</i> for Belle, who was standing a little in
+advance of us. Nineteen! Good Heavens! she must
+have been fifty if she was a day, and under her green veil
+was a chestnut front&mdash;yes, decidedly a front&mdash;and a face
+yellow as a Canadian's, and wrinkled as Madame<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>
+Pipelet's, made infinitely worse by that sweet maiden simper
+and assumed juvenility common to <i>vieilles filles</i>. Up she
+came towards poor Belle, who involuntarily retreated step
+by step till he had backed against the milestone, and
+could get no farther, while she smiled up in his handsome
+face, and he stared down in her withered one, with the
+most comical expression of surprise, dismay, and horror
+that had ever appeared on our "beauty's" impassive
+features.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you&mdash;the&mdash;the&mdash;L. C.?" demanded the maiden
+of ten lustres, casting her eyes to the ground with virgin
+modesty.</p>
+
+<p>"L. C. ar&mdash;&mdash;My dear madam, I don't quite understand
+you," faltered Belle, taken aback for once in his life.</p>
+
+<p>"Was it not you," faltered the fair one, shaking out a
+pocket-handkerchief that sent a horrible odor of musk to
+the olfactory nerves of poor Belle, most fastidious connoisseur
+in perfume, "who advertised for a kindred heart
+and sympathetic soul?"</p>
+
+<p>"Really, my good lady," began Belle, still too aghast
+by the chestnut front to recover his self-possession.</p>
+
+<p>"Because," simpered his inamorata, too agitated by
+her own feelings to hear his horrible appellative, keeping
+him at bay there with the fatal milestone behind him and
+the awful brown stuff in front of him&mdash;"because I, too,
+have desired to meet with some elective affinity, some
+spirit-tie that might give me all those more subtle sympathies
+which can never be found in the din and bustle of
+the heartless world; I, too, have pined for the objects of
+your search&mdash;love and domestic happiness. Oh, blessed
+words, surely we might&mdash;might we not?&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She paused, overcome with maidenly confusion, and
+buried her face in the musk-scented handkerchief. Tom
+and I, where we stood <i>perdus</i>, burst into uncontrollable
+shouts of laughter. Poor Belle gave one blank look of
+utter terror at the <i>tout ensemble</i> of brown stuff, straw poke,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>
+and chestnut front. He forgot courtesy, manners, and
+everything else; his lips were parted, with his small white
+teeth glancing under his silky moustaches, his sleepy eyes
+were open wide, and as the maiden lady dropped her
+handkerchief, and gave him what she meant to be the
+softest and most tender glance, he turned straight round,
+sprang on his bay, and rushed down the Yarmouth road
+as if the whole of the dignitaries of the church and law
+were tearing after him to force him <i>nolens volens</i> into carrying
+out the horrible promise in his cursed line in the
+<i>Daily</i>. What was Tom's and my amazement to see the
+maiden lady seat herself astride on the milestone, and
+join her cachinnatory shouts to ours, fling her green veil
+into a hawthorn tree, jerk her bonnet into our faces, kick
+off her brown stuff into the middle of the road, tear off
+her chestnut front and yellow mask, and perform a frantic
+war-dance on the roadside turf. No less a person than
+that mischievous monkey and inimitable mimic Little
+Nell!</p>
+
+<p>"You young demon!" shouted Gower, shrieking with
+laughter till he cried. "A pretty fellow you are to go
+tricking your senior officer like this. You little imp,
+how can you tell but what I shall court-martial you to-morrow?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, no, you won't!" cried Little Nell, pursuing his
+frantic dance. "Wasn't it prime? wasn't it glorious?
+wasn't it worth the Kohinoor to see? You won't go and
+peach, when I've just given you a better farce than all
+old Buckstone's? By Jove! Belle's face at my chestnut
+front! This'll be one of his prime conquests, eh? I
+say, old fellows, when Charles Mathews goes to glory,
+don't you think I might take his place, and beat him
+hollow, too?"</p>
+
+<p>When we got back to barracks, we found Belle prostrate
+on his sofa, heated, injured, crestfallen, solacing
+himself with Seltzer-and-water, and swearing away<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>
+anything but mildly at that "wretched old woman." He
+bound us over to secrecy, which, with Little Nell's confidence
+in our minds, we naturally promised. Poor Belle!
+to have been made a fool of before two was humiliation
+more than sufficient for our all-conquering <i>blondin</i>. For
+one who had so often refused to stir across a ball-room to
+look at a Court beauty, to have ridden out three miles to
+see an old maid of fifty with a chestnut front! The insult
+sank deep into his soul, and threw him into an abject
+melancholy, which hung over him all through mess, and
+was not dissipated till a letter came to him from Mrs.
+Greene's, when we were playing loo in Fairlie's room.
+That night Fairlie was in gay spirits. He had called at
+Fern Chase that morning, and though he had not been
+able to see Geraldine alone, he had passed a pleasant
+couple of hours there, playing pool with her and her
+sisters, and had been as good friends as ever with his old
+playmate.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, Belle," said he, feeling good-natured even with
+him that night, "did you get any good out of your advertisement?
+Did your lady turn out a very pretty one?"</p>
+
+<p>"No: deuced ugly, like the generality," yawned poor
+Belle, giving me a kick to remind me of my promise.
+Little Nell was happily about the city somewhere with
+Pretty Face, or the boy would scarcely have kept his
+countenance.</p>
+
+<p>"What amusement you can find in hoaxing silly
+women," said Fairlie, "is incomprehensible to me. However,
+men's tastes differ, happily. Here comes another
+epistle for you, Belle; perhaps there's better luck for you
+there."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! I shall have no end of letters. I sha'n't answer
+any more. I think it's such a deuced trouble. Diamonds
+trumps, eh?" said Belle, laying the note down till he
+should have leisure to attend to it. Poor old fellow! I
+dare say he was afraid of another onslaught from maiden
+ladies.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Come, Belle," said Glenville; "come, Belle, open
+your letter; we're all impatience. If you won't go, I
+will in your place."</p>
+
+<p>"Do, my dear fellow. Take care you're not pounced
+down upon by a respectable papa for intentions, or called
+to account by a fierce brother with a stubby beard," said
+Belle, lazily taking up the letter. As he did so, the melancholy
+indolence on his face changed to eagerness.</p>
+
+<p>"The deuce! the Vane crest!"</p>
+
+<p>"A note of invitation, probably?" suggested Gower.</p>
+
+<p>"Would they send an invitation to Patty Greene's? I
+tell you it's addressed to L. C.," said Belle, disdainfully,
+opening the letter, leaving its giant deer couchant intact.
+"I thought it very likely; I expected it, indeed&mdash;poor
+little dear! I oughtn't to have let it out. Ain't you
+jealous, old fellows? Little darling! Perhaps I may
+be tricked into matrimony after all. I'd rather a presentiment
+that advertisement would come to something.
+There, you may all look at it, if you like."</p>
+
+<p>It was a dainty sheet of scented cream-laid, stamped
+with the deer couchant, such as had brought us many an
+invitation down from Fern Chase, and on it was written,
+in delicate caligraphy:</p>
+
+<p>"G. V. understands the meaning of the advertisement,
+and will meet L. C. at the entrance of Fern Wood, at
+eleven o'clock to-morrow morning."</p>
+
+<p>There was a dead silence as we read it; then a tremendous
+buzz. Cheaply as we held women, I don't think
+there was one of us who wasn't surprised at Geraldine's
+doing any clandestine thing like this. He sat with a
+look of indolent triumph, curling his perfumed moustaches,
+and looking at the little autograph, which gave
+us evidence of what he often boasted&mdash;Geraldine Vane's
+regard.</p>
+
+<p>"Let me look at your note," said Fairlie, stretching out
+his hand.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>He soon returned it, with a brief, "Very complimentary
+indeed!"</p>
+
+<p>When the men left, I chanced to be last, having mislaid
+my cigar-case. As I looked about for it, Fairlie
+addressed me in the same brief, stern tone between his
+teeth with which he spoke to Belle.</p>
+
+<p>"Hardinge, you made this absurd bet with Courtenay,
+did you not? Is this note a hoax upon him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not that I know of&mdash;it doesn't look like it. You
+see there is the Vane crest, and the girl's own initials."</p>
+
+<p>"Very true." He turned round to the window again,
+and leaned against it, looking out into the dawn, with a
+look upon his face that I was very sorry to see.</p>
+
+<p>"But it is not like Geraldine," I began. "It may be
+a trick. Somebody may have stolen their paper and crest&mdash;it's
+possible. I tell you what I'll do to find out; I'll
+follow Belle to-morrow, and see who does meet him in
+Fern Wood."</p>
+
+<p>"Do," said Fairlie, eagerly. Then he checked himself,
+and went on tapping an impatient tattoo on the shutter.
+"You see, I have known the family for years&mdash;known
+her when she was a little child. I should be sorry to
+think that one of them could be capable of such&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Despite his self-command he could not finish his sentence.
+Geraldine was a great deal too dear to him to be
+treated in seeming carelessness, or spoken lightly of, however
+unwisely she might act. I found my cigar-case.
+His laconic "Good night!" told me he would rather be
+alone, so I closed the door and left him.</p>
+
+<p>The morning was as sultry and as clear as a July day
+could be when Belle lounged down the street, looking the
+perfection of a gentleman, a trifle less bored and <i>blas&eacute;</i>
+than ordinary, <i>en route</i> to his appointment at Fern Wood
+(a sequestered part of the Vane estate), where trees and
+lilies of the valley grew wild, and where the girls were
+accustomed to go for picnics or sketching. As soon as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>
+he had turned a corner, Gower and I turned it too, and
+with perseverance worthy a better cause, Tom and I followed
+Belle in and out and down the road which led to
+Fern Wood&mdash;a flat, dusty, stony two miles&mdash;on which,
+in the blazing noon of a hot midsummer day, nothing
+short of Satanic coercion, or love of Geraldine Vane,
+would have induced our beauty to immolate himself, and
+expose his delicate complexion.</p>
+
+<p>"I bet you anything, Tom," said I, confidently, "that
+this is a hoax, like yesterday's. Geraldine will no more
+meet Belle there than all the Ordnance Office."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we shall see," responded Gower. "Somebody
+might get the note-paper from the bookseller, and the
+crest seal through the servants, but they'll hardly get
+Geraldine there bodily against her will."</p>
+
+<p>We waited at the entrance of the wood, shrouded ourselves
+in the wild hawthorn hedges, while we could still
+see Belle&mdash;of course we did not mean to be near enough
+to overhear him&mdash;who paced up and down the green
+alleys under the firs and larches, rendered doubly dark
+by the evergreens, brambles, and honeysuckles,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i2">which, ripened by the sun,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Forbade the sun to enter.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>He paced up and down there a good ten minutes, prying
+about with his eye-glass, but unable to see very far in the
+tangled boughs, and heavy dusky light of the untrimmed
+wood. Then there was the flutter of something azure
+among the branches, and Gower gave vent to a low whistle
+of surprise.</p>
+
+<p>"By George, Hardinge! there's Geraldine! Well! I
+didn't think she'd have done it. You see they're all
+alike if they get the opportunity."</p>
+
+<p>It <i>was</i> Geraldine herself&mdash;it was her fluttering muslin,
+her abundant folds, her waving ribbons, her tiny sailor
+hat, and her little veil, and under the veil her face, with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>
+its delicate tinting, its pencilled eyebrows, and its undulating
+bright-colored hair. There was no doubt about it:
+it was Geraldine. I vow I was as sorry to have to tell it
+to Fairlie as if I'd had to tell him she was dead, for I
+knew how it would cut him to the heart to know not only
+that she had given herself to his rival, but that his little
+playmate, whom he had thought truth, and honesty, and
+daylight itself, should have stooped to a clandestine interview
+arranged through an advertisement! Their retreating
+figures were soon lost in the dim woodland, and Tom
+and I turned to retrace our steps.</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt about it now, old fellow?" quoth Gower.</p>
+
+<p>"No, confound her!" swore I.</p>
+
+<p>"Confound her? <i>Et pourquoi!</i> Hasn't she a right to
+do what she likes?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course she has, the cursed little flirt; but she'd
+no earthly business to go making such love to Fairlie.
+It's a rascally shame, and I don't care if I tell her so
+myself."</p>
+
+<p>"She'll only say you're in love with her too," was
+Gower's sensible response. "I'm not surprised myself.
+I always said she was an out-and-out coquette."</p>
+
+<p>I met Fairlie coming out of his room as I went up to
+mine. He looked as men will look when they have not
+been in bed all night, and have watched the sun up with
+painful thoughts for their companions.</p>
+
+<p>"You have been&mdash;&mdash;" he began; then stopped short,
+unwilling or unable to put the question into words.</p>
+
+<p>"After Belle? Yes. It is no hoax, Geraldine met
+him herself."</p>
+
+<p>I did not relish telling him, and therefore told it, in all
+probability, bluntly and blunderingly&mdash;tact, like talk,
+having, they say, been given to women. A spasm passed
+over his face. "<i>Herself!</i>" he echoed. Until then I do
+not think he had realized it as even possible.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, there was no doubt about it. What a wretched<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>
+little coquette she must have been; she always seemed
+to make such game of Belle&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But Fairlie, saying something about his gloves that he
+had left behind, had gone back into his room again before
+I had half done my sentence. When Belle came back,
+about half an hour afterwards, with an affected air of
+triumph, and for once in his life of languid sensations
+really well contented, Gower and I poured questions upon
+him, as, done up with the toil of his dusty walk, and horrified
+to find himself so low-bred as to be hot, he kicked
+off his varnished boots, imbibed Seltzer, and fanned himself
+with a periodical before he could find breath to
+answer us.</p>
+
+<p>"Was it Geraldine?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course it was Geraldine," he said, yawning.</p>
+
+<p>"And will she marry you, Belle?"</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure she will. I should like to see the woman
+that wouldn't," responded Belle, shutting his eyes and
+nestling down among the cushions. "And what's more,
+I've been fool enough to let her make me ask her. Give
+me some more sherry, Phil; a man wants support under
+such circumstances. The deuce if I'm not as hot as a
+ploughboy! It was very cruel of her to call a fellow out
+with the sun at the meridian; she might as well have
+chosen twilight. But, I say, you fellows, keep the secret,
+will you? she don't want her family to get wind of it,
+because they're bothering her to marry that old cove,
+Mount Trefoil, with his sixty years and his broad acres,
+and wouldn't let her take anybody else if they knew it;
+she's under age, you see."</p>
+
+<p>"But how did she know you were L. C.?"</p>
+
+<p>"Fairlie told her, and the dear little vain thing immediately
+thought it was an indirect proposal to herself,
+and answered it; of course I didn't undeceive her. She
+<i>raffoles</i> of me&mdash;it'll be almost too much of a good thing,
+I'm afraid. She's deuced prudish, too, much more than<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>
+I should have thought <i>she</i>'d have been; but I vow she'd
+only let me kiss her hand, and that was gloved."</p>
+
+<p>"I hate prudes," said Gower; "they've always much
+more devilry than the open-hearted ones. Videlicet&mdash;here's
+your young lady stiff enough only to give you her
+hand to kiss, and yet she'll lower herself to a clandestine
+correspondence and stolen interviews&mdash;a condescension I
+don't think I should admire in <i>my</i> wife."</p>
+
+<p>"Love, my dear fellow, oversteps all&mdash;what d'ye call
+'em?&mdash;boundaries," said Belle, languidly. "What a
+bore! I shall never be able to wear this coat again, it's
+so ingrained with dust; little puss, why didn't she wait
+till it was cooler?"</p>
+
+<p>"Did you fix your marriage-day?" asked Tom, rather
+contemptuously.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I was very weak!" sighed Belle; "but you see
+she's uncommonly pretty, and there's Mount Trefoil and
+lots of men, and, I fancy, that dangerous fellow Fairlie,
+after her; so we hurried matters. We've been making
+love to one another all these three months, you know, and
+fixed it so soon as Thursday week. Of course she blushed,
+and sighed, and put her handkerchief to her eyes, and all
+the rest of it, <i>en r&egrave;gle</i>; but she consented, and I'm to be
+sacrificed. But not a word about it, my dear fellows!
+The Vanes are to be kept in profoundest darkness, and,
+to lull suspicion, I'm not to go there scarcely at all until
+then, and when I do, she'll let me know when she will be
+out, and I'm to call on her mother then. She'll write to
+me, and put the letters in a hollow tree in the wood, where
+I'm to leave my answers, or, rather, send 'em; catch me
+going over that road again! Don't give me joy, old boys.
+I know I'm making a holocaust of myself, but deuce
+take me if I can help it&mdash;she is so deuced pretty!"</p>
+
+<p>Fairlie was not at mess that night. Nobody knew
+where he was. I learnt, long months afterwards, that as
+soon as I had told him of Geraldine's identity, he, still<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>
+thirsting to disbelieve, reluctant to condemn, catching at
+straws to save his idol from being shattered as men in love
+will do, had thrown himself across his horse and torn off
+to Fern Dell to see whether or no Geraldine was at home.</p>
+
+<p>His heart beat faster and thicker as he entered the
+drawing-room than it had done before the lines at Ferozeshah,
+or in the giant semicircle at Sobraon; it stood
+still as in the far end of the room, lying back on a low
+chair, sat Geraldine, her gloves and sailor hat lying on
+her lap. She sprang up to welcome him with her old gay
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Good God! that a child like that can be such an accomplished
+actress!" thought Fairlie, as he just touched
+her hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Have you been out to-day?" he asked suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>"You see I have."</p>
+
+<p>"Prevarication is conviction," thought Fairlie, with a
+deadly chill over him.</p>
+
+<p>"Where did you go, love?" asked mamma.</p>
+
+<p>"To see Adela Ferrers; she is not well, you know, and
+I came home through part of the wood to gather some of
+the anemones; I don't mean anemones, they are over&mdash;lilies
+of the valley."</p>
+
+<p>She spoke hurriedly, glancing at Fairlie all the time,
+who never took his iron gaze off her, though all the beauty
+and glory was draining away from his life with every
+succeeding proof that stared him in the face with its cruel
+evidence.</p>
+
+<p>At that minute Lady Vane was called from the room
+to give some directions to her head gardener about some
+flowers, over which she was particularly choice, and Fairlie
+and Geraldine were left in dead silence, with only the
+ticking of the timepiece and the chirrup of the birds outside
+the open windows to break its heavy monotony.</p>
+
+<p>Fairlie bent over a spaniel, rolling the dog backwards
+and forwards on the rug.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Geraldine stood on the rug, her head on one side in her
+old pretty attitude of plaintiveness and defiance, the
+bright sunshine falling round her and playing on her gay
+dress and fair hair&mdash;a tableau lost upon the Colonel, who
+though he had risen too, was playing sedulously with the
+dog.</p>
+
+<p>"Colonel Fairlie, what is the matter with you? How
+unkind you are to-day!"</p>
+
+<p>Fairlie was roused at last, disgusted that so young a
+girl could be so accomplished a liar and actress, sick at
+heart that he had been so deceived, mad with jealousy,
+and that devil in him sent courtesy flying to the winds.</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon me, Miss Vane, you waste your coquetteries
+on me. Unhappily, I know their value, and am not likely
+to be duped by them."</p>
+
+<p>Geraldine's face flushed as deep a rose hue as the
+geraniums nodding their heads in at the windows.</p>
+
+<p>"Coquetteries?&mdash;duped? What do you mean?"</p>
+
+<p>"You know well enough what. All I warn you is,
+never try them again on me&mdash;never come near me any
+more with your innocent smiles and your lying lips, or,
+by Heaven, Geraldine Vane, I may say what I think of
+you in plainer words than suit the delicacy of a lady's
+ears!"</p>
+
+<p>Geraldine's eyes flashed fire; from rose-hued as the
+geraniums she changed to the dead white of the Guelder
+roses beside them.</p>
+
+<p>"Colonel Fairlie, you are mad, I think! If you only
+came here to insult me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I had better leave? I agree with you. Good morning."</p>
+
+<p>Wherewith Fairlie took his hat and whip, bowed himself
+out, and, throwing himself across his horse, tore away
+many miles beyond Norwich, I should say, and rode into
+the stable-yard at twelve o'clock that night, his horse with
+every hair wringing and limb trembling at the headlong<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>
+pace he had been ridden; such a midnight gallop as only
+Mazeppa, or a Border rider, or Turpin racing for his life,
+or a man vainly seeking to leave behind him some pursuing
+ghost of memory or passion, ever took before.</p>
+
+<p>We saw little of him for the next few days. Luckily
+for him, he was employed to purchase several strings of
+Suffolk horses for the corps, and he rode about the country
+a good deal, and went over to Newmarket, and to the
+Bury horse fair, inspecting the cattle, glad, I dare say, of
+an excuse to get away.</p>
+
+<p>"I feel nervous, terribly nervous; do give me the Seltzer
+and hock, Tom. They wonder at the fellows asking for
+beer before their execution. I don't; and if a fellow
+wants it to keep his spirits up before he's hanged, he may
+surely want it before he's married, for one's a swing and
+a crash, and it's all over and done most likely before
+you've time to know anything about it; but the other
+you walk into so deliberately, superintend the sacrifice
+of yourself, as it were, like that old cove Seneca; feel
+yourself rolling down-hill like Regulus, with all the
+horrid nails of the 'domesticities' pricking you in every
+corner; see life ebbing away from you; all the sunshine
+of life, as poets have it, fading, sweetly but surely, from
+your grasp, and Death, <i>alias</i> the Matrimonial Black Cap,
+coming down ruthlessly on your devoted heads. I feel
+low&mdash;shockingly low. Pass me the Seltzer, Tom, do!"</p>
+
+<p>So spake Geraldine's <i>sposo</i> that was to be, on the evening
+before his marriage-day, lying on his sofa in his Cashmere
+dressing-gown, his gold embroidered slippers, and
+his velvet smoking-cap, puffing largely at his meerschaum,
+and unbosoming his private sentiments and emotions to
+the (on this score) sufficiently sympathetic listeners,
+Gower and I.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't pity you!" said Tom, contemptuously, who
+had as much disdain for a man who married as for one
+who bought gooseberry for champagne, or Cape for comet<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>
+hock, and did not know the difference&mdash;"I don't pity
+you one bit. You've put the curb on yourself; you can't
+complain if you get driven where you don't like."</p>
+
+<p>"But, my dear fellow, <i>can</i> one help it?" expostulated
+Belle, pathetically. "When a little winning, bewitching,
+attractive little animal like that takes you in hand, and
+traps you as you catch a pony, holding out a sieve of oats,
+and coaxing you, and so-ho-ing you till she's fairly got
+the bridle over your head, and the bit between your teeth,
+what is a man to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Remember that as soon as the bit is in your mouth,
+she'll never trouble herself to give you any oats, or so-ho
+you softly any more, but will take the whip hand of you,
+and not let you have the faintest phantom of a will of
+your own ever again," growled the misogamistic Tom.</p>
+
+<p>"Catch a man's remembering while it's any use," was
+Belle's very true rejoinder. "After he's put his hand to
+a little bill, he'll remember it's a very green thing to do,
+but he don't often remember it before, I fancy. No, in
+things like this, one can't help one's self; one's time is
+come, and one goes down before fate. If anybody had
+told me that I should go as spooney about any woman as
+I have about that little girl Geraldine, I'd have given
+'em the lie direct; I would, indeed! But then she made
+such desperate love to me, took such a deuced fancy to me,
+you see: else, after all, the women <i>I</i> might have chosen&mdash;&mdash;By
+George! I wonder what Lady Con, and the little Bosanquet,
+and poor Honoria, and all the rest of 'em will say?"</p>
+
+<p>"What?" said Gower; "say 'Poor dear fellow!' to
+you, and 'Poor girl, I pity her!' to your wife. So you're
+going to elope with Miss Geraldine? A man's generally
+too ready to marry his daughters, to force a fellow to
+carry them off by stealth. Besides, as Bulwer says somewhere,
+'<i>Gentlemen</i> don't run away with the daughters of
+gentlemen.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh, nonsense! all's fair in love or war," returned<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>
+Belle, going into the hock and Seltzer to keep up his spirits.
+"You see, she's afraid, her governor's mind being so set on
+old Mount Trefoil and his baron's coronet; they might offer
+some opposition, put it off till she was one-and-twenty, you
+know&mdash;and she's so distractedly fond of me, poor little
+thing, that she'd die under the probation, probably&mdash;and
+I'm sure I couldn't keep faithful to her for two mortal
+years. Besides, there's something amusing in eloping; the
+excitement of it keeps up one's spirits; whereas, if I were
+marched to church with so many mourners&mdash;I mean
+groomsmen&mdash;I should feel I was rehearsing my own obsequies
+like Charles V., and should funk it, ten to one I
+should. No! I like eloping: it gives the certain flavor
+of forbidden fruit, which many things, besides pure water,
+want to 'give them a relish.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Let's see how's the thing to be managed?" asked Gower. "Beyond telling
+me I was to go with you, consigned ignominiously to the rumble, to
+witness the ceremony, I'm not very clear as to the programme."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, as soon as it's dawn," responded Belle, with
+leisurely whiffs of his meerschaum, "I'm to take the
+carriage up to the gate at Fern Wood&mdash;this is what she
+tells me in her last note; she was coming to meet me, but
+just as she was dressed her mother took her to call on
+some people, and she had to resort to the old hollow tree.
+The deuce is in it, I think, to prevent our meeting; if it
+weren't for the letters and her maid, we should have been
+horribly put to it for communication;&mdash;I'm to take the
+carriage, as I say, and drive up there, where she and her
+maid will be waiting. We drive away, of course, catch
+the 8.15 train, and cut off to town, and get married at the
+Regeneration, Piccadilly, where a fellow I know very well
+will act the priestly Calcraft. The thing that bothers me
+most of all is getting up so early. I used to hate it so
+awfully when I was a young one at the college. I like to
+have my bath, and my coffee, and my paper leisurely,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>
+and saunter through my dressing, and get up when the
+day's <i>warmed</i> for me. Early parade's one of the crying
+cruelties of the service; I always turn in again after it,
+and regard it as a hideous nightmare. I vow I couldn't
+give a greater test of my devotion than by getting up at
+six o'clock to go after her&mdash;deuced horrible exertion!
+I'm quite certain that my linen won't be aired, nor my
+coffee fit to drink, nor Perkins with his eyes half open, nor
+a quarter of his wits about him. Six o'clock! By George!
+nothing should get me up at that unearthly hour except
+my dear, divine, delicious little demon Geraldine! But
+she's so deuced fond of me, one must make sacrifices for
+such a little darling."</p>
+
+<p>With which sublimely unselfish and heroic sentiment
+the bridegroom-elect drank the last of his hock and
+Seltzer, took his pipe out of his lips, flung his smoking-cap
+lazily on to his Skye's head, who did not relish the
+attention, and rose languidly to get into his undress in
+time for mess.</p>
+
+<p>As Belle had to get up so frightfully early in the morning,
+he did not think it worth while to go to bed at all,
+but asked us all to vingt-et-un in his room, where, with
+the rattle of half-sovereigns and the flow of rum-punch,
+kept up his courage before the impending doom of matrimony.
+Belle was really in love with Geraldine, but in
+love in his own particular way, and consoled himself for
+his destiny and her absence by what I dare say seems to
+mademoiselle, fresh from her perusal of "Aurora Leigh"
+or "Lucille," very material comforters indeed. But, if
+truth were told, I am afraid mademoiselle would find, save
+that from one or two fellows here and there, who go in for
+love as they go in for pig-sticking or tiger-hunting, with
+all their might and main, wagering even their lives in the
+sport, the Auroras and Lucilles are very apt to have their
+charms supplanted by the points of a favorite, their
+absence made endurable by the aroma of Turkish tobacco,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>
+and their last fond admonishing words, spoken with such
+persuasive caresses under the moonlight and the limes,
+against those "horrid cards, love," forgotten that very
+night under the glare of gas, while the hands that lately
+held their own so tenderly, clasp wellnigh with as much
+affection the unprecedented luck "two honors and five
+trumps!"</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Man's love is of man's life a thing apart.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Byron was right; and if we go no deeper, how can it well
+be otherwise, when we have our stud, our pipe, our Pytchley,
+our Newmarket, our club, our coulisses, our Mabille,
+and our Epsom, and they&mdash;oh, Heaven help them!&mdash;have
+no distraction but a needle or a novel! The Fates
+forbid that our <i>agr&eacute;mens</i> should be <i>less</i>, but I dare say,
+if they had a vote in it, they'd try to get a trifle <i>more</i>.
+So Belle put his "love apart," to keep (or to rust, whichever
+you please) till six <span class="smcap">A. M.</span> that morning, when, having
+by dint of extreme physical exertion got himself dressed,
+saw his valet pack his things with the keenest anxiety
+relative to the immaculate folding of his coats and the
+safe repose of his shirts, and at last was ready to go and
+fetch the bride his line in the <i>Daily</i> had procured him.</p>
+
+<p>As Belle went down the stairs with Gower, who should
+come too, with his gun in his hand, his cap over his eyes,
+and a pointer following close at his heels, but Fairlie,
+going out to shoot over a friend's manor.</p>
+
+<p>Of course he knew that Belle had asked for and obtained
+leave for a couple of months, but he had never
+heard for what purpose; and possibly, as he saw him at
+such an unusual hour, going out, not in his usual travelling
+guise of a wide-awake and a Maude, but with a delicate
+lavender tie and a toilet of the most unexceptionable
+art, the purport of his journey flashed fully on his mind,
+for his face grew as fixed and unreadable as if he had had
+on the iron mask. Belle, guessing as he did that Fairlie<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>
+would not have disliked to have been in his place that
+morning, was too kind-hearted and infinitely too much of
+a gentleman to hint at his own triumph. He laughed,
+and nodded a good morning.</p>
+
+<p>"Off early, you see, Fairlie; going to make the most of
+my leave. 'Tisn't very often we can get one; our corps
+is deuced stiff and strict compared to the Guards and the
+Cavalry."</p>
+
+<p>"At least our strictness keeps us from such disgraceful
+scenes as some of the other regiments have shown up of
+late," answered Fairlie between his teeth.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! well, perhaps so; still, strictness ain't pleasant,
+you know, when one's the victim."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly not."</p>
+
+<p>"And, therefore, we should never be hard upon others."</p>
+
+<p>"I perfectly agree with you."</p>
+
+<p>"There's a good fellow. Well, I must be off; I've no
+time for philosophizing. Good-bye, Colonel."</p>
+
+<p>"Good-bye&mdash;a safe journey."</p>
+
+<p>But I noticed that he held the dog's collar in one hand
+and the gun in the other, so as to have an excuse for not
+offering that <i>poign&eacute;e de main</i> which ought to be as sure a
+type of friendship, and as safe a guarantee for good faith,
+as the Bedouin Arab's salt.</p>
+
+<p>Belle nodded him a farewell, and lounged down the
+steps and into the carriage, just as Fairlie's man brought
+his mare round.</p>
+
+<p>Fairlie turned on to me with unusual fierceness, for
+generally he was very calm, and gentle, and impassive in
+manner.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is he gone?"</p>
+
+<p>I could not help but tell him, reluctant though I was,
+for I guessed pretty well what it would cost him to hear
+it. He did not say one word while I told him, but bent
+over Marquis, drawing the dog's leash tighter, so that I
+might not see his face, and without a sign or a reply he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>
+was out of the barracks, across his mare's back, and rushing
+away at a mad gallop, as if he would leave thought,
+and memory, and the curse of love for a worthless woman
+behind him for ever.</p>
+
+<p>His man stood looking at the gun Fairlie had thrown
+to him with a puzzled expression.</p>
+
+<p>"Is the Colonel gone mad?" I heard him say to himself.
+"The devil's in it, I think. He used to treat his
+things a little carefuller than this. As I live, he's been
+and gone and broke the trigger?"</p>
+
+<p>The devil wasn't in it, but a woman <i>was</i>, an individual
+that causes as much mischief as any Asmodeus, Belph&eacute;gor,
+or Mephistopheles. Some fair unknown correspondents
+assured me the other day, in a letter, that my satire
+on women was "a monstrous libel." All I can say is,
+that if it <i>be</i> a libel, it is like many a one for which one
+pays the highest, and which sounds the blackest&mdash;a libel
+that is <i>true</i>!</p>
+
+<p>While his rival rode away as recklessly as though he
+was riding for his life, the gallant bridegroom&mdash;as the
+<i>Court Circular</i> would have it&mdash;rolled on his way to Fern
+Wood, while Gower, very amiably occupying the rumble,
+smoked, and bore his position philosophically, comforted
+by the recollection that Geraldine's French maid was an
+uncommonly good-looking, coquettish little person.</p>
+
+<p>They rolled on, and speedily the postilion pulled up,
+according to order, before the white five-bar gate, its
+paint blistering in the hot summer dawn, and the great
+fern-leaves and long grass clinging up round its posts, still
+damp with the six o'clock dew. Five minutes passed&mdash;ten
+minutes&mdash;a quarter of an hour. Poor Belle got
+impatient. Twenty minutes&mdash;five-and-twenty&mdash;thirty.
+Belle couldn't stand it. He began to pace up and down
+the turf, soiling his boots frightfully with the long wet
+grass, and rejecting all Tom's offers of consolation and a
+cigar-case.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Confound it!" cried poor Belle, piteously, "I thought
+women were always ready to marry. I know, when I
+went to turn off Lacquers of the Rifles at St. George's, his
+bride had been waiting for him half an hour, and was in
+an awful state of mind, and all the other brides as well,
+for you know they always marry first the girl that gets
+there first, and all the other poor wretches were kept on
+tenter-hooks too. Lacquers had lost the ring, and found
+it in his waistcoat after all! I say, Tom, devil take it,
+where can she be? It's forty minutes, as I live. We
+shall lose the train, you know. She's never prevented
+coming, surely. I think she'd let me hear, don't you?
+She could send Justine to me if she couldn't come by any
+wretched chance. Good Heavens, Tom, what shall I do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wait, and don't worry," was Tom's laconic and common-sense
+advice; about the most irritating probably to a
+lover's feelings that could pretty well be imagined. Belle
+swore at him in stronger terms than he generally exerted
+himself to use, but was pulled up in the middle of them
+by the sight of Geraldine and Justine, followed by a boy
+bearing his bride's dainty trunks.</p>
+
+<p>On came Geraldine in a travelling-dress; Justine following
+after her, with a brilliant smile, that showed all
+her white teeth, at "Monsieur Torm," for whom she had
+a very tender friendship, consolidated by certain half-sovereigns
+and French phrases whispered by Gower after
+his dinners at Fern Chase.</p>
+
+<p>Belle met Geraldine with all that tender <i>empressement</i>
+which he knew well how to put into his slightest actions;
+but the young lady seemed already almost to have begun
+repenting her hasty step. She hung her head down, she
+held a handkerchief to her bright eyes, and to Belle's tenderest
+and most ecstatic whispers she only answered by a
+convulsive pressure of the arm, into which he had drawn
+her left hand, and a half-smothered sob from her heart's
+depths.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Belle thought it all natural enough under the circumstances.
+He knew women always made a point of impressing
+upon you that they are making a frightful sacrifice
+for your good when they condescend to accept you,
+and he whispered what tender consolation occurred to
+him as best fitted for the occasion, thanked her, of course,
+for all the rapture, &amp;c. &amp;c., assured her of his life-long
+devotion&mdash;you know the style&mdash;and lifted her into the
+carriage, Geraldine only responding with broken sighs
+and stifled sobs.</p>
+
+<p>The boxes were soon beside Belle's valises, Justine soon
+beside Gower, the postilion cracked his whip over his outsider,
+Perkins refolded his arms, and the carriage rolled
+down the lane.</p>
+
+<p>Gower was very well contented with his seat in the
+rumble. Justine was a very dainty little Frenchwoman,
+with the smoothest hair and the whitest teeth in the world,
+and she and "Monsieur Torm" were eminently good
+friends, as I have told you, though to-day she was very
+coquettish and wilful, and laughed <i>&agrave; propos de bottes</i> at
+Gower, say what Chaumi&egrave;re compliments he might.</p>
+
+<p>"Ma ch&egrave;re et charmante petite," expostulated Tom,
+"tes moues mutines sont ravissantes, mais je t'avoue que
+je pr&eacute;f&egrave;re tes&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Tais-toi, b&eacute;casse!" cried Justine, giving him a blow
+with her parasol, and going off into what she would have
+called <i>&eacute;clats de rire</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Mais &eacute;coute-moi, Justine," whispered Tom, piqued by
+her perversity; "je raffole de toi! je t'adore, sur ma
+parole! je&mdash;&mdash;Hallo! what the devil's the matter? Good
+gracious! Deuce take it!"</p>
+
+<p>Well might Tom call on his Satanic Majesty to explain
+what met his eyes as he gave vent to all three ejaculations
+and maledictions. No less a sight than the carriage-door
+flying violently open, Belle descending with a violent impetus,
+his face crimson, and his hat in his hand, clearing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span>
+the hedge at a bound, plunging up to his ankles in mud
+on the other side of it, and starting across country at the
+top of his speed, rushing frantically straight over the
+heavy grass-land as if he had just escaped from Hanwell,
+and the whole hue and cry of keepers and policemen was
+let loose at his heels.</p>
+
+<p>"Good Heavens! By Jove! Belle, Belle, I say, stop!
+Are you mad? What's happened? What's the row? I
+say&mdash;the devil!"</p>
+
+<p>But to his coherent but very natural exclamations poor
+Tom received no answer. Justine was screaming with
+laughter, the postilion was staring, Perkins swearing,
+Belle, flying across the country at express speed, rapidly
+diminishing into a small black dot in the green landscape,
+while from inside the carriage, from Geraldine, from the
+deserted bride, peals of laughter, loud, long, and uproarious,
+rang out in the summer stillness of the early morning.</p>
+
+<p>"By Jupiter! but this is most extraordinary. The
+deuce is in it. Are they both gone stark staring mad?"
+asked Tom of his Cuba, or the blackbirds, or the hedge-cutter
+afar off, or anything or anybody that might turn
+out so amiable as to solve his problem for him.</p>
+
+<p>No reply being given him, however, Tom could stand
+it no longer. Down he sprang, jerked the door open
+again, and put his head into the carriage.</p>
+
+<p>"Hallo, old boy, done green, eh? Pity 'tisn't the 1st
+of April!" cried Geraldine, with renewed screams of
+mirth from the interior.</p>
+
+<p>"Eh? What? What did you say, Miss Vane?" ejaculated
+Gower, fairly staggered by this extraordinary answer
+of a young girl, a lady, and a forsaken bride.</p>
+
+<p>"What did I say, my dear fellow? Why, that you're
+done most preciously, and that I fancy it'll be a deuced
+long time before your delectable friend tries his hand at
+matrimony again, that's all. Done! oh, by George, he is<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>
+done, and no mistake. Look at me, sir, ain't I a charming
+bride?"</p>
+
+<p>With which elegant language Geraldine took off her
+hat, pulled down some false braids, pushed her hair off her
+forehead, shook her head like a water-dog after a bath,
+and grinned in Gower's astonished eyes&mdash;<i>not</i> Geraldine,
+but her twin-brother, Pretty Face!</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know me now, old boy?" asked the Etonian,
+with demoniacal delight,&mdash;"do you know me now?
+Haven't I chiselled him&mdash;haven't I tricked him&mdash;haven't
+I done him as green as young gooseberries, and
+as brown as that bag? Do you fancy he'll boast of his
+conquests again, or advertise for another wife? So you
+didn't know how I got Gary Clements, of the Ten Bells,
+to write the letters for me? and Justine to dress me in
+Geraldine's things? You know they always did say
+they couldn't tell her from me; I've proved it now, eh?&mdash;rather!
+Oh, by George, I never had a better luck!
+and not a creature guesses it, not a soul, save Justine,
+Nell, and I! By Jupiter, Gower, if you'd heard that
+unlucky Belle go on swearing devotion interminable, and
+enough love to stock all Mudie's novels! But I never
+dare let him kiss me, though my beard is down, confound
+it! Oh! what jolly fun it's been, Gower, no words can
+tell. I always said he shouldn't marry her; he'll
+hardly try to do it now, I fancy! What a lark it's been!
+I couldn't have done it, you know, without that spicy
+little French girl;&mdash;she did my hair, and got up my
+crinoline, and stole Geraldine's dress, and tricked me up
+altogether, and carried my notes to the hollow oak, and
+took all my messages to Belle. Oh, Jupiter! what fun
+it's been! If Belle isn't gone clean out of his senses, it's
+very odd to me. When he was going to kiss me, and
+whispered, 'My dearest, my darling, my wife!' I just
+took off my hat and grinned in his face, and said, 'Ain't<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>
+this a glorious go? Oh! by George, Gower, I think the
+fun will kill me!"</p>
+
+<p>And the wicked little dog of an Etonian sank back
+among the carriage cushions stifled with his laughter.
+Gower staggered backwards against a roadside tree, and
+stood there with his lips parted and his eyes wide open,
+bewildered, more than that cool hand had ever been in all
+his days, by the extraordinary finish of poor Belle's luckless
+wooing; the postilion rolled off his saddle in cachinnatory
+fits at the little monkey's narrative! Perkins, like
+a soldier as he was, utterly impassive to all surrounding
+circumstances, shouldered a valise and dashed at quick
+march after his luckless master; Justine clapped her
+plump French-gloved fingers with a million ma Fois!
+and mon Dieus! and O Ciels! and far away in the gray
+distance sped the retreating figure of poor Belle, with
+the license in one pocket and the wedding-ring in the
+other, flying, as if his life depended on it, from the shame,
+and the misery, and the horror of that awful sell, drawn
+on his luckless head by that ill-fated line in the <i>Daily</i>.</p>
+
+<p>While Belle drove to his hapless wooing, Fairlie
+galloped on and on. Where he went he neither knew nor
+cared. He had ridden heedlessly along, and the Grey,
+left to her own devices, had taken the road to which her
+head for the last four months had been so often turned&mdash;the
+road leading to Fern Chase,&mdash;and about a mile from
+the Vane estate lost her left hind-shoe, and came to a
+dead stop of her own accord, after having been ridden
+for a couple of hours as hard as if she had been at the
+Grand Military. Fairlie threw himself off the saddle,
+and, leaving the bridle loose on the mare's neck, who he
+knew would not stray a foot away from him, he flung
+himself on the grass, under the cool morning shadows of
+the roadside trees, no sound in the quiet country round
+him breaking in on his weary thoughts, till the musical
+ring of a pony's hoofs came pattering down the lane.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>
+He never heard it, however, nor looked up, till the
+quick trot slackened and then stopped beside him.</p>
+
+<p>"Colonel Fairlie!"</p>
+
+<p>"Good Heavens! Geraldine!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well," she said, with tears in her eyes and petulant
+anger in her voice, "so you have never had the grace to
+come and apologize for insulting me as you did last
+week?"</p>
+
+<p>"For mercy's sake do not trifle with me."</p>
+
+<p>"Trifle! No, indeed!" interrupted the young lady.
+"Your behavior was no trifle, and it will be a very long
+time before I forgive it, if ever I do."</p>
+
+<p>"Stay&mdash;wait a moment."</p>
+
+<p>"How can you ask me, when, five days ago, you bid
+me never come near you with my cursed coquetries again?"
+asked Geraldine, trying, and vainly, to get the bridle out
+of his grasp.</p>
+
+<p>"God forgive me! I did not know what I said. What
+I had heard was enough to madden a colder man than I.
+Is it untrue?"</p>
+
+<p>"Is what untrue?"</p>
+
+<p>"You know well enough. Answer me, is it true or
+not?"</p>
+
+<p>"How can I tell what you mean? You talk in enigmas.
+Let me go."</p>
+
+<p>"I will never let you go till you have answered me."</p>
+
+<p>"How can I answer you if I don't know what you
+mean?" retorted Geraldine, half laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not jest. Tell me, yes or no, are you going to
+marry that cursed fool?"</p>
+
+<p>"What 'cursed fool'? Your language is not elegant,
+Colonel Fairlie!" said Geraldine, with demure mischief.</p>
+
+<p>"Belle! Would you have met him? Did you intend
+to elope with him?"</p>
+
+<p>Geraldine's eyes, always large enough, grew larger and
+a darker blue still, in extremest astonishment.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Belle!&mdash;elope with him? What are you dreaming?
+Are you mad?"</p>
+
+<p>"Almost," said Fairlie, recklessly. "Have you misled
+him, then&mdash;tricked him? Do you care nothing for him?
+Answer me, for Heaven's sake, Geraldine!"</p>
+
+<p>"I know nothing of what you are talking!" said Geraldine,
+with her surprised eyes wide open still. "Oblige
+me by leaving my pony's head. I shall be too late
+home."</p>
+
+<p>"You never answered his advertisement, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"The very question insults me! Let my pony go."</p>
+
+<p>"You never met him in Fern Wood&mdash;never engaged
+yourself to him&mdash;never corresponded with him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Colonel Fairlie, you have no earthly right to put
+such questions to me," interrupted Geraldine, with her
+hot geranium color in her cheeks and her eyes flashing
+fire. "I honor the report, whoever circulated it, far more
+than it deserves, by condescending to contradict it.
+Have the kindness to unhand my pony, and allow me to
+continue my ride."</p>
+
+<p>"You shall <i>not</i> go," said Fairlie, as passionately as she,
+"till you have answered me one more question: Can you,
+will you ever forgive me?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Geraldine, with an impatient shake of her
+head, but a smile nevertheless under the shadow of her
+hat.</p>
+
+<p>"Not if you know it was jealousy of him which maddened
+me, love for you which made me speak such
+unpardonable words to you?&mdash;not if I tell you how perfect
+was the tale I was told, so that there was no link
+wanting, no room for doubt or hope?&mdash;not if I tell you
+what tortures I had endured in losing you&mdash;what bitter
+punishment I have already borne in crediting the report
+that you were secretly engaged to my rival&mdash;would you
+not forgive me then?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"No," whispered the young lady perversely, but
+smiling still, the geraniums brighter in her cheeks, and
+her eyes fixed on the bridle.</p>
+
+<p>Fairlie dropped the reins, let go her hand, and left her
+free to ride, if she would, away from him.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you leave me, Geraldine? Not for this morning
+only, remember, nor for to-day, nor for this year, but&mdash;for
+ever?"</p>
+
+<p>"No!" It was a very different "No" this time.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you forgive me, then, my darling?"</p>
+
+<p>Her fingers clasped his hand closely, and Geraldine
+looked at him from under her hat; her eyes, so like an
+April day, with their tears, and their tender and mischievous
+smile, were so irresistibly provocative that Fairlie took
+his pardon for granted, and thanked her in the way that
+seemed to him at once most eloquent and most satisfactory.</p>
+
+<p>If you wish to know what became of Belle, he fled
+across the country to the railway station, and spent his
+leave Heaven knows where&mdash;in sackcloth and ashes, I
+suppose&mdash;meditating on his frightful sell. <i>We</i> saw
+nothing more of him; he could hardly show in Norwich
+again with all his laurels tumbled in the dust, and his
+trophies of conquest laughing-stocks for all the troop.
+He exchanged into the Z Battery going out to India, and
+I never saw or heard of him till a year or two ago, when
+he landed at Portsmouth, a much wiser and pleasanter
+man. The lesson, joined to the late campaign under Sir
+Colin, had done him a vast amount of good; he had lost
+his conceit, his vanity, his affectation, and was what
+Nature meant him to be&mdash;a sensible, good-hearted fellow.
+As luck would have it, Pretty Face, who had joined the
+Eleventh, was there too, and Fairlie and his wife as well,
+and Belle had the good sense to laugh it over with them,
+assuring Geraldine, however, that no one had eclipsed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>
+the G. V. whom he had once hoped had answered his
+memorable advertisement. He has grown wiser, and
+makes a jest of it now; it may be a sore point still, I cannot
+say&mdash;nobody sees it; but, whether or no, in the old
+city of Norwich, and in our corps, from Cadets to
+Colonels, nobody forgets <span class="smcap">The Line in the "Daily:"
+who did it, and who was done by it</span>.</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="sep1" />
+<hr class="sep2" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span></p>
+<h1>HOLLY WREATHS AND ROSE<br />
+CHAINS.</h1>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span></p>
+<hr class="sep3" />
+<hr class="sep4" />
+
+<h2><a name="HOLLY_WREATHS_AND_ROSE" id="HOLLY_WREATHS_AND_ROSE"></a>HOLLY WREATHS AND ROSE CHAINS.</h2>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>I.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE COLONEL OF THE "WHITE FAVORS" AND CECIL ST. AUBYN.</h3>
+
+<p>"What are you going to do with yourself this Christmas,
+old fellow?" said Vivian, of the 60th Hussars: the
+White Favors we call them, because, after Edgehill, Henriette
+Maria gave their Colonel a white rosette off her
+own dress to hang to his sword-knot, and all the 60th
+have like ribbons to this day. "If you've nothing better
+to do," continued their present Lieutenant-Colonel,
+"Come down with me to Deerhurst. The governor'll be
+charmed to see you; my mother has always some nice-looking
+girls there; and, as we keep the hounds, I can
+promise you some good hunting with the Harkaway."</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be delighted," said I, who, being in the &mdash;&mdash; Lancers,
+had been chained by the leg at Kensington the
+whole year, and, of all the woes the most pitiable, had
+not been able to get leave for either the 12th or the 1st;
+but while my chums were shooting among the turnips,
+or stalking royals in Blackmount Forest, I had been tied
+to town, a solitary unit in Pall-Mall, standing on the forsaken
+steps of the U. S., or pacing my hack through the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>
+dreary desert of Hyde Park&mdash;like Macaulay's New Zealander
+gazing on the ruins of London Bridge.</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," continued Vivian, "come down with me
+next week, and you can send your horses with Steevens
+and my stud. The governor could mount you well
+enough, but I never hunt with so much pleasure as when
+I'm on Qui Vive; so I dare say you, like me, prefer your
+own horses. I only hope we shan't have a confounded
+'black frost;' but we must take our chance of the
+weather. I think you'll like my sisters; they're just
+about half my age. Lots of children came in between,
+but were providentially nipped in the bud."</p>
+
+<p>"Are they pretty?"</p>
+
+<p>"Can't say, really; I'm too used to them to judge. I
+can't make love to them, so I never took the trouble to
+criticise them; but we've always been a good-looking
+race, I believe. I tell you who's staying there&mdash;that girl
+we met in Toronto. Do you remember her&mdash;Cecil St.
+Aubyn?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should say I did. How did she get here?"</p>
+
+<p>"She's come to live with her aunt, Mrs. Coverdale. You
+know that over-dressed widow who lives in Hyde Park
+gardens, and, when she can't afford Brighton, shuts the
+front shutters, lives in the back drawing-room, and says,
+'Not at home to callers?' St. Aubyn is as poor as a rat,
+so I suppose he was glad to send Cecil here; and the
+Coverdale likes to have somebody who'll draw men to
+her parties, which I'm sure her champagne will never do.
+It's the most unblushing gooseberry ever ticketed 'Veuve
+Clicquot.'"</p>
+
+<p>"'Pon my life, I'm delighted to hear it," said I. "The
+St. Aubyn's superb eyes will make the gooseberry go
+down. Men in Canada would have swallowed cask-washings
+to get a single waltz with her. All Toronto went<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>
+mad on that score. You admired her, too, old fellow,
+only you weren't with her long enough for such a stoic
+as you are to boil up into anything warmer."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, I thought her extremely pretty, but I thought
+her a little flirt, nevertheless."</p>
+
+<p>"Stuff! An attractive girl can't make herself ugly or
+disagreeable, or erect a brick wall round herself, with
+iron spikes on the top, for fear, through looking at her,
+any fellow might come to grief. The men followed her,
+and she couldn't help that."</p>
+
+<p>"And she encouraged them, and she <i>could</i> help that.
+However, I don't wish to speak against her; it's nothing
+to me how she kills and slays, provided I'm not among
+the bag. Take care you don't get shot yourself, Ned."</p>
+
+<p>"Keep your counsel for your own use, Syd. You put
+me in mind of the philanthropist, who ran to warn his
+neighbor of the dangers of soot while his own chimney
+was on fire."</p>
+
+<p>"As how? I don't quite see the point of your parable,"
+said Vivian, with an expression of such innocent
+impassiveness that one would have thought he had never
+seen her fair face out of her furs in her sledge, or admired
+her small ankles when she was skating on the Ontario.</p>
+
+<p>The winter before, a brother of mine, who was out
+there in the Rifles, wrote and asked me to go and have
+some buffalo-hunting, and Vivian went out with me for a
+couple of months. We had some very good sport in the
+western woods and plains, and his elk and bison horns
+are still stuck up in Vivian's rooms at Uxbridge, with
+many another trophy of both hemispheres. We had
+sport of another kind, too, to the merry music of the
+silvery sledge-bells, over the crisp snow and the gleaming
+ice, while bright eyes shone on us under delicate lace
+veils, and little feet peeped from under heaps of sable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>
+and bearskin, and gay voices rang out in would-be fear
+when the horses shied at the shadow of themselves, or
+at the moon shining on the ice. Who thinks of Canada
+without in fancy hearing the ringing chimes of the gay
+sledge bells swinging joyous measure into the clear sunshine
+or the white moonlight, in tune with light laughter,
+and soft whispers, and careless hearts?</p>
+
+<p>There we saw Cecil St. Aubyn, one of the prettiest girls
+in Toronto, then about nineteen. My brother Harry was
+mad about her, so were almost all the men in the Canada
+Rifles, and Engineers, and, 61st that were quartered
+there; and Vivian admired her too, though in a calmer
+sort of way. Perhaps if he had been with her more than
+a fortnight he might have gone further. As it was, he left
+Toronto liking her long Canadian eyes no more than was
+pleasant. It was as well so, perhaps, for it would not have
+been a good match for him, St. Aubyn being a broken-down
+gambler, who, having lost a princely fortune at
+Crocky's, and the Bads, married at fifty a widow with a
+little money, and migrated to Toronto, where he was a
+torment to himself and to everybody else. Vivian, meanwhile,
+was a great matrimonial <i>coup</i>. Coming of a high
+county family, and being the only son, of course there
+was priceless value set on his life, which, equally, of
+course, he imperilled, after the manner of us all, in every
+way he could&mdash;in charges and skirmishes, yachting, hunting,
+and steeple-chasing&mdash;ever since some two-and-twenty
+years ago he joined as a cornet of fifteen&mdash;a man already
+in muscle and ideas, pleasures and pursuits.</p>
+
+<p>At the present time he had been tranquilly engaged in
+the House, as he represented the borough of Cacklebury.</p>
+
+<p>He spoke seldom, but always well, and was thought
+a very promising member, his speeches being in Bernal
+Osborne's style; but he himself cared little about his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>
+senatorial laurels, and was fervently hoping that there
+would be a row with Russia, and that we should be
+allowed to go and stick Croats and make love to Bayad&egrave;res,
+to freshen us up and make us boys again.</p>
+
+<p>Next week, the first in December, he and I drove to
+Paddington, put ourselves in the express, and whisked
+through the snow-covered embankments, whitened fields,
+and holly hedges on the line down to Deerhurst. If the
+frost broke up we should have magnificent runs, and we
+looked at the country with a longing eye. Ever since he
+was six years old, he told me, he had gone out with the
+Harkaway Hack on Christmas-eve. When the drag met
+us, with the four bays steaming in the night air, and the
+groom warming into a smile at the sight of the Colonel,
+the sleet was coming down heavily, and the wind blew as
+keen as a sabre's edge. The bays dashed along at a
+furious gallop under Vivian's hand, the frosty road
+cracked under the wheel, the leaders' breath was white
+in the misty night; we soon flew through the park gate&mdash;though
+he didn't forget to throw down a sovereign on
+the snow for the old porteress&mdash;and up the leafless avenue,
+and bright and cheery the old manor-house, with its
+score of windows, like so many bright eyes, looked out
+upon the winter's night.</p>
+
+<p>"By George! we did that four miles quick enough,"
+said Vivian, jumping down, and shaking the snow off his
+hair and mustaches. "The old place looks cheery,
+doesn't it? Ah! there are the girls; they're sure to
+pounce on me."</p>
+
+<p>The two girls in question having warm hearts, not
+spoilt by the fashionable world they live in, darted across
+the hall, and, regardless of the snow, welcomed him
+ardently. They were proud of him, for he is a handsome
+dog, with haughty, aristocratic features, and a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>
+grand air as stately as a noble about Versailles in the
+polished "Age dor&eacute;."</p>
+
+<p>He shook himself free, and went forward to meet his
+mother, whom he is very fond of; while the governor,
+a fine-looking, genial old fellow, bade me welcome to
+Deerhurst. In the library door I caught sight of a figure
+in white that I recognised as our belle of the sledge drives;
+she was looking at Vivian as he bent down to his mother.
+As soon as she saw me though, she disappeared, and he
+and I went up to our rooms to thaw, and dress for dinner.</p>
+
+<p>By the fire, talking to Blanche Vivian, stood Cecil,
+when we went down to the drawing-room. She always
+makes me think of a S&egrave;vres or Dresden figure, her coloring
+is so delicate, and yet brilliant; and if you were to
+see her Canadian eyes, her waving chestnut hair, and her
+instantaneous, radiant, coquettish smiles, you would not
+wonder at the Toronto men losing their heads about her.</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Cecil, you never told me you knew Sydney!"
+cried Blanche, as Vivian shook hands with the St. Aubyn.
+"Where did you meet him? how long have you been acquainted?
+why did you never tell me?"</p>
+
+<p>"How could I tell Colonel Vivian was your brother?"
+said Cecil, playing with a little silver Cupid driving a
+barrowful of matches on the mantelpiece till she tumbled
+all his matches into the fender.</p>
+
+<p>"You might have asked. Never mind the wax-lights,"
+said Blanche, who, not having been long out, had a habit
+of saying anything that came into her head. "When
+did you see him? Tell me, Sydney, if she won't."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, in Canada, dear!" interrupted Cecil, quickly.
+"But it was for so short a time I should have thought
+Colonel Vivian would have forgotten my face, and name,
+and existence."</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, Miss St. Aubyn," said Vivian, smiling. "Pardon<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>
+me, but I think you must know your own power too
+well to think that any man who has seen you once could
+hope for his own peace to forget you."</p>
+
+<p>The words of course were flattering, but his quizzical
+smile made them doubtful. Cecil evidently took them as
+satire. "At least, you've forgotten anything we talked
+about at Toronto," she said, rather impatiently, "for I
+remember telling you I detested compliments."</p>
+
+<p>"I shouldn't have guessed it," murmured Vivian,
+stroking his mustaches.</p>
+
+<p>"And you," Cecil went on, regardless of the interruption,
+"told me you never complimented any woman
+you respected; so that speech just now doesn't say much
+for your opinion of me."</p>
+
+<p>"How dare I begin to like you?" laughed Vivian.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you know Levinge and Castlereagh were great
+friends of mine? Poor fellows! the sole object of their
+desires now is six feet of Crimean sod, if we're lucky
+enough to get out there." Cecil colored. Levinge's and
+Castlereagh's hard drinking and gloomy aspect at mess
+were popularly attributed to the witchery of the St.
+Aubyn. Canada, while she was in it, was as fatal to the
+Service as the Cape or the cholera.</p>
+
+<p>"If I talked so romantically, Colonel Vivian, with
+what superb mockery you would curl your mustaches.
+Surely the Iron Hand (wasn't that your sobriquet in
+Caffreland?) does not believe in broken hearts?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps not; but I <i>do</i> believe in some people's liking
+to try and break them."</p>
+
+<p>"So do I. It is a favorite pastime with your sex," said
+Cecil, beating the hearth-rug impatiently with her little
+satin shoe.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think we often attack," laughed Vivian. "We
+sometimes yield out of amiability, and we sometimes<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>
+take out the foils in self-defence, though we are no match
+for those delicate hands that use their Damascus blades
+so skilfully. We soon learn to cry quarter!"</p>
+
+<p>"To a dozen different conquerors in as many months,
+then!" cried Cecil, with a defiant toss of her head.</p>
+
+<p>Vivian looked down on her as a Newfoundland might
+look down on a small and impetuous-minded King
+Charles, who is hoping to irritate him. Just then three
+other people staying there came in. A fat old dowager
+and a thin daughter, who had turquoise eyes, and from
+whom, being a great pianist, we all fled in mortal terror
+of a hailstorm of Thalberg and Hertz, and a cousin of
+Syd's, Cossetting, a young chap, a blondin, with fair curls
+parted down the centre, whose brains were small, hands
+like a girl's, and thoughts centred on dew <i>bouquets</i> and
+his own beauty, but who, having a baronetcy, with much
+tin, was strongly set upon by the turquoise eyes, but appeared
+himself to lean more towards the Canadian, as a
+greater contrast to himself, I suppose.</p>
+
+<p>"How do you do, Cos?" said Vivian, carelessly. The
+Iron Hand very naturally scorned this effeminate <i>patte de
+velours</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"You here!" lisped the baronet. "Delighted to see
+you! thought you'd killed yourself over a fence, or something,
+before this&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, Horace," burst in energetic little Blanche, "I
+have told you for the last month that he was coming down
+for Christmas."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you, my dear child?" said Cos. "'Pon my life I
+forgot it. Miss St. Aubyn, my man Cl&eacute;ante (he's the
+handiest dog&mdash;he once belonged to the Duc d'Aumale)
+has just discovered something quite new&mdash;there's no perfume
+like it; he calls it 'Fleurs des Tilleuls,' and the best
+of it is, nobody can have it. If you'll allow me&mdash;&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Everybody seems to make it their duty to forget Sydney,"
+muttered Blanche, as the Baronet murmured the rest
+of his speech inaudibly.</p>
+
+<p>"Never mind, petite; I can bear it," laughed Vivian,
+leaning against the mantelpiece with that look of quiet
+strength characteristic of both his mind and body.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil overheard the whisper, and flushed a quick look
+at him; then turning to Cossetting, talked over the
+"Fleurs des Tilleuls" as if her whole mind was absorbed
+in <i>bouquet</i>.</p>
+
+<p>When dinner was announced, Vivian troubled himself,
+however, to give his arm to Cecil, and, tossing his head
+back in the direction of the turquoise eyes, said to the
+discomfited Horace, "You sing, don't you, Cosset? Miss
+Screechington will bore you less than she would me."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it, then, because I 'bore you less' that you do me
+the honor?" asked Cecil, quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Syd, calmly; "or, rather, to put it more
+courteously, you amuse me more."</p>
+
+<p>"Monseigneur! je vous remercie," said Cecil, her long
+almond eyes sparkling dangerously. "You promote me
+to the same rank with an opera, a hookah, a rat-hunt, and
+a French novel?"</p>
+
+<p>"And," Vivian went on tranquilly, "I dare say I shall
+amuse <i>you</i> better than that poor little fool with his lisp
+and his talk of the toilet, and his hands that never pulled
+in a thorough-bred or aided a rowing match."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, we're not in the Iliad and Odyssey days to deify
+physical strength," said Cecil, who secretly adored it, as
+all women do; "nor yet among the Pawnees to reverence
+a man according to his scalps. Though Sir Horace may
+not have followed your example and jeopardised his life
+on every possible occasion, he is very handsome, and can
+be very agreeable."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Is it possible you can endure that fop?" said Vivian,
+quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly. Why not?"</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel stroked his moustache contemptuously.
+"I should have fancied you more difficile, that is all; but
+Cos is, as you say, good-looking, and very well off. I
+wish&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"What? That you were 'less bored?'"</p>
+
+<p>"That I always wish; but I was thinking of Cos, there&mdash;milk-posset,
+as little Eardley in the troop says they
+called him at Eton&mdash;I was wishing he could see Levinge
+and Castlereagh, just as <i>&eacute;pouvantails</i>, to make him turn and
+flee as the French noblesse did when they saw their cousins
+and brothers strung up &agrave; la lanterne."</p>
+
+<p>"Wasn't it very strange," Blanche was saying to me at
+the same time, "that Cecil never mentioned Sydney?
+I've so often spoken of him, told her his troop, and all
+about him. (He has always been so kind to me, though
+he is eighteen years older&mdash;just twice my age.) Besides,
+I found her one day looking at his picture in the gallery,
+so she must have known it was the same Colonel Vivian,
+mustn't she Captain Thornton?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should say so. Have you known her long?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. We met her at Brighton this August with that
+silly woman, Mrs. Coverdale. All her artifices and falsehoods
+annoy Cecil so; Cecil doesn't mind saying she's not
+rich, she knows it's no crime."</p>
+
+<p>"C'est pire qu'un crime, c'est une faute," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't talk in that way," laughed Blanche. "That's
+bitter and sarcastic, like Sydney in his grand moods,
+when I'm half afraid of him. I am sure Cecil couldn't be
+nicer, if she were ever such an heiress. Mamma asked
+her for Christmas because she once knew Mr. St. Aubyn
+well, and Cecil is not happy with Mrs. Coverdale. False
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>
+and true don't suit each other. I hope Sydney will like
+her&mdash;do you think he does?"</p>
+
+<p>That was a question I could not answer. He admired
+her, of course, because he could not well have helped it,
+and had done so in Canada; and he was talking to her
+now, I dare say, to force her to acknowledge that he <i>was</i>
+more amusing than Horace Cos. But he seemed to me
+to weigh her in a criticising balance, as if he expected to
+find her wanting&mdash;as if it pleased him to provoke and correct
+her, as one pricks and curbs a beautiful two-year old,
+just to see its graceful impatience at the check and the
+glance of its wild eye.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>II.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE CANADIAN'S COLD BATH WARMS UP THE COLONEL.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Deerhurst was a capital house to spend a Christmas in.
+It was the house of an English gentleman, with even the
+dens called bachelors' rooms comfortable and luxurious
+to the last extent: a first-rate stud, a capital billiard table,
+a good sporting country, pretty girls to amuse one with
+when tired of the pink, the best Chablis and Ch&acirc;teau
+Margaux to be had anywhere, and a host who would have
+liked a hundred people at his dinner-table the whole year
+round. The snow, confound it! prevented our taking the
+hounds out for the first few days; but we were not bored
+as one might have expected, and our misery was the girls'
+delight, who were fervently hoping that the ice might
+come thick enough for them to skate. Cecil was invaluable
+in a country-house; her resources were as unlimited
+as Houdin's inexhaustible bottle. She played in French<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>
+vaudevilles and Sheridan Knowles's comedies, acted charades,
+planned tableaux vivants, sang gay wild chansons
+peculiar to herself, that made the Screechington bravuras
+and themes more insupportable than ever; and, what was
+more, managed to infuse into everybody else some of her
+own energy and spirit. She made every one do as she
+liked; but she tyrannised over us so charmingly that we
+never chafed at the bit; and to the other girls she was so
+good-natured in giving them the r&ocirc;les they liked, in praising,
+and in aiding them, that it was difficult for feminine
+malice, though its limits are boundless, to find fault with
+her. Vivian, though he did not relax his criticism of her,
+was agreeable to her, as he had been in Canada, and as
+he is always to women when he is not too lazy. He consented
+to stand for Rienzi in a tableau, though he hates
+doing all those things, and played in the Proverbs with
+such a flashing fire of wit in answer to Cecil that we told
+him he beat Mathews.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm inspired," he said, with a laughing bend of his
+head to Cecil, when somebody complimented him.</p>
+
+<p>She gave an impatient movement&mdash;she was accustomed
+to have such things whispered in earnest, not in jest.
+She laughed, however. "Are you inspired, then, to take
+<i>Huon's</i> part? All the characters are cast but that."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I can't play well enough."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense. You cannot think that. Say you would
+rather not at once."</p>
+
+<p>Vivian stroked his mustaches thoughtfully. "Well,
+you see, it bores me rather; and I'm not Christian enough
+to suffer ennui cheerfully to please other people."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well, then, I will give the part to Sir Horace,"
+said Cecil, looking through the window at the church
+spire, covered with the confounded snow.</p>
+
+<p>Vivian stroked away at his mustaches rather fiercely<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121]</a></span>
+this time. "Cos! he'll ruin the play. Dress him up as
+a lord in waiting, he'll be a dainty lay figure, but for
+anything more he's not as fit as this setter! Fancy that
+essenced, fair-haired young idiot taking <i>Huon</i>&mdash;his lisp
+would be so effective!"</p>
+
+<p>She looked up in his face with one of her mischievous,
+dangerous smiles, and put up her hands in an attitude
+of petition. "He must have the part if you won't. Be
+good, and don't spoil the play. I have set my mind
+on its being perfect, and&mdash;I will have <i>such</i> a dress as the
+<i>Countess</i> if you will only do as I tell you."</p>
+
+<p>Cecil, in her soft, childlike moods, could finish any
+man. Of course Vivian rehearsed "Love" with her
+that afternoon, a play that was to come off on the 23rd.
+Cos sulked slightly at being commanded by her to dress
+himself beautifully and play the <i>Prince of Milan</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"To be refused by you," lisped Horace. "Oh, I dare
+say! No! 'pon my life&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Cos, you'll have plenty of fellow-sufferers,"
+whispered Syd, mischievously.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you dare to disobey me, Sir Horace?" cried
+Cecil. "For shame! I should have thought you more
+of a preux chevalier. If you don't order over from Boxwood
+that suit of Milan armor you say one of your ancestors
+wore at Flodden, and wear it on Tuesday, you shall
+never waltz with me again. Now what do you say?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nobody can rethitht you," murmured Cos. "You
+do anything with a fellow that you chooth."</p>
+
+<p>Vivian glanced down at him with superb scorn, and
+turned to me. "What a confounded frost this is. The
+weathercock sticks at the north, and old Ben says there's
+not a chance of a change till the new moon. Qui Vive
+might as well have kept at Hounslow. To waste all the
+season like this would make a parson swear! If I'd foreseen<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">[Pg 122]</a></span>
+it I would have gone to Paris with Lovell, as he
+wanted me to do."</p>
+
+<p>I suppose the Colonel was piqued to find he was not
+the only one persuaded into his r&ocirc;le. He bent over
+Laura Caldecott's chair, a pretty girl, but with nothing
+to say for herself, admired her embroidery, and talked
+with great empressement about it, till Laura, much flattered
+at such unusual attention, after lisping a good deal
+of nonsense, finally promised to embroider a note-case
+for him, "if you'll be good and use it, and not throw it
+away, as you naughty men always do the pretty things
+we give you," simpered Miss Laura.</p>
+
+<p>"Hearts included," said Syd, smiling. "I assure you
+if you give me yours, I will prize it with Turkish jealousy."</p>
+
+<p>The fair brodeuse gave a silly laugh; and Vivian,
+whose especial detestation is this sort of love-making
+nonsense, went on flirting with her, talking the persiflage
+that one whispers leaning over the back of a phaeton
+after a dinner at the Castle or a day at Ascot, but never
+expects to be called to remember the next morning, when
+one bows to the object thereof in the Ring, and the flavor
+of the claret-cup and the scent of the cigar are both fled
+with the moonbeams and forgotten.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil gave the Colonel and his flirtation a glance, and
+let Cossetting lean over the back of her chair and deliver
+himself of some lackadaisical sentiment (taken second-hand
+out of "Isidora" or the "Amant de la Lune," and
+diluted to be suitable for presentation to her), looking
+up at him with her large velvet eyes, or flashing on him
+her radiant smile, till Horace pulled up his little stiff
+collar, coaxed his flaxen whiskers, looked at her with his
+half-closed light eyes&mdash;and thought himself irresistible&mdash;and
+Miss Screechington broke the string of the purse<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span>
+she was making, and scattered all the steel beads about
+the floor in the futile hope of gaining his attention.
+Blanche went down on her knees and spent twenty minutes
+hunting them all up; but as I helped her I saw the
+turquoise eyes looked anything but grateful for our
+efforts, though if Blanche had done anything for me
+with that ready kindness and those soft little white
+hands, I should have repaid her very warmly. But oh,
+these women! these women! Do they ever love one
+another in their hearts? Does not Chloris always swear
+that Lelia's gazelle eyes have a squint in them and Delia
+hint that Daphne, who is innocent as a dove, is bad style,
+and horridly bold?</p>
+
+<p>At last Cecil got tired of Cos's drawling platitudes,
+and walked up to one of the windows. "How is the ice,
+will anybody tell me? I am wild to try it, ain't you,
+Blanche? If we are kept waiting much longer, we will
+have the carpets up and skate on the oak floors."</p>
+
+<p>I told her I thought they might try it safely. "Then
+let us go after luncheon, shall we?" said Cecil. "It is
+quite sunny now. You skate, of course, Sir Horace?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! to be sure&mdash;certainly," murmured Cos. "We'd
+a quadrille on the Serpentine last February, Talbot, and
+I, and some other men&mdash;lots of people said they never
+saw it better done. But it's rather cold&mdash;don't you think
+so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you expect to find ice in warm weather?" said
+Vivian, curtly, from the fire, where he was standing
+watching the commencement of the note-case.</p>
+
+<p>"No. But I hate cold," said Horace, looking at his
+snowy fingers. "One looks such a figure&mdash;blue, and
+wet, and shivering; the house is much the best place in
+a frost."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor fellow!" said Vivian, with a contemptuous twist<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>
+of his mustaches. "I fear, however f&ecirc;t&eacute; you may be
+in every other quarter, the seasons won't change to accommodate
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! you are a dreadful man," drawled Cos. "You
+don't a bit mind tanning yourself, nor getting drenched
+through, nor soiling your hands&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Thank Heaven, no!" responded Syd. "I'm neither
+a school-girl, nor&mdash;a fop."</p>
+
+<p>"Would you believe it, Miss St. Aubyn?" said the baronet,
+appealingly. "That man'll get up before daylight
+and let himself be drenched to the skin for the chance of
+playing a pike; and will turn out of a comfortable arm-chair
+on a winter's night just to go after poachers and
+knock a couple of men over, and think it the primest
+fun in life. I don't understand it myself, do you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Cecil, fervently. "I delight in a man's
+love for sport, for I idolise horses, and there is nothing
+that can beat a canter on a fine fresh morning over a
+grass country; and I believe that a man who has the
+strength, and nerve, and energy to go thoroughly into
+fishing, or shooting, or whatever it be, will carry the
+same will and warmth into the rest of his life; and the
+hand that is strong in the field and firm in righteous
+wrath, will be the truer in friendship and the gentler in
+pity."</p>
+
+<p>Cecil spoke with energetic enthusiasm. Horace stared,
+the Screechington sneered, Laura gave an affected little
+laugh. The Colonel swung round from his study of the
+fire, his face lighting up. I've seen Syd on occasion
+look as soft as a woman. However, he said nothing; he
+only took her in to luncheon, and was exceedingly kind
+to her and oblivious of Laura Caldecott's existence
+throughout that meal, which, at Deerhurst, was of unusual
+splendor and duration. And afterwards, when she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>
+had arrayed herself in a hat with soft curling feathers,
+and looped up her dress in some inexplicable manner
+that showed her dainty high heels artistically, he took
+her little skates in his hand and walked down by her side
+to the pond. It was some way to the pond&mdash;a good sized
+piece of water, that snobs would have called the Lake,
+by way of dignifying their possessions, with willows on
+its banks (where in summer the sentimental Screechington
+would have reclined, Tennyson <i>&agrave; la main</i>), and boats
+and punts beside it, among which was a tub, in which
+Blanche confessed to me she had paddled herself across
+to the saturation of a darling blue muslin, and the agonised
+feelings of her governess, only twelve months before.</p>
+
+<p>"A dreadful stiff old thing that governess was," said
+Blanche, looking affectionately at the tub. "Do you
+know, Captain Thornton, when she went away, and I
+saw her boxes actually on the carriage-top, I waltzed
+round the schoolroom seven times, and burnt 'Noel et
+Chapsal' in the fire&mdash;I did, indeed!"</p>
+
+<p>The way, as I say, was long to the pond; and as Cecil's
+dainty high heels and Syd's swinging cavalry strides kept
+pace over the snow together, they had plenty of time for
+conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Caldecott is looking for you," said Cecil, with
+a contemptuous glance at the fair Laura, who, between
+two young dandies, was picking her route over the snow
+holding her things very high indeed, and casting back
+looks at the Colonel.</p>
+
+<p>"Is she? It is very kind of her."</p>
+
+<p>"If you feel the kindness so deeply, you had better
+repay it by joining her."</p>
+
+<p>Vivian laughed. "Not just now, thank you. We are
+close to the kennels&mdash;hark at their bay! Would you like<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>
+to come and see them? By-the-by, how is your wolf-dog&mdash;Leatherstockings,
+didn't you call him?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you remember him?" said Cecil, her eyes beaming
+and her lips quivering. "Dear old dog, I loved him
+so much, and he loved me. He was bitten by an asp
+just before I left, and papa would have him shot. Good
+gracious! what is the matter?&mdash;she is actually frightened
+at that setter!"</p>
+
+<p>The "she" of whom Cecil so disdainfully spoke was
+Miss Caldecott, who, on seeing a large setter leap upon
+her with muddy paws and much sudden affection, began
+to scream, and rushed to Vivian with a beseeching cry
+of "Save me, save me!" Cecil stood and laughed, and
+called the setter to her.</p>
+
+<p>"Here, Don&mdash;Dash&mdash;what is your name? Come here,
+good dog. That poor young lady has nerves, and you
+must not try them, or you will cause her endless expenses
+in sal volatile and ether; But I have no such interesting
+weaknesses, and you may lavish any demonstrations
+you please on me!"</p>
+
+<p>We all laughed as she thus talked confidentially to the
+setter, holding his feathered paws against her waist;
+while Vivian stood by her with admiration in his glance.
+Poor Laura looked foolish, and began to caress a great
+bull-dog, who snapped at her. She hadn't Cecil's ways
+either with dogs or men.</p>
+
+<p>"What a delightful scene," whispered Cecil to the
+Colonel, as we left the kennels. "You were not half so
+touched by it as you were expected to be!"</p>
+
+<p>Vivian laughed. "Didn't you effectually destroy all
+romantic effect? You can be very mischievous to your
+enemies."</p>
+
+<p>Cecil colored. "She is no enemy of mine; I know
+nothing of her, but I do detest that mock sentimentality,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>
+that would-be fine ladyism that thinks it looks interesting
+when it pleads guilty to sal volatile, and screams
+at an honest dog's bark. Did you see how shocked she
+and Miss Screechington looked because I let the hounds
+leap about me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course; but though you have not lived very long,
+you must have learned that you are too dangerous to the
+peace of our sex to expect much mercy from your own."</p>
+
+<p>A flush came into Cecil's cheeks <i>not</i> brought by the
+wind. Her feathers gave a little dance as she shook her
+head with her customary action of annoyance.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, never compliment me, I am so tired of it."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish I could believe that," said Syd, in a low tone.
+"Your feelings are warm, your impulses frank and true;
+it were a pity to mar them by an undue love for the flattering
+voices of empty-headed fools."</p>
+
+<p>Tears of pleasure started into her eyes, but she would
+not let him see it. She had not forgotten the Caldecott
+flirtation of the morning enough to resist revenging it.
+She looked up with a merry laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Je m'amuse&mdash;voil&agrave; tout. There is no great harm in
+it."</p>
+
+<p>A shadow of disappointment passed over Syd's haughty
+face.</p>
+
+<p>"No, if you do not do it once too often. I <i>have</i> known
+men&mdash;and women too&mdash;who all their lives through have
+been haunted by the memory of a slight word, a careless
+look, with which, unwittingly or in obstinacy, they shut
+the door of their own happiness. Have you ever heard
+of the Deerhurst ghost?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Cecil, softly. "Tell it me."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a short story. Do you know that picture of
+Muriel Vivian, the girl with the hawk on her wrist and
+long hair of your color? She lived in Charles's time,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>
+and was a great beauty at the court. There were many
+who would have lived and died for her, but the one who
+loved her best was her cousin Guy. The story says that
+she had plighted herself to him in these very woods; at
+any rate, he followed her when she went to join the court,
+and she kept him on, luring him with vague promises,
+and flirting with Goring, and Francis Egerton, and all
+the other gay gentlemen. One night his endurance
+broke down: he asked her whether or no she cared for
+him? He begged, as a sign, for the rosebud she had in
+her dress. She laughed at him, and&mdash;gave the flower to
+Harry Carrew, a young fellow in Lunsford's 'Babe-eaters.'
+Guy said no more, and left her. Before dawn
+he shot Carrew through the heart, took the rosebud from
+the boy's doublet, put it in his own breast, and fell upon
+his sword. They say Muriel lost her senses. I don't
+believe it: no coquette ever had so much feeling; but if
+you ask the old servants they will tell you, and firmly
+credit the story too, that hers and Guy Vivian's ghosts
+still are to be seen every midnight at Christmas-eve, the
+day that he fought and killed little Harry Carrew."</p>
+
+<p>He laughed, but Cecil shuddered.</p>
+
+<p>"What a horrible story! But do you believe that any
+woman ever possessed such power over a man?"</p>
+
+<p>"I believe it since I have seen it. One of my best
+friends is now hopelessly insane because a woman as
+worthless as this dead branch forsook him. Poor fellow!
+they set it down to a coup de soleil, but it was the falsehood
+of Emily Rushbrooke that did it. But, for myself,
+I never should lose my head for any woman. I did once
+when I was a boy, but I know better now."</p>
+
+<p>A wild, desperate idea came into Cecil's mind. She
+contrasted the passionless calm of his face with the tender
+gentleness of his tone a few moments ago, and she would<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>
+have given her life to see him "lose his head for her" as
+he had done for that other. How she hated her, whoever
+she had been! Cecil had seen too many men not
+to know that Syd's cool exterior covered a stormy heart,
+and in the longing to rouse up the storm at her incantation
+she resolved to play a dangerous game. The ghost
+story did not warn her. As Mephistopheles to Faust
+came Horace Cos to aid the impulse, and Cecil turned to
+him with one of her radiant smiles. She never looked
+prettier than in her black hat; the wind had only blown
+a bright flush into her cheeks&mdash;though it had turned
+Laura blue and the Screechington red&mdash;and the Colonel
+looked up at her as he put her skates on with something
+of the look Guy might have given Muriel Vivian flirting
+gaily with the roistering cavaliers.</p>
+
+<p>"Now, Sir Horace, show us some of those wonderful
+Serpentine figures," cried Cecil, balancing herself with
+the grace of a curlew, and whirling here, there, and everywhere
+at her will as easily as if she were on a chalked ball-room
+floor. She hadn't skated and sledged on the Ontario
+for nothing. More than one man had lost his own
+balance looking after her. Cos wasn't started yet; one
+pair of skates were too large, another pair too small;
+if he'd thought of it he'd have had his own sent over.
+He stood on the brink much as Winkle, of Pickwickian
+memory, trembled in Weller's grasp. Cecil looked at
+him with laughing eyes, a shrewd suspicion that he had
+planted her adorer, and that the quadrille on the Serpentine
+was an offspring of the Cossetting poetic fancy.
+Thrice did the luckless baronet essay the ice, and thrice
+did he come to grief with heels in the air, and his dainty
+apparel disordered. At last, his Canadian sorceress took
+compassion upon him, and declaring she was tired, asked
+him to drive her across the pond. Cos, with an air of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>
+languid martyrdom and a heavy sigh as he glanced at
+his Houbigants, torn and soiled, grasped the back of the
+chair, and actually contrived to start it. Once started,
+away went the chair and its Phaeton after it, whether he
+would or no, its occupant looking up and laughing in the
+dandy's heated, disconcerted, and anxious face. All at
+once there was a crash, a plunge, and a shout from Vivian,
+who was on the opposite bank. The chair had
+broken the ice, flung Cecil out into the water with the
+shock, while her charioteer, by a lucky jump backwards,
+had saved himself, and stood on the brink of the chasm
+unharmed. Cecil's crinoline kept her from sinking; she
+stretched out her little hand with a cry&mdash;it sounded like
+Vivian's name as it came to my ears on the keen north
+wind&mdash;but before Vivian, who came across the ice like a
+whirlwind, could get to her, Cos, valorously determining
+to wet his wristbands, stooped down, and, holding by
+the chair, which was firmly wedged in, put his arm
+round her and dragged her out. Vivian came up two
+seconds too late.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you hurt?" he said, bending towards her.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Cecil, faintly, as her head drooped unconsciously
+on Cos's shoulder. She had struck her forehead
+on the ice, which had stunned her slightly. The Colonel
+saw the chestnut hair resting against Cos's arm; he
+dropped the hand he had taken, and turned to the shore.</p>
+
+<p>"Bring her to the bank," he said, briefly. "I will go
+home and send a carriage. Good Heavens! that that
+fool should have saved her!" I heard him mutter, as he
+brushed past me.</p>
+
+<p>He drove the carriage down himself, and under pretext
+of holding on the horses, did not descend from the box
+while Horace wrapped rugs and cloaks round Cecil, who,
+having more pluck than strength, declared she was quite<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span>
+well now, but nearly fainted when Horace lifted her out,
+and she was consigned by Mrs. Vivian to her bedroom
+for the rest of the day.</p>
+
+<p>"It is astonishing how we miss Cecil," remarked
+Blanche, at dinner. "Isn't it dull without her, Sydney?"</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't perceive it," said the Colonel, calmly; "but
+I am very sorry for the cause of her absence."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, by Jove! it sounds unfeeling; but I can't say
+I am," murmured Horace. "It's something to have
+saved such a deuced pretty girl as that."</p>
+
+<p>"Curse that puppy," muttered Syd to his champagne
+glass. "A fool that isn't fit for her to look at&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Syd's and my room, in the bachelors' wing, adjoin each
+other; and as our windows both possess the convenience
+of balconies, we generally smoke in them, and hold a
+little chat before turning in. When I stepped out into
+my balcony that night, Syd was already puffing away at
+his pipe. Perhaps his Cavendish was unusually good,
+for he did not seem greatly inclined to talk, but leant
+over the balcony, looking out into the clear frosty night,
+with the winter stars shining on the wide white uplands
+and the leafless glittering trees.</p>
+
+<p>"What's that?" said he sharply, as the notes of a cornet
+playing, and playing badly, Hal&eacute;vy's air, "Quand
+de la Nuit," struck on the night air.</p>
+
+<p>"A serenade, I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"A serenade in the snow. Who is romantic idiot
+enough for that?" said Vivian contemptuously, nearly
+pitching himself over to see where the cornet came
+from. It came from under Cecil's windows, where a light
+was still burning. The player looked uncommonly like
+Cossetting wrapped up in a cloak with a wide-awake
+on, under which the moonlight showed us some fair hair
+peeping.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Vivian drew back with an oath he did not mean me to
+hear. He laughed scornfully. "Milk-posset, of course!
+There is no other fool in the house. His passion must
+be miraculously deep to drag him out of his bed into the
+snow to play some false notes to his lady-love. It's
+rather windy, don't you think, Ned. Good night, old
+fellow&mdash;and, I say, don't turn little Blanche's head with
+your pretty speeches. You and I are bound not to flirt,
+since we're sworn never to marry; and I don't want the
+child played with, though possibly (being a woman) she'd
+very soon recover it."</p>
+
+<p>With which sarcasm on his sister and her sex, the
+Colonel shut down the window with a clang; and I remained,
+smoking four pipes and a half, meditating on his
+last words, for I <i>had</i> been playing with the child, and
+felt (inhuman brute! the ladies will say) that I should
+be sorry if she <i>did</i> recover it.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>III.</h2>
+
+<h3>SHOWING THAT LOVE-MAKING ON HOLY GROUND DOESN'T
+PROSPER.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Cecil came down the next morning looking very pretty
+after her ducking. Vivian asked her how she was with
+his general air of calm courtesy, helped her to some cold
+pheasant, and applied himself to his breakfast and some
+talk with a sporting man about the chances of the frost
+breaking up.</p>
+
+<p>Horace, who looked upon himself as a preux chevalier,
+had had his left arm put in a sling on the strength of a
+bruise as big as a fourpenny-piece, and appeared to consider
+himself entitled to Cecil's eternal gratitude and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>
+admiration for having gone the length of wetting his coat
+sleeves for her.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you like music by starlight?" he whispered, with
+a self-conscious smile, after a course of delicate attentions
+throughout breakfast.</p>
+
+<p>Syd fixed his eyes on Cecil's, steadily but impassively.
+The color rose into her face, and she turned to Cos
+with a mischievous laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"Very much, if&mdash;I am not too sleepy to hear it; and
+it isn't a cornet out of tune."</p>
+
+<p>"How cruel!" murmured Horace, as he passed her
+coffee. "You shouldn't criticise so severely when a fellow
+tries to please you."</p>
+
+<p>"That poor dear girl really thinks I turned out into
+the snow last night to give her that serenade," observed
+Cos, with a languid laugh, when we were alone in the
+billiard-room. "Good, isn't it, the idea of <i>my</i> troubling
+myself?"</p>
+
+<p>"Whose cracked cornet was it, then, that made that
+confounded row last night?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>Horace laughed again; it was rarely he was so highly
+amused at anything: "It was Cl&eacute;ante's, to be sure.
+He don't play badly when his hands are not numbed,
+poor devil! Of course he made no end of a row about
+going out into the snow, but I made him do it. I knew
+Cecil would think it was I. Women are so vain, poor
+things!"</p>
+
+<p>It was lucky I alone was the repository of his confidence,
+for if Vivian had chanced to have been in the billiard-room,
+it is highly probable he would then and there
+have brained his cousin with one of the cues.</p>
+
+<p>Happily he was out of the reach of temptation, in the
+stables, looking after Qui Vive, who had to "bide in
+stall," as much to that gallant bay's disquiet as to her<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>
+owner's; for I don't know which of the two best loves a
+burst over a stiff country, or a fast twenty minutes up
+wind alone with the hounds when they throw up their
+heads.</p>
+
+<p>To the stables, by an odd coincidence, Cecil, putting
+the irresistible black hat on the top of her chestnut braids,
+prevailed on Blanche to escort her, vowing (which
+was nearly, but not quite, the truth) that she loved the
+sweet pets of horses better than anything on earth.
+Where Cecil went, Laura made a point of going too, to
+keep her enemy in sight, I suppose; though Cecil, liking
+a fast walk on the frosty roads, a game of battledore and
+shuttlecock with Blanche (when we were out of the
+house), or anything, in short, better than working with
+her feet on the fender, and the Caldecott inanities or
+Screechington scandals in her ear, often led Laura many
+an unwelcome dance, and brought that luckless young
+lady to try at things which did not sit well upon her as
+they did upon the St. Aubyn, who had a knack of doing,
+and doing charmingly, a thousand things no other woman
+could have attempted. So, as Vivian and I, and some
+of the other men, stood in the stable-doors, smoking, and
+talking over the studs accommodated in the spacious
+stalls, a strong party of four young ladies came across
+the yard.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm come to look at Qui Vive; will you show him to
+me?" said Cecil, softly. Her gentle, childlike way was
+the most telling of all her changing moods, but I must
+do her the justice to say that it was perfectly natural,
+she was no actress.</p>
+
+<p>"With great pleasure," said Syd, very courteously, if
+not over-cordially; and to Qui Vive's stall Cecil went,
+alone in her glory, for Laura was infinitely too terrified
+at the sight of the bay's strong black hind legs to risk a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>
+kick from them, even to follow Syd. Helena Vivian
+stayed with her, and Blanche came with me to visit my
+hunters.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil is a tolerable judge of a horse; she praised Qui
+Vive's lean head, full eye, and silky coat with discrimination,
+and Qui Vive, though not the best-tempered of
+thorough-breds, let her pat his smooth sides and kiss
+his strong neck without any hostile demonstration.</p>
+
+<p>Vivian watched her as if she were a spoilt child who
+bewitched him, but whom he knew to be naughty; he
+could not resist the fascination of her ways, but he never
+altered his calm, courteous tone to her&mdash;the tone Cecil
+longed to hear change, were it even into invectives against
+her, to testify some deeper interest.</p>
+
+<p>"Now show me the mount you will give me when the
+frost breaks up and we take out the hounds," said Cecil,
+with a farewell caress of Qui Vive.</p>
+
+<p>"You shall have the grey four-year-old; Billiard-ball,
+and he will suit you exactly, for he is as light as a bird,
+checks at nothing, and will take you safe over the stiffest
+bullfinch. I know you may trust him, for he has carried
+Blanche."</p>
+
+<p>Cecil threw back her head. "Oh, I would ride anything,
+Qui Vive himself, if he would bear a habit. I am
+not like Miss Caldecott, who, catching sight of his dear
+brown legs, vanished as rapidly as if she had seen Muriel's
+ghost on Christmas-eve."</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel smiled. "You are very unmerciful to
+poor Miss Caldecott. What has she done to offend
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Offend me! Nothing in the world. Though I heard
+her lament with Miss Screechington in the music-room,
+that I was 'so fast,' and 'such slang style;' I consider
+that rather a compliment, for I never knew any lady pull<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>
+to pieces my bonnet, or my bouquet, or my hat, unless
+it was a prettier one than their own. That sounds a
+vain speech, but I don't mean it so."</p>
+
+
+<p>The Colonel looked down into her velvet eyes; she
+was most dangerous to him in this mood. "No," he
+said, briefly, "no one would accuse you of vanity, though
+they might, pardon me, of love of admiration."</p>
+
+<p>Cecil laughed merrily. "Yes, perhaps so; it is pleasant,
+you know. Yet sometimes I am tired of it all, and
+I want&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"A more difficult conquest? To find a diamond,
+merely, like Cleopatra, to show your estimate of its value
+by throwing it away."</p>
+
+<p>A flush of vexation came into her cheeks. "Do you
+think me utterly heartless?" she said impetuously. "No.
+I mean that I often tire of the fulsome compliments, the
+flattery, the attention, the whirl of society! I do like
+admiration. I tell you candidly what every other woman
+acknowledges to herself but denies to the world; but
+often it is nothing to me&mdash;mere Dead Sea fruit. I care
+nothing for the voices that whisper it; the eyes that express
+it wake no response in mine, and I would give it
+all for one word of true interest, one glance of real&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Vivian looked down on her steadily with his searching
+eagle eyes, out of which, when he chose, nothing could
+be read. "If I dare believe you&mdash;&mdash;" he said, half aloud.</p>
+
+<p>Gentle as his tone was, the mere doubt stung Cecil to
+the quick. Something of the wild, desperate feeling of
+the day previous rose in her heart. The same feeling
+that makes men brave heaven and hell to win their desires
+worked up in her. If she had been one of us, just
+at that moment, she would have flinched at nothing;
+being a young lady, her hands were tied. She could
+only go to Cos's stalls with him (Cos knows as much<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span>
+about horseflesh as I do about the profound female mystery
+they call "shopping"), and flirt with him to desperation,
+while Horace got the steam up faster than he,
+with his very languid motor powers, often did, being accustomed
+to be spared the trouble and have all the love
+made to him&mdash;an indolence in which the St. Aubyn, who
+knows how to keep a man well up to hand, never indulged
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Do have some pity on me," I heard Cos murmuring,
+as she stroked a great brute of his, with a head like a
+fiddle-case, and no action at all. "I assure you, Miss St.
+Aubyn, you make me wretched. I'd die for you to-morrow
+if I only saw how, and yet you take no more notice
+of me sometimes than if I were that colt."</p>
+
+<p>Cecil glanced at him with a smile that would have
+driven Cos distracted if he'd been in for it as deep as he
+pretended.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't see that you are much out of condition, Sir
+Horace, but if you have any particular fancy to suicide,
+the horse-pond will accommodate you at a moment's notice;
+only don't do it till after our play, because I have
+set my heart on that suit of Milan armor. Pray don't
+look so plaintive. If it will make you any happier, I am
+going for a walk, and you may come too. Blanche, dear,
+which way is it to the plantations?"</p>
+
+<p>Now poor Horace hated a walk on a frosty morning
+as cordially as anything, being altogether averse to any
+natural exercise: but he was sworn to the St. Aubyn,
+and Blanche and I, dropping behind them, he had a
+good hour of her fascinations to himself. I do not know
+whether he improved the occasion, but Cecil at luncheon
+looked tired and teased. I should think, after Syd's
+graphic epigrammatic talk, the baronet's lisped nonsense
+must have been rather trying, especially as Cecil has a
+strong leaning to intellect.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Vivian didn't appear at luncheon; he was gone rabbit-shooting
+with the other fellows, and I should have
+been with them if I had not thought lounging in the
+drawing-room, reading "Clytemnestra" to Blanche, with
+many pauses, the greater fun of the two. I am keen
+about sport, too; but ever since, at the age of ten, I conceived
+a romantic passion for my mother's lady's-maid&mdash;a
+tall and stately young lady, who eventually married a
+retail tea-dealer&mdash;I have thought the beaux yeux the best
+of all games.</p>
+
+<p>"Mrs. Vivian, Blanche and Helena and I want to be
+very useful, if you will let us," said Cecil, one morning.
+She was always soft and playful with that gentlest of all
+women, Syd's mother. "What do you smile in that incredulous
+way for? We <i>can</i> be extraordinarily industrious:
+the steam sewing-machine is nothing to us when
+we choose! What do you think we are going to do?
+We are going to decorate the church for Christmas. To
+leave it to that poor little old clerk, who would only stick
+two holly twigs in the pulpit candlesticks, and fancy he
+had done a work of high art, would be madness. And,
+besides, it will be such fun."</p>
+
+<p>"If you think it so, pray do it, dear," laughed Mrs.
+Vivian. "I can't say I should, but your tastes and mine
+are probably rather different. The servants will do as you
+direct them."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no," said Cecil; "we mean to do it all ourselves.
+The gentlemen may help us if they like&mdash;those, at least,
+who prefer our society to that of smaller animals, with
+lop-ears and little bushy tails, who have a fascination
+superior sometimes to any of our attractions." She
+flashed a glance at the Colonel, who was watching her
+over the top of <i>Punch</i>, as, when I was a boy, I have
+watched the sun, though it pained my eyes to do it.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>
+"You're the grand seigneur of Deerhurst," said Cecil,
+turning to him; "will you be good, and order cart-loads
+of holly and evergreens (and plenty of the Portugal laurel,
+please, because it's so pretty) down to the church;
+and will you come and do all the hard work for me?
+The rabbits would <i>so</i> enjoy a little peace to-day, poor
+things!"</p>
+
+<p>He smiled in spite of himself, and did her bidding,
+with a flush of pleasure on his face. I believe at that
+moment, to please her, he would have cut down the best
+timber on the estates&mdash;even the old oaks, in whose shadow
+in the midsummer of centuries before Guy Vivian and
+Muriel had plighted their troth.</p>
+
+<p>The way to the church was through a winding walk,
+between high walls of yew, and the sanctuary itself was a
+find old Norman place, whose <i>tout ensemble</i> I admired,
+though I could not pick it to pieces architecturally.</p>
+
+<p>To the church we all went, of course, with more readiness
+than we probably ever did in our lives, regardless of
+the rose chains with which we were very likely to become
+entangled, while white hands weaved the holly wreaths.</p>
+
+<p>Vivian had ordered evergreens enough to decorate fifty
+churches, and had sent over to the neighboring town for
+no end of ribbon emblazonments and illuminated scrolls,
+on which Cecil looked with delight. She seemed to
+know by instinct it was done for <i>her</i>, and not for his
+sisters.</p>
+
+<p>"How kind that is of you," she said, softly. "That
+is like what you were in Toronto. Why are you not
+always the same?"</p>
+
+<p>For a moment she saw passion enough in his eye to
+satisfy her, but he soon mastered it, and answered her
+courteously:</p>
+
+<p>"I am very glad they please you. Shall we go to work<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>
+at once, for fear it grow dusk before we get through with
+it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Can I do anything to help you?" murmured Cos in
+her ear.</p>
+
+<p>She did not want him, and laughed mischievously.
+"You can cut some holly if you like. Begin on those
+large boughs."</p>
+
+<p>"Better not, Cos," said the Colonel. "You will certainly
+soil your hands, and you might chance to scratch
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"And if you did you would never forgive me, so I will
+let you off duty. You may go back to the dormeuse and
+the 'Lys de la Vall&eacute;e' if you wish," laughed Cecil.</p>
+
+<p>Horace looked sulky, and curled his blond whiskers
+in dudgeon, while Cecil, with half a dozen satellites
+about her, proceeded to work with vigorous energy,
+keeping Syd, however, as her head workman; and the
+Colonel twisted pillars, nailed up crosses, hung wreaths,
+and put up illuminated texts, as if he had been a carpenter
+all his life, and his future subsistence entirely depended
+on his adorning Deerhurst church in good taste.
+It was amusing to me to see him, whom the highest London
+society, the gayest Paris life bored&mdash;who pronounced
+the most dashing opera supper and the most vigorous
+debates alike slow&mdash;taking the deepest interest in decorating
+a little village church! I question if Eros did not
+lurk under the shiny leaves and the scarlet berries of
+those holly boughs quite as dangerously as ever he did
+under the rose petals consecrated to him.</p>
+
+<p>I had my own affairs to attend to, sitting on the pulpit
+stairs at Blanche's feet, twisting the refractory evergreens
+at her direction; but I kept an occasional look-out at
+the Colonel and his dangerous Canadian for all that.
+They found time (as we did) for plenty of conversation<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>
+over the Christmas decorations, and Cecil talked softly
+and earnestly for once without any "mischief." She
+talked of her father's embarrassments, her mother's trials,
+of Mrs. Coverdale, with honest detestation of that widow's
+arts and artifices, and of her own tastes, and ideas,
+and feelings, showing the Colonel (what she did not
+show generally to her numerous worshippers) her heart
+as well as her mind. As she knelt on the altar steps,
+twisting green leaves round the communion rails, Syd
+standing beside her, his pale bronze cheek flushed, and
+his eyes never left their study of her face as she bent
+over her work, looking up every minute to ask him for
+another branch, or another strip of blue ribbon.</p>
+
+<p>When it had grown dusk, and the church was finished,
+looking certainly very pretty, with the dark leaves against
+its white pillars, and the scarlet berries kissing the stained
+windows, Cecil went noiselessly up into the organ-loft,
+and played the Christmas anthem. Vivian followed her,
+and, leaning against the organ, watched her, shading his
+eyes with his hand. She went on playing&mdash;first a Miserere,
+then Mozart's Symphony in E, and then improvisations
+of her own&mdash;the sort of music that, when one
+stands calmly to listen to it, makes one feel it whether
+one likes or not. As she played, tears rose to her lashes,
+and she looked up at Vivian's face, bending over her in
+the gloaming. Love was in her eyes, and Syd knew it,
+but feared to trust to it. His pulses beat fast, he leaned
+towards her, till his mustaches touched her soft perfumy
+hair. Words hung on his lips. But the door of the
+organ-loft opened.</p>
+
+<p>"'Pon my life, Miss St. Aubyn, that's divine, delicious!"
+cried Cos. "We always thought that you were
+divine, but we never knew till now that you brought the
+angels' harmony with you to earth. For Heaven's sake,
+play that last thing again!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I never play what I compose twice," said Cecil, hurriedly,
+stooping down for her hat.</p>
+
+<p>Vivian cursed him inwardly for his untimely interruption,
+but cooler thought made him doubt if he were not
+well saved some words, dictates of hasty passion, that he
+might have lived to repent. For Guy Vivian's fate
+warned him, and he mistrusted the love of a flirt, if flirt,
+as he feared&mdash;from her sudden caprices to him, her alternate
+impatience with, and encouragement of, his cousin&mdash;Cecil
+St. Aubyn would prove. He gave her his arm
+down the yew-tree walk. Neither of them spoke all the
+way, but he sent a servant on for another shawl, and
+wrapped it round her very tenderly when it came; and
+when he stood in the lighted hall, I saw by the stern,
+worn look of his face&mdash;the look I have seen him wear
+after a hard fight&mdash;that the fiery passions in him had
+been having a fierce battle.</p>
+
+<p>That evening the St. Aubyn was off her fun, said she
+was tired, and, disregarding the misery she caused to
+Cos and four other men, who, figuratively speaking, <i>not</i>
+literally, for they went into the "dry" and comestibles
+fast enough, had lived on her smiles for the last month,
+excused herself to Mrs. Vivian, and departed to her dormitory.
+Syd gave her her candle, and held her little
+hand two seconds in his as he bid her softly good night
+at the foot of the staircase.</p>
+
+<p>I did not get much out of him in the balcony that
+night, and long after I had turned in, I scented his Cavendish
+as he smoked, Heaven knows how many pipes, in
+the chill December air. The next day, the 23rd, was the
+night of our theatricals, which went off as dashingly as if
+Mr. Kean, with his eternal "R-r-r-richard," had been
+there to superintend them.</p>
+
+<p>All the country came; dowagers and beauties, with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>
+the odor of Belgravia still strong about them: people
+not quite so high, who were not the rose, but living near
+it, toadied that flower with much amusing and undue
+worship; a detachment of Dragoons from the next town,
+whom the girls wanted to draw, and the mammas to warn
+off&mdash;Dragoons being ordinarily better waltzers than speculations;
+all the magnates, custos rotulorum, sheriff,
+members, and magistrates&mdash;the two latter portions of the
+constitution being chiefly remarkable for keenness about
+hunting and turnips, and an unchristian and deadly
+enmity against all poachers and vagrants; rectors, who
+tossed down the still Ai with Falstaff's keen relish; other
+rectors, who came against their principles, but preferred
+fashion to salvation, having daughters to marry and sons
+to start; hunting men; girls who could waltz in a nutshell;
+dandies of St. James's, and veterans of Pall-Mall,
+down for the Christmas; belles renewing their London
+acquaintance, and recalling that "pleasant day at Richmond."
+But, by Jove! if I describe all the different
+species presented to view in that ball-room, I might use
+as many words as an old whip giving you the genealogy
+of a killing pack in a flying county.</p>
+
+<p>Suffice it, there they all were to criticise us, and pretty
+sharply I dare say they did it, when they were out of
+our hearing, in their respective clarences, broughams,
+dog-carts, drags, tilburies, and hansoms. Before our
+faces, of course, they only clapped their snowy kid gloves,
+and murmured "Bravissimo!" with an occasional "Go
+it, Jack!" and "Get up the steam, old fellow!" from
+the young bloods in the background; and a shower of
+bouquets at Cecil and Blanche from their especial worshippers.</p>
+
+<p>Blanche made the dearest little <i>Catherine</i> that ever
+dressed herself up in blue and silver, and when she drew<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span>
+her toy-rapier in the green-room, asked me if I could not
+get her a cornetcy in ours. As for Cecil, she played <i>&agrave;
+ravir</i> as Cos, in his Milan armor, whispered with some
+difficulty, as the steel gorget pressed his throat uncomfortably.
+Vestris herself never made a more brilliant or
+impassioned <i>Countess</i>. She and Syd really acquitted
+themselves in a style to qualify them for London boards,
+and as she threw herself at his feet&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Huon&mdash;my husband&mdash;lord&mdash;canst thou forgive<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">The scornful maid? for the devoted wife<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Had cleaved to thee, though ne'er she owned thee lord,<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>I thought the St. Aubyn must be as great an actress as
+Rachel, if some of that fervor was not real.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil played in the afterpiece, "The wonderful Woman;"
+the Colonel didn't; and Cos being <i>De Frontignac</i>,
+Syd leaned against one of the scenes, and looked
+on the whole thing with calm indifference externally, but
+much disquietude and annoyance within him. He was
+not jealous of the puppy; he would as soon have thought
+of putting himself on a par with Blanche's little white
+terrier, but he'd come to set a price on Cecil's winning
+smiles, and to see them given pretty equally to him, and
+to a young fool, her inferior in everything save position,
+whom he knew in her inmost soul she must ridicule and
+despise, galled his pride, and steeled his heart against
+her. His experience in women made him know that it
+was highly probable that Cecil was playing both at once,
+and that though, as he guessed, she loved him, she
+would, if Cos offered first, accept the title, and wealth,
+and position his cousin, equally with himself, could give
+her; and such love as that was far from the Colonel's
+ideal.</p>
+
+<p>"By George! Vivian, that Canadian of yours is a perfect
+angel," said a man in the Dragoons, who had played<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>
+<i>Ulric</i>. "She's such a deuced lot ove pluck, such eyes,
+such hair, such a voice! 'Pon my life, I quite envy you.
+I suppose you mean to act out the play in reality, don't
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>Vivian lying back in an arm-chair in the green-room
+crushed up one of the satin playbills in his hand, and
+answered simply, "You do me too much honor, Calvert.
+Miss St. Aubyn and I have no thought of each other."</p>
+
+<p>If any man had given Vivian the lie, he would have
+had him out and shot him instanter; nevertheless, he
+told this one with the most unhesitating defiance of
+truth. He did not see Cecil, who had just come off the
+stage, standing behind him. But she heard his words,
+went as white as Muriel's phantom, and brushed past us
+into her dressing room, whence she emerged, when her
+name was called, her cheeks bright with their first
+rouge, and her eyes unnaturally brilliant. <i>How</i> she flirted
+with Horace that night, when the theatricals were over!
+Young ladies who wanted to hook the pet baronet, whispered
+over their bouquets, "How bold!" and dowagers,
+seeing one of their best matrimonial speculations endangered
+by the brilliant Canadian, murmured behind their
+fans to each other their wonder that Mrs. Vivian should
+allow any one so fast and so unblushing a coquette to associate
+with her young daughters.</p>
+
+<p>Vivian watched her with intense earnestness. He had
+given her a bouquet that day, and she had thanked him
+for it with her soft, fond eyes, and told him she should
+use it. Now, as she came into the ball-room, he looked
+at the one in her hand; it was not his, but his cousin's.</p>
+
+<p>He set his teeth hard; and swore a bitter oath to himself.
+As <i>Huon</i>, he was obliged to dance the first dance
+with the <i>Countess</i>, but he spoke little to her, and indeed,
+Cecil did not give him much opportunity, for she talked<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>
+fast, and at random, on all sorts of indifferent subjects,
+with more than even her usual vivacity, and quite unlike
+the ordinary soft and winning way she had used of late
+when with him. He danced no more with her, but, daring
+the waltzes with which he was obliged to favor certain
+county beauties, and all the time he was doing the
+honors of Deerhurst, with his calm, stately, Bayard-like
+courtesy, his eyes would fasten on the St. Aubyn, driving
+the Dragoons to desperation, waltzing while Horace
+whispered tender speeches in her ear, or sitting jesting
+and laughing, half the men in the room gathered round
+her&mdash;with a look of passion and hopelessness, tenderness
+and determination, strangely combined.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>IV.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE COLONEL KILLS HIS FOX, BUT LOSES HIS HEAD AFTER
+OTHER GAME.</h3>
+
+
+<p>The next day was Christmas-eve; and on the 24th of
+December the hounds, from time immemorial, had been
+taken out by a Vivian. For the last few days the frost
+had been gradually breaking up, thank Heaven, and we
+looked forward to a good day's sport The meet was at
+Deerhurst, and it proved a strong muster for the Harkaway;
+though not exactly up to the Northamptonshire
+Leicestershire mark, are a clever, steady pack. Cecil
+and Blanche were the only two women with us, for the
+country is cramped and covered with blind fences, and
+the fair sex seldom hunt with the Harkaway. But the
+St. Aubyn is a first-rate seat, and Blanche has, she tells
+me, ridden anything from the day she first stuck on to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>
+her Shetland, when she was three years old. They were
+both down in time. Indeed, I question if they went
+to bed at all, or did any more than change their ball
+dresses for their habits. As I lifted Blanche on to her
+pet chestnut, I heard Syd telling Cecil that Billiard-ball
+was saddled.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you," said the St. Aubyn, hurriedly. "I need
+not trouble you. Sir Horace has promised to mount me."</p>
+
+<p>Vivian bent his head with a strange smile, and sprang
+on Qui Vive, while Cecil mounted a showy roan, thorough-bred,
+the only good horse Cos had in his stud, despite
+the thousands he had paid into trainers' and breeders'
+pockets.</p>
+
+<p>"Stole away&mdash;forward, forward!" screamed Vivian's
+fellow-member for Cacklebury; and, holding Qui Vive
+hard by the head, away went Syd after the couple or two
+of hounds that were leading the way over some pasture
+land, with an ox-rail at the bottom of it, all the field after
+him. Cecil's roan flew over the grass land, and rose at
+the ox-rail as steadily as Qui Vive. Blanche's chestnut
+let himself be kicked along at no end of a pace, his mistress
+sitting down in her stirrups as well as the gallant
+M. F. H., her father. I never <i>do</i> think of anything but
+the hounds flying along in front of me, but I could not
+help turning my head over my shoulder to see if she was
+all right; and I never admired her so much as when she
+passed me with a merry laugh: "Five to one I beat you,
+monsieur!" Away we went over the dark ploughed
+lands, and the naked thorn hedges, the wide straggling
+briar fences, and the fields covered with stones and belted
+with black-looking plantations. Down went Cos with
+his horse wallowing helplessly in a ditch, after considerately
+throwing him unhurt on the bank. Syd set his
+teeth as he lifted Qui Vive over the prostrate baronet, to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span>
+the imminent danger of that dandy field-sportsman's
+life. "Take hold of his head, Miss St. Aubyn," shouted
+the M. F. H.; but before the words had passed his lips,
+Cecil had landed gallantly a little farther down. Another
+ten minutes with the hounds streaming over the country&mdash;a
+ten minutes of wild delight, worth all the monotonous
+hours of every-day life&mdash;and Qui Vive was alone
+with the hounds. We could see him speeding along a
+quarter of a mile ahead of us, and Cecil's roan was but
+half a field behind him. She was "riding jealous" of
+one of the best riders in the Queen's; the M. F. H. just
+in front of her turned his head once, in admiration of
+her pluck, to see her lift her horse at a staken-bound
+fence; but the Colonel never looked round. Away they
+went&mdash;they disappeared over the brow of a hill.
+Blanche shook her reins and struck her chestnut, and I
+sawed my hunter's mouth mercilessly with the snaffle.
+No use&mdash;we were too late by three minutes. Confound it!
+they had just killed their fox after twenty minutes' burst
+over a stiff country, one of the fastest things I ever saw.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil was pale with over-excitement, and upon my
+word she looked more ready to cry than anything when
+the M. F. H. complimented her with his genial smile, and
+his cordial "Well done, my dear. I never saw anybody
+ride better. I used to think my little Blanche the best
+seat in the country, but she must give place to you&mdash;eh,
+Syd?"</p>
+
+<p>"Miss St. Aubyn does everything well that she attempts,"
+answered the Colonel, in his calm, courteous
+tone, looking, nevertheless, as stern as if he had just
+slain his deadliest enemy, instead of having seen a fox
+killed.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil flushed scarlet, and Cos coming up at that moment,
+a sadly bespattered object for such an Adonis to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>
+present, his coat possessing more the appearance of a bricklayer's
+than any one else's, after its bath of white mud,
+she turned to him, and began to laugh and talk with
+rather wild gaiety. It so chanced that the fox was killed
+on Horace's land, and we, being not more than a mile
+and a half off his house, the gallant Cos immediately
+seized upon the idea of having the object of his idolatry
+up there to luncheon; and his uncle, and Cecil,
+and Blanche acquiescing in the arrangement, to his
+house we went, with such of the field as had ridden up
+after the finish. Cos trotted forward with the St. Aubyn
+to show us the way by a short cut through the
+park, and the echoes of Cecil's laughter rang to Vivian
+in the rear discussing the run with his father.</p>
+
+<p>A very slap-up place was Cos's baronial hall, for the
+Cossettings had combined blood and money far many generations;
+its style and appointments were calculated to
+back him powerfully in the matrimonial market, and that
+Cecil might have it all was fully apparent, as he devoted
+himself to her at the luncheon, which made its appearance
+at a minute's notice, as if Aladdin had called it up.
+Cecil seemed disposed to have it too. A deep flush had
+come up in her cheeks; she smiled her brightest smiles
+on Cos; she drank his Mo&euml;t's, bending her graceful head
+with a laughing pledge to her host; she talked so fast,
+so gaily, such repartee, such sarcasms, such jeux de mots,
+that it was well no women were at table to sit in judgment
+on her afterwards. A deadly paleness came over
+Vivian's face as he listened to her&mdash;but he sat at the bottom
+of the board where Cecil could not see him. His
+father, the gayest and best-tempered of mortals, laughed
+and applauded her; the other men were charmed with a
+style and a wit so new to them; and Cos, of course, was
+in the seventh heaven.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The horses were dead beat, and Cos's drag, with its
+four bays very fresh, for they were so little worked, was
+ordered to take us back to Deerhurst.</p>
+
+<p>"Who'll drive," said Horace. "Will you, Syd?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said his cousin, more laconically than politely.</p>
+
+<p>"Let <i>me</i>," cried Cecil. "I can drive four in hand.
+Nothing I like better."</p>
+
+<p>"Give me the ribbons," interposed the Colonel, changing
+his mind, "if you can't drive them yourself, Cos, as
+you ought to do."</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," murmured Cos. "Mith St. Aubyn shall do
+everything she wishes in <i>my</i> house."</p>
+
+<p>"Let her drive them," laughed Vivian, senior.
+"Blanche has tooled my drag often enough before now."</p>
+
+<p>Before he had finished, Cecil had sprung up on to the box
+as lightly as a bird; her cheeks were flushed deeper still,
+and her gazelle eyes flashed darker than ever. Cos
+mounted beside her. Blanche and I in the back seat.
+The M. F. H., Syd, and the two other men behind. The
+bays shook their harness and started off at a rattling
+pace, Cecil tooling them down the avenue with her little
+gauntleted hands as well as if she had been Four-in-hand
+Forester of the Queen's Bays, or any other crack
+whip. How she flirted, and jested, and laughed, and
+shook the ribbons till the bays tore along the stony road
+in the dusky winter's afternoon&mdash;even Blanche, though a
+game little lady herself, looked anxious.</p>
+
+<p>Cecil asked Horace for a cigar, and struck a fusee, and
+puffed away into the frosty air like the wildest young
+Cantab at Trinity. It didn't make her sick, for she and
+Blanche had had two Queens out of Vivian's case, and
+smoked them to the last ash for fun only the day before;
+and she drove us at a mad gallop into Deerhurst Park,
+past the dark trees and the gleaming water and the trooping<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>
+deer, and pulled up before the hall door just as the
+moon came out on Christmas-eve.</p>
+
+<p>We were all rather fast at Deerhurst, so Blanche got
+no scolding from her mamma (who, like a sensible woman,
+never put into their heads that things done in the
+glad innocency of the heart were "wrong"); and Cecil,
+as soon as she had sprung down, snatched her hand from
+Cos, and went up to her own room.</p>
+
+<p>The Colonel's lips were pressed close together, and his
+forehead had the dark frown that Guy wears in his portrait.</p>
+
+<p>It had been done with another, so it was all wrong;
+but oh! Syd, my friend, if the "dry" that was drunk,
+and the drag that was tooled, and the weed that was
+smoked, had been <i>yours</i>, wouldn't it have been the most
+charming caprice of the most charming woman!</p>
+
+<p>That night, at dinner, a letter by the afternoon's post
+came to the Colonel. It was "On her Majesty's Service,"
+and his mother asked him anxiously what it was.</p>
+
+<p>"Only to tell me to join soon," said he, carelessly, giving
+me a sign to keep the contents of a similar letter I had
+just received to myself; which I should have done anyhow,
+as I had reason to hope that the disclosure of them would
+have quenched the light in some bright eyes beside me.</p>
+
+<p>"Ordered off at last, thank God!" said Syd, handing
+his father the letter as soon as the ladies were gone.
+"There's a train starts at 12.40, isn't there, for town?
+You and I, Ned, had better go to-night. You don't look
+so charmed, old fellow, as you did when you went out to
+Scinde. I say, don't tell my sisters; there is no need to
+make a row in the house. Governor, you'll prepare my
+mother; I must bid <i>her</i> good-by."</p>
+
+<p>I <i>did not</i> view the Crimea with the unmingled, devil-me-care
+delight with which I had gone out under "fighting<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>
+Napier" nine years before, for Blanche's sunshiny
+face had made life fairer to me; and to obey Syd, and go
+without a farewell of her, was really too great a sacrifice
+to friendship. But he and I went to the drawing-rooms,
+chatted, and took coffee as if nothing had chanced, till
+he could no longer stand seeing Cecil, still excited, singing
+chansons to Cos, who was leaning enraptured over
+the instrument, and he went off to his own room. The
+other girls and men were busy playing the Race game;
+Blanche and I were sitting in the back drawing-room beside
+the fire, and the words that decided my destiny were
+so few, that I cite them as a useful lesson to those novelists
+who are in the habit of making their heroes, while
+waiting breathless to hear their fate, recite off at a cool
+canter four pages of the neatest-turned sentences without
+a single break-down or a single pull-up, to see how the
+lady takes it.</p>
+
+<p>"Blanche, I must bid you good-by to-night." Blanche
+turned to me in bewildered anxiety. "I must join my
+troop: perhaps I may be sent to the Crimea. I could
+go happily if I thought you would regret me?"</p>
+
+<p>Brutally selfish that was to be sure, but she did not
+take it so. She looked as if she was going to faint, and
+for fear she should, trusting to the engrossing nature of
+the Race game in the further apartment, I drew nearer
+to her. "Will you promise to give yourself to nobody
+else while I am away, my darling?" Blanche's eyes did
+promise me through their tears, and this brief scene,
+occupying the space of two minutes, twisted our fates
+into one on that eventful Christmas-eve.</p>
+
+<p>While I was parting with my poor little Blanche in the
+library, Vivian was bidding his mother farewell in her
+dressing-room. His mother had the one soft place in his
+heart, steeled and made skeptical to all others by that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>
+fatal first love of which he had spoken to Cecil. Possibly
+some of her son's bitter grief was shown to her on that
+sad Christmas-eve; at all events, when he left her dressing-room,
+he had the tired, haggard look left by any conflict
+of passion. As he came down the stairs to come to
+the dog-cart that was to take us to the station, the door
+of Blanche's boudoir stood open, and in it he saw Cecil.
+The fierce tide of his love surged up, subduing all his
+pride, and he paused to take his last sight of the face
+that would haunt him in the long night watches and the
+rapid rush of many a charge. She looked up and saw
+him; that look overpowered all his calmness and resolve.
+He turned, and bent towards her, every feature quivering
+with the passion she had once longed to rouse. His hot
+breath scorched her cheek, and he caught her fiercely
+against his heart in an iron embrace, pressing his burning
+lips on hers. "God forgive you! I have loved
+you too well. Women have ever been fatal to my
+race!"</p>
+
+<p>He almost threw her from him in the violence of feelings
+roused after a long sleep. In another moment he
+was driving the dog-cart at a mad gallop past the old
+church in which we had spent such pleasant hours. Its
+clock tolled out twelve strokes as we passed it, and on the
+quiet village, and the weird-like trees, and the tall turrets
+of Deerhurst, the Christmas morning dawned.</p>
+
+<p>Vivian continued so utterly enfeebled and prostrate
+that there was but one chance for him&mdash;return homewards.
+I was going to England with despatches, and
+Syd, at his mother's entreaty, let himself be carried down
+to a transport, and shipped for England. He was utterly
+listless and strengthless, although the voyage did him a
+little good. He did not care where he went, so he stayed
+in town with me while I presented myself at the Horse<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>
+Guards and war Office, and then we travelled down
+together to Deerhurst.</p>
+
+<p>Oddly enough it was Christmas-eve again when we
+drove up the old avenue. The snow was falling heavily,
+and lay deep on the road and thick on the hedges and
+trees. The meadows and woods were white against the
+dark, hushed sky, and the old church, and its churchyard
+cedars, were loaded too with the clouds' Christmas gift.
+To me, at least, the English scene was very pleasant, after
+the heat, and dirt, and minor worries of Gallipoli and
+Constantinople. The wide stretching country, with its
+pollards, and holly hedges, and homesteads, the cattle
+safe housed, the yule fire burning cheerily on the hearths,
+the cottages and farms nestling down among their orchards
+and pasture-lands, all was so heartily and thoroughly
+English. They seemed to bring back days when I was a
+boy skating and sliding on the mere at home, or riding
+out with the harriers light-hearted and devil-me-care as
+a boy might be, coming back to hear the poor governor's
+cheery voice tell me I was one of the old stock, and to
+toss down a bumper of Rhenish with a time-honored
+Christmas toast. The crackle of the crisp snow, the
+snort of the horses as they plunged on into the darkening
+night, and the red fire-light flickering on the lattice windows
+of the cottages we passed, were so many welcomes
+home, and I double-thonged the off-wheeler with a vengeance
+as I thought of soft lips that would soon touch
+mine, and a soft voice that would soon whisper my best
+"Io triumphe!"</p>
+
+<p>The lodge-gates flew open. We passed the old oaks
+and beeches, the deer trooping away over the snow as
+we startled them out of their rest. We were not expected
+that night, and my man rang such a peal at the bell as
+might have been heard all over the quiet park. Another<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">[Pg 155]</a></span>
+minute, and Blanche and I were together again, and
+alone in the library where we had parted just twelve
+months before. Of course, for the time being, we neither
+knew nor cared what was going on in the other rooms of
+the house. The Colonel had gone to rest himself on the
+sofa in the dining-room. Half an hour had elapsed, perhaps,
+when a wild cry rang through the house, startling
+even us, absorbed though we were in our t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te.
+Blanche's first thought was of her brother. She ran out
+through the hall, and up the staircase, and I followed her.
+At the top of the stairs, leaning against the wall, breathing
+fast, and his face ashy white, stood Syd, and at his
+feet, in a dead faint, lay Cecil St. Aubyn. I caught hold
+of Blanche's arm and held her back as she was about to
+spring forward. I thought their meeting had much best
+be uninterrupted; for, if Cecil's had been mere flirtation
+I fancied the Colonel's return could scarcely have moved
+her like this.</p>
+
+<p>Vivian stood looking down on her, all the passion in
+him breaking bounds. He could not stand calmly by the
+woman he loved. He did not wait to know whether she
+was his or another's&mdash;whether she was worthy or unworthy
+of him&mdash;but he lifted her up and pressed her unconscious
+form against his heart, covering her lips with
+wild caresses. Waking from her trance, she opened her
+eyes with a terrified stare, and gazed up in his face; then
+tears came to her relief, and she sank down at his feet
+again with a pitiful cry, "Forgive me&mdash;forgive me!"
+Weak as Syd was, he found strength to raise her in his
+arms, and whisper, as he bent over her, "If you love me,
+I have nothing to forgive."</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The snow fell softly without over the woods and fields
+and the winds roared through the old oaks and whistled<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 156]</a></span>
+among the frozen ferns, but Christmas-eve passed brightly
+enough to us at home within the strong walls of Deerhurst.</p>
+
+<p>I am sure that all Moore's pictures of Paradise seemed
+to me tame compared to that drawing-room, with its
+warmth, and coziness, and luxuries; with the waxlights
+shining on the silver of the English tea equipage (pleasant
+to eye and taste, let one love campaigning ever so
+well, after the roast beans of the Commissariat), and the
+fire-gleams dancing on the soft brow and shining hair of
+the face beside me. I doubt if Vivian either ever spent a
+happier Christmas-eve as he lay on the sofa in the back
+drawing-room, with Cecil sitting on a low seat by him,
+her hand in his, and the Canadian eyes telling him eloquently
+of love and reconciliation. They had such volumes
+to say! As soon as she knew that wild farewell of
+his preceded his departure to the Crimea, Cecil, always
+impulsive, had written to him on the instant, telling him
+how she loved him, detailing what she had heard in the
+green-room, confessing that, in desperation, she had done
+everything she could to rouse his jealousy, assuring him
+that that same evening she had refused Cos's proposals,
+and beseeching him to forgive her and come back to her.
+That letter Vivian had never had (six months from that
+time, by the way, it turned up, after a journey to India
+and Melbourne, following a cousin of his, colonel of a line
+regiment, she in her haste having omitted to put his
+troop on the address), and Cecil, whose feeling was too
+deep to let her mention the subject to Blanche or Helena,
+made up her mind that he would never forgive her, and
+being an impressionable young lady, had, on the anniversary
+of Christmas-eve, been comparing her fate with that
+of Muriel in the ghost legend, and, on seeing the Colonel's
+unexpected apparition, had fainted straight away in the
+over-excitement and sudden joy of the moment.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Such was Cecil's story, and Vivian was content with it
+and gladly took occasion to practise the Christmas duties
+of peace, and love, and pardon. He had the best anodyne
+for his wounds now, and there was no danger for him,
+since Cecil had taken the place of the Scutari nurses.
+No "Crimean heroes," as they call us in the papers, were
+ever more f&ecirc;ted and petted than were the Colonel and I.</p>
+
+<p>Christmas morning dawned, the sun shining bright on
+the snow-covered trees, and the Christmas bells chiming
+merrily; and as we stood on the terrace to see the whole
+village trooping up through the avenue to receive the
+gifts left to them by some old Vivian long gone to his rest
+with his forefathers under the churchyard cedars, Syd
+looked down with a smile into Cecil's eyes as she hung
+on his arm, and whispered,</p>
+
+<p>"I will double those alms, love, in memory of the priceless
+gift this Christmas has given me. Ah! Thornton
+and I little knew, when we came down for the hunting,
+how fast you and Blanche would capture us with your&mdash;<span class="smcap">Holly
+Wreaths and Rose Chains</span>."</p>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="sep1" />
+<hr class="sep2" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span></p>
+<h1>SILVER CHIMES AND GOLDEN<br />
+FETTERS.</h1>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span></p>
+<hr class="sep3" />
+<hr class="sep4" />
+
+
+<h2><a name="SILVER_CHIMES_AND_GOLDEN_FETTERS" id="SILVER_CHIMES_AND_GOLDEN_FETTERS"></a>SILVER CHIMES AND GOLDEN
+FETTERS.</h2>
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<h2>I.</h2>
+
+<h3>WALDEMAR FALKENSTEIN AND VAL&Eacute;RIE L'ESTRANGE.</h3>
+
+
+<p>"A quarter to twelve! By Heaven if my luck don't change before the year
+is out, I vow I'll never touch a card in the next!" exclaimed one of
+several men playing lansquenet in Harry Godolphin's rooms at
+Knightsbridge.</p>
+
+<p>There were seven or eight of them, some with long rent-rolls, others
+within an ace of the Queen's Bench; the poor devils losing in the long
+run much oftener and more recklessly than the rich fellows; all of them
+playing high, as that <i>beau joueur</i> of the Guards, Godolphin, always
+did.</p>
+
+<p>Luck had been dead against the man who spoke ever
+since they had deserted the mess-room for the <i>cartes</i> in
+the privacy of Harry's rooms. If Fortune is a woman,
+he ought to have found favor in her eyes. His age was
+between thirty and thirty-five, his figure with grace and
+strength combined, his features nobly and delicately cut,
+his head, like Canning's, one of great intellectual beauty,
+and by the flash of his large dark eyes, and the additional
+paleness of his cheek, it was easy to see he was
+playing high once too often.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Five minutes passed&mdash;he lost still; ten minutes' luck
+was yet against him. A little French clock began the
+Silver Chimes that rang out the Old Year; the twelfth
+stroke sounded, the New Year was come, and Waldemar
+Falkenstein rose and drank down some cognac&mdash;a ruined
+man.</p>
+
+<p>"A happy New Year to you, and better luck, Falkenstein,"
+cried Godolphin, drinking his toast with a ringing
+laugh and a foaming bumper of Chambertin. "What
+shall I wish you? The richest wife in the kingdom, a
+cabal that will break all the banks, for Mistletoe to win
+the Oaks, or for your eyes to be opened to your sinful
+state, as the parson phrases it&mdash;which, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, Harry," laughed Falkenstein. (Like the
+old Spartans, we can laugh while the wolf gnaws our
+vitals.) "You remind me of what my holy-minded
+brother wrote to me when I broke my shoulder-bone
+down at Melton last season: 'My dear Waldemar, I am
+sorry to hear of your sad accident; but all things are
+ordered for the best, and I trust that in your present
+hours of solitude your thoughts may be mercifully turned
+to higher and better things.' Queer style of sympathy,
+wasn't it? I preferred yours, when you sent me 'Ad&eacute;la&iuml;de
+M&eacute;ran,' and that splendid hock I wasn't allowed to
+touch."</p>
+
+<p>"I should say so; but catch the Pharisees giving anybody
+anything warmer than texts and counsels, that cost
+them nothing," said Tom Bevan of the Blues. "Apropos
+of Pharisees, have you heard that old Cash is going to
+build a chapel-of-ease in Belgravia, to endow that young
+owl Gus with as soon as he can pull himself through his
+'greats?' It is thought that the dear Bella will be
+painted as St. Catherine for the altar-piece."</p>
+
+<p>"She'll strychnine herself if we're all so hard-hearted<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>
+as to leave her to St. Catharine's nightcap," laughed
+Falkenstein.</p>
+
+<p>"Why don't <i>you</i> take up with her, old fellow?" said a
+man in Godolphin's troop. "Not the sangue puro, you'd
+say; rather sallied with XXX. But what does that signify?
+you've quarterings enough for two."</p>
+
+<p>"Much good the quarterings do me. No, thank you,"
+said Falkenstein bitterly. "I'm not going to sell myself,
+though my dear friends would insinuate that I was sold
+already to a gentleman who never quits hold of his bargains.
+I've fetters enough now too heavy by half to add
+matrimonial handcuffs to them."</p>
+
+<p>"Right, old boy," said Harry. "The Cashranger hops
+and vats, even done in the brightest parvenu <i>or</i>, would
+scarcely look well blazoned on the royal <i>gules</i>. Come, sit
+down. Where are you going?"</p>
+
+<p>"He's going to Eulalie Brown's, I bet," said Bevan.
+"Nonsense, Waldemar; throw her over, and stay and
+take your revenge&mdash;it's so early."</p>
+
+<p>"No, thank you," said Falkenstein briefly. "By the
+way, I suppose you all go to Cashranger's to-morrow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Make a point of it, answered Godolphin. I feel I'm
+sinning against my Order to visit him, but really his Lafitte's
+so good&mdash;&mdash;I'm sorry you <i>will</i> leave us, Waldemar,
+but I know I might as well try to move the Marble Arch
+as try to turn you."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed I never set up for a Roman, Harry. The deuce
+take this pipe, it won't light. Good night to you all."
+And leaving them drinking hard, laughing loud, and telling
+<i>grivois</i> tales before they sat down to play in all its
+delirious delight, he sprang into a hanson, and drove,
+not to Eulalie Brown's <i>petit souper</i>, but to his own rooms
+in Duke Street, St. James's.</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein's governor, some two-score years before,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>
+had got in mauvaise odeur in Vienna for some youthful
+escapade at court; powerful as his princely family was,
+had been obliged to fly the country; and, coming over
+here, entered himself at the Bar, and, setting himself to
+work with characteristic energy, had, wonderful to relate,
+made a fortune at it. A fine, gallant, courtly <i>ancien noble</i>
+was the Count, haughty and passionate at times, after
+the manner of the house; fond of his younger son Waldemar,
+who at school had tanned boys twice his size; rode
+his pony in at the finish; smoked, swam, and otherwise
+conducted himself, till all the rest of the boys worshipped
+him, though I believe the masters generally attributed to
+him more <i>diablerie</i> than divinity. But of late, unluckily,
+his father had been much dominated over by Waldemar's
+three sisters, ladies of a chill and High Church turn of
+mind, and by his brother, who in early life had been a
+prize boy and a sap, and received severe buffetings from
+his junior at football; and now, being much the more
+conventional and unimpeachable of the two, took his revenge
+by carrying many tales to the old Count of his
+wilder son&mdash;tales to which Falkenstein gave strong foundation.
+For he was restless and reckless, strikingly
+original, and, above the common herd, too impatient to
+take any meddling with his affairs, and too proud to explain
+where he was misjudged; and, though he held a
+crack government place, good pay, and all but a sinecure,
+he often spent more than he had, for economy was a
+dead-letter to him, and if any man asked him a loan, he
+was too generous to say "No." Life in all its phases he
+had seen from the time he left school, and you know,
+mon ami, we cannot see life on a groat&mdash;at least, through
+the bouquet of the wines at V&eacute;fours, and the brilliance
+of the gas-light in Casinos and Redoutes. The fascinations
+of play were over him&mdash;the iron hand of debt<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>
+pressed upon him; altogether, as he sat through the first
+hours of the New Year, smoking, and gazing on the
+flickering fire gleams, there was not much light either in
+his past or future!</p>
+
+<p>Keenly imaginative and susceptible, blas&eacute; and skeptical
+though he was, the weight of the Old Year and of many
+gone before it, weighed heavily on his thoughts. Scenes
+and deeds of his life, that he would willingly have blotted
+out, rose before him; vague regrets, unformed desires,
+floated to him on the midnight chimes.</p>
+
+<p>The Old Year was drifting away on the dark clouds
+floating on to the sea, the New Year was dawning on the
+vast human life swarming in the costly palaces and
+crowded dens around him. The past was past, ineffaceable,
+and relentless; the future lay hid in the unborn days,
+and Falkenstein, his pipe out, his fire cold and black,
+took a sedative, and threw himself on his bed, to sleep
+heavily and restlessly through the struggling morning
+light of the New Year.</p>
+
+<p>James Cashranger, Esq., of 133, Lowndes Square, was
+a millionnaire, and the million owed its being to the sale
+of his entire, which was of high celebrity, being patronised
+by all the messes and clubs, shipped to all the colonies,
+blessed by all the H. E. I. C.s, shouted by all the
+potmen as "Beer-r-r-how," and consumed by all England
+generally. But Cashranger's soul soared above the snobisms
+of malt and jack, and &agrave; la Jourdain, of bourgeois celebrity,
+he would have let any Dorante of the beau monde
+fleece him through thick and thin, and, <i>en effet</i>, gave
+dinners and drums unnumbered to men and women, who,
+like Godolphin, went there for the sake of his Lafitte,
+and quizzed him mercilessly behind his back. The first
+day Harry dined there with nine other spirits worse than
+himself&mdash;Cashranger having begged him to bring some<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span>
+of his particular chums&mdash;he looked at the eleventh seat,
+and asked, with consummate impudence, who it was
+for?</p>
+
+<p>"Why, really, my dear Colonel, it is for&mdash;for myself,"
+faltered the luckless brewer.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh?&mdash;ah?&mdash;I see," drawled Harry; "you mistook
+me; I said I'd dine <i>here</i>&mdash;I didn't say I'd dine with <i>you</i>."</p>
+
+<p>That, however, was four or five years before; now,
+Godolphin having proclaimed his cook and cellar worth
+countenancing, and his wife, the relict of a lieutenant in
+the navy, being an admirable adept in the snob's art of
+"pushing," plenty of exclusive dandies and extensive
+fine ladies crushed up the stairs on New Year's-night to
+one of Cashranger's numerous "At homes." Among
+them, late enough, came Falkenstein. These sort of
+crushes bored him beyond measure, but he wanted to see
+Godolphin about some intelligence he had had of an
+intended illegitimate use of the twitch to Mistletoe, that
+sweet little chestnut who stood favorite for the Oaks.
+He soon paid his devoir to madame, who wasn't quite
+accustomed even yet to all this grandeur after her early
+struggles on half-pay, and to her eldest daughter, the
+Bella aforesaid, a showy, flaunting girl with a peony
+color, and went on through the rooms seeking Harry,
+stopping, however, for a word to every pretty woman he
+knew; for though he began to find his game grow stale,
+he and the beau sexe have a mutual attraction. Little
+those women guessed, as they smiled in his handsome
+eyes, and laughed at his witty talk, and blushed at his
+soft voice, how heartily sick he was of their frivolities,
+and how often disappointment and sarcasm lurked in his
+mocking words. To be blas&eacute; was no affectation with
+Falkenstein; it was a very earnest reality, as with most
+of us who have knocked about in the world, not only<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span>
+from the variety of his manifold experiences, but from the
+trickery, and censure, and cold water with which the
+world had treated him.</p>
+
+<p>"You here, old fellow?" said Bevan of the Blues, meeting
+him in the music-room, where some artistes were
+singing Traviata airs. "You don't care for this row, do
+you? Come along with me, and I'll show you something
+that will amuse you better."</p>
+
+<p>"Show me Godolphin, and I'll thank you. I didn't
+come to stay&mdash;did you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. Horrid bore, ain't it? But since you are here,
+you may as well take a look at the dearest little actress I
+ever saw since I was a boy, and bewitched by L&eacute;ontine
+Fay. Sit down." Bevan went on, as they entered a
+room fitted up like a theatre, "There, it's that one with
+blue eyes, got up like a Watteau's huntress; isn't she a
+brilliant little thing?"</p>
+
+<p>"Very. She plays as well as D&eacute;jazet. Who is she?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't know. Can you tell us, Forester?"</p>
+
+<p>"She's old Cash's niece," said Forester, not taking his
+eyes off the stage. "Come as a sort of companion to the
+beloved Bella; dangerous companion, I should say, for
+there's no comparing the two."</p>
+
+<p>"What's her name?"</p>
+
+<p>"Viola&mdash;Violet&mdash;no, Val&eacute;rie L'Estrange. L'Estrange,
+of the 10th, ran away with Cash's sister. God knows
+why. Horrid low connexion, and no money. She went
+speedily to glory, and he drank himself to death two
+years ago in Lahore. I remember him, a big fellow, fourteen
+stone, pounded Bully Batson once at Moseley, and
+there wasn't such another hard hitter among the fancy as
+Bully. When he departed this life, of course his daughter
+was left to her own devices, with scarcely a rap to
+buy her bonnets. Clever little animal she is, too; she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>
+wrote those proverbs they're now playing; full of dash,
+and spice, ain't they? especially when you think a girl
+wrote 'em."</p>
+
+<p>"Introduce me as soon as they're over," said Falkenstein,
+leaning back to study the young actress and author,
+who was an engaging study enough, being full of grace
+and vivacity, with animated features, mobile eyebrows,
+dark-blue eyes, and chestnut hair. "Anything original
+would be as great a wonder as to buy Cavendish in Regent-Street
+that wasn't bird's-eye."</p>
+
+<p>"Val&eacute;rie's original enough for anybody's money. Hark
+how she's firing away at Egerton. Pretty little soft voice
+she has. I do like a pretty voice for a woman," said Forester,
+clapping softly, with many a murmured bravisima.</p>
+
+<p>"You're quite enthusiastic," smiled Falkenstein. "Pity
+you haven't a bouquet to throw at her."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't you poke fun at me, you cynic," growled Forester.
+"I've seen you throw bouquets at much plainer
+women."</p>
+
+<p>"And the bouquets and the women were much alike
+in morning light&mdash;faded and colorless on their artificial
+stalks as soon as the gas glare was off them."</p>
+
+<p>"Hold your tongue, Juvenal," laughed Forester, "or I
+vow I won't introduce you. You'll begin satirising poor
+little Val as soon as you've spoken to her."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I can be merciful to the weak; don't I let <i>you</i>
+alone, Forester?" laughed Waldemar, as the curtain fell.</p>
+
+<p>The proverbs were over, and having put herself in ball-room
+style, the author came among the audience. He
+amused himself with watching how she took her numerous
+compliments, and was astonished to detect neither
+vanity nor shyness, and to hear her turn most of them
+aside with a laugh. She was quite as attractive off as on
+the stage, especially with the aroma of her sparkling<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span>
+proverbs hanging about her; and Falkenstein got his
+introduction, and consigning Godolphin and Mistletoe to
+futurity, waltzed with her, and found her dancing as full
+of grace and lightness as an Andalusian's or Arl&eacute;sienne's.
+Falkenstein cared little enough for the saltatory art, but
+this waltz did not bore him, and when it was over, regardless
+of some dozen names written on her tablets, he
+gave her his arm, and they strolled out of the ball-room
+into a cooler atmosphere. He found plenty of fun in
+her, as he had expected from her proverbs, and sat down
+beside her in the conservatory to let himself be amused
+for half an hour.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know many of the people here?" she asked
+him. "Is there anybody worth pointing out? There
+ought to be, in four or five hundred dwellers in the aristocratic
+west."</p>
+
+<p>"I know most of them personally or by report, but
+they are all of the same stamp, like the petals of that
+camellia, some larger and some smaller, but all cut in the
+same pattern. Most of them apostles of fashion, martyrs
+to debt, worshippers of the rising sun. All of them
+created by art, from the young ladies who owe their
+roses and lilies to Breidenbach, to the ci-devant jeunes
+hommes, who buy their figures in Bond Street and their
+faces from Isidore. All of them actors&mdash;and pretty good
+actors, too&mdash;from that pretty woman yonder, who knows
+her milliner may imprison her any day for the lace she
+is now drawing round her with a laugh, to that sleek old
+philanthropist playing whist through the doors there,
+whose guinea points are paid by the swindle of half
+England."</p>
+
+<p>She laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Lend me your lorgnon. I should like to see around
+me as you do."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Wait twenty years, you will have it; there are two
+glasses to it&mdash;experience and observation."</p>
+
+<p>"But your glasses are smoked, are they not?" said
+Val&eacute;rie, with a quick glance at him; "for you seem to
+me to see everything en noir."</p>
+
+<p>He smiled.</p>
+
+<p>"When I was a boy I had a Claude glass, but they
+break very soon; or rather, as you say, grow dark and
+dim with the smoke of society. But you ask me about
+these people. You know them, do you not, as they are
+your uncle's guests?"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head.</p>
+
+<p>"I have been here but a week or two. For the last
+two years I have been vegetating among the fens, with a
+maiden aunt of poor papa's."</p>
+
+<p>"And did you like the country?"</p>
+
+<p>"Like it!" cried Val&eacute;rie, "I was buried alive. Everything
+was so dreadfully punctual and severe in that house,
+that I believe the very cat had forgotten how to purr.
+Breakfast at eight, drive at two, dinner at five, prayers
+at ten. Can't you fancy the dreary diurnal round, with a
+pursy old rector or two, and three or four high-dried
+county princesses as callers once a quarter? Luckily, I
+can amuse myself, but oh, you cannot think how I
+sickened of the monotony, how I longed to <i>live!</i> At
+last, I grew so naughty, I was expelled."</p>
+
+<p>"May I inquire your sins?" asked Falkenstein, really
+amused for once.</p>
+
+<p>She laughed at the remembrance.</p>
+
+<p>"I read 'Notre-Dame' against orders, and I rode the
+fat old mare round the paddock without a saddle. I saw
+no harm in it; as a child, I read and rode everything I
+came near, but the rough-riding was condemned as unfeminine,
+and any French book, were it even the 'G&eacute;nie<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>
+du Christianisme,' or the 'Petit Car&ecirc;me,' would be regarded
+by Aunt Agatha, who doesn't know a word of the
+language, as a powder magazine of immorality and infidelity."</p>
+
+<p>"C'est la profonde ignorance qui inspire le ton dogmatique,"
+laughed Falkenstein. "But surely you have
+been accustomed to society."</p>
+
+<p>"No, never; but I am made for it, I fancy," said
+Val&eacute;rie, with an unconscious compliment to herself.
+"When I was with the dear old Tenth, I used to enjoy
+myself, but I was a child then. The officers were very
+kind to me&mdash;gentlemen always are much more so than
+ladies"&mdash;("Pour cause," thought Waldemar, as she
+went on)&mdash;"but ever since then I have vegetated as I
+tell you, in much the same still life as the anemones in
+my vase."</p>
+
+<p>"Yet you could write those proverbs," said he, involuntarily.</p>
+
+<p>She laughed, and colored.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, I have written ever since I could make A B C,
+and I have not forgotten all I saw with the old Tenth.
+But come, tell me more of these people; I like to hear
+your satire."</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad you do," said Falkenstein, with a smile;
+"for only those who have no foibles to hit have a relish
+for sarcasm. Do you think Messaline and L&eacute;lie had
+much admiration for La Bruy&egrave;re's periods, however well
+turned or justly pointed? but those whom the caps did
+not fit probably enjoyed them as you and I do. All
+satirists, from Martial downwards, most likely gain an
+enemy for each truth they utter, for in this bal masqu&eacute;
+of life it is not permitted to tear the masks off our companions."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you wear one?" asked Val&eacute;rie, quickly. "I fancy,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>
+like Monte Cristo, your pleasure is to 'usurper les vices
+que vous n'avez pas, et de cacher les vertus que vous
+avez.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Virtues? If you knew me better, you would know
+that I never pretend to any. If you compare me to
+Monte Cristo, say rather that I 'pr&ecirc;che loyalement
+l'&eacute;goisme,'" laughed Falkenstein. "Upon my word, we
+are talking very seriously for a ball-room. I ought to be
+admiring your bouquet, Miss L'Estrange, or petitioning
+for another waltz."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't trouble yourself. I like this best," said Val&eacute;rie,
+playing with the flowers round her. "And I ought to
+have my own way, for this is my birthday."</p>
+
+<p>"New Year's-day? Indeed! Then I am sure I wish
+you most sincerely the realisation of all your ideals and
+desires, which, to the imaginative author of the proverbs,
+will be as good as wishing her Aladdin's lamp," smiled
+Falkenstein.</p>
+
+<p>She smiled too, and sighed.</p>
+
+<p>"And about as improbable as Aladdin's lamp. Did
+you see the Old Year out last night?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," he answered, briefly; for the remembrance of
+what he had lost watching it out was not agreeable to him.</p>
+
+<p>"There was a musical party here," continued Val&eacute;rie,
+"but I got away from it, for I like to be alone when the
+past and the future meet&mdash;do not you?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; your past is pure, your future is bright. Mine
+are not so; I don't want to be stopped to contemplate
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor are mine, indeed; but the death of an Old Year
+is sad and solemn to me as the death of a friend, and I
+like to be alone in its last hour. I wonder," she continued,
+suddenly, "what this year will bring. I wonder
+where you and I shall be next New Year's-night?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein laughed, not merrily.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>I</i> shall be in Kensal Green or the Queen's Bench,
+very likely. Why do you look astonished Miss L'Estrange;
+one is the destination of everybody in these
+rooms, and the other probably of one-half of them."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't speak so bitterly&mdash;don't give me sad thoughts
+on my birthday. Oh, how tiresome!" cried Val&eacute;rie, interrupting
+herself, "there comes Major D'Orwood."</p>
+
+<p>"To claim you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; I'd forgotten him entirely. I promised to waltz
+with him an hour ago."</p>
+
+<p>"What the devil brought you here to interrupt us?"
+thought Falkenstein, as the Guardsman lisped a reproof
+at Val&eacute;rie's cruelty, and gave her his arm back to the
+ball-room. Waldemar stopped her, however, engaged
+her for the next, and sauntered through the room on her
+other side. He waltzed a good deal with her, paying her
+that sort of attention which Falkenstein knew how to
+make the softest and subtlest homage a woman could
+have. Amused himself, he amused her with his brilliant
+and pointed wit, so well, that Val&eacute;rie L'Estrange told
+him, when he bid her good night, that she had never
+enjoyed any birthday so much.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," said Bevan, as they drove away from 133,
+Lowndes Square, "did you find that wonderful little
+L'Estrange as charming a companion as actress? You
+ought to know, for you've been after her all night, like a
+ferret after a rabbit."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Falkenstein, taking out a little pet briarwood
+pipe, "I was very pleased with her: she's worth no
+more than the others, probably, au fond, but she's very
+entertaining and frank: she'll tell you anything. Poor
+child! she can't be over-comfortable in Cash's house.
+She's a lady by instinct; that odious ostentation and snobbish<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>
+toadying must disgust her. Besides, Bella is not
+very likely to lead a girl a very nice life who is partially
+dependent on her father, and infinitely better style than
+herself."</p>
+
+<p>"The devil, no! That flaunting, flirting, over-dressed
+Cashranger girl is my detestation. She'll soon find
+means to worry littil Val&eacute;rie. Women have a great spice
+of the mosquito in 'em, and enjoy nothing more than
+stinging each other to death."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, she must get Forester or D'Orwood&mdash;some
+man who can afford it&mdash;to take compassion upon her.
+All of them finish so when they can; the rich ones marry
+for a title, and the poor ones for a home," said the Count,
+stirring up his pipe. "Here's my number; thank you
+for dropping me; and good night, old fellow."</p>
+
+<p>"Good night. Pleasant dreams of your author and
+actress, <i>aux longs yeux bleus</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Waldemar laughed as he took out his latch-key. "I'm
+afraid I couldn't get up so much romance. You and I
+have done with all that, Tom. Confound it, I never saw
+Godolphin, after all. Well, I must go and breakfast
+with him to-morrow."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>II.</h2>
+
+<h3>FALKENSTEIN BREAKS LANCES WITH THE "LONGS YEUX BLEUS."</h3>
+
+
+<p>He did breakfast with Godolphin, not, however, before
+he had held a small but disagreeable levee to one or two
+rather impatient callers whom he couldn't satisfy, and a
+certain Amadeus Levi, who, having helped him to the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>
+payment of those debts of honor incurred in Harry's
+rooms, held him by Golden Fetters as hard to unclasp as
+the chains that bound Prometheus. He shook himself
+free of them at last, drove to Knightsbridge, and had a
+chat with Godolphin, over coffee and chibouques, went
+to his two or three hours' diplomatic work in the Deeds
+and Chronicles Office, and when he came out, instead of
+going to his club as usual, thought he might as well call
+on the Cashrangers, and turned his steps to Lowndes
+Square. Val&eacute;rie L'Estrange was sitting at a Davenport,
+done out of her Watteau costume into very becoming
+English morning dress; he had only time to shake hands
+with her before Bella and her mamma set upon him.
+Miss Cashranger had a great admiration for him, and,
+though his want of money was a drawback, the royal
+gules of his blazonments, joined to his manifold attractions,
+fairly dazzled her, and she held him tight, talking
+over the palace concerts, till a dowager and her daughter,
+and a couple of men from Hounslow, being ushered in,
+he was at liberty, and sitting down by Val&eacute;rie, gave her
+a book she had said the night before she wished to read.</p>
+
+<p>"'Goethe's Autobiography!' Oh, thank you&mdash;how kind you are!"</p>
+
+<p>"Not at all," laughed Falkenstein. "To merit such
+things I ought to have saved your life at least. What
+are you doing here; writing some more proverbs, I hope,
+to give me a part in one?"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. "Nothing half so agreeable. I
+am writing dinner invitations, and answering Belle's
+letters."</p>
+
+<p>"Why, can't she answer them herself?"</p>
+
+<p>"My motto here is 'Ich Dien,'" she answered, with a
+flush on her cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>Bella turned languidly round, and verified her words:<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>
+"Val, Puppet's scratching at the door; let him in, will
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>Waldemar rose and opened the door for a little slate-colored
+greyhound, and while Bella lisped out her regrets
+for his trouble, smiled a smile that made Miss
+Cashranger color, and looked searchingly at Val&eacute;rie to
+see how she took it. She turned a grateful, radiant look
+on him, and whispered, "Je m'affranchirai un jour."</p>
+
+<p>"Et comment?"</p>
+
+<p>She raised her mobile eyebrows: "Dieu sait! Comme
+actrice, comme feuilletonniste&mdash;j'ai mes r&ecirc;ves, monsieur&mdash;mais
+pas comme institutrice: cela me tuerait bient&ocirc;t."</p>
+
+<p>"Je le crois," said Falkenstein, briefly, as he took up
+the autobiography, and began to talk on it.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't like Goethe for one thing," said Val&eacute;rie; "he
+loved a dozen women one after the other. That I would
+pardon him; most men do so; but I don't believe he
+really loved any one of them."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes he did; quite enough, at least, to please himself.
+He wasn't so silly as to go in for a never-ending,
+heart-burning, heart-breaking, absorbing passion. We
+don't do those things."</p>
+
+<p>"Go in for it!" repeated Val&eacute;rie, contemptuously,
+"I suppose if he had been of the nature to feel such, he
+couldn't have helped it."</p>
+
+<p>"I can help going near the fire, can't I, if I don't wish
+to be burnt?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes; but a coal may fly out of the fire, and set you
+in flames, when you are sitting far away from it."</p>
+
+<p>"Then I ought to wear asbestos," said Waldemar, with
+a merry quizzical smile. "You authors, and poets, and
+artists think 'the world well lost, and all for love!' but
+we rational people, who know the world, find it quite
+the contrary. Those are very pretty ideas for your<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span>
+proverbs, but they don't suit real life. <i>We</i>, when we're
+boys, worship some parterre divinity, till we see her
+some luckless day inebriate with eau-de-Cologne, or more
+unpoetic porter, are cured and disenchanted, wait ten
+years with Christines and Minna Herzliebs in the interim,
+and wind up with a rich widow, who keeps us
+straight and heads our table. <i>You</i>, fresh from the
+school-room, fasten on some lachrymose curate, or flirting
+dragoon, as the object of your early romances, walk
+with him under the limes, work him a smoking-cap, and
+write him tender little notes, till mamma whispers her
+hope that Mr. A. or B. is serious, and you, balancing, like
+a sensible girl, A. or B.'s tangible settlements with the
+others' intangible love-speeches, forsake the limes, forswear
+the notes, and announce yourself as 'sold.' That's
+the love of our day, Miss L'Estrange, and very wise
+and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Love!" cried Val&eacute;rie, with supreme scorn. "You
+don't know the common A B C of love. You might as
+well call gilt leather-work pure gold."</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein laughed heartily. "Well, there's a good
+deal more leather-work than gold about in the world,
+isn't there?"</p>
+
+<p>"A good deal more, granted; but there is some gold
+to be found, I should hope."</p>
+
+<p>"Not without alloy; it can't be worked, you know."</p>
+
+<p>"It can't be worked for the base purposes of earth; but
+it may be found still undefiled before men's touch has
+soiled it. So I believe in some hearts, undefiled by the
+breath of conventionality and cant, may lie the true love
+of the poets, 'lasting, and knowing not change.'"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! you're too ideal for me," cried Waldemar, smiling
+at her impetuous earnestness. "You are all enthusiasm,
+imagination, effervescence&mdash;&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I am not," she answered, impatiently. "I can be
+very practical when I like; I made myself the loveliest
+wreath yesterday; quite as pretty as Bella buys at
+Mitchell's for five times the sum mine cost me. That
+was very realistic, wasn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. That exercised your fancy. You wouldn't do&mdash;what
+do you call it?&mdash;plain work, with half the gusto;
+now, would you?"</p>
+
+<p>Val&eacute;rie made a <i>moue mutine</i>, expressive of entire repudiation
+of such employment.</p>
+
+<p>"I thought so," laughed Falkenstein. "You idealists
+are like the fire in the grate yonder; you flame up very
+hot and bright for a moment, but 'the sparks fly upward
+and expire,' and if they're not fed with some fresh fuel
+they soon die out into lifeless cinders."</p>
+
+<p>"On the contrary," said Val&eacute;rie, quickly, "we are like
+wood fires, and burn red down to the last ash."</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Falkenstein, come and look at this little 'Ghirlandaio,'"
+said Bella, turning round, with an angry light
+in her eyes; "it is such a gem. Papa bought it the
+other day."</p>
+
+<p>Waldemar rose reluctantly enough to inspect the
+"Ghirlandaio," manufactured in a back slum, and
+smoked into proper antiquity to pigeon, under the attractive
+title of an "Old Master," the brewer and his
+species, and found Miss Cashranger's ignorant dilettantism
+very tame after Val&eacute;rie's animated arguments and
+gesticulation. But he was too old a hand at such game
+not to know how to take advantage of even an enemy's
+back-handed stroke, and he turned the discussion on art
+to an inspection of Val&eacute;rie's portfolio, over whose croquis
+and pastels, and water-colors, he lingered as long as he
+could, till the clock reminded him that it was time to
+walk on into Eaton Square, where he was going to dine<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span>
+at his father's. The governor excepted, Falkenstein had
+little rapport with his family. His brother was as chilly
+disagreeable in private life as he was popularly considered
+irreproachable in public, and as pragmatical and
+uncharitable as your immaculate individuals ordinarily
+are. His sisters were cold, conventional women, as
+utterly incapable of appreciating him as of allowing the
+odor of his Latakia in their drawing-room, and so it
+chanced that Waldemar, a favorite in every other house
+he entered, received but a chill welcome at home. A
+prophet has no honor in his own country, and the hearth
+where a man's own kin are seated is too often the one to
+nurture the cockatrice's eggs of ill-nature and injustice
+against him. Thank Heaven there are others where the
+fire burns brighter, and the smiles are fonder for him.
+It were hard for some of us if we were dependent on the
+mercies of our "own family."</p>
+
+<p>The old Count gave him this night but a distant welcome,
+for Maximilian was there to "damn" his brother
+with "faint praise," and had been pouring into his
+father's ear tales of "poor Waldemar's losses at play."
+All that Falkenstein said, his sisters took up, contradicted,
+and jarred upon, till he, fairly out of patience,
+lapsed into silence, only broken by a sarcasm deftly flung
+at Maximillian to floor him completely in his orthodoxy
+or ethics. He was glad to bid the governor good night;
+and leaving them to hold a congress over his skepticism,
+radicalism, and other dangerous opinions, he walked
+through the streets, and swore slightly, with his pipe between
+his teeth, as he opened his own door.</p>
+
+<p>"Since my father prefers Max to me, let him have
+him," thought Waldemar, smoking, and undressing himself.
+"If people choose to dictate to me or misjudge me,
+let them go; and if they have not penetration enough to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>
+judge what I am, I shall not take the trouble to show
+them."</p>
+
+<p>But, nevertheless, as he thus resolved, Falkenstein
+smoked hard and fast, for he was fond of the old Count,
+and felt keenly his desertion; for, steel himself as he
+might, egotist as he might call himself, Waldemar was
+quick in his susceptibilities and tenacious in his attachments.</p>
+
+<p>Since Falkenstein had got intimate with Val&eacute;rie
+L'Estrange in one ball you are pretty sure that week
+after week did not lessen their friendship. He was
+amused, and past memories of women he had wooed, and
+won, and left, certain passages in his life where such had
+reproached him, not always deservedly, never presented
+themselves to check him in his new pursuit. It is pleasant
+to a naturalist to study a butterfly pinned to the wall;
+the rememberance that the butterfly may die of the sport
+does not occur to him, or, at least, never troubles him.</p>
+
+<p>So Falkenstein called to Lowndes Square, and lent
+her books, and gave her a little Skye of his, and met her
+occasionally by accident on purpose in Kensington Gardens,
+where Val&eacute;rie, according to Mrs. Cashranger's request,
+sometimes took one of her cousins, a headstrong
+young demon of six or seven, for an early walk, to which
+early walks Val&eacute;rie made no objection, preferring them
+to the drawing-rooms of No. 133, and liking them, you
+may guess, none the less after seeing somebody she knew
+standing by the pond throwing in sticks for his retriever,
+and Falkenstein had sat down with her under the bushes
+by the water, and talked of all the things in heaven and
+earth; while Julius Adolphus ran about and gobbled at
+the China geese, and wetted his silk stockings unreproved.
+He made no love to her, not a bit; he talked of
+it theoretically, but never practically. But he liked to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>
+talk to her, to argue with her, to see her demonstrative
+pleasure in his society, to watch her coming through the
+trees, and find the <i>longs yeux bleus</i> gleam and darken
+at his approach. All this amused him, pleased him as
+something original and out of the beaten track. She
+told him all she thought and felt; she pleased him,
+and beguiled him from his darker thoughts, and she began
+to reconcile him to human nature, which, with Faria,
+he had learnt to class into "les tigres et les crocodiles &agrave;
+deux pieds."</p>
+
+<p>It was well he had this amusement, for it was his only
+one. He was going to the bad, as we say; debts and
+entanglements imperceptibly gathered round him, held
+him tight, and only in Val&eacute;rie's lively society (lively, for
+when with him she was as happy as a bird) could exercise
+his dark spirit.</p>
+
+<p>You remember the vow he made when the Silver
+Chimes rang in the New Year? So did not he. We
+cannot be always Medes and Persians, madam, to resist
+every temptation and keep unbroken every law, though
+you, sitting in your cushioned chair, in unattacked tranquillity,
+can tell us easily enough we should be. One
+night, when he was dining with Bevan, Tom produced
+those two little ivory fiends, whose rattle is in the ear of
+watchful deans and proctors as the singing of the rattlesnake,
+and whose witchery is more wily and irresistible
+than the witchery of woman. No beaux yeux, whether
+of the cassette or of one's first love, ever subjugate a man
+so completely as the fascinations of play. Once yielded
+to the charm, the Circe that clasps us will not let us go.
+Falkenstein, though in much he had the strong will of
+his race, had no power to resist the beguilements of his
+Omphale; he played again and again, and five times out
+of seven lost.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Well, Falkenstein," cried Godolphin, after five games
+of &eacute;cart&eacute; at a pony a side, three of which Falkenstein had
+lost, "I heard Max lamenting to old Straitlace in the
+lobby, the other night, that you were going to the devil,
+only the irreproachable member phrased it in more delicate
+periods."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite true," said Falkenstein, with a short laugh,
+"if for devil you substitute Queen's Bench."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we're en route together, old fellow," interrupted
+Tom Bevan; "and, with all your sins, you're a fat lot
+better than that brother of yours, who, I believe, don't
+know Latakia from Maryland. Jesse Egerton told me
+the other day that his wife has an awful life of it; but
+who'd credit it of a man who patronises Exeter Hall, and
+gave the shoeblacks only yesterday such unlimited supply
+of weak tea, buns, and strong texts?"</p>
+
+<p>"Who indeed! Max is such a moral man," sneered
+Falkenstein; "though he has done one or two things in
+his life that I wouldn't have stooped to do. But you
+may sin as much as you like as long as you sin under the
+rose. John Bull takes his vices as a ten pound voter
+takes a bribe; he stretches his hand out eagerly enough,
+but he turns his eyes away and looks innocent, and is
+the first to point at his neighbor and cry out against
+moral corruption. Melville's quite right that there is an
+eleventh commandment&mdash;'Thou shalt not be found out'&mdash;whose
+transgression is the only one society visits with
+impunity."</p>
+
+<p>"True enough," laughed Jimmy Fitzroy. "Thank
+Heaven, nobody can accuse us of studying the law and
+the prophets overmuch. By the way, old fellow, who's
+that stunning little girl you were walking with by the
+Serpentine yesterday morning, when I was waiting for
+the Metcalfe, who promised to meet me at twelve, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>
+never came till half-past one&mdash;the most unpunctual
+woman going. Any new game? She's a governess,
+ain't she? She'd some sort of brat with her; but she's
+deuced good style, anyhow."</p>
+
+<p>"That's little L'Estrange," laughed Godolphin: "the
+beloved Bella's cousin. He's met her there every day
+for the last three months. I don't know how much
+further the affair may have gone, or if&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Harry, your imagination is running away
+with you," said Falkenstein, impatiently. "I never made
+an appointment with her in my life; she's not the same
+style as Mrs. Metcalfe."</p>
+
+<p>Oh the jesuitism of the most candid men on occasion!
+He never made an appointment with her, because it was
+utterly unnecessary, he knowing perfectly that he should
+find her feeding the ducks with Julius Adolphus any
+morning he chose to look for her.</p>
+
+<p>"All friendship is it, then?" laughed Godolphin.
+"Stick to it, my boy, if you can. Take care what you do,
+though, for to carry her off to Duke Street would give
+Max such a handle as he would not let go in a hurry;
+And to marry (though that of course, will never enter
+your wildest dreams) with anybody of the Cashranger's
+race, were it the heiress instead of the companion, would
+be such a come-down to the princely house, as would
+infallibly strike you out of Count Ferdinand's will."</p>
+
+<p>Waldemar threw back his head like a thorough-bred
+impatient of the punishing. "The 'princely house,' as
+you call it, is not so extraordinarily stainless; but leave
+Val&eacute;rie alone, she and I have nothing to do with other,
+and never shall have. I have enough on my hands, in
+all conscience, without plunging into another love affair."</p>
+
+<p>"I did hear," continued Godolphin, "that Forester
+proposed to her, but I don't suppose it's true; he'd
+scarcely be such a fool."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein looked up quickly, but did not speak.</p>
+
+<p>"I think it is true," said Bevan; "and, moreover, I
+fancy she refused him, for he used to cry her up to the
+skies, and now he's always snapping and sneering at
+her, which is beastly ungenerous, but after the manner
+of many fellows."</p>
+
+<p>"One would think you were an old woman, Tom, believing
+all the tales you hear," said Godolphin. "She'd
+better know you disclaim her, Falkenstein, that she
+mayn't waste her chances waiting for you."</p>
+
+<p>Waldemar cast a quick, annoyed, contemptuous glance
+upon him. "You are wonderfully careful over her interests,"
+he said, sharply, "but I never heard that having
+her on your lips, Harry, ever did a woman much good.
+Pass me that whisky, Conrad, will you?"</p>
+
+<p>The next morning, however, though he "disclaimed"
+her, Waldemar, about ten, took his stick, whistled his
+dog, and walked down to Kensington Gardens. Under
+the beeches just budding their first leaves, he saw what
+he expected to see&mdash;Val&eacute;rie L'Estrange. She turned&mdash;even
+at that distance he thought he saw the <i>longs yeux
+bleus</i> flash and sparkle&mdash;dropped the biscuits she was
+giving the ducks to the tender mercies of Julius Adolphus,
+and came to meet him. Spit, the little Skye he
+had given her, welcoming him noisily.</p>
+
+<p>"Spit is as pleased to see you as I am," said Val&eacute;rie,
+laughing. "We have both been wondering whether you
+would come this morning. I am so glad you have, for
+I have been reading your 'Pollnitz Memoirs,' and want to
+talk to you about them. You know I can talk to no one
+as I can to you."</p>
+
+<p>"You do me much honor," said Falkenstein, rather
+formally. He was wondering in his mind whether she
+<i>had</i> refused Forester or not.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"What a cold, distant speech! It is very unkind of
+you to answer me so. What is the matter with you,
+Count Waldemar?"</p>
+
+<p>She always called him by the title he had dropped in
+English society; she had a fervent reverence for his
+historic <i>ant&eacute;c&eacute;dens</i>; and besides, as she told him one day,
+"she liked to call him something no one else did."</p>
+
+<p>"Matter with me? Nothing at all, I assure you," he
+answered, still distantly.</p>
+
+<p>"You are not like yourself, at all events," persisted
+Val&eacute;rie. "You should be kind to me. I have so few
+who are."</p>
+
+<p>The tone touched him; he smiled, but did not speak,
+as he sat down by her poking up the turf with his stick.</p>
+
+<p>"Count Waldemar," said Val&eacute;rie, suddenly, brushing
+Spit's hair off his bright little eyes, "do tell me; hasn't
+something vexed you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing new," answered Falkenstein, with a short
+laugh. "The same entanglements and annoyances that
+have been netting their toils round me for many years&mdash;that
+is all. I am young enough, as time counts, yet I
+give you my word I have as little hope in my future, and
+I know as well what my life will be as if I were fourscore."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush, don't say so," said Val&eacute;rie, with a gesture of
+pain. "You are so worthy of happiness; your nature
+was made to be happy; and if you are not, fate has misused
+you cruelly."</p>
+
+<p>"Fate? there is no such thing. I have been a fool,
+and my folly is now working itself out. I have made my
+own life, and I have nobody but myself to thank for it."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know that. Circumstances, temptation, education,
+opportunity, association, often take the place of
+the Parc&aelig;, and gild or cut the threads of our destiny."</p>
+
+<p>"No. I don't accept that doctrine," said Falkenstein,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>
+always much sterner judge to himself than anybody
+would have been to him. "What I have done has been
+with my eyes open. I have known the price I should
+pay for my pleasures, but I never paused to count it. I
+never stopped for any obstacle, and for what I desired, I
+would, like the men in the old legends, have sold myself
+to the devil. Now, of course, I am hampered with ten
+thousand embarrassments. You are young; you are a
+woman; you cannot understand the reckless madness
+which will drink the wine to-day, though one's life paid
+for it to-morrow. Screened from opportunity, fenced in
+by education, position, and society, you cannot know
+how impossible it is to a man, whose very energies and
+strength become his tempters, to put a check upon himself
+in the vortex of pleasure round him&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," interrupted Val&eacute;rie, "I can. Feeling for you,
+I can sympathise in all things with you. Had I been a
+man, I should have done as you have done, drunk the
+ambrosia without heeding its cost. Go on&mdash;I love to
+hear you speak of yourself; and I know your real nature,
+Count Waldemar, into whatever errors or hasty acts repented
+of in cooler moments the hot spirit of your race
+may have led you."</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein was pleased, despite himself, half amused,
+half saddened. He turned it off with a laugh. "By
+Heaven, I wish they had made a brewer of me&mdash;I might
+now be as rich and free from care as your uncle."</p>
+
+<p>"You a brewer!" cried Val&eacute;rie. Her father, a poor
+gentleman, had left her his aristocratic leanings. "What
+an absurd idea! All the old Falkensteins would come
+out of their crypts, and chanceries, and cloisters, to see
+the coronet surmounting the beer vats!"</p>
+
+<p>He smiled at her vehemence. "The coronet! I had
+better have full pockets than empty titles."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"For shame!" cried Val&eacute;rie. "Yes, bark at him, Spit
+dear; he is telling stories. You do not mean it; you
+know you are proud of your glorious name. Who would
+not rather be a Falkenstein on a hundred a year, than a
+Cashranger on a thousand?"</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't," said Waldemar, wilfully. "If I had
+money, I could find oblivion for my past, and hope for
+my future. If I had money, what loads of friends would
+open their purses for me to borrow the money they'd
+know I did not need. As it is, if I except poor Tom
+Bevan, who's as hard up as I am, and who's a good-hearted,
+single-minded fellow, and likes me, I believe I haven't a
+friend. Godolphin welcomes me as a companion, a
+bon vivant, a good card player; but if he heard I was
+in the Queen's Bench, or had shot myself, he'd say,
+'Poor devil! I am not surprised,' as he lighted his pipe
+and forgot me a second after. So they would all. I
+don't blame them."</p>
+
+<p>"But I do," cried Val&eacute;rie, her cheeks burning; "they
+are wicked and heartless, and I hate them all. Oh!
+Count Waldemar, I would not do so. I would not desert
+you if all the world did!"</p>
+
+<p>He smiled: he was accustomed to her passionate ebullitions.
+"Poor child, I believe you would be truer than
+the rest," he muttered, half aloud, as he rose hastily and
+took out his watch. "I must be in Downing Street by
+eleven, and it only wants ten minutes. If you will walk
+with me to the gates, I have something to tell you about
+your MS."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>III.</h2>
+
+<h3>"SCARLET AND WHITE" MAKES A HIT, AND FALKENSTEIN FEELS
+THE WEIGHT OF THE GOLDEN FETTERS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Tom, will you come to the theatre with me to-night?"
+said Falkenstein as they lounged by the rails one afternoon
+in May.</p>
+
+<p>"The theatre! What for? Who's that girl with a
+scarlet tie, on that roan there? I don't know her face.
+The ballet is the only thing worth stirring a step for in
+town. Which theatre is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am going to see the new piece Pomps and Vanities
+is bringing out, and I want you as a sort of claqueur."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. I'll come," said Tom, who regarded
+Falkenstein, who had been his school and formfellow,
+still rather as a Highlandman his chief; "but, certainly,
+the first night of a play is the very last I should select.
+But if you wish it&mdash;&mdash; There's that roan coming round
+again! Good action, hasn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>Obedient to his chiefs orders, Bevan brushed his
+whiskers, settled his tie, or rather let his valet do it for
+him, and accompanied Waldemar to one of the crack-up
+theatres, where Pomps and Vanities, as the manager was
+irreverently styled by the habitu&eacute;s of his green-room,
+reigned in a state of scenic magnificence, very different
+to the days when Garrick played Macbeth in wig and
+gaiters.</p>
+
+<p>Bevan asked no questions; he was rather a silent man,
+and probably knew by experience that he would most
+likely get no answers, unless the information was volunteered.
+So settling in his own mind that it was the
+d&eacute;but of some prot&eacute;g&eacute;e of Falkenstein's, he followed him<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span>
+to the door of a private box. Waldemar opened it, and
+entered. In it sat two women: one, a middle-aged lady-like-looking
+person; the other a young one, in whom, as
+she turned round with a radiant smile, and gave Falkenstein
+her hand, Bevan recognised Val&eacute;rie L'Estrange.
+"Keep up your courage," whispered Waldemar, as he
+took the seat behind her, and leaned forward with a
+smile. Tom stared at them both. It was high Dutch to
+him; but being endowed with very little curiosity, and a
+lion's share of British immovability, he waited without
+any impatience for the elucidation of the mystery, and
+seeing the Count and Val&eacute;rie absorbed in earnest and
+low-toned conversation, he first studied the house, and
+finding not a single decent-looking woman, he dropped
+his glass and studied the play-bill. The bill announced
+the new piece as "Scarlet and White." "Queer title,"
+thought Bevan, a little consoled for his self-immolation
+by seeing that Rosalie Rivers, a very pretty little brunette,
+was to fill the soubrette r&ocirc;le. The curtain drew
+up. Tom, looking at Val&eacute;rie instead of the stage, fancied
+she looked very pale, and her eyes were fixed, not
+on the actors, but on Falkenstein. The first act passed
+off in ominous silence. An audience is often afraid to
+compromise itself by applauding a new piece too quickly.
+Then the story began to develop itself&mdash;wit and passion,
+badinage and pathos, were well intermingled. It turned
+on the love of a Catholic girl, a fille d'honneur to Catherine
+de M&eacute;dicis, for a Huguenot, Vicomte de Val&egrave;re, a
+friend of Cond&eacute; and Coligny. The despairing love of
+the woman, the fierce struggle of her lover between his
+passion and his faith, the intrigues of the court, the
+cruelty and weakness of Charles Neuf, were all strikingly
+and forcibly written. The actors, being warmly applauded
+as the plot thickened and the audience became<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>
+interested, played with energy and spirit; and when the
+curtain fell the success of "Scarlet and White" was proclaimed
+through the house.</p>
+
+<p>"Very good play&mdash;very good indeed," said Tom, approvingly.
+"I hope you've been pleased, Miss L'Estrange."
+Val&eacute;rie did not hear him; she was trembling
+and breathless, her blue eyes almost black with excitement,
+while Falkenstein bent over her, his face more full
+of animation and pleasure than Bevan had seen it for
+many a day. "Well," thought Tom, "Forester <i>did</i> say
+little Val was original. I should think that was a polite
+term for insane. I suppose Falkenstein's keeper."</p>
+
+<p>At that minute the applause redoubled. Pomps and
+Vanities had announced "Scarlet and White" for repetition,
+and from the pit to the gods there was a cry for the
+author. Falkenstein bent his head till his lips touched
+her hair, and whispered a few words. She looked up in
+his face. "Do you wish me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly."</p>
+
+<p>His word was law. She rose and went to the front of
+the box, a burning color in her cheeks, smiles on her lips,
+and tears lying under her lashes.</p>
+
+<p>"The devil, Waldemar! Do you mean that&mdash;that
+little thing?" began Bevan.</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein nodded, and Tom, for once in his life
+astonished, forgot to finish his sentence in staring at the
+author! Probably the audience also shared his surprise,
+in seeing her young face and girlish form, in lieu of the
+anticipated member of the Garrick or new Bourcicault,
+with inspiration drawn from Cavendish and Cognac; for
+there was a moment's silence, and then they received her
+with such a welcome as had not sounded through the
+house for years.</p>
+
+<p>She bowed two or three times to thank them; then<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>
+Falkenstein, knowing that though she had no shyness,
+she was extremely excitable, drew her gently back to her
+seat behind the curtain. "Your success is too much for
+you," he said, softly.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," said Val&eacute;rie, passionately, utterly forgetful
+that any one else was near her; "but I am so glad that
+I owe it all to you. It would be nothing to me, as you
+know, unless it pleased you; and it came to me through
+your hands."</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein gave a short, quick sigh, and moved restlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"You would like to go home now, wouldn't you?" he
+said after a pause.</p>
+
+<p>She assented, and he led her out of the box, poor victimised
+Tom following with her duenna, who was the
+daily governess at No. 133.</p>
+
+<p>As their cab drove away, Val&eacute;rie leaned out of the
+window, and watched Falkenstein as long as she could
+see him. He waved his hand to her, and walked on into
+Regent Street in silence.</p>
+
+<p>"Hallo, Waldemar!" began Bevan, at length, "so
+your prot&eacute;g&eacute;e's turning out a star. Do you mean that
+she really wrote that play?"</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein nodded.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, it's more than I could do. But what the deuce
+have you got to do with it? For a man who says he
+won't entangle himself with another love affair, you seem
+pretty tolerably <i>au mieux</i> with her. How did it all come
+about?"</p>
+
+<p>"Simply enough," answered Falkenstein. "Of course
+I haven't known her all these months without finding out
+her talents. She has a passion for writing, and writes
+well, as I saw at once by those New Year's Night's Proverbs.
+She has no money, as you know; she wants to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>
+turn her talents to account, and didn't know how to set
+about it. She'd several conversations with me on the
+subject, so I took her play, looked it over, and gave it to
+Pomps and Vanities. He read it to oblige me, and put
+it on the stage to oblige himself, as he wanted something
+new for the season, and was pretty sure it would make a
+hit."</p>
+
+<p>"Do the Cashrangers know of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; that is why she asked the governess to come
+with her to-night. That stingy old Pomps wouldn't pay
+her much, but she thinks it an El Dorado, and I shall
+take care she commands her own price next time. I
+count on a treat on enlightening Miss Bella."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, she'll cut up rough. By George! I quite envy
+you your young genius."</p>
+
+<p>"She isn't <i>mine</i>," said Falkenstein, bitterly.</p>
+
+<p>"She might be if you chose."</p>
+
+<p>"Poor little thing!&mdash;yes. But love is too expensive a
+luxury for a ruined man, even if&mdash;&mdash; The devil take this
+key, why won't it unlock? You're off to half a dozen parties
+I suppose, Tom?"</p>
+
+<p>"And where are you going?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nowhere."</p>
+
+<p>"What! going to bed at half-past ten?"</p>
+
+<p>"There is no particular sin in going to bed at half-past
+ten, is there?" said Waldemar, impatiently. "I haven't
+the stuff in me for balls and such things. I'm sick of
+them. Good-night, old fellow."</p>
+
+<p>He went up-stairs to his room, threw himself on his
+bed, and, lighting his pipe, lay smoking and thinking
+while the Abbey clock tolled the hours one after another.
+The <i>longs yeux bleus</i> haunted him, for Waldemar had
+already too many chains upon him not to shrink from
+adding to them the Golden Fetters of a fresh passion<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span>,
+and marriage, unless a rich one, was certain to bring
+about him all his entanglements. He resolved to seek
+her no more, to check the demonstrative affection which,
+like Esmeralda, "&agrave; la fois na&iuml;ve et passionn&eacute;e," she had
+no thought of concealing from him, and which, as Falkenstein's
+conscience told him, he had done everything to
+foster. "What is a man worth if he hasn't strength of
+will?" he muttered, as he tossed on his bed. "And yet,
+poor little Val&eacute;rie&mdash;&mdash; Pshaw! all women learn quickly
+enough to forget!"</p>
+
+<p>Some ten days after he was calling in Lowndes Square.
+True as yet to his resolution, he had avoided the t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te
+walks in the Gardens; and Val&eacute;rie keenly felt the
+change in his manner, though in what he did for her he
+was as kind as ever. The successful run of "Scarlet and
+White," the praises of its talents, its promises of future
+triumphs&mdash;all the admiration which, despite Bella's efforts
+to keep her back, the <i>yeux bleus</i> excited&mdash;all were valueless,
+if, as she vaguely feared, she had lost "Count Waldemar."
+The play had made a great sensation, and the
+Cashrangers had taken a box the night before, as they
+made a point of following the lead and seeing everything,
+though they generally forswore theatres as not quite <i>ton</i>.
+Pah! these people, "qui se couchent roturiers et se l&egrave;vent
+nobles," they paint their lilies with such superabundant
+coloring, that we see, at a glance, the flowers come not
+out of a conservatory but out of an atelier.</p>
+
+<p>They were out, as it chanced, and Val&eacute;rie was alone.
+She received him joyously, for unhappy as she was in his
+absence, the mere sight of his face recalled her old spirits,
+and Falkenstein, in all probability, never guessed a tithe
+she suffered, because she had always a smile for him.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Count Waldemar," she cried, "why have you<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>
+never been to the Gardens this week? If you only knew
+how I miss you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I have had no time," he answered, coldly.</p>
+
+<p>"You could make time if you wished," said Val&eacute;rie,
+passionately. "You are so cold, so unkind to me lately.
+Have I vexed you at all?"</p>
+
+<p>"Vexed me, Miss L'Estrange? Certainly not."</p>
+
+<p>She was silent, chilled, despite herself.</p>
+
+<p>"Why do you call me Miss L'Estrange?" she said, suddenly.
+"You know I cannot bear it from <i>you</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"What should I call you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Val&eacute;rie," she answered, softly.</p>
+
+<p>He got up and walked to the hearth-rug, playing with
+Spit and Puppet with his foot, and for once hailed, as a
+relief, the entrance of Bella, in an extensive morning
+toilet, fresh from "shopping." She looked rapidly and
+angrily from him to Val&eacute;rie, and attacked him at once.
+Seeing her cousin's vivacity told, she went in for the
+same stakes, with but slight success, being a young lady
+of the heavy artillery stamp, with no light action about
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Mr. Falkenstein," she began, "that exquisite
+play&mdash;you've seen it, of course? Captain Boville told
+me I should be delighted with it, and so I was. Don't
+you think it enchanting?"</p>
+
+<p>"It is very clever," answered Falkenstein, gravely.</p>
+
+<p>"Val missed a great treat," continued Bella; "nothing
+would make her go last night; however, she never likes
+anything I like. I should love to know who wrote it;
+some people say a woman, but I would never believe it."</p>
+
+<p>"The witty raillery and unselfish devotion of the heroine
+might be dictated by a woman's head and heart, but
+the passion, and vigor, and knowledge of human nature
+indicate a masculine genius," replied Waldemar.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Val&eacute;rie gave him such a grateful, rapturous glance,
+that, had Bella been looking, might have disclosed the
+secret; but she was studying her dainty gloves, and went
+on:</p>
+
+<p>"Could it be Westland Marston&mdash;Sterling Coyne?"</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein shook his head. "If it were, they would
+put their name on the play-bills."</p>
+
+<p>"You naughty man! I do believe you could tell me
+if you chose. <i>Are</i> you not, now, in the author's confidence?"</p>
+
+<p>The corner of Falkenstein's mouth went up in an
+irresistible smile as he telegraphed a glance at "the author."
+"Well, perhaps I am."</p>
+
+<p>Bella clapped her hands with enchanting gaiety.
+"Then, tell me this moment; I am in agonies to know!"</p>
+
+<p>"It is no great mystery," smiled Falkenstein. "I
+fancy you are acquainted with the unknown."</p>
+
+<p>"You don't mean it!" cried Bella, in a state of ecstasy.
+"Have you written it, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I can't lay claim to the honor."</p>
+
+<p>"Who can it be? Oh, do tell me! How enchanting!"
+cried Miss Cashranger; "I am wild to hear. Somebody
+I know, you say? Is it&mdash;is it Captain Tweed?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, it isn't," laughed Falkenstein. Elliot Tweed&mdash;Idiot
+Tweed, as they all call him&mdash;who was hanging after
+Bella, abhorred all caligraphy, and wrote his own name
+with one <i>e</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Dashaway, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dash never scrawled anything but I. O. U.s."</p>
+
+<p>"Lord Flippertygibbett, perhaps?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wrong again. Flip took up a pen once too often,
+when he signed his marriage register, to have any leanings
+to goose quills."</p>
+
+<p>"Charlie Montmorency, then?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Reads nothing but his betting-book and <i>Bell's Life</i>."</p>
+
+<p>"Dear me! how tiresome. Who can it be? Wait a
+moment. Let me see. Is it Major Powell?"</p>
+
+<p>"Guess again. He wouldn't write, save in Indian
+fashion, with his tomahawk on his enemies' scalps."</p>
+
+<p>"How provoking!" cried Bella, exasperated. "Stop:
+is it Mr. Beauchamp?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; he scribbles for six-and-eightpences too perseveringly
+to have time for anything, except ruining his
+clients."</p>
+
+<p>"Dr. Montressor, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Try once more. His prescriptions bring him too
+many guineas for him to waste ink on any other purpose."</p>
+
+<p>"How stupid I am! Perhaps&mdash;perhaps&mdash;&mdash; Yet no, it
+can't be, because he's at the Cape, and most likely killed,
+poor fellow. Could it be Cecil Green?"</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein laughed. "You needn't go so far as Kaffirland;
+try a little nearer home. Think over the <i>ladies</i>
+you know."</p>
+
+<p>"The ladies! Then it <i>is</i> a woman!" cried Bella.
+"Well, I should never have believed it. Who can she be?
+How I shall admire her, and envy her! A lady! Can
+it be darling Flora?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. If your pet friend can get through an invitation-note
+of four lines, the exertion costs her at least a
+dram of sal volatile."</p>
+
+<p>"How wicked you are," murmured Miss Cashranger,
+delighted, after the custom of women, to hear her friend
+pulled to pieces. "Is it Mrs. Lushington, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"Wrong again. The Lushington has so much business
+on hand, inditing rose-hued notes to twenty men at once,
+and wording them differently, for fear they may ever be
+compared, that she's no time for other composition."</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Mechlin, perhaps&mdash;she is a charming creature?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein shook his head. "Never could learn the
+simplest rule of grammar. When she was engaged to
+Mechlin, she wrote her love-letters out of 'Henrietta
+Temple,' and flattered him immensely by their pathos."</p>
+
+<p>"Was there ever such a sarcastic creature!" cried Bella,
+reprovingly; her interest rather flagged, since no man
+was the incognito author. "Well, let me see: there is
+Rosa Temple&mdash;she is immensely intellectual."</p>
+
+<p>"But immensely orthodox. Every minute of her life
+is spent in working slippers and Bible markers for interesting
+curates. It is to be hoped one of them may reward
+her some day, though, I believe, till they <i>do</i> propose,
+she is in the habit of advocating priestly celibacy,
+by way of assertion of her disinterestedness. No! Miss
+Cashranger, the talented writer of 'Scarlet and White,'
+is not only of your acquaintance, but your family."</p>
+
+<p>"My family!" almost screamed Bella. "Good gracious,
+Mr. Falkenstein, is it dear papa, or&mdash;or Augustus?"</p>
+
+<p>The idea of the brewer, fat, and round, and innocent
+of literature as one of his own teams, or of his son just
+plucked for his "smalls" at Cambridge, for spelling
+C&aelig;sar, Sesar, sitting down to indite the pathos and
+poetry of "Scarlet and White," was so exquisitely absurd
+that Waldemar, forgetting courtesy, lay back in his arm-chair
+and laughed aloud. The contagion of his ringing
+laugh was irresistible; Val&eacute;rie followed his example, and
+their united merriment rang in the astonished ears of
+Miss Cashranger, who looked from one to the other in
+wrathful surprise. As soon as he could control himself,
+Falkenstein turned towards her with his most courteous
+smile.</p>
+
+<p>"You will forgive our laughter, I am sure, when I tell
+you what I am certain <i>must</i> give you great pleasure, that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>
+the play you so warmly and justly admire was written by
+your cousin."</p>
+
+<p>Bella stared at him, her face scarlet, all the envy and
+reasonless spite within her flaming up at the idea of her
+cousin's success.</p>
+
+<p>"Val&eacute;rie&mdash;Val&eacute;rie," she stammered, "is it true? I
+had no idea she ever thought of&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Falkenstein, roused in his prot&eacute;g&eacute;e's defence;
+"I dare say you are astonished, as every one else
+would be, that any one so young, and, comparatively
+speaking, so inexperienced as your cousin, should have
+developed such extraordinary talent and power."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, of course&mdash;to be sure&mdash;yes," said Bella, her lips
+twitching nervously, "mamma will be astonished to hear
+of these new laurels for the family. I congratulate you,
+Val&eacute;rie; I never knew you dreamt of writing, much less
+of making so public a d&eacute;but."</p>
+
+<p>"Nor should I ever have been able to do so unless my
+way had been pioneered for me," said Val&eacute;rie, resting her
+eyes fondly on Waldemar.</p>
+
+<p>He stayed ten minutes longer, chatting on indifferent
+subjects, then left, making poor little Val happy with
+a touch of his hand, and a smile as "kind" as of
+old.</p>
+
+<p>"You horrid, deceitful little thing!" began Bella, bursting
+with fury, as the door closed on him, "never to mention
+what you were doing. I can't bear such sly people
+I hate&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Bella, don't disturb yourself," said Val&eacute;rie,
+quietly; "if you had testified any interest in my doings,
+you might have known them; as it was, I was glad to
+find warmer and kinder friends."</p>
+
+<p>"In Waldemar Falkenstein, I suppose," sneered Bella,
+white with rage. "A nice friend you have, certainly; a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>
+man whom everybody knows may go to prison for debt
+any day."</p>
+
+<p>"Leave him alone," said Val&eacute;rie haughtily; "unless
+you speak well of him, in my presence, you shall not
+speak at all."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, indeed," laughed Bella, nervously; "how very
+much interested you are in him! more than he is in you,
+I'm afraid, dear. He's famed for loving and leaving.
+Pray how long has this romantic affair been on the tapis?"</p>
+
+<p>"He's met her every day in the Gardens," cried Julius
+Adolphus, just come in with that fatal apropos of "enfans
+terribles," much oftener the result of m&eacute;chancet&eacute; than of
+innocence; "he's met her every day, Bella, while I fed
+the ducks."</p>
+
+<p>Bella rose, inflated with fury, and summoning all her
+dignity:</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose, Val&eacute;rie, you know the sort of reputation
+you will get through these morning assignations."</p>
+
+<p>Val&eacute;rie bent over Spit with a smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, it is nothing to <i>me</i>," continued Bella,
+spitefully; "but I shall consider it my duty to inform
+mamma."</p>
+
+<p>Val&eacute;rie fairly laughed out.</p>
+
+<p>"Do your duty, by all means."</p>
+
+<p>"And," continued Bella, a third time, "I dare say she
+will find some means to put a stop to this absurd friendship
+with an unmarried and unprincipled man."</p>
+
+<p>Val&eacute;rie was roused; she lifted her head like a little
+Pythoness, and her blue eyes flashed angry scorn.</p>
+
+<p>"Tell your mamma what you please, but&mdash;listen to me,
+Bella&mdash;if you venture to harm him in any way with your
+pitiful venom, I, girl as I am, will never let you go till I
+have revenged myself and him."</p>
+
+<p>Bella, like most bullies, was a terrible coward. There<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>
+was an earnestness in Val&eacute;rie's words, and a dangerous
+light in her eyes, that frightened her, and she left the
+room in silence, while Val&eacute;rie leaned her forehead on
+Spit's silky back, and cried bitterly, tears that for her life
+she wouldn't have shed while her cousin was there.</p>
+
+<p>The next time Falkenstein called at Lowndes Square,
+the footman told him, "Not at home," and Waldemar
+swore, mentally, as he turned from the door, for though
+he could keep himself from seeking her, it was something
+new not to find her when he wished.</p>
+
+<p>"She's like all the rest," he thought bitterly; "She's
+used me, and now she's gone to newer friends. I was a
+fool to suppose any woman would do otherwise. They'll
+tell her I can't marry; of course she'll go over to D'Orwood,
+or some of those confounded fools that are dangling
+after her."</p>
+
+<p>So in his skeptical haste judged Falkenstein, on the
+strength of a single "Not at home," due to Cashranger
+malice, and the fierce throbs the mere suspicion gave
+him showed him that he loved Val&eacute;rie too much to be
+able to deceive himself any longer with the assurance
+that his feelings towards his prot&eacute;g&eacute;e was simple "friendship."
+He knew it, but he was loth to give way to it.
+He had long held as a doctrine that a man could forget
+if he chose. He had been wearied of so many, been disappointed
+in so much, he had had idols of the hour, in
+which, their first gloss off, he had found no beauty, he
+could not tell; it might not be the same with Val&eacute;rie.
+Warm and passionate as a Southern, haughty and reserved
+as a Northern, he held many a bitter conflict in
+his solitary vigils at night over his pipe, after evenings
+spent in society which no longer amused him, or excitement
+with which he vainly sought to drown his cares.
+When he did meet Val&eacute;rie out, which was rarely, as he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>
+refused most invitations now, his struggle against his ill-timed
+passion made his manner so cold and capricious,
+that Val&eacute;rie, who could not divine the workings of his
+heart, began, despite her vehement faith in him, and conviction
+that he was not wholly indifferent to her, to dread
+that Bella might be right, and that as he had left others
+so would he leave her. He gave her no opportunity of
+questioning him as to his sudden change, for when he did
+call in Lowndes Square, Bella and her aunt always stationed
+themselves as a sort of detective police, and Falkenstein
+now never sought a t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te.</p>
+
+<p>One evening she met him at a dinner-party. With undisguised
+delight she watched his entrance, and Waldemar,
+seeing her radiant face, thought in his haste, "She
+is happy enough, what does she care for me?" If he had
+looked at her after he had shaken hands carelessly with
+her, and turned away to talk to another woman, he would
+have discovered his mistake. But when do we ever discover
+half our errors before it is too late? She signed
+to him to come to her under pretext of looking at some
+croquis, and whispered hurriedly,</p>
+
+<p>"Count Waldemar, what have I done&mdash;why do you
+never come to see me? You are so changed, so altered&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I was not aware of it."</p>
+
+<p>"But I never see you in the Gardens now. You never
+talk to me, you never call on me."</p>
+
+<p>"I have other engagements."</p>
+
+<p>Val&eacute;rie breathed hard between her set teeth.</p>
+
+<p>"That are more agreeable to you, I suppose. You
+should not have accustomed me to what you intended to
+withdraw when it ceased to amuse you. <i>I</i> am not so capricious.
+Your kindness about my play&mdash;&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"It was no kindness; I would have done the same for
+any one."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him fixedly.</p>
+
+<p>"General kindness is no kindness," said Val&eacute;rie, passionately.
+"If you would do for a mere acquaintance
+what you would do for your friend, what value attaches
+to your friendship?"</p>
+
+<p>"I attach none to it," said the Count, coldly.</p>
+
+<p>Val&eacute;rie's little hands clenched hard. She did not speak,
+lest her self-possession should give way, and just then
+D'Orwood came to give her his arm in to dinner; and at
+dinner Val&eacute;rie, demonstrative and candid as she was, was
+gay and animated, for she could wear a mask in the bal
+d'Op&eacute;ra of life as well as he; and though she could not
+believe the coldness he testified was really meant, she felt
+bitterly the neglect of his manner before others, at sight
+of which Bella's small eyes sparkled with malicious satisfaction.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>IV.</h2>
+
+<h3>SOME GOLDEN FETTERS ARE SHAKEN OFF AND OTHERS ARE PUT
+ON.</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Mrs. Boville told me last night that Waldemar Falkenstein
+is so dreadfully in debt, that she thinks he'll have
+to go into court&mdash;don't they call it?" lisped Bella, the
+next morning; "be arrested, or bankrupt, or something
+dreadful. Should you think it is true?"</p>
+
+<p>"I know it's true," said Idiot Tweed, who was there,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>
+having a little music before luncheon. "He's confoundedly
+hard up, poor devil."</p>
+
+<p>"But I thought he was in such a good position&mdash;so
+well off?" said Bella, observing with secret delight that
+her cousin's head was raised, and that the pen with which
+she was writing had stopped in its rapid gallop.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! so one thinks of a good many fellows," answered
+the Guardsman; "or, at least, you ladies do, who don't
+look at a man's ins and outs, and the fifty hundred things
+there are to bother him. Lots of people&mdash;householders,
+and all that sort of thing&mdash;that one would fancy worth
+no end, go smash when nobody's expecting it."</p>
+
+<p>"And Mr. Falkenstein really is embarrassed?"</p>
+
+<p>The Guardsman laughed outright. "That is a mild
+term, Miss Cashranger. I heard down at Windsor yesterday,
+from a man that knows his family very well, that
+if he don't pay his debts this week, Amadeus Levi will
+arrest him. I dare say he will. Jews do when they can't
+bleed you any longer, and think your family will come
+down handsomely. But they say the old Count won't
+give Falkenstein a rap, so most likely he'll cut the country."</p>
+
+<p>That afternoon, on his return from the Deeds and
+Chronicles Office, whose slow red-tapeism ill suited his
+impatient and vigorous intellect, Waldemar sat down deliberately
+to investigate his affairs. It was true that
+Amadeus Levi's patience was waning fast; his debts of
+honor had put him deep in that worthy's books, and Falkenstein,
+as he sat in his lodgings, with the August sun
+streaming full on the relentless figures that showed him,
+with cruel mathematical ruthlessness, that he was fast
+chained in the Golden Fetters of debt, leaned his head
+upon his arms with the bitter despair of a man whose own
+hand has blotted his past and ruined his future.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The turning of the handle of his door roused him from
+his reverie. He looked up quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"A lady wants to speak to you, sir," said the servant
+who waited on him.</p>
+
+<p>"What name?"</p>
+
+<p>"She'd rather not give it, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well," said Falkenstein, consigning all women to
+the devil; "show her up."</p>
+
+<p>Resigning himself to his fate, he rose, leaning his hand
+on the arm of the chair. He started involuntarily as the
+door opened again.</p>
+
+<p>"Val&eacute;rie!"</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him half hesitatingly. "Count Waldemar,
+don't be angry with me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Angry! no, Heaven knows; but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Her face and her voice were fast thawing his chill
+reserve, and he stopped abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>"You wonder why I have come here," Val&eacute;rie went on
+singularly shyly for her, "but&mdash;but I heard that you&mdash;you
+have much to trouble you just now. Is it true?"</p>
+
+<p>"True enough, Heaven knows."</p>
+
+<p>"Then&mdash;then," said Val&eacute;rie, with all her old impetuosity,
+"let me do something for you&mdash;let me help you
+in some way&mdash;you who have done everything for me,
+who have been the only person kind to me on earth. Do
+let me&mdash;do not refuse me. I would die to serve you."</p>
+
+<p>He breathed fast as he gazed on her expressive eyes. It
+was a hard struggle to him to preserve his self-control.</p>
+
+<p>"No one can help me," he answered, hurriedly. "I
+have made my own fate&mdash;leave me to it."</p>
+
+<p>"I will not!" cried Val&eacute;rie, passionately. "Do not
+send me away&mdash;do not refuse me. What happiness
+would there be for me so great as serving you&mdash;you to
+whom I owe all the pleasure I have known! Take them.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>
+Count Waldemar&mdash;pray take them; they have often told
+me they are worth a good deal, and I will thank Heaven
+every hour for having enabled me to aid you ever so little."
+She pressed into his hands a jewel-case.</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein could not answer her. He stood looking
+down at her, his lips white as death. She mistook his
+silence for displeasure, and laid her hands on his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Do not be offended&mdash;do not be annoyed with me.
+They are my own&mdash;an old heirloom of the L'Estranges
+that only came to me the other day. Take them, Count
+Waldemar. Do, for Heaven's sake. I spoke passionately
+to you last night; I have been unhappy ever since. If
+you will not take them, I shall think you have not yet
+forgiven me?"</p>
+
+<p>He seized her hands and drew her close to him: "Good
+Heavens! do you love me like this?"</p>
+
+<p>She did not answer, but she looked up at him. That
+look shivered to atoms Falkenstein's resolves, and cast
+his pride and prudence to the winds. He pressed her
+fiercely against his heart, he kissed her again and again,
+bitter tears rushing to his burning eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"Val&eacute;rie! Val&eacute;rie!" he whispered, wildly, "my fate is
+at its darkest. Will you share it?"</p>
+
+<p>She leaned her brow on his shoulder, trembling with
+hysterical joy.</p>
+
+<p>"You do care for me, then?" she murmured, at last.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! thank Heaven."</p>
+
+<p>In the delirium of his happiness, in the vehemence of
+feelings touched to the core by sight of the intense love
+he had awakened, Falkenstein poured out on her all the
+passion of his impetuous and reserved nature, and in the
+paradise of the moment forgot every cloud that hung on
+his horizon.</p>
+
+<p>"Val&eacute;rie!" he whispered, at length, "I have now nothing<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>
+to offer you. I can give you none of the riches, and
+power, and position that other men can&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>She stopped him, putting her hands on his lips.
+"Hush! I shall have everything that life can give me in
+having your love."</p>
+
+<p>"My darling, Heaven bless you!" cried Falkenstein,
+passionately; "but think twice, Val&eacute;rie&mdash;pause before you
+decide. I am a ruined man&mdash;embarrassments fetter me
+on every side. To-morrow, for aught I know, I may be
+arrested for debt. I would not lead you into what, in
+older years, you may regret."</p>
+
+<p>"Regret!" cried Val&eacute;rie, clinging to him. "How can
+I ever regret that I have won the one heaven I crave. If
+you love me, life will always be beautiful in my eyes; and,
+Count Waldemar, I can work for you&mdash;I can help you,
+be it ever so little. I cannot make much money now,
+but you have said that I shall gain more year after year.
+Only let me be with you; let me know your sorrows and
+lighten them if I can, and I could ask no greater happiness&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein bent over her, and covered with caresses
+the lips that to him seemed so eloquent; he had no
+words to thank her for a love that, to his warm and solitary
+heart, came like water in the wilderness. The sound
+of voices gay and laughing, on the stairs, startled him.</p>
+
+<p>"That is Bevan and Godolphin; I forgot they were
+coming for me to go down to the Castle. Good Heavens!
+they mustn't see you here, love, to jest about you over
+their mess-tables. Stay," said Falkenstein, hastily, as the
+men entered the front room, "wait here a moment; they
+cannot see you in this window, and I will come to you
+again. Hallo! old fellows!" said he, passing through the
+folding-doors. "You're wonderfully punctual, Tom. I
+always give you half an hour's grace; but I suppose<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>
+Harry's such an awful martinet, that he kept you up to
+time for once."</p>
+
+<p>"All the credit's due to my mare," laughed Godolphin.
+"She did the distance from Knightsbridge in four minutes,
+and I don't think Musjid himself could beat that.
+Are you ready, I say? because we're to be at the Castle
+by six, and Fitz don't like waiting for his turbot."</p>
+
+<p>"Give me a brace of seconds, and I shall be with you,"
+said Waldemar.</p>
+
+<p>"Make haste, there's a good fellow. By George!" said
+Harry, catching sight of the jewel-case, "for a fellow
+who's so deucedly hard up, you've been pretty extravagant
+in getting those diamonds, Waldemar. Who are
+they for&mdash;Rosalie Rivers, or the Deloraine; or that last
+love of yours, that wonderful little L'Estrange?"</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein's brow grew dark; he snatched the case
+from the table, with a suppressed oath, and went back to
+the inner room, slamming the folding-doors after him.
+Godolphin lounged to the window looking on the street,
+where he stood for five minutes, whistling A te, o cara.
+"The devil! what's that fellow about?" he said, yawning.
+"How impatient Bonbon's growing! Why don't
+that fool Roberts drive her up and down? By Jove!
+come here, Tom. Who's that girl Falkenstein's now
+putting into a cab? That's what he wanted his brace of
+seconds for! Confound that portico! I can't see her
+face, and women dress so much alike now, there's no telling
+one from another. What an infernal while he is bidding
+her good-by. I shall know another time what his
+two seconds mean. There, the cab's off at last, thank
+Heaven!&mdash;Very pretty, Falkenstein," he began, as the
+Count entered. "That's your game, is it? I think you
+might have confided in your bosom friend. Who is the
+fair one? Come, make a clean breast of it."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein shook his head. "My dear Harry, spare
+your words. Don't you know of old that you never get
+anything out of me unless I choose?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, confound you, I know that pretty well. One
+question, though&mdash;was she pretty?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do you suppose I entertain plain women?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; never was such a man for the beaux yeux. It
+looked uncommonly like little L'Estrange; but I don't
+suppose she could get out of the durance vile of Lowndes
+Square, to come and pay you a t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te call. Well,
+are you ready now? because Bonbon's tired of waiting,
+and so are we. A man in love makes an abominable
+friend."</p>
+
+<p>"A man in love with himself makes a worse one," said
+Waldemar; which hit Harry in a vulnerable spot, Godolphin
+being generally chaffed about the affection he
+bore his own person.</p>
+
+<p>"That <i>was</i> the little L'Estrange, wasn't it?" asked
+Godolphin, as they leaned out of the window after dinner,
+apart from the others.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Waldemar, curtly; "but I beg you to keep
+silence on it to every one."</p>
+
+<p>"To be sure; I've kept plenty of your confidences. I
+had no idea you'd push it so far. Of course you won't
+be fool enough to marry her?"</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein's dark eyes flashed fire. "I shall not be
+fool enough to consult or confide in any man upon my
+private affairs."</p>
+
+<p>Godolphin shrugged his shoulders with commiseration,
+and left Waldemar alone in his window.</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein called in Lowndes Square the morning after
+and had an interview with old Cash in the library of
+gaudy books that were never opened, and told him concisely
+that he loved his niece, and&mdash;that ever I should<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>
+live to record it!&mdash;that little snob, with not two ideas in
+his head, who couldn't, if put to it, tell you who his own
+grandfather was, and who owed his tolerance in society
+to his banking account, refused an alliance with the
+refined intellect and the blue blood of one of the proud,
+courtly, historic Falkensteins! He'd been tutored by
+his wife, and said his lesson properly, refusing to sanction
+"any such connexion;" of course his niece must act
+for herself.</p>
+
+<p>Waldemar bowed himself out with all his haughtiest
+high-breeding; he knew Val&eacute;rie <i>would</i> act for herself, but
+the insult cut him to the quick. He threw himself into
+the train, and went down to Fairlie, his governor's place
+in Devonshire, determining to sacrifice his pride, and
+ask his father to aid him in his effort for freedom. In
+the drawing-room he found his sister Virginia, a cold,
+proud woman of the world. She scarcely let him sit
+down and inquire for the governor, before she pounced
+on him.</p>
+
+<p>"Waldemar, I have heard the most absurd report
+about you."</p>
+
+<p>"Most reports are absurd."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, of course; but this is too ridiculous. What do
+you think it is?"</p>
+
+<p>"I am sure I can't say."</p>
+
+<p>"That you are going to marry."</p>
+
+<p>"Well?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well! You take it very quietly. If you were going
+to make a good match I should be the first to rejoice;
+but they say that you are engaged to some niece of that
+odious, vulgar parvenu, Cashranger, the brewer; that
+little bold thing who wrote that play that made a noise a
+little while ago. Pray set me at rest at once, and say it
+is not true."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I should be very sorry if it were not."</p>
+
+<p>His sister looked at him in haughty horror. "Waldemar!
+you must be mad. If you were rich, it would be
+intolerable to stoop to such a connexion; but, laden with
+debts as you are, to disgrace the family with such&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Disgrace?" repeated Falkenstein, scornfully. "She
+would honor any family she entered."</p>
+
+<p>"You talk like a boy of twenty," said Virginia, impatiently.
+"To load yourself with a penniless wife when
+you are on the brink of ruin&mdash;to introduce to <i>us</i> the niece
+of a low-bred, pushing plebeian&mdash;to give your name to a
+bold man&#339;uvring girl, who has the impudence to take
+her stand before a crowded theatre&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hold!" broke out Waldemar, fiercely: "you might
+thank Heaven, Virginia, if you were as frank-hearted and
+as free from guile as she is. She thinks no ill, and therefore
+she is not, like you fine ladies, on the constant qui
+vive lest it should be attributed to her. I have found at
+last a woman too generous to be mistrustful, too fond to
+wait for the world's advantages, and, moreover, untainted
+by the breath of your conventionalities, and pride, and
+cant."</p>
+
+<p>Virginia threw back her head with a curl on her lip.
+"You are mad, as I said before. I suppose you do not
+expect me to countenance your infatuation?"</p>
+
+<p>He shrugged his shoulder. "Really, whether you do
+or not is perfectly immaterial to me."</p>
+
+<p>Virginia was silent, pale with anger, for they were all
+(pardonably enough) proud. She turned with a sneer to
+Josephine, a younger and less decided woman, just entering.
+"Josephine, you are come in time to be congratulated
+on your sister-in-law."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it true?" murmured Josephine, aghast. "Oh!
+my dear Waldemar, pause; consider how dreadful for us<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>&mdash;a
+person who is so horribly connected; the man's beer
+wagon is now standing at the door. Oh, do reflect&mdash;a
+girl, whose name is before the public&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"By talent that would grace a queen!" interrupted
+Waldemar, rising impatiently. "You waste your words;
+you might know that I am not so weak as to give up my
+sole chance of happiness to please your pitiful prejudices."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. <i>I</i> shall never speak to her," said Virginia,
+between her teeth.</p>
+
+<p>"That you will do as you please; you will be the
+loser."</p>
+
+<p>"But, Waldemar, do consider," began Josephine.</p>
+
+<p>"Your women's tongues would drive a man mad,"
+muttered Falkenstein. "Tell me where my father is."</p>
+
+<p>"In his study," answered Virginia briefly. And in his
+study Falkenstein found him. He saw at once that something
+was wrong by his reception; but he plunged at once
+into his affairs, showing him plainly his position, and
+asking him frankly for help to discharge his debts.</p>
+
+<p>Count Ferdinand heard him in silence. "Waldemar,"
+he answered, after a long pause, "you shall have all
+you wish. I will sign you a check for the amount this
+instant if you give me your word to break off this miserable
+affair."</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein's cheek flushed with annoyance; he had
+expected sympathy from his father, or at least toleration.
+"That is impossible. You ask me to give up the one
+thing that binds me to life&mdash;the one love I have given me&mdash;the
+one chance of redeeming the future, that lies in
+my grasp. I am not a boy led away by a passing caprice.
+I have known and tried everything, and I can
+judge what will make my happiness. What unfortunate<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>
+prejudice have you all formed against my poor little Val&eacute;rie&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Enough" said his father, sternly. "I address you as a
+man of the world, and a man of sense; you answer me
+with infatuated folly. I give you your choice: my aid and
+esteem, in everything you can desire, or the madman's
+gratification of the ill-placed caprice of the hour."</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein rose as haughtily as the Count.</p>
+
+<p>"Virtually, then, you give me no choice. I am sorry I
+troubled you with my concerns. I know whose interference
+I have to thank for it, and am only astonished you
+are so easily influenced," said Falkenstein, setting his
+teeth hard as he closed the door; for his father's easy
+desertion of him hit him hard, and he attributed it,
+rightly enough, to Maximilian, who, industriously gathering
+every grain of evil report against his brother, had
+taken such a character of Val&eacute;rie&mdash;whom, unluckily, he
+had seen coming out of Duke street&mdash;down to Fairlee,
+that his father vowed to disinherit him, and his sisters
+never to speak to him. The doors both of his own home
+and Lowndes Square were closed to him; and in his adversity
+the only one that clung to him was Val&eacute;rie.</p>
+
+<p>If he had been willing to ask them, none of his friends
+could have helped him. Godolphin, with 20,000<i>l</i>. a year,
+spent every shilling on himself; Tom Bevan, but that he
+stood for a pocket borough of his governor's, would have
+been in quod long ago; and for the others, men very willing
+to take your money at &eacute;cart&eacute; are not very willing to
+lend you theirs when you can play &eacute;cart&eacute; no longer.
+Amadeus Levi grew more and more importunate; down
+on him at once, as Falkenstein knew, would come the
+Jew's <i>griffes</i> if he took any such unprofitable step as a
+marriage for love; and with all the passion in the world,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>
+mesdemoiselles, a man thinks twice before he throws himself
+into the Insolvent Court.</p>
+
+<p>One night, <i>nolens volens</i>, decision was forced on him.
+He had seen Val&eacute;rie that morning in the Pantheon, and
+they had parted to meet again at a ball, one of the lingering
+stragglers of the past season. About twelve he
+dressed and walked down Duke Street, looking for a cab
+to take him to Park Lane. Under a lamp at the corner,
+standing reading, he saw a man whom he knew by sight,
+and whose errand he guessed without hesitation. He
+paused unnoticed close beside him; he stood a moment
+and glanced over his shoulder; he saw a warrant for his
+own apprehension at Levi's suit. The man looking, to
+make sure of the dress, never raised his eyes. Falkenstein
+walked on, hailed a hansom in Regent street, and
+in a quarter of an hour was chatting with his hostess.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is Miss L'Estrange?" he asked, carelessly.</p>
+
+<p>"She was waltzing with Tom a moment ago," answered
+Mrs. Eden. "If you run after her so, I shall believe
+report. But is anything the matter, Falkenstein? How
+ill you look!"</p>
+
+<p>"Too much champagne," laughed Waldemar. "I've
+been dining with Gourmet, and all the Falkensteins inherit
+the desire of obtaining that gentlemanlike curse, the
+gout."</p>
+
+<p>"It's not the gout, mon ami," smiled Mrs. Eden.</p>
+
+<p>"Break your engagement and waltz with me," he whispered,
+ten minutes after, to Val&eacute;rie.</p>
+
+<p>"I have none. I kept them all free for you!"</p>
+
+<p>He put his arm round her and whirled her into the
+circle.</p>
+
+<p>"Count Waldemar, you are not well. Has anything
+fresh occurred?" she asked anxiously, as she felt the quick<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>
+throbs of his heart, and saw the dark circles of his eyes
+and the deepened lines round his haughty mouth.</p>
+
+<p>"Not much, dearest. I will tell you in a moment."</p>
+
+<p>She was silent, and he led her through the different
+rooms into Mrs. Eden's boudoir, which he knew was generally
+deserted; and there, holding her close to him, but
+not looking into her eyes lest his strength should fail
+him, he told her that he must leave England, and asked
+her if he should go alone.</p>
+
+<p>She caught both his hands and kissed them passionately.
+"No, no; do not leave me&mdash;take me with you,
+wherever it be. Oh, that I were rich for your sake!
+I, who would die for you, can do nothing to help you&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He pressed her fiercely to him. "Oh, Val&eacute;rie! Heaven
+bless you for your love, that renders the darkest hour of
+my life the brightest. But weigh well what you do, my
+darling. I am utterly ruined. I cannot insure you from
+privation in the future, perhaps not from absolute want;
+if I make money, much must go in honor year by year to
+the payment of my debts, by instalments. I shall take
+you from all the luxuries and the society that you are
+formed for; do not sacrifice yourself blindly&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Sacrifice myself!" interrupted Val&eacute;rie. "Oh! Waldemar,
+if it is no sacrifice to <i>you</i>, let me be with you
+wherever it be; and if you have cares, and toil, and sorrow,
+let me share them. I will write for you, work for you, do
+anything for you, only let me be with you&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He pressed his lips to hers, silent with the tumult of
+passion, happiness, delirious joy, regret, remorse, that
+arose in him at her words.</p>
+
+<p>"My guardian angel, be it as you will!" he said, at
+length. "I must be out of England to-morrow, Val&eacute;rie.
+Will you come with me as my wife?"</p>
+
+<p>Early on Sunday morning Falkenstein was married,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>
+and out of his host of friends, and relatives, and acquaintance,
+honest Tom Bevan was the only man who turned
+him off, as Tom phrased it, and bid him good bye, with
+few words but much regret, concealed, after the manner
+of Britons, for the loss of his old chum. Tom's congratulations
+were the only ones that fell on Val&eacute;rie's ear
+in the empty church that morning; but I question if
+Val&eacute;rie ever noticed the absence of the marriage paraphernalia,
+so entirely were her heart, and eyes, and mind,
+fixed on the one whom she followed into exile. They
+were out of London before their part of it had begun to
+lounge down to their late breakfasts; and as they crossed
+the Channel, and the noon sun streamed on the white
+line of cliffs, Falkenstein, holding her hands in his and
+looking down into her eyes, forgot the follies of his
+past, the insecurity of his future, the tale of his ruin and
+his flight, that would be on the tongues of his friends on
+the morrow, and only remembered the love that came to
+him when all others forsook him.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>V.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE SILVER CHIMES RING IN A HAPPY NEW YEAR.</h3>
+
+
+<p>One December evening Falkenstein sat in his lodgings
+in Vienna; the wood fire burnt brightly, and if its flames
+lighted up a room whose <i>appanages</i> were rather different
+to the palace his grandfather had owned in the imperial
+city, they at least shone on waving hair and violet eyes
+that were very dear to him, and helped to teach him to
+forget much that he had forfeited. From England he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>
+had come to Vienna, where, as he had projected, his uncle,
+one of the cabinet, had been able to help him to a
+diplomatic situation, for which his keen judgment and
+varied information fitted him; and in Austria his name
+gave him at once a brevet of the highest nobility. Of
+course the knowledge that he was virtually outlawed, and
+that he was deep in the debt of such sharps as Amadeus
+Levi, often galled his proud and sensitive nature; but
+Val&eacute;rie knew how to soften and to soothe him, and,
+under her caressing affection or her ready vivacity, the
+dark hours passed away.</p>
+
+<p>He was smoking his favorite briar-wood pipe, with Val&eacute;rie
+sitting at his feet, reading him some copy just going
+to her publishers in England, and little Spit, not forgotten
+in their flight, lying on the hearth, when a deep English
+voice startled them, singing out, "Here you are at
+last! I give you my word, I've been driving over this
+blessed city two hours to find you!"</p>
+
+<p>"Tom!" cried Falkenstein.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Bevan!" echoed Val&eacute;rie, springing to her
+feet, while Spit began barking furiously.</p>
+
+<p>Bevan shook hands with them; heartily glad to see his
+friend again, though, of course he grumbled more about
+the snow and the stupidity of the Viennese than anything
+else. "Very jolly rooms you've got," said he at last;
+"and, 'pon my life, you look better than I've seen you do
+a long time, Waldemar. Madame has done wonders for
+you."</p>
+
+<p>"Madame" laughed, and glanced up at Falkenstein,
+who smiled half sadly.</p>
+
+<p>"She has taught me how to find happiness, Tom. I
+wish you may get such a teacher."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, so do I, if my time ever comes; but geniuses
+<i>aux longs yeux bleus</i> are rare in the world. But
+you're wondering why I'm here, ain't you?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I was flattering myself you were here to see us."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, of course and very glad to see you, too; but
+I'm come in part as your governor's messenger."</p>
+
+<p>Val&eacute;rie saw him look up quickly, a flush on his face.
+"My father?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that rascal&mdash;(you know I always said he was
+good for nothing, a fool that couldn't smoke a Queen
+without being sick)&mdash;I mean, your brother Maximillian&mdash;was
+at the bottom of the Count's row with you. Last
+week I was dining at old Fitz's, and your father and sisters
+were there, and when the women were gone I asked
+him when he'd last heard of you; of course he looked
+tempestuous, and said, 'Never.' Happily, I'm not easily
+shut up, so I told him it was a pity, then, for if he did
+he'd hear you were jollier than ever, and I said your wife
+was&mdash;&mdash; Well, I won't say what, for fear we spoil this
+young lady, and make her vain of herself. The old boy
+turned pale, and said nothing; but two days after I got a
+line from him, saying he wasn't quite well; would I go
+down and speak to him. I found him chained with the
+gout, and he began to talk about you. I like that old
+man, Waldemar, I do, uncommonly. He said he'd been
+too hasty, but that it was a family failing, and that Max
+had brought him such&mdash;well, such confounded lies&mdash;about
+Val&eacute;rie, that he would have shot you rather than see you
+give her your name; now he wants to have you back. I'd
+nothing to do, so I said I'd come and ask you to forgive
+the poor old boy, and come and see him, for he isn't well.
+I know you will, Falkenstein, because you never <i>did</i> bear
+malice."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, he will," murmured Val&eacute;rie, tears in her eyes.
+"I separated you, Waldemar; you will let me see you
+reconciled?"</p>
+
+<p>"My darling, yes! Poor old governor!" And Falkenstein<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>
+stopped and smoked vigorously, for kindness always
+touched him to the heart.</p>
+
+<p>Bevan looked at him and was silent. "I say," he
+whispered, when he was a moment alone with Val&eacute;rie.
+"I didn't tell Waldemar, because I thought you'd break
+it to him less blunderingly than I should, but the old
+Count's breaking fast. I doubt if he'll live another
+week."</p>
+
+<p>Bevan was right. In another week Falkenstein stood by
+the death-bed of his father. He had a long interview
+with him alone, in which the old Count detailed to him the
+fabricated slanders with which his brother had blackened
+Val&eacute;rie's name. With all his old passion he disowned
+the son capable of such baseness, and constituted Waldemar
+his sole heir, save the legacies left his daughters.
+He died in Waldemar's arms the night they arrived in
+England, with his last word to him and Val&eacute;rie, whom,
+despite Virginia's opposition, he insisted on seeing.
+Falkenstein's sorrow for his father was deep and unfeigned,
+like his character; but his guardian angel, as he
+used to call her, was there to console him, and, under the
+light of her smile, sorrow could not long pursue him.</p>
+
+<p>On his brother, always his own enemy, and now the
+traducer of the woman he loved, Waldemar's wrath fell
+heavily, and would, to a certainty, have found some
+means of wreaking itself, but for the last wishes of his
+father. As it was, he took a nobler, yet a more complete
+revenge. The day of the funeral, when they were assembled
+for the reading of the will, Maximilian, unconscious
+of his doom, came with his gentle face, and tender melancholy
+air, to inherit, as he believed, Fairlie, and all the
+personal property.</p>
+
+<p>Stunned as by a spent ball, horror-struck, disbelieving
+his senses, he heard his younger brother proclaimed the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>
+heir. It was a serious thing to him, moreover, for&mdash;for
+a man of large expenses and great ostentation&mdash;his own
+means were small. To secure every shilling he had
+schemed, and planned, and lied; and now every shilling
+was taken from him. Like the dog of &AElig;sopian memory,
+trying to catch two pieces of meat, he had lost his own!</p>
+
+<p>After the last words were read, Waldemar stood a
+moment irresolute; then he lifted his head, his dark eyes
+bright and clear, his mouth fixed and firm, a proud calm
+displacing his old look of passion and of care.</p>
+
+<p>He went up to his brother with a generous impulse,
+and held out his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Maximilian, from our boyhood you never liked me,
+and of late you have done me a great wrong; but I am
+willing to believe that you did it from a mistaken motive,
+and by me, at least, it shall never be recalled. My father,
+in his wish to make amends for the one harsh act
+of his life to me, has made a will which I know you consider
+unjust. I cannot dispute his last desire that I
+should inherit Fairlie, but I can do what I know he
+would sanction&mdash;divide with you the wealth his energy
+collected. Take the half of the property, as if he had
+left it to you, and over his grave let us forget the past!"</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>On the last day of the year, so eventful to them both,
+Falkenstein and Val&eacute;rie drove through the park at
+Fairlie. The r&ocirc;le of a country gentleman would have
+been the last into which Waldemar, with his independent
+opinions and fastidious intellect, would have sunk; but
+he was fond of the place from early associations, and he
+came down to take possession. The tenantry and servants
+welcomed him heartily, for they had often used to
+wish that the wild high-spirited child, who rode his
+Shetland over the country at a headlong pace, and if he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>
+sometimes teased their lives out, always gave them a
+kind word and merry laugh, had been the heir instead of
+the one to whom they applied the old proverb "still and
+ill."</p>
+
+<p>The tenantry had been dismissed, the dinner finished,
+even the briarwood pipe smoked out, and in the wide
+Elizabethan window of the library Falkenstein stood,
+looking on the clear bright night, and watching the Old
+Year out.</p>
+
+<p>"You sent the deed of gift to-day to Maximilian?"
+said Val&eacute;rie, clasping both her hands on his arm.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. He does not take it very graciously; but perhaps
+we can hardly expect that from a man who has
+been disinherited. I question if I should accept it at
+all."</p>
+
+<p>"But you could never have wronged another as he
+wronged you," cried Val&eacute;rie. "Oh, Waldemar! I think I
+never realised fully, till the day you took your generous
+revenge, how noble, how good, how above all others you
+are."</p>
+
+<p>He smiled, and put his hand on her lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Good, noble, silly child! those words may do for
+some spotless Gahlahad or Folko, not for me, who, a
+month ago, was in debt to some of the greatest blackguards
+in town, who have yielded to every temptation,
+given way to every weakness; not with the excuse of a
+boy new to life, but willfully and recklessly, knowing
+both the pleasures and their price&mdash;I, who but for your
+love and my father's, should now be a solitary exile, paying
+for my past follies with&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Be quiet," interrupted Val&eacute;rie, with her passionate
+vivacity. "As different as was 'Mirabeau jug&eacute; par sa
+famille et Mirabeau jug&eacute; par le peuple,' are you judged
+by your enemies, and judged by those who love you.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span>
+Granted you have had temptations, follies, errors; so
+has every man of high spirit and generous temper, and I
+value you far more coming out of a fiery furnace with so
+much of pure gold that the flames could not destroy,
+than if you were some ascetic Pharisee, who has never
+succumbed because he has never been tempted, and, born
+with no weaknesses, is born with no warmer virtues
+either!"</p>
+
+<p>Falkenstein laughed, as he looked down at her.</p>
+
+<p>"You little goose! Well, at least you have eloquence, Val&eacute;rie, if not
+truth, on your side; and your sophistry is dear to me, as it springs out
+of your love."</p>
+
+<p>"But it is not sophistry," she cried, with an energetic stamp of her
+foot. "If you will not listen to philosophy, concede, at least, to fact.
+Which is most worthy of my epithets&mdash;'noble and good'&mdash;Waldemar
+Falkenstein, or Maximillian? And yet Maximillian has been quiet and
+virtuous from his youth upwards, and always wins white balls from the
+ballot of society."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, you shall have the privilege of your sex&mdash;the last word," smiled
+Waldemar, "more especially as the last word is on my side."</p>
+
+<p>"Hark!" interrupted Val&eacute;rie, quiet and subdued in a second, "the clock
+is striking twelve."</p>
+
+<p>Silently, with her arms round his neck, they listened
+to the parting knell of the Old Year, stealing quietly
+away from its place among men. From the church
+towers through England tolled the twelve strokes, with a
+melancholy echo, telling a world that its dead past was
+laid in a sealed grave, and the stone of Never More was
+rolled to the door of the sepulchre. The Old Year was
+gone, with all its sins and errors, its golden gleams and
+midnight storms, its midsummer days of sunshine for
+some, its winter nights of starless gloom for others. Its<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>
+last knell echoed; and then, from the old grey belfries in
+villages and towns, over the stirring cities and the sleeping
+hamlets, over the quiet meadows and stretching
+woodlands and grand old forest trees, rang the Silver
+Chimes of the New Year.</p>
+
+<p>"It shall be a happy New Year to you, my darling, if
+my love can make it so," whispered Waldemar, as the
+musical bells clashed out in wild harmony under the winter
+stars.</p>
+
+<p>She looked up into his eyes. "I <i>must</i> be happy, since
+it will be passed with you. Do you remember, Waldemar,
+the night I saw you first, my telling you New Year's-day
+was my birthday, and wondering where you and I
+should spend the next? I liked you strangely from the
+first, but how little I foresaw that my whole life was to
+hang on yours!"</p>
+
+<p>"As little as I foresaw when, after heavy losses at Godolphin's,
+I watched the Old Year out in my chambers, a
+tired, ruined, hopeless, aimless man, with not one on
+whom I could rely for help or sympathy in my need, that
+I should stand here now, free, clear from debt, with all
+my old entanglements shaken off, my old scores wiped
+out, my darker errors forgotten, my worst enemy humbled,
+and my own future bright. Oh! Val&eacute;rie! Heaven
+bless you for the love that followed me into exile!"</p>
+
+<p>He drew her closer to him as he spoke, and as he felt
+the beating of the heart that was always true to him,
+and the soft caress of the lips that had always a smile for
+him, Falkenstein looked out over the wide woodland
+that called him master, glistening in the clear starlight,
+and as he listened to the <span class="smcap">Silver Chimes</span>&mdash;joyous herald
+of the New-born Year&mdash;he blessed in his inmost heart
+the <span class="smcap">Golden Fetters of Love</span>.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="sep1" />
+<hr class="sep2" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span></p>
+<h1>SLANDER AND SILLERY.</h1>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span></p>
+<hr class="sep3" />
+<hr class="sep4" />
+<h2><a name="SLANDER_AND_SILLERY" id="SLANDER_AND_SILLERY"></a>SLANDER AND SILLERY.</h2>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<h2>I.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE LION OF THE CHAUSS&Eacute;E D'ANTIN.</h3>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">Ma m&egrave;re est &agrave; Paris,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Mon p&egrave;re est &agrave; Versailles.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Et moi je suis ici.<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">Pour chanter sur la paille,<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">L'amour! L'amour!<br /></span>
+<span class="i4">La nuit comme le jour.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+
+<p>Humming this popular if not over-recherch&eacute; ditty, a
+man sat sketching in pastels, one morning, in his rooms
+at Num&eacute;ro 10, Rue des Mauvais Sujets, Chauss&eacute;e d'
+Antin,
+Paris.</p>
+
+<p>The band of the national guard, the marchands crying
+"Coco!" the charlatans puffing everything from elixirs
+to lead-pencils, the Empress and Mme. d'Alve passing in
+their carriage, the tramp of some Zouaves just returned
+from Algeria&mdash;nothing in the street below disturbed him;
+he went sketching on as if his life depended on the completion
+of the picture. He was a man about thirty-three,
+middle height, and eminently graceful. He was half
+Bohemian, half English, and the animation of the one
+nation and the hauteur of the other were by turns expressed
+on his chiselled features as his thoughts moved<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>
+with his pencil. The stamp of his good blood was on
+him; his face would have attracted and interested in
+ever so large a crowd. He was very pale, and there was
+a tired look on his wide, powerful forehead and in his
+long dark eyes, and a weary line or two about his handsome
+mouth, as if he had exhausted his youth very quickly;
+and, indeed, to see life as he had seen it <i>is</i> somewhat
+a fatiguing process, and apt to make one blas&eacute; before
+one's time.</p>
+
+<p>The rooms in which he sat were intensely comfortable,
+and very provocative to a quiet pipe and idleness.
+To be sure, if one judged his tastes by them, they were
+not probably, to use the popular jargon, "healthy," for
+they had nothing very domestic or John Halifaxish about
+them, and were certainly not calculated to gratify the
+eyes of maiden aunts and spinster sisters.</p>
+
+<p>There were fencing-foils, pistols, tobacco-boxes of every
+style and order, from ballet-girls to terriers' heads.
+There were three or four cockatoos and parrots on stands
+chattering bits of Quartier Latin songs, or imitating the
+cries in the street below. There were cards, dice-boxes,
+albums &agrave; rire, meerschaums, lorgnons, pink notes, no
+end of De Kock's and Lebrun's books, and all the etc&aelig;teras
+of chambres de gar&ccedil;on strewed about: and
+there were things, too&mdash;pictures, statuettes, fauteuils,
+and a breakfast-service of S&egrave;vres and silver&mdash;that Du
+Barry need not have scrupled to put in her "petite bon-bonni&egrave;re"
+at Luciennes.</p>
+
+<p>So busy was he sketching and singing</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"Messieurs les &eacute;tudiens<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Montez &aacute; la Chaumi&egrave;re!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>that he never heard a knock at his door, and he looked<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>
+up with an impatient frown on his white, broad forehead
+as a man entered <i>sans c&eacute;r&eacute;monie</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Mon Dieu! Ernest," cried his friend, "what the
+devil are you doing here with your pipe and your pastels,
+when I've been waiting at Tortoni's a good half-hour,
+and at last, out of patience, drove here to see what
+on earth had become of you?"</p>
+
+<p>"My dear fellow, I beg you a thousand pardons,"
+said Vaughan, lazily. "I was sketching this, and you
+and your horses went clean out of my head, I honestly
+confess."</p>
+
+<p>"And your breakfast too, it seems," said De Concressault,
+glancing at the table. "Is it Madame de M&eacute;lusine
+or the little Bluette whose portrait absorbs you so much?
+No, by Jove! it's a prettier woman than either of 'em.
+If she's like that, take me to see her this instant. What
+glorious gold hair! I adore your countrywomen when
+they've hair that color. Where did you get that face?
+Is she a duchess, or a danseuse, a little actress you're
+going to patronise, or a millionnaire you're going to
+marry?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can't tell you," laughed Vaughan. "I've not an
+idea who she may be. I saw her last evening coming
+out of the Fran&ccedil;ais, and picked up her bouquet for her
+as she was getting into her carriage. The face was
+young, the smile very pretty and bright, and, as they
+daguerreotyped themselves in my mind, I thought I
+might as well transfer them to paper before newer beauties
+chased them out of it."</p>
+
+<p>"Diable! and you don't know who she is? However,
+we'll soon find out. That gold hair mustn't be lost.
+But get your breakfast, pray, Ernest, and let us be off
+to poor Armand's sale."</p>
+
+<p>"That's the way we mourn our dead friends," said<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>
+Vaughan, with a sneer, pouring out his coffee. "Armand
+is jesting, laughing, and smoking with us one day, the
+next he's pitched out of his carriage going down to Asni&egrave;res,
+and all we think of is&mdash;that his horses are for sale.
+If I were found in the Morgue to-morrow, your first emotion,
+Emile, would be, 'Vaughan's De l'Orme will be
+sold. I must go and bid for it directly."</p>
+
+<p>De Concressault laughed as he looked up at a miniature
+of Marion de l'Orme, once taken for the Marquis
+of Gordon. "I fancy, mon gar&ccedil;on, there'll be too many
+sharks after all your possessions for me to stand any
+chance."</p>
+
+<p>"True enough," said Vaughan; "and I question if
+they'll wait till my death before they come down on 'em.
+But I don't look forward. I take life as it comes. Vogue
+la gal&egrave;re! At least, I've <i>lived</i>, not vegetated." And
+humming his refrain,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">"L'amour! l'amour!<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">La nuit comme le jour!"<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>he lounged down the stairs and drove to a sale in the
+Faubourg St. Germain, where one of his Paris chums, a
+virtuoso and connoisseur, had left endless <i>meubles</i> to be
+sold by his duns and knocked down to his friends.</p>
+
+<p>Vaughan was quite right; he <i>had</i> lived, and at a pretty
+good pace, too. When he came of age a tolerably
+good fortune awaited him, but it had not been long in
+his hands before he contrived to let it slip through
+them. He'd been brought up at Sainte Barbe, after being
+expelled from Rugby, knew all the best of the "jeunesse
+dor&eacute;e," and could not endure any place after Paris,
+where his life was as sparkling and brilliant as the foam
+off a glass of champagne. Wild and careless, high<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>
+spirited, and lavish in his Opera suppers, his <i>cabaret</i> dinners,
+his Trois Fr&egrave;res banquets, his lansquenet parties,
+his bouquets for baronnes, and his bracelets for ballerinas,
+Ernest gained his reputation as a <i>Lion</i>, and&mdash;ruined
+himself, too, poor old fellow!</p>
+
+<p>His place down in Surrey had mortgages thick on
+every inch of its lands, and the money that kept him
+going was borrowed from those modern Satans, money
+lenders, at the usually ruinous interest. "But still,"
+Ernest was wont to say, with great philosophy, "I've had
+ten years' swing of pleasure. Does every man get as
+much as that? And should I have been any happier if
+I'd been a good boy, and a country squire, sat on the
+bench, amused my mind with turnips, and married some
+bishop's daughter, who'd have marched me to church,
+forbidden cigars, and buried me in family boots?"</p>
+
+<p>Certainly that would <i>not</i> have been his line, and so, in
+natural horror at it, he dashed into a diametrically opposite
+one, and after the favor he had shown him from
+every handsome woman that drove through Longchamp,
+wore diamonds at the Tuileries, and supped with dominos
+noirs at bals d'Op&eacute;ra, and the favor he showed to cards,
+the <i>courses</i>, and the <i>coulisses</i>, few bishops would have
+imperilled their daughters' souls by setting them to hunt
+down this wicked <i>Lion</i>, especially as the poor <i>Lion</i> now
+wasn't worth the trapping. If he had been, there would
+have been hue and cry enough after him I don't doubt;
+but the Gordon Cummings of the beau sexe rarely hunt
+unless it's worth their while, and they can bring home
+splendid spoils to make their bosom friends mad with
+envy; and Ernest, despite his handsome face, his fashionable
+reputation, and the aroma of conquest that hung
+about him (they used to say he never wooed ever so
+negligently but he won), was assuredly neither an "eligible<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>
+speculation" nor a "marrying man," and was an
+object rather of terror to English mammas steering budding
+young ladies through the dangerous vortex of
+French society with a fierce chevaux de frise of British
+prejudices and a keen British eye to business. If Ernest
+was of no other use, however, he was invaluable to his
+uncles, aunts, and male cousins, as a sort of scapegoat
+and <i>&eacute;pouvantail</i>, to be held up on high to show the unwary
+what they would come to if they followed his steps.
+It was so pleasant to them to exult over his backslidings,
+and, cutting him mercilessly up into little bits, hold condemnatory
+sermons over every one of the pieces. "Dans
+l'adversit&eacute; de nos meilleurs amis, nous trouvons toujours
+quelque chose qui ne nous d&eacute;plait pas;" and Vaughan's
+friends, like the rest of us pharisees, dearly loved to
+glance at the publican (especially if he was handsomer,
+cleverer, or any way better than themselves), and thank
+God loudly that they were not such men as he. Ernest
+was a hardened sinner, however; he laughed, put the
+Channel between him and them, and went on his ways
+without thinking or caring for their animadversions.</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove! Emile," said he as they sat dining together
+at Leiter's, "I should like to find out my golden-haired
+sylphide. She was English, by her fair skin, and though
+I'm not very fond of my compatriotes, especially when
+they're abroad (I think touring John Bull detestable
+wrapped up in his treble plaid of reserve), still I should
+like to find her out just for simple curiosity. I assure
+you she'd the prettiest foot and ankle I ever saw, not
+excepting even Bluette's."</p>
+
+<p>"Ma foi! that's a good deal from <i>you</i>. She must be
+found, then. Voyons! shall we advertise in the <i>Moniteur</i>,
+employ the secret police, or call at all the hotels in person
+to say that you're quite ready to act out Souli&eacute;'s<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_231" id="Page_231">[Pg 231]</a></span>
+'Lion Amoureux,' if you can only discover the petite
+bourgeoise to play it with you?"</p>
+
+<p>Vaughan laughed as he drank his demi-tasse.</p>
+
+<p>"Lion amoureux! that's an anomaly; we're only in
+love just enough pour nous amuser; and of us Albin
+says, very rightly,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Si vous connaissiez quelques meilleurs,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Vous porteriez bient&ocirc;t cette &acirc;me ailleurs."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"Very well, then: if you don't know of anything better,
+let's hunt up this incognita. If she went to the
+Fran&ccedil;ais, she's most likely at the Od&eacute;on to-night," said
+De Concressault. "Shall we try?"</p>
+
+<p>"Allons!" said Vaughan, rising indolently, as he did
+most things. "But it's rather silly, I think; there are
+bright smiles and pretty feet enough in Paris without
+one's setting off on a wild-goose chase after them."</p>
+
+<p>They were playing the last act of "La Calomnie," as
+Vaughan and De Concressault took their places, put up
+their lorgnons, and looked round the house. He swore
+a few mental "Diables!" and "Sacr&eacute;s!" as his gaze fell
+on faces old or ugly, or too brunes or too blondes, or anything
+but what he wanted. At last, without moving his
+glass, he touched De Concressault's arm.</p>
+
+<p>"There she is, Emile, in the fourth from the centre, in
+a white opera cloak, with pink flowers in her hair."</p>
+
+<p>"I see her, mon ami," said Emile. "I found her out
+two seconds ago (see how well you sketch!) but I
+wouldn't spoil your pleasure in discovering her. Mon
+Dieu! Ernest, she's looking at you, and smiles as if she
+recognised you. Was there ever so lucky a Lauzun?"</p>
+
+<p>Vaughan could have laughed outright to see by the
+brightness of the girl's expression that she knew the
+saviour of her bouquet again, for though he was accustomed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 232]</a></span>
+to easy conquests, such naive interest in him at
+such short notice was something new to him.</p>
+
+<p>He didn't take his lorgnon off her again, and she was
+certainly worth the honor, with her soft, lustrous gold
+hair, the eyes that defy definition&mdash;black in some lights,
+violet in others&mdash;a wide-arched forehead, promising
+plenty of brains, and a rayonnante, animated, joyous
+expression, quite refreshing to anybody as bored and
+blas&eacute; as Vaughan and De Concressault. As soon as the
+last piece was over Vaughan slipped out of his loge, and
+took up his station at the entrance.</p>
+
+<p>He didn't wait in vain: the golden hair soon came, on
+the arm of a gentleman&mdash;middle aged, as Vaughan noticed
+with a sensation of satisfaction. She glanced up at
+him as she passed: he looked very handsome in the gas
+glare. Vaughan perhaps was too sensible a fellow to
+think of his pose, but even <i>we</i> have our weaknesses under
+certain circumstances, as well as the crinolines.
+Luckily for him, he chanced to have in his pocket a gold
+serpent bracelet he had bought that morning for some
+fair dame or demoiselle. He stopped her, and held it
+out to her.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon, mademoiselle," he said in French,
+"but I think you dropped this?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him with the sunniest of smiles as
+she answered, in a pure accent, "No monsieur, thank
+you, it does not belong to me."</p>
+
+<p>The middle-aged man glanced sideways at him with
+true British suspicion&mdash;I dare say a pickpocket, a Rouge,
+and Fieschi, were all mixed up in his mind as embodied
+in the graceful figure and bold glance of the <i>Lion</i>. He
+drew the girl on, looking much like a heavy cloud with a
+bright sun ray after it; but she half turned her head over
+her shoulder to give him a farewell smile, which Ernest
+returned with ten per cent. interest.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Anglais," said Emile, concisely.</p>
+
+<p>"Malheureusement," said Ernest as briefly, as he
+pushed his way into the air, and saw the gold hair vanish
+into her carriage. He went quickly up to the cocher.</p>
+
+<p>"O&ugrave; demeurent-ils, mon ami?" he whispered, slipping
+a five-franc piece into his hand.</p>
+
+<p>The man smiled. "A l'H&ocirc;tel de Londres, monsieur;
+No. 6, au premier."</p>
+
+<p>"The devil! pourquoir ne allez pas?" said an unmistakably
+English voice from the interior of the voiture. The
+man set off at a trot; Ernest sprang into his own trap.</p>
+
+<p>"Au Chateau Rouge! May as well go there, eh,
+Emile? What a deuced pity la chevelure dor&eacute;e is English!"</p>
+
+<p>"I wish she were a danseuse, an actress, a fleuriste&mdash;anything
+one could make his own introduction to. Confound
+it there's the 'heavy father,' I'm afraid, in the case, and
+some rigorous mamma, or vigilant <i>b&eacute;guine</i> of a governess:
+but, to judge by the young lady's smiles, she'll be easy
+game unless she's tremendously fenced in."</p>
+
+<p>With which consolatory reflection Vaughan leaned
+back and lighted a cheroot, <i>en route</i> to spend the night
+as he had spent most of them for the last ten years, till
+the fan had begun to be more bore than pleasure.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>II.</h2>
+
+<h3>NINA GORDON.</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Have you been to the H&ocirc;tel de Londres, Ernest?" said
+De Concressault, as Vaughan lounged into Tortoni's next
+day, where Emile and three or four other men were<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>
+drinking Seltzer and talking of how Cerisette had beaten
+Vivandi&egrave;re by a neck at Chantilly, or (the sport to which
+a Frenchman takes much more naturally) of how well
+Rivi&egrave;re played in the "Prix d'un Bouquet;" what a <i>belle
+taille</i> la De Servans had; and what a fool Senecterre had
+made of himself in the duel about Madame Viardot.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I have," said Vaughan. "The name is Gordon&mdash;general
+name enough in England. They were gone
+to the Expiatoire, the porti&egrave;re told me. There <i>is</i> the
+heavy father, as I feared, and a quasi-governess acting
+duenna; they're travelling with another family, whose
+name I could not hear: the woman said 'C'&eacute;tait beaucoup
+trop dur pour les l&egrave;vres.' I dare say they're some Brummagem
+people&mdash;some Fudge family or other&mdash;on their
+travels. Confound it!"</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Ernest," laughed De Concressault. "Some
+gold hair has bewitched him, and instead of finding it
+belongs to a danseuse, or a married woman, or a fleuriste
+of the Palais Royal, or something attainable, he finds it
+turn into an unapproachable English girl, with no end of
+outlying sentries round her, who'll fire at the first familiar
+approach."</p>
+
+<p>"It is a hard case," said De Kerroualle, a dashing fellow
+in one of the "R&eacute;giments de famille." "Never
+mind, mon ami; 'contre fortune bon c&#339;ur,' you know:
+it'll be more fun to devastate one of our countrymen's
+inviolate strongholds than to conquer where the white
+flag's already held out. Halloa! here's a compatriot of
+yours, I'd bet; look at his sanctified visage and stiff
+choker&mdash;a Church of England man, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"The devil!" muttered Vaughan, turning round;
+"deuce take him, it's my cousin Ruskinstone! What in
+the world does <i>he</i> do in Paris?"</p>
+
+<p>The man he spoke of was the Rev. Eusebius Ruskinstone,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>
+the Dean's Warden of the cathedral of Faithandgrace,
+a tall, thin young clerical of eight or nine-and-twenty,
+with goodness enough (it was generally supposed)
+in his little finger to make up for all Ernest's sins,
+scarlet though they were. He had just sat down and
+taken up the carte to blunder through "Potage au Duc
+de Malakoff," "Fricass&eacute;e de volaille &agrave; la Princesse Mathilde,"
+and all the rest of it, when his eye lit on his
+graceless cousin, and a vinegar asperity spread over his
+bland visage. Vaughan rose with a lazy grace, immensely
+bored within him: "My dear Ruskinstone, what an unanticipated
+pleasure. I never hoped Vanity Fair would
+have had power to lure <i>you</i> into its naughty peep-shows
+and roundabouts."</p>
+
+<p>The Rev. Eusebius reddened slightly; he had once
+stated strongly his opinion that poor Paris was Pandemonium.
+"How do you do?" he said, giving his cousin
+two fingers; "it is a long time since we saw you in England."</p>
+
+<p>"England doesn't want me," said Ernest, dryly. "I
+don't fancy I should be very welcome at Faithandgrace,
+should I? The dear Chapter would probably consign me
+to starvation for my skeptical notions, as Calvin did Castellio.
+But what <i>has</i> brought you to Paris? Are you
+come to fight the Jesuits in a conference, or to abjure the
+Wardenship and turn over to them?"</p>
+
+<p>Eusebius was shocked at the irreverent tone, but there
+was a satirical smile on his cousin's lips that he didn't
+care to provoke. "I am come," he said, stiffly, "partly
+for health, partly to collect materials for a work on the
+'Gurgoyles and Rose Mouldings of Medi&aelig;val Architecture,'
+and partly to oblige some friends of mine. Pardon
+me, here they come."</p>
+
+<p>Vaughan lifted his eyes, expecting nothing very delectable<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>
+in Ruskinstone's friends; to his astonishment they
+fell on his beauty of the Fran&ccedil;ais! with the outlying sentries
+of father, governess, and two other women, the
+Warden's maiden sisters, stiff, mani&eacute;r&eacute;es, and prudish,
+like too many Englishwomen. The young lady of the
+Fran&ccedil;ais was a curious contrast to them: she started a
+little as she saw Vaughan, and smiled brilliantly. On the
+spur of that smile Ernest greeted his cousins with a degree
+of <i>empressement</i> that they certainly wouldn't have
+been honored by without it. They were rather frightened
+at coming in actual contact with such a monster of iniquity
+as a Paris <i>Lion</i>, who, they'd heard, had out-Juan'd
+Don Juan, and gave him but a frigid welcome. Mr. Gordon
+had doubtless heard, too, of Vaughan's misdemeanors,
+for he looked stoical and acidulated as he bowed. But
+the young girl's eyes reconciled Ernest to all the rest, as
+she frankly returned a look with which he was wont to
+win his way through women's hearts, 'midst the hum of
+ball rooms, in the soft t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te in boudoirs, and over
+the sparkling Sillery of <i>petits soupers</i>. So, for the sake of
+his new quarry, he disregarded the cold looks of the
+others, and made himself so charming, that nobody could
+withstand the fascination of his manner till their dinner
+was served, and then, telling his cousins he would do himself
+the pleasure of calling on them the next day, he left
+the caf&eacute; to drive over to Gentilly, to inspect a grey colt
+of De Kerroualle's.</p>
+
+<p>"La chevelure dor&eacute;e is quite as pretty by daylight,
+Ernest," said De Concressault. "Bon dieu! it is such
+a relief to see eyes that are not tinted, and a skin whose
+pink and white is not born from the mysterious rites of
+the toilet."</p>
+
+<p>Vaughan nodded, with his Manilla between his teeth.</p>
+
+<p>"That cousin of yours is queer style, mon gar&ccedil;on,"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>
+said Kerroualle. "How some of those islanders contrive
+to iron themselves into the stiffness and flatness they do,
+is to me the profoundest enigma. But what Church of
+England meaning lies hid in his coat-tails? They are,
+for all the world, like our r&eacute;v&eacute;rends p&egrave;res! What is it
+for?"</p>
+
+<p>"High Church. Next door shop to yours, you know.
+Our ecclesiastics are given to balancing themselves on a
+tight rope between their 'mother' and their 'sister,' till
+they tumble over into their sister's open arms&mdash;the Catholics
+say into salvation, the Protestants into damnation;
+into neither, I myself opine, poor simpletons. Ruskinstone
+is fearfully architectural. The sole things he'll see
+here will be fa&ccedil;ades, gurgoyles, and clerestories, and his
+soul knows no warmer loves than 'stone dolls,' as Newton
+calls them. I say, Gaston, what do you think of <i>my</i>
+love of the Fran&ccedil;ais; isn't she <i>chic</i>, isn't she mignonne,
+isn't she spirituelle?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," assented De Kerroualle, "prettier than either
+Bluette or Madame de M&eacute;lusine would allow, or&mdash;relish."</p>
+
+<p>Ernest frowned. "I've done with Bluette; she's a
+pretty face, but&mdash;ah, bah! one can't amuse oneself always
+with a little paysanne, for she's nothing better, after all;
+and I'm half afraid the M&eacute;lusine begins to bore me."</p>
+
+<p>"Better not tell her so, mon ami," said De Kerroualle;
+"she'd be a nasty enemy."</p>
+
+<p>"Pooh! a woman like that loves and forgets."</p>
+
+<p>"Sans doute; but they also sometimes revenge. Poor
+little Bluette you may safely turn over; but Madame la
+Baronne won't so easily be jilted."</p>
+
+<p>Vaughan laughed. "Oh, I'm not going to break her
+heart. Don't you know, Gaston, 'on a bien de la peine
+&agrave; rompre, m&ecirc;me quand on ne s'aime plus."</p>
+
+<p>"I shouldn't have said you found it so," smiled De<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span>
+Concressault, "for you change your loves as you change
+your gloves. La chevelure dor&eacute;e will be the next, eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Poor little thing!" said Ernest, bitterly. "I wish
+her a better fate."</p>
+
+<p>He went to call on la chevelure dor&eacute;e, nevertheless,
+the morning after, and found her in the salon alone,
+greatly to his surprise and pleasure. Nina Gordon <i>was</i>
+pretty <i>even</i> in the morning&mdash;as Byron says&mdash;and she was
+much more, she was fascinating, and as perfectly demonstrative
+and natural as any peasant girl out of the meadows
+of Arles, ignorant of the magic words toilette, cosm&eacute;tique,
+and crinoline.</p>
+
+<p>She received him with evident pleasure and perfect unreserve,
+which even this daring and skeptical <i>Lion</i> could
+not twist or contort into boldness, and began to talk fast
+and gaily.</p>
+
+<p>"Do I like Paris?" she said, in answer to his question.
+"Oh yes; or at least I should, if I could see it differently.
+I detest sight-seeing, crowding one's brains with
+pictures, statues, palaces, Holy Families jostling Polinchinelle,
+races, mixing up with grand masses, Versailles,
+clouding St. Cloud&mdash;the Trianon rattled through in five
+minutes&mdash;all in inextricable muddle. <i>I</i> should like to
+see Paris at leisure, with some one with whom I had a
+'rapport,' my thoughts undisturbed, and my historical
+associations fresh and fervent."</p>
+
+<p>"I wish I were honored with the office of your guide,"
+said Ernest, smiling. "Do you think you would have a
+'rapport' with me?"</p>
+
+<p>She smiled in return. "Yes, I think I should. I
+cannot tell why. But as it is, my warmest souvenir of
+Cond&eacute; is chilled by the offer of an ice, and my tenderest
+thought of Louise de la Valli&egrave;re is shivered with the
+suggestion of dinner."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Vaughan laughed. "Bravo!" thought he. "Thank
+God this is no tame English icicle. I would give much,"
+he said, "to be able to take my cousin's place, and show
+you Paris. We would have no such vulgar gastronomical
+interruptions; we would go through it all perfectly.
+I would make you hear the very whispers with which La
+Valli&egrave;re, under the old oaks of St. Germain, unknowingly,
+told her love to Louis. In the forest glades of St. Cloud
+you should see Cinq-Mars and the Royal Hunt riding
+out in the <i>chasse de nuit</i>; in the gloomy walls of the
+prisons you should hear Andr&eacute; Ch&eacute;nier reciting his last
+verses, and see Egalit&eacute; completing his last toilet. The
+glittering 'Cotillons' on the terraces of Versailles, the
+fierce canaille surging through the salons of the Tuileries,
+the Templars dying in the green meadows at the back of
+St. Antoine&mdash;they should all rise up for you under my
+incantations."</p>
+
+<p>Positively Ernest, bored and blas&eacute;, accustomed to look
+at Paris through the gas-lights of his <i>Lion's</i> life, warmed
+into romance to please the eyes that now beamed upon
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! that would be delightful," said the girl, her eyes
+sparkling. "Mr. Ruskinstone, you know, is terrible to
+me, for he goes about with 'Ruskin' in one hand, 'Murray'
+in the other, and a Phrase-book or two in his pocket
+(of course he wants it, as he's a 'classical scholar'), and
+no matter whatever associations cling around a place,
+only looks at it in regard to its architectural points. I
+beg your pardon," she said, interrupting herself with a
+blush, "I forgot he was your cousin; but really that constant
+cold stone does tease me so."</p>
+
+<p>At that moment the heavy father, as Ernest irreverently
+styled the tall, pompous head of one of the first banks
+in London, who was worth a million if he was worth a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>
+sou, entered, and the Rev. Eusebius after him, who had
+been spending a lively morning taking notes among the
+catacombs. He was prepared to be as cold as a refrigerator,
+and the banker to follow his example, at finding
+this <i>b&ecirc;te noire</i> of the Chauss&eacute;e d'Antin t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te with
+Nina. But Ernest had a sort of haughty high breeding
+and careless dignity which warned people off from any
+liberties with him; and Gordon remembered that he
+knew Paris and its <i>haute vol&eacute;e</i> so well that he might be a
+useful acquaintance if kept at arm's length from Nina,
+and afterwards dropped. Unlucky man! he actually
+thought his weak muscles were strong enough to cope
+with a <i>Lion's</i>!</p>
+
+<p>Vaughan took his leave, after offering his box at the
+Op&eacute;ra-Comique to Mr. Gordon, and drove to the Jockey
+Club, pondering much on this new species of the <i>beau
+sexe</i>. He was too used to women not to know at a glance
+that she had nothing bold about her, and yet he was too
+skeptical to credit that a girl could possibly exist who
+was neither a coquette nor a prude. As soon as the door
+closed on him his friends began to open their batteries of
+scandal.</p>
+
+<p>"How sad it is to see life wasted as my cousin wastes
+his," said the Warden, balancing a paper-knife thoughtfully,
+with a depressed air; "frittered away on mere
+trifles, as valuless and empty as soap-bubbles, but not,
+alas! so innocent."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you mean?" Nina asked, quickly.</p>
+
+<p>"What do I mean, Miss Gordon?" repeated Eusebius,
+reproachfully; "what can I mean but the idle whirl of
+gaiety, the vitiating pleasures, the debts and the vices
+which are to be laid at poor Ernest's door. Ever since
+we were boys together, and he was expelled from Rugby<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>
+for going to Coventry fair and staying there all night, he
+has been going rapidly down the road to ruin."</p>
+
+<p>"He looks very comfortable in his descent," smiled the
+young lady. "Pray why, after all, shouldn't horses,
+operas, and Manillas, be as legitimate objects to set one's
+affections upon as Norman arches and Gregorian chants?
+He has his dissipations, you have yours. Chacun &agrave; son
+go&ucirc;t!"</p>
+
+<p>The Warden had his reasons for conciliating the young
+heiress, so he made a feeble effort to smile. "You know
+as well as I that you do not think what you say, Miss
+Gordon. Were it merely Vaughan's tastes that were in
+fault it would not be of such fearful consequence, but
+unfortunately it is his principles."</p>
+
+<p>"He is utterly without any," said Miss Selina Ruskinstone,
+who, ten years before, had been deeply and hopelessly
+in love with Ernest, and never forgave him for
+not reciprocating the passion.</p>
+
+<p>"He is a skeptic, a gambler, a spendthrift; and a more
+heartlessless flirt never lived," averred Miss Augusta,
+who hated the whole of Ernest's sex&mdash;even the Chapter&mdash;<i>pour
+cause</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Gentlemen can't help seeming flirts sometimes, some
+women pay such attention to them," said Nina, with a
+mischievous laugh. "Poor Mr. Vaughn! I hope he's
+not as black as he is painted. His physiognomy tells a
+different tale; he is just my ideal of 'Ernest Maltravers.'
+How kind his eyes are; have you ever looked into them,
+Selina?"</p>
+
+<p>Miss Ruskinstone gave an angry sneer, vouchsafing no
+other response.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear Nina, how foolishly you talk, about looking
+into a young man's eyes," frowned her father. "I am
+surprised to hear you."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Her own eyes opened in astonishment. "Why mayn't
+I look at them? It is by the eyes that, like a dog, I
+know whom to like and whom to avoid."</p>
+
+<p>"And pray does your prescience guide you to see a
+saint in a ruined <i>Lion</i> of the Chauss&eacute;e d'Antin?" sneered
+Selina, with another contemptuous sniff.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a saint. I'm not good enough to appreciate the
+race," laughed Nina. "But I do not believe your
+cousin to be all you paint him; or, at least, if circumstances
+have led him into extravagance, I have a conviction
+that he has a warm heart and a noble character au
+fond."</p>
+
+<p>"We will hope so," said the Warden, meekly, with an
+expression which plainly said how vain a hope it was.</p>
+
+<p>"I think we have wasted a great deal too much conversation
+on a thankless subject," said Selina, with asperity.
+"Don't you think it time, Mr. Gordon, for us to go
+to the Louvre?"</p>
+
+<p>That day, as they were driving along the Boulevards,
+they passed Ernest with Bluette in his carriage going to
+the Pr&eacute; Catalan: they all knew her, from having seen
+her play at the Od&eacute;on. Selina and Augusta turned down
+their mouths, and turned up their eyes. Gordon pulled
+up his collar, and looked a Brutus in spectacles. Nina
+colored, and looked vexed. Triumph glittered in Eusebius's
+meek eyes, but he sighed a pastor's sigh over a lost
+soul.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>III.</h2>
+
+<h3>"LE LION AMOUREUX."</h3>
+
+
+<p>The morning after, as they were going into the Exposition
+des Beaux Arts, they met Vaughan; and no ghost<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>
+would have been more unwelcome to the Warden than
+the distingu&eacute; figure of his fashionable cousin. Nina was
+the only one who looked pleased to recognise him, and
+she, as she returned his smile, forgot that the evening
+before it had been given to Bluette.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you coming in too?" she asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I was not, but I will with pleasure," said Ernest.
+And into the Exhibition with them he went, to Ruskinstone's
+wrath and Gordon's annoyance.</p>
+
+<p>Vaughan was a connoisseur in art. The Warden knew
+no more than what he took verbatim from the god of his
+idolatry, Mr. John Ruskin. It was very natural that
+Nina should listen to the friend of Ingres and Vernet instead
+of to the second-hand worshipper of Turner.
+Vaughan, by instinct, dropped his customary tone of
+compliment&mdash;compliment he never used to women he
+delighted to honor&mdash;and talked so charmingly, that Nina
+utterly forgot the luckless Eusebius, and started when a
+low, sweet voice said, close beside her, "What, Ernest,
+you here?"</p>
+
+<p>She turned, and saw a woman about eight-and-twenty,
+dressed in perfection of taste, with an exquisite figure,
+and a face of brunette beauty; the rouge most undiscoverable,
+and the eyes artistically tinted to make them
+look larger, which, Heaven knows, was needless. She
+darted a quick look at Vaughan's companion, which Nina
+gave back with a dash of hauteur. A shade came over
+his face as he answered her greeting.</p>
+
+<p>"Will you not introduce me to your friend?" said the
+new comer. "She is of your nation, I fancy, and you
+know I am ent&ecirc;t&eacute;e of everything English."</p>
+
+<p>Ernest looked rather gloomy at the compliment, but
+turning to Nina, begged to introduce her to Madame de
+M&eacute;lusine. The gay, handsome baronne, taking in all<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>
+the English girl's points as rapidly as a groom at Tattersall's
+does a two-year-old's, was chatting volubly to Nina,
+when the others came up. Gordon, though wont to
+boast that he belonged to the aristocracy of money, was
+always ready to fall in the dust before the noblesse of
+blood, and was gratified at the introduction, remembering
+to have read in the <i>Moniteur</i> the name of De M&eacute;lusine
+at the ball at the Tuileries. And the widow was very
+charming even to the professedly stoical eyes of a Brutus
+of sixty-two. She soon floated off, however, with her
+party, giving Vaughan a gay "A ce soir!" and requesting
+to be allowed the honor of calling on the Gordons.</p>
+
+<p>"Is she a great friend of yours?" asked Nina, when
+she and he were a little in advance of the others.</p>
+
+<p>"I have known her some time."</p>
+
+<p>"And you are very intimate, I suppose, as she called
+you by your Christian name?"</p>
+
+<p>He smiled a smile that puzzled Nina. "Oh! we soon
+get familiar here!"</p>
+
+<p>"Where are you going to see her again this evening?"
+she persevered, playing with her parasol fringe.</p>
+
+<p>"At her own house&mdash;a house that will charm you. By
+the way, it once belonged to Bussy Rabutin, and it has
+all Louis Quatorze furniture."</p>
+
+<p>"Is it a dinner?&mdash;a ball?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, an Opera supper&mdash;she is famed for her Sillery
+and her mots. Ten to one I shall not go; what amuses
+one once palls with repetition."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't understand that," said Nina, quickly; "what
+I like, I like pour toujours."</p>
+
+<p>"Pauvre enfant! you little know life," muttered
+Ernest. "Ah! Miss Gordon, you are at the happy age
+when one can believe in the feelings and friendships, and
+all the charming little romances of existence. But I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>
+have passed it, and so that I am amused for a moment,
+so that something takes time off my hands, I look no
+further, and expect no more. I know well enough the
+champagne will cease to sparkle, but I drink it while it
+foams, and don't trouble myself to lament over it.
+Qu'importe? when one bottle's empty, there is another!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! it is such women as Madame de M&eacute;lusine who
+have taught you that doctrine," cried Nina, with an energy
+that rather startled Ernest, though his nerves were as
+strong as any man's in Paris. "My romances, as you
+term them, still I believe sleep in your heart, but the
+world you live in has stifled them. Do you think amusement
+will always be enough for you?&mdash;do you think you
+will never want something better than your empty
+champagne foam?"</p>
+
+<p>"I hope I shall not, mademoiselle," said Vaughan,
+bitterly, "for I am certain I do not believe in it, and am
+quite sure I should never get it. Leave me to the roses
+of my Triteric&aelig;; they are all I shall ever enjoy, and they,
+at the best, are withered."</p>
+
+<p>"Nina, love," interrupted Selina, coming up with much
+amiability, "I was <i>obliged</i> to come and tell you not to be
+<i>quite</i> so energetic. All the people in the room are looking
+at you."</p>
+
+<p>"I dare say they are," said Vaughan, calmly. "It is
+not often the Parisians have the pleasure of seeing
+beauty unaffected, and fascinations careless of their own
+charms. Nature, Selina, is unhappily as rare one side
+the Channel as the other, and we men appreciate it when
+we do see it."</p>
+
+<p>When Vaughan parted from them soon after, he swore
+at himself for three things. First, for having driven
+Bluette, en plein jour, through the Boulevards, though
+he had driven Bluette, and such as Bluette, a thousand<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>
+times before; secondly, for having been so weak as to
+introduce Madame de M&eacute;lusine to the Gordons; and,
+thirdly, for having&mdash;he the thorough-paced <i>Lion</i>, whose
+manual was Rochefoucauld, and tutor in love, De Kock&mdash;actually
+talked romance as if he were Werter or Paul
+Flemming, or some other sentimental simpleton.</p>
+
+<p>Vaughan, to his great disgust, felt a fit of blue devils
+stealing on him, hurled one or two rose notes waiting for
+him into the fire with an oath, smoked half a dozen Manillas
+fiercely, and then, to get excitement, went to a dinner
+at the Rocher de Cancale, played &eacute;cart&eacute; with a beau
+joueur, went to an Opera supper&mdash;<i>not</i> to the De M&eacute;lusine's&mdash;then
+to Mabille and came home at seven in the
+morning after a night such as would have raised every
+hair off Brutus's head, given a triumphant glitter to the
+Warden's small blue eyes, and possibly even staggered
+the hot faith of his young champion. Pauline de M&eacute;lusine
+was as good as her word&mdash;she did call on the Gordons&mdash;and
+Brutus, stoic though he was, was well pleased;
+for the baronne, though her nobility only dated from the
+Restoration, and was not received by the exclusive Legitimists
+of the old Faubourg St. Germain, had a very
+pleasant set of her own, and figured among the nouvelle
+noblesse and bourgeois d&eacute;cor&eacute;s who fill the vacant places
+of the De Rochefoucauld, the De Rohan, and the Montmorency,
+in the "imperial" salons of the Tuileries, where
+once the noblest blood in Europe was gathered.</p>
+
+<p>"It is painful to me to frequent Ernest's society," the
+Warden was wont to say, "for every word he utters
+impresses me but more sadly with the conviction of his
+lost state. But we are commanded to be in the world
+though not of it, and, if I shun him, how can I hope to
+benefit him?"</p>
+
+<p>"True; and, as your cousin, it would scarcely be<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>
+charitable to avoid him entirely, terrible as we know his
+habits to be. But there is no necessity to be too intimate,
+and I do not wish Nina to be too much with him,"
+the banker was accustomed to answer.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Anglice</i>, Vaughan gets us good introductions, and
+makes Paris pleasant to us; we'll use him while we want
+him: when we don't, we will give him his cong&eacute;."</p>
+
+<p>That's the reading of most of our dear friends' compliments
+and caresses, isn't it?</p>
+
+<p>Vaughan knew perfectly well that they would like to
+make a cat's-paw of him, and was the last man likely to
+play that simple and certainly not agreeable r&ocirc;le unless
+it suited him. But he had reasons of his own for forcing
+Gordon to be civil and obliged to him, despite the prejudices
+of that English, and therefore, of course, opinionated
+gentleman. It amused him to mortify Eusebius,
+whom he saw at a glance was bewitched with the prospect
+of Nina's <i>dot</i>, and it amused him very much to see
+Nina's joyous laughter as he leaned over her chair at the
+Op&eacute;ra Comique, to hear her animated satire on Madame
+de M&eacute;lusine, for whom, knowing nothing of her, the
+young lady had conceived hot aversion, and to listen to
+her enthusiasm when she poured out to him her vivid
+imaginings.</p>
+
+<p>Gradually the caf&eacute;s, and the Boulevards, and the boudoirs
+missed Ernest while he accompanied Nina through
+the glades of St. Cloud, or down the Seine to Asni&egrave;res,
+or up the slopes of P&egrave;re la Chaise, in his new pursuit;
+and often at night he would leave the coulisses, or a
+lansquenet, or the gas-lights of the Maison Dor&eacute;e, and
+the Closerie des Lilas, to watch her thorough enjoyment
+of a vaudeville, her fervent feeling in an opera, or to
+waltz with her at a ball, and note her glad recognition of
+him.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>To this girl, Ernest opened his heart and mind as he&mdash;being
+a reserved, proud, and skeptical man&mdash;had never
+done to any one; there was a sympathy and confidence
+between them, and she learned much of his inner nature
+as she talked to him soft and low under the forest trees
+of Fontainebleau, such talk as could not be heard in
+Bluette's boudoir, under the wax-lights of the Quartier
+Br&eacute;da, or in the flow of the Sillery at la M&eacute;lusine's
+soupers. All this was new to the tired <i>Lion</i>, and amused
+him immensely. La chevelure dor&eacute;e was twisting the
+golden meshes of its net round him, as De Concressault
+told him one day.</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense," said Ernest; "have I not two loves already
+on my hands more than I want?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dethrone them, and promote la petite."</p>
+
+<p>Vaughan turned on his friend with his eyes flashing.</p>
+
+<p>"Bon Dieu! do you take her for a ballet-girl or a
+grisette?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, if you don't like that, marry her then, mon
+cher. You will satisfy your fancy, and get cinquante
+mille francs de rente&mdash;at a sacrifice, of course; but, que
+veux-tu? There is no medal without its reverse, though
+a 'lion mari&eacute;' is certainly an anomaly, an absurdity, and
+an intense pity."</p>
+
+<p>"Tais-toi," said Ernest, impatiently; "tu es fou!
+Caught in the toils of a wretched intrigante, in the power
+of any tailor in the Rue Vivienne, any jeweller in the
+Palais Royal, my money spent on follies, my life wasted
+in play, the turf, and worthless women, I have much indeed
+to offer to a young girl who has wealth, beauty,
+genius, and heart!"</p>
+
+<p>"All the more reason why you should make a good
+coup," said Emile, calmly, after listening with pitying
+surprise to his friend in his new mood. "You have a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>
+handsome face, a fashionable reputation, and a good
+name. Bah! you can do anything. As for your life, all
+women like a mauvais sujet, and unless the De M&eacute;lusine
+turn out a Brinvilliers, I don't see what you have to
+fear."</p>
+
+<p>"When I want your counsel, Emile, I will ask it," said
+Vaughan, shortly; "but, as I have no intention of going
+in for the prize, there is no need for you to bet on the
+chance of the throw."</p>
+
+<p>"Comme tu veux!" said the Parisian, shrugging his
+shoulders. "That homme de paille, your priestly cousin,
+will take her back to the English fogs, and make her a
+much better husband than you'd ever be, mon gar&ccedil;on."</p>
+
+<p>Vaughan moved restlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"The idiot! if I thought so&mdash;&mdash; The devil take you,
+Emile! why do you talk of such things?"</p>
+
+<p>At that minute Nina was sitting by one of the windows
+of their hotel, watching for Ernest, with a bouquet he
+had sent her on a table by her side; and the Rev. Eusebius
+was talking in a very low tone to her father. She
+caught a few words. "Last night&mdash;Vaughan at the
+Fr&egrave;res Proven&ccedil;aux&mdash;a souper au cabinet&mdash;Mademoiselle
+C&eacute;line, premi&egrave;re danseuse&mdash;quite terrible," &amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p>Nina flushed scarlet, and turned round. "If you
+blame your cousin, Mr. Ruskinstone, why were you there
+yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>The Warden colored too. With him, as with a good
+many, foreign air relaxed the severity of the Decalogue,
+and what was sin at home, where everybody knew it, was
+none at all abroad&mdash;under the rose. Some dear pharisees
+will not endanger their souls by a carpet-dance in
+England, but if a little bird followed them in their holiday
+across the Channel, it might chance to see them disporting
+under a domino noir.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I had been," he stammered, "to see, as you know, a
+beautiful specimen of the arcboutant in a ruined chapel
+of the Carm&eacute;lites, some miles down the Seine. It was
+very late, and I was very tired, so turned into the Fr&egrave;res
+Proven&ccedil;aux to take some little refreshment, and I there
+saw my unhappy cousin in society which <i>ought</i>, Miss Gordon,
+to disqualify him for yours. It is very painful to
+me to mention such things to you. I never thought you
+overheard&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Then, if it is very painful to you," Nina burst in, impetuously,
+her <i>bouche de rose</i>, as De Kerroualle called it,
+curving haughtily, "why are you ceaselessly raking up
+every possible bit of scandal that you can against your
+cousin? His life does not clash with yours, his acts do
+not matter to you, his extravagance does not rob you. I
+used to fancy charity should cover a multitude of sins,
+but it seems to me that, now-a-days, clergymen, like Dr.
+Watt's naughty dogs, only delight to bark and bite."</p>
+
+<p>"You are cruelly unjust," answered the Warden, in
+those smooth tones that irritate one much more than
+"hard swearing." "I have no other wish than Christian
+kindness to poor Ernest. If, in my place as pastor, I
+justly condemn his errors and vices, it is only through a
+loving desire to wean him from his downward course."</p>
+
+<p>"Your love is singularly vindictive," said his vehement
+young opponent, her cheeks hot and her eyes bright.
+"No good was ever yet done to a man by proclaiming
+his faults right and left. <i>I</i> should like you much better,
+Mr. Ruskinstone, if you said, candidly, I don't like my
+cousin, and I have never forgiven him for thrashing me
+at Rugby, and playing football better than I did."</p>
+
+<p>Eusebius winced at this little touch up of his bygone
+years, but he smiled a benign, superior, pitying smile.
+"Such petitesses, I thank Heaven, are utterly beneath<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>
+me, and I should have fancied Miss Gordon was too generous
+to suppose them. God forbid that I should envy
+poor Vaughan his dazzling qualities. I sorrow over him
+as a relative and a precious human soul, but as a minister
+of our holy Church I neither can, nor will, countenance
+his gross violations of all her divinest laws."
+With which peroration the Warden, with a sigh, took up
+a work on "The Early English Piscini and Aspersoria,"
+and became immersed therein.</p>
+
+<p>"Poor Mr. Vaughan!" cried Nina, impatiently. "Probably
+he is too wise to concern himself about what people
+buzz in his absence, or else he need be cased in mail to
+avoid being stung to death with the musquito bites of
+scandal."</p>
+
+<p>Gordon came down on her with his heavy artillery.
+"Silence, Nina! you do not know what you are defending.
+I fear that no slander can darken Mr. Vaughan's
+character more than he merits."</p>
+
+<p>"A gambler&mdash;a rou&eacute;&mdash;a lover of married woman, of
+dancing-girls," murmured Eusebius, in an aside, meant,
+like those on the stage, to tell killingly with the audience.</p>
+
+<p>Nina flushed as scarlet as the camellias in her bouquet,
+and put up her head with a haughty gesture. "Here
+comes the subject of your vituperation, Mr. Ruskinstone,
+so you can repeat your denunciations, and favor
+him with a sermon in person&mdash;unless, indeed, the secular
+recollections of Rugby intimidate the religious arm."</p>
+
+<p>I fear something as irreverent as "Little devil!" rose
+to the Warden's pious lips as he flashed a fierce glance
+at her from his pale-blue eyes, for he loved not her, but
+the splendid <i>dot</i> which the banker was sure to pay down
+if his son-in-law were to his taste. He caught his cousin's
+glance as he came into the salons, and in the superb
+scorn gleaming in Ernest's dark eyes, Eusebius saw that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span>
+they were not merely enemies, but&mdash;rivals: a Warden
+with Church principles, all the cardinal virtues, strict
+morality, and money; and a <i>Lion</i> with Paris principles
+(if any), great fascinations, debts, entanglements, and
+an empty purse. Which will win, with Nina for the cup
+and Gordon for the umpire?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>IV.</h2>
+
+<h3>MISCHIEF.</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Qui cherchez-vous, petite?"</p>
+
+<p>The speaker was la M&eacute;lusine, and the hearer was Nina
+who considerably resented the half-patronising, half
+mocking, yet intensely amiable manner the widow chose
+to assume towards her. Gordon was stricken with warm
+admiration of madame, and never inquired into <i>her</i> morality,
+only too pleased when she condescended to talk to
+or invite him. They had met at a soir&eacute;e at some intimate
+friends of Vaughan's in the Champs Elys&eacute;es.
+(Ernest was a favorite wherever he went, and the good-natured
+French people at once took up his relatives to
+please him.) He was not there himself, but the baronne's
+quick eyes soon caught and construed her restless
+glances through the crowded rooms.</p>
+
+<p>"Je ne cherche personne, madame," said Nina, haughtily.
+Dressed simply in white tulle, with the most exquisite
+flowers to be had out of the Palais Royal in the famous
+golden hair, which gleamed in the gaslight like
+sunshine, she aroused the serpent which lay hid in the
+roses of madame's smiles.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Pauline laughed softly, and flirted her fan. "Nay,
+nay, mignonne, those soft eyes are seeking some one.
+Who is it? Ah! it is that m&eacute;chant Monsieur Vaughan
+n'est-ce pas? He is very handsome, certainly, but</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">On dit an village<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Qu'Argire est volage."<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>"Madame's own thoughts possibly suggest the supposition
+of mine," said Nina, coldly.</p>
+
+<p>"Comme ces Anglaises sont impolies," thought the
+baronne. "No, indeed," she said, laughing carelessly,
+"I know Ernest too well to let my thoughts dwell on
+him. He is charming to talk to, to waltz with, to flirt
+with, but from anything further Dieu nous garde! Lauzun
+himself were not more dangerous or more unstable."</p>
+
+<p>"You speak as bitterly, madame, as if you had suffered
+from the fickleness," said Nina, with a contemptuous
+curl of her soft lips. Sweet temper as she was, she
+could thrust a spear in her enemy's side when she
+liked.</p>
+
+<p>Madame's eyes glittered like a rattlesnake's. Nina's
+chance ball shot home. But madame was a woman of
+the world, and could mask her batteries with a skill of
+which Nina, with her impetuous <i>abandon</i>, was incapable.
+She smiled very sweetly, as she answered, "No, petite
+I have unhappily seen too much of the world not to
+know that we must never put our trust in those charming
+mauvais sujets. At your age, I dare say I should
+not have been proof against your countryman's fascinations,
+but now, I know just how much his fondest vows
+are worth, and I have been deaf to them all, for I would
+not let my heart mislead me against my reason and my
+conscience. Ah, petite! you little guess what the traitor
+word 'love' means here, in Paris. We women grow<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>
+accustomed to our fate, but the lesson is hard sometimes."</p>
+
+<p>"You have been reading 'Mes Confidences,' lately?"
+asked Nina, with a sarcastic flash of her brilliant eyes.</p>
+
+<p>"How cruel! Do you suppose I can have no <i>&eacute;motions</i>
+except I learn them second-hand through Lamartine or
+Delphine Gay? You are very satirical, Miss Gordon&mdash;&mdash;How
+strange!" said the baronne, interrupting herself;
+"your bouquet is the fac-simile of mine! Look! De
+Kerroualle sent you that I fancy? You know he raffoles
+of you. I was very silly to use mine, but Mr. Vaughan
+sent me such a pretty note with it, that I had not the
+resolution to disappoint him. Poor Ernest!" And
+Madame sighed softly, as if bewailing in her tender heart
+the woes her obduracy caused. The blood flamed up in
+Nina's cheeks, and her hand clenched hard on Ernest's
+flowers: they <i>were</i> the fac-similes of the widow's; delicate
+pink blossoms, mixed with white azalias. "Is he
+here to-night, do you know?" madame continued. "I
+dare say not; he is behind the coulisses, most likely.
+C&eacute;line, the new danseuse from the Fenice, makes her
+d&eacute;but to-night. Here comes poor Gaston to petition for
+a valse. Be kind to him, pray."</p>
+
+<p>She herself went off to the ball-room, and the effect of
+her exordium was to make Nina very disagreeable to
+poor De Kerroualle, whom she really liked, and who was
+<i>ent&ecirc;t&eacute;</i> about her. Not long afterwards, Nina saw in the
+distance Vaughan's haughty head and powerful brow,
+and her silly little heart beat as quick as a pigeon's just
+caught in the trap: he was talking to the widow.</p>
+
+<p>"Look at our young English friend," Pauline was
+saying, "how she is flirting with Gaston, and De Lafitolle,
+and De Concressault. Certainly, when your Englishwomen
+do coquet, they go further than any of us."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_255" id="Page_255">[Pg 255]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Est-ce possible?" said Ernest, raising his eyebrows.</p>
+
+<p>"M&eacute;chant!" cried madame, with a chastising blow of
+her fan. "But, do you know, I admire the petite very
+much. I believe all really beautiful women had that
+rare golden hair of hers&mdash;Lucrezia Borgia (I could never
+bear Grisi as <i>Lucrezia</i>, for that very reason). La Cenci,
+the Duchess of Portsmouth, &AElig;none&mdash;and Helen, I am
+sure, netted Paris with those gold threads. Don't you
+think it is very lovely?"</p>
+
+<p>"I do, indeed," said Vaughan, with unconscious
+warmth.</p>
+
+<p>Madame laughed gaily, but there was a disagreeable
+glitter in her eye. "What, fickle already? Ah well, I
+give you full leave."</p>
+
+<p>"And example, madame," said Ernest, as he bowed
+and left her side, glad to have struck the first blow of
+his freedom from this handsome tyrant, who was as
+capricious and exacting as she was clever and captivating.
+But fetters made of fairer roses were over Ernest
+now, and he never bethought himself of the probable
+vengeance of that bitterest foe, a woman who is piqued.</p>
+
+<p>"Tout beau!" thought Pauline, as she saw him waltzing
+with Nina. "Mais je vous donnerai encore l'&eacute;chec
+et mat, mon brave joueur."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you give Madame de M&eacute;lusine the bouquet she
+carries this evening?" asked Nina, as he whirled her
+round.</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Ernest, astonished. "Why do you ask?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because she said you did," answered Nina, never
+accustomed to conceal anything; "and, besides, it is
+exactly like mine."</p>
+
+<p>"Infernal woman!" muttered Ernest. "How could
+you for a moment believe that I would have so insulted
+you?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 256]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I didn't believe it," said Nina, lifting her frank eyes
+to his. "But how very late you are; have you been at
+the ballet?"</p>
+
+<p>His face grew stern. "Did she tell you that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. But why did you go there, instead of coming
+to dance with me? Do you like those danseuses better
+than you do me? What was C&eacute;line's or anybody's d&eacute;but,
+to you?"</p>
+
+<p>Ernest smiled at the native indignation of the question.
+"Never think that I do not wish to be with you;
+but&mdash;I wanted oblivion, and one cannot shake off old
+habits. Did you miss me among all those other men
+that you have always round you?"</p>
+
+<p>"How unkind that is!" whispered Nina, indignantly.
+"You know I always do."</p>
+
+<p>He held her closer to him in the waltz, and she felt his
+heart beat quicker, but she got no other answer.</p>
+
+<p>That night Nina stood before her toilette-table, putting
+her flowers in water, and some hot tears fell on the
+azalias.</p>
+
+<p>"I will have faith in him," she cried, passionately;
+"though all the world be witness against him, I will
+believe in him. Whatever his life may have been, his
+heart is warm and true; they shall never make me doubt
+it."</p>
+
+<p>Her last thoughts were of him, and when she slept his
+face was in her dreams, while Ernest, with some of the
+wildest men of his set, smoked hard and drank deep in
+his chambers to drive away, if he could, the fiends of
+Regret and Passion and the memory of a young, radiant,
+impassioned face, which lured him to an unattainable
+future.</p>
+
+<p>"Nina dearest," said Selina Ruskinstone, affectionately,
+the morning after, "I hope you will not think me unkind<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>&mdash;you
+know I have no wish but for your good&mdash;but <i>don't</i>
+you think it would be better to be a little more&mdash;more
+reserved, a little less free, with Mr. Vaughan?"</p>
+
+<p>"Explain yourself more clearly," said Nina, tranquilly.
+"Do you wish me to send to Turkey for a veil and a
+guard of Bashi-Bazouks, or do you mean that Mr. Vaughan
+is so attractive that he is better avoided, like a mantrap
+or a Ma&euml;lstrom?"</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be ridiculous," retorted Augusta; "you know
+well enough what we mean, and certainly you do run
+after him a great deal too much."</p>
+
+<p>"You are so <i>very</i> demonstrative," sighed Selina, "and
+it is so easily misconstrued. It is not feminine to court
+any man so unblushingly."</p>
+
+<p>Nina's eyes flashed, and the blood colored her brow.
+"I am not afraid of being misconstrued by Mr. Vaughan,"
+she said, haughtily; "gentlemen are kinder and
+wiser judges in those things than our sex."</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't advise you to trust to Ernest's tender
+mercies," sneered Augusta.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear child, remember his principles," sighed
+Selina; "his life&mdash;his reputation&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Leave both him and me alone," retorted Nina, passionately.
+"I will not stand calmly by to hear him
+slandered with your vague calumnies. You preach religion
+often enough; practice it now, and show more common
+kindness to your cousin: I do not say charity, for I am
+sick of the cant word, and he is above your pity. You
+think me utterly lost because I dance, and laugh, and
+enjoy my life, but, bad as <i>my</i> principles are, I should be
+shocked&mdash;yes, Selina, and I should think I merited little
+mercy myself, were I as harsh and bitter upon any one
+as you are upon him. How can <i>you</i> judge him?&mdash;how
+can you say what nobility, and truth, and affection&mdash;that<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>
+will shame your own cold pharisaism&mdash;may lie in his
+heart unrevealed?&mdash;how can you dare to censure <i>him</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>In the door of the salon, listening to the lecture his
+young champion was giving these two blue, opinionated,
+and strongly pious ladies, stood Ernest, his face even
+paler than usual, and his eyes with a strange mixture of
+joy and pain in them. Nina colored scarlet, but went
+forward to meet him with undisguised pleasure, utterly
+regardless of the sneering lips and averted eyes of the
+Miss Ruskinstones. He had come to go with them to St.
+Germain, and, with a dexterous man&#339;uvre, took the very
+seat in the carriage opposite Nina that Eusebius had
+planned for himself. But the Warden was no match for
+the <i>Lion</i> in such affairs, and, being exiled to the barouche
+with Gordon and Augusta, took from under the seat a
+folio of the "Stones of Venice," and read sulkily all the
+way.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear fellow," said Vaughan, when they reached
+St. Germain, "don't you think you would prefer to sit in
+the carriage, and finish that delightful work, to coming
+to see some simple woods and terraces? If you would,
+pray don't hesitate to say so; I am sure Miss Gordon
+will excuse your absence."</p>
+
+<p>The solicitous courtesy of Ernest's manner was boiling
+oil to the fire raging in the Warden's gentle breast, and
+Eusebius, besides, was not quick at retorts. "I am not
+guilty of any such bad taste," he said, stiffly, "though I
+do discover a charm in severe studies, which I believe
+you never did."</p>
+
+<p>"No, never," said Ernest, laughing; "my genius does
+not lie that way; and I've no vacant bishopric in my
+mind's eye to make such studies profitable. Even you,
+you know, light of the Church as you are, want recreation
+sometimes. Confess now, the chansons &agrave; boire last night<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>
+sounded pleasant after long months of Faithandgrace
+services!"</p>
+
+<p>Eusebius looked much as I have seen a sleek tom-cat,
+who bears a respectable character generally, surprised in
+surreptitiously licking out of the cream-jug. He had the
+night before (when he was popularly supposed to be sitting
+under Adolphe Monod) tasted rather too many
+petits verres up at the Pr&eacute; Catalan, utterly unconscious
+of his cousin's proximity. The pure-minded soul thus
+cruelly caught looked prayers of piteous entreaty to
+Vaughan not to damage his milk-white reputation by
+further revelation of this unlucky detour into the Broad
+Road; and Ernest, who, always kind-hearted, never hit
+a man when he was down, contented himself with saying:</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! well, we are none of us pure alabaster, though
+some of the sepulchres <i>do</i> contrive to whiten themselves
+up astonishingly. My father, poor man, once wished to
+put me in the Church. Do you think I should have
+graced it, Selina?"</p>
+
+<p>"I can't say I do," sneered Selina.</p>
+
+<p>"You think I should <i>disgrace</i> it? Very probably. I
+am not good at 'canting.'" And giving Nina his arm,
+the Warden being much too confused to forestall him, he
+whispered: "when is that atrocious saint going to take
+himself over the water? Couldn't we bribe his diocesan
+to call him before the Arches Court? Surely those long
+coats, so like the little wooden men in Noah's Ark, and
+that straightened hair, so mathematically parted down
+the centre, look 'perverted' enough to warrant it."</p>
+
+<p>Nina shook her head. "Unhappily, he is here for six
+months for ill health!&mdash;the sick-leave of clergymen who
+wish for a holiday, and are too holy to leave their flock
+without an excuse to society."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Vaughan laughed, then sighed. "Six months&mdash;and
+you have been here four already! Eusebius hates me
+cordially&mdash;all my English relatives do, I believe; we do
+not get on together. They are too cold and conventional
+for me. I have some of the warm Bohemian blood,
+though God knows I've seen enough to chill it to ice by
+this time; but it is <i>not</i> chilled&mdash;so much the worse for
+me," muttered Ernest "Tell me," he said, abruptly&mdash;"tell
+me why you took the trouble to defend me so generously
+this morning?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked up at him with her frank, beaming regard.
+"Because they dare to misjudge you, and they know
+nothing, and are not worthy to know anything of your
+real self."</p>
+
+<p>He pressed his lips together as if in bodily pain.
+"And what do you know?"</p>
+
+<p>"Have you not yourself said that you talk to me as
+you talk to no one else?" answered Nina, impetuously;
+"besides&mdash;I cannot tell why, but the first day I met you
+I seemed to find some friend that I had lost before. I
+was certain that you would never misconstrue anything I
+said, and I felt that I saw further into your heart and
+mind than any one else could do. Was it not very
+strange?" She stopped, and looked up at him. Ernest
+bent his eyes on the ground, and breathed fast.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," he said at last; "yours is only an ideal of
+me. If you knew me as I really am, you would cease to
+feel the&mdash;the interest that you say&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He stopped abruptly; facile as he was at pretty compliments,
+and versed in tender scenes as he had been
+from his school-days, the longing to make this girl love
+him, and his struggle not to breathe love to her, deprived
+him of his customary strength and nonchalance.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not fear to know you as you are," said Nina,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>
+gently. "I do not think you yourself allow all the better
+things that there are in you. People have not judged you
+rightly, and you have been too proud to prove their error
+to them. You have found pleasure in running counter
+to the prudish and illiberal bigots who presumed to judge
+you; and to a world you have found heartless and false
+you have not cared to lift the domino and mask you
+wore."</p>
+
+<p>Vaughan sighed from the bottom of his heart, and
+walked on in silence for a good five minutes. "Promise
+me, Nina," he said at length with an effort, "that no
+matter what you hear against me, you will not condemn
+me unheard."</p>
+
+<p>"I promise," she answered, raising her eyes to his,
+brighter still for the color in her checks. It was the first
+time he had called her Nina.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Gordon," said Eusebius, hurriedly overtaking
+them, "pray come with me a moment: there is the most
+exquisite specimen of the Flamboyant style in an archway&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you for your good intentions," said Nina, pettishly,
+"but really, as you might know by this time, I
+never can see any attractions in your prosaic and matter-of-fact-fact
+study."</p>
+
+<p>"It might be more profitable than&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Than thinking of La Valli&egrave;re and poor Bragelonne,
+and all the gay glories of the exiled Bourbons?" laughed
+Nina. "Very likely; but romance is more to my taste
+than granite. You would never have killed yourself, like
+Bragelonne, for the beaux yeux of Louise de la Beaume-sur-Blanc,
+would you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I trust," said Eusebius, stiffly, "that I should have
+had a deeper sense of the important responsibilities of
+the gift of life than to throw it away because a silly girl
+preferred another."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"You are very impolitic," said Ernest, with a satirical
+smile. "No lady could feel remorse at forsaking you,
+if you could get over it so easily."</p>
+
+<p>"He <i>would</i> get over it easily," laughed Nina. "You
+would call her Delilah, and all the Scripture bad names,
+order Mr. Ruskin's new work, turn your desires to a
+deanship, marry some bishop's daughter with high ecclesiastical
+interest, and console yourself in the bosom of
+your Mother Church&mdash;eh, Mr. Ruskinstone?"</p>
+
+<p>"You are cruelly unjust," sighed Eusebius. "You little know&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The charms of architecture? No; and I never shall,"
+answered his tormentor, humming the "Queen of the
+Roses," and waltzing down the forest glade, where they
+were walking. "How severe you look!" she said as she
+waltzed back. "Is <i>that</i> wrong, too? Miriam danced before
+the ark and Jephtha's daughter."</p>
+
+<p>The Warden appeared not to hear. Certainly his mode
+of courtship was singular.</p>
+
+<p>"Ernest," he said, turning to his cousin as the rest of
+the party came up, "I had no idea your sister was in
+Paris. I have not seen her since she was fourteen. I
+should not have known her in the least."</p>
+
+<p>"Margaret is in India with her husband," answered
+Vaughan. "What are you dreaming of? Where have
+you seen her?"</p>
+
+<p>"I saw her in your chambers," answered the Warden,
+slowly. "I passed three times yesterday, and she was
+sitting in the centre window each time."</p>
+
+<p>"Pshaw! You dreamt it in your sleep last night.
+Margaret's in Vellore, I assure you."</p>
+
+<p>"I saw her," said the Warden, softly; "or, at least, I
+saw some lady, whom I naturally presumed to be your
+sister."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Ernest, who had not colored for fifteen years, and
+would have defied man or woman to confuse him, flushed
+to his very temples.</p>
+
+<p>"You are mistaken," he said, decidedly. "There is no
+woman in my rooms."</p>
+
+<p>Eusebius raised his eyebrows, bent his head, smiled
+and sighed. More polite disbelief was never expressed.
+The Miss Ruskinstones would have blushed if they
+could; as they could not, they drew themselves bolt upright,
+and put their parasols between them and the reprobate.
+Nina, whose hand was still in Vaughan's arm,
+turned white, and flashed a quick, upward look at him;
+then, with a glance at Eusebius, as fiery as the eternal
+wrath that that dear divine was accustomed to deal out
+so largely to other people, she led Ernest up to her
+father, who being providentially somewhat deaf, had not
+heard this by-play, and said, to her cousin's horror,
+"Papa, dear, Mr. Vaughan wants you to dine with him
+at Tortoni's to-night, to meet M. de Vendanges. You
+will be very happy, won't you?"</p>
+
+<p>Ernest pressed her little hand against his side, and
+thanked her with his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Gordon was propitiated for that day; he was not likely
+to quarrel with a man who could introduce him to "Son
+Altesse Monseigneur le Duc de Vendanges."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>V.</h2>
+
+<h3>MORE MISCHIEF&mdash;AND AN END.</h3>
+
+
+<p>In a little cabinet de peinture, in a house in the Place
+Vend&ocirc;me, apart from all the other people, who having
+come to a d&eacute;je&ucirc;ner were now dispersed in the music rooms,
+boudoirs, and conservatories, sat Madame de M&eacute;lusine,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span>
+talking to Gordon, flatteringly, beguilingly, bewitchingly,
+as that accomplished widow could. The banker found
+her charming, and really, under her blandishments, began
+to believe, poor old fellow, that she was in love with him!</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! by-the-by, cher monsieur," began madame, when
+she had soft-soaped him into a proper frame of mind,
+"I want to speak to you about that mignonne Nina.
+You cannot tell, you cannot imagine, what interest I take
+in her."</p>
+
+<p>"You do her much honor, madame," replied her bourgeois
+gentilhomme, always stiff, however enraptured he
+might feel internally.</p>
+
+<p>"The honor is mine," smiled Pauline. "Yes, I do feel
+much interest in her; there is a sympathy in our natures,
+I am certain, and&mdash;and, Monsieur Gordon, I cannot see
+that darling girl on the brink of a precipice without
+stretching out a hand to snatch her from the abyss."</p>
+
+<p>"Precipice&mdash;abyss&mdash;Nina! Good Heavens! my dear
+madame, what do you mean?" cried Gordon&mdash;a fire, an
+elopement, and the small-pox, all presenting themselves
+to his mind.</p>
+
+<p>"No, no," repeated madame, with increasing vehemence,
+"I will not permit any private feelings, I will not
+allow my own weakness to prevent me from saving her.
+It would be a crime, a cruelty, to let your innocent child
+be deceived, and rendered miserable for all time, because
+I lack the moral courage to preserve her. Monsieur, I
+speak to you, as I am sure I may, as one friend to another,
+and I am perfectly certain that you will not misjudge me.
+Answer me one thing; no impertinent curiosity dictates
+the question. Do you wish your daughter married to
+Mr. Vaughan?"</p>
+
+<p>"Married to Vaughan!" exclaimed the startled banker;
+"I'd sooner see her married to a crossing sweeper. She<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>
+never thought of such a thing. Impossible! absurd!
+she'll marry my friend Ruskinstone as soon as she comes
+of age. Marry Vaughan! a fellow without a penny&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Pauline laid her soft, jewelled hand on his arm:</p>
+
+<p>"My dear friend, <i>he</i> thinks of it if you do not, and I
+am much mistaken if dear Nina is not already dazzled by
+his brilliant qualities. Your countryman is a charming
+companion, no one can gainsay that; but, alas! he is a
+rou&eacute;, a gambler, an adventurer, who, while winning her
+young girl's affections, has only in view the wealth which
+he hopes he will gain with her. It is painful to me to
+say this" (and tears stood in madame's long, velvet
+eyes). "We were good friends before he wanted more
+than friendship, while poor De M&eacute;lusine was still living,
+and his true character was revealed to me. It would be
+false delicacy to allow your darling Nina to become his
+victim for want of a few words from me, though I know,
+if he were aware of my interference, the inference he
+would basely insinuate from it. But you," whispered
+madame, brushing the tears from her eyes, and giving him
+an angelic smile, "I need not fear that you would ever
+misjudge me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Never, I swear, most generous of women!" said the
+banker, kissing the snow-white hand, very clumsily, too.
+"I'll tell the fellow my mind directly&mdash;an unprincipled,
+gambling&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Non, non, je vous en prie, monsieur!" cried the widow,
+really frightened, for this would not have suited her
+plans at all. "You would put me in the power of that
+unscrupulous man. He would destroy my reputation at
+once in his revenge."</p>
+
+<p>"But what am I to do?" said the poor gulled banker.
+"Nina's a will of her own, and if she take a fancy to this
+confounded&mdash;&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Leave that to me," said la baronne, softly. "I have
+proofs which will stagger her most obstinate faith in her
+lover. Meanwhile give him no suspicion, go to his supper
+on Tuesday, and&mdash;you are asked to Vauvenay, accept
+the invitation&mdash;and conclude the fian&ccedil;ailles with Monsieur
+le Ministre as soon as you can."</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;but, madame," stammered this new Jourdain
+to his enchanting Dorim&egrave;ne, "Vauvenay is an exile. I
+shall not see you there?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, silly man," laughed the widow, "I shall be only
+two miles off. I am going to stay with the Salvador;
+they leave Paris in three weeks. Listen&mdash;your daughter
+is singing 'The Swallows.' Her voice is quite as good
+as Ristori's."</p>
+
+<p>Three hours after, madame held another t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te in
+that boudoir. This time the favored mortal was Vaughan.
+They had had a pathetic interview, of which the pathos
+hardly moved Ernest as much as the widow desired.</p>
+
+<p>"You love me no longer, Ernest," she murmured, the
+tears falling down her cheeks&mdash;her rouge was the product
+of high art, and never washed off&mdash;"I see it, I feel it;
+your heart is given to that English girl. I have tried to
+jest about it; I have tried to affect indifference, but I
+cannot. The love you once won will be yours to the
+grave."</p>
+
+<p>Ernest listened, a satirical smile on his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"I should feel more grateful," he said, calmly, "if the
+gift had not been given to so many; it will be a great deal
+of trouble to you to love us all to our graves. And your
+new friend Gordon, do you intend cherishing his grey
+hairs, too, till the gout puts them under the sod?"</p>
+
+<p>She fell back sobbing with exquisite <i>abandon</i>. No deserted
+Calypso's <i>pose</i> was ever more effective.</p>
+
+<p>"Ernest, Ernest! that I should live to be so insulted,
+and by you!"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Nay, madame, end this vaudeville," said he bitterly.
+"I know well enough that you hate me, or why have
+you troubled yourself to coin the untruths about me that
+you whispered to Miss Gordon?"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! have you no pity for the first mad vengeance
+dictated by jealousy and despair?" murmured Pauline.
+"Once there was attraction in this face for you, Ernest;
+have some compassion, some sympathy&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Well as he knew the worth of madame's tears, Ernest,
+chivalric and generous at heart, was touched.</p>
+
+<p>"Forgive me," he said, gently, "and let us part. You
+know now, Pauline, that she has my deepest, my latest
+love. It were disloyalty to both did we meet again save
+in society."</p>
+
+<p>"Farewell, then," murmured Pauline. "Think gently
+of me, Ernest, for I <i>have</i> loved you more than you will
+ever know now."</p>
+
+<p>She rose, and, as he bent towards her, kissed his forehead.
+Then, floating from the room, passed the Reverend
+Eusebius, standing in the doorway, looking in on
+this parting scene. The widow looked at herself in her
+mirror that night with a smile of satisfaction.</p>
+
+<p>"C'est bien en train," she said, half aloud. "Le fou!
+de penser qu'il puisse me braver. Je ne l'aime plus, c'est
+vrai, mais je ne veux pas qu'elle r&eacute;ussisse."</p>
+
+<p>Nina went to bed very happy. Ernest had sat next
+her at the d&eacute;je&ucirc;ner; and afterwards at a ball had waltzed
+often with her and with nobody else; and his eyes had
+talked love in the waltzes though his tongue never had.</p>
+
+<p>Ernest went to his chambers, smoked hard, half mad
+with the battle within him, and took three grains of opium,
+which gave him forgetfulness and sleep. He woke,
+tired and depressed, to hear the gay hum of life in the
+street below, and to remember he had promised Nina to
+meet them at Versailles.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>It was Sunday morning. In England, of course, Gordon
+would have gone up to the sanctuary, listened to Mr.
+Bellew, frowned severely on the cheap trains, and, after
+his claret, read edifying sermons to his household; but
+in Paris there would be nobody to admire the piety, and
+the "grandes eaux" only play once a week, you know&mdash;on
+Sundays. So his Sabbath severity was relaxed, and
+down to Versailles he journied. There must be something
+peculiar in continental air, for it certainly stretches our
+countrymen's morality and religion uncommonly: it is
+only up at Jerusalem that our pharisees worship. Eusebius
+dare not go&mdash;he'd be sure to meet a brother-clerical,
+who might have reported the dereliction at home&mdash;so that
+Vaughan, despite Gordon's cold looks, kept by Nina's
+side though he wasn't alone with her, and when they
+came back in the <i>wagon</i> the banker slept and the duenna
+dozed, and he talked softly and low to her&mdash;not quite
+love, but something very like it&mdash;and as they neared Paris
+he took the little hand with its delicate Jouvin glove
+in his, and whispered,</p>
+
+<p>"Remember your promise: I can brave, and have
+braved most things, but I could not bear your scorn.
+<i>That</i> would make me a worse man than I have been, if, as
+some folks would tell you, such a thing be possible."</p>
+
+<p>It was dark, but I dare say the moonbeams shining
+on the chevelure dor&eacute;e showed him a pair of truthful,
+trusting eyes that promised never to desert him.</p>
+
+<p>The day after he had, by dint of tact and strategy,
+planned to spend entirely with Nina. He was going
+with them to the races at Chantilly, then to the Gait&eacute; to
+see the first representation of a vaudeville of a friend of
+his, and afterwards he had persuaded Gordon to enter
+the Lion's den, and let Nina grace a petit souper at No.
+10, Rue des Mauvais Sujets, Chauss&eacute;e d'Antin.</p>
+
+<p>The weather was delicious, the race-ground full, if not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>
+quite so crowded as the Downs on Derby Day. Ernest
+cast away his depression, he gave himself up to the joy
+of being loved, his wit had never rung finer nor his laugh
+clearer than as he drove back to Paris opposite Nina.
+He had never felt in higher spirits than, after having given
+carte blanche to a cordon bleu for the entertainment,
+he looked round his salons, luxurious as Eug&egrave;ne Sue's,
+and perfumed with exotics from the Palais Royal, and
+thought of one rather different in style to the women
+that had been wont to drink his Sillery and grace his
+symposia.</p>
+
+<p>He knew well enough she loved him, and his heart
+beat high as he put a bouquet of white flowers into a
+gold bouqueti&egrave;re to take to her.</p>
+
+<p>On his lover-like thoughts the voice of one of his parrots&mdash;Ernest
+had almost as many pets as there are
+in the Jardin des Plantes&mdash;broke in, screaming "Bluette!
+Bluette! Sacre bleu, elle est jolie! Bluette! Bluette!"</p>
+
+<p>The recollection was unwelcome. Vaughan swore a
+"sacre bleu!" too. "Diable! she mustn't hear that
+Fran&ccedil;ois, put that bird out of the way. He makes a
+such a confounded row."</p>
+
+<p>The parrot, fond of him, as all things were that knew
+him, sidled up, arching its neck, and repeating what De
+Concressault had taught it: "Fi donc, Ernest! Tu es
+volage! Tu ne m'aimes plus! Tu aimes Pauline!"</p>
+
+<p>"Devil take the bird!" thought its master; "even he'll
+be witness against me." And as he went down stairs
+to his cab, a chorus of birds shouting "Tu aimes Pauline!"
+followed him, and while he laughed, he sighed
+to think that even these unconscious things could tell
+her how little his love was worth. He forgot all but his
+love, however, when he leaned over her chair in the Gait&eacute;s
+and saw that, strenuously as De Concressault and De
+Kerroualle sought to distract her attention, and many<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>
+as were the lorgnons levelled at the chevelure dor&eacute;e, all
+her thoughts and smiles were given to him.</p>
+
+<p>Ernest had never, even in his careless boyhood, felt
+so happy as he did that night as he handed her into
+Gordon's carriage, and drove to the Chauss&eacute;e d'Antin;
+and though Gordon sat there heavy and solemn, looming
+like an iceberg on Ernest's golden future, Vaughan forgot
+him utterly, and only looked at the sunshine beaming
+on him from radiant eyes that, skeptic in her sex as
+he was from experience, he felt would always be true to
+him. The carriage stopped at No. 10, Rue des Mauvais
+Sujets. He had given her one or two dinners with the
+Senecterre, the De Salvador, and other fine ladies&mdash;grand
+affairs at the Fr&egrave;res Proven&ccedil;aux that would have
+satisfied Brillat-Savarin&mdash;but she had never been to his
+rooms before, and she smiled joyously in his face as he
+lifted her out&mdash;the smile that had first charmed him at
+the Fran&ccedil;ais. He gave her his arm, and led her across the
+salle, bending his head down to whisper a welcome.
+Gordon and Selina and several men followed. Selina
+felt that it was perdition to enter the <i>Lion's</i> den, but a
+fat old vicomte, on whom she'd fixed her eye, was going,
+and the "femmes de trente ans" that Balzac champions
+risk their souls rather than risk their chances when the
+day is far spent, and good offers grow rare.</p>
+
+<p>Ernest's Abyssinian, mute, subordinate to that grand
+gentleman, M. Fran&ccedil;ois, ushered them up the stairs,
+making furtive signs to his master, which Vaughan was
+too much absorbed to notice. Fran&ccedil;ois, in all his glory,
+flung open the door of the salon. In the salon a sight
+met Ernest's eyes which froze his blood more than if all
+the dead had arisen out of their graves on the slopes of
+P&egrave;re la Chaise.</p>
+
+<p>The myriad of wax-lights shone on the rooms, fragrant
+with the perfume of exotics, gleamed on the supper-table<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>,
+gorgeous with its gold plate and its flowers, lighted up
+the aviary with its brilliant hues of plumage, and showed
+to full perfection the snowy shoulders, raven hair, and
+rose-hued dress of a woman lying back in a fauteuil,
+laughing, as De Cheffontaine, a man but slightly known
+to Ernest, leaned over her, fanning her. On a sofa in an
+alcove reclined another girl, young, fair, and pretty, the
+amber mouthpiece of a hookah between her lips, and a
+couple of young fellows at her feet.</p>
+
+<p>The brunette was Bluette, who played the soubrette
+r&ocirc;les at the Od&eacute;on; the blonde was C&eacute;line Gamelle, the
+new premi&egrave;re danseuse. Bluette rose from the depths of
+her amber satin fauteuil, with her little <i>p&eacute;tillant</i> eyes
+laughing, and her small plump hands stretched out in
+gesticulation. "M&eacute;chant! Comme tu es tard, Ernest.
+Nous avons &eacute;t&eacute; ici si longtemps&mdash;dix minutes au moins!
+And dis is you leetler new Ingleesh friend. How do you
+do, my dear?"</p>
+
+<p>Nina, white as death, shrank from her, clinging with
+both hands to Ernest's arms. As pale as she, Vaughan
+stood staring at the actress, his lips pressed convulsively
+together, the veins standing out on his broad, high forehead.
+The bold <i>Lion</i> hunted into his lair, for once lost
+all power, all strength.</p>
+
+<p>Gordon looked over Nina's shoulder into the room.
+He recognized the women at a glance, and, with his heavy
+brow dark as night, he glared on Ernest in a silence more
+ominous than words or oaths, and snatching Nina's arm
+from his, he drew her hand within his own, and dragged
+her from the room.</p>
+
+<p>Ernest sprang after him. "Good God! you do not
+suppose me capable of this. Stay one instant. Hear
+me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Let us pass, sir," thundered Gordon, "or by Heaven
+this insult shall not go unavenged."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Nina, Nina!" cried Ernest, passionately, "do you at
+least listen!&mdash;you at least will not condemn&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Nina wrenched her hands from her father, and turned
+to him, a passion of tears falling down her face. "No,
+no! have I not promised you?"</p>
+
+<p>With a violent oath Gordon carried her to her carriage.
+It drove away, and Ernest, his lips set, his face white, and
+a fierce glare in his dark eyes that made Bluette and
+C&eacute;line tremble, entered his salons a second time, so bitter
+an anguish, so deadly a wrath marked in his expressive
+countenance, that even the Frenchmen hushed their jests,
+and the women shrunk away, awed at a depth of feeling
+they could not fathom or brave.</p>
+
+<p>The fierce anathemas of Gordon, the "Christian" lamentations
+of Eusebius, the sneers of Selina, the triumphs
+of Augusta, all these vials of wrath were poured
+forth on Ernest, in poor little Nina's ears, the whole of
+the next day. She had but one voice among many to
+raise in his defence, and she had no armor but her faith
+in him. Gordon vowed with the same breath that she
+should never see Vaughan again, and that she should engage
+herself to Ruskinstone forthwith. Eusebius poured
+in at one ear his mild milk-and-water attachment, and, in
+the other, details of Ernest's scene in the boudoir with
+Madame de M&eacute;lusine, or, at least, what he had seen of it,
+<i>i. e.</i> her parting caress. Selina rang the changes on her
+immodesty in loving a man who had never proposed to
+her; and Augusta drew lively pictures of the eternal
+fires which were already being kept up below, ready for
+the <i>Lion's</i> reception. Against all these furious batteries
+Nina stood firm. All their sneers and arguments could
+not shake her belief, all her father's commands&mdash;and,
+when he was roused, the old banker was very fierce&mdash;could
+not move her to promise not to see Ernest again,
+or alter her firm repudiation of the warden's proposals.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>
+The thunder rolled, the lightning flamed, the winds
+screamed all to no purpose, the little reed that one might
+have fancied would break, stood steady.</p>
+
+<p>The day passed, and the next passed, and there were
+no tidings of Ernest. Nina's little loyal heart, despite
+its unhesitating faith, began to tremble lest it should have
+wrecked itself: but then, she thought of his eyes, and
+she felt that all the world would never make her mistrust
+him.</p>
+
+<p>On the <i>surlendemain</i> the De M&eacute;lusine called. Gordon
+and Eusebius were out, and Nina wished her to be shown
+up. Ill as the girl felt, she rose haughtily and self-possessed
+to greet madame, as, announced by her tall
+chasseur, with his green plume, the widow glided into
+the room.</p>
+
+<p>Pauline kissed her lightly (there are no end of Judases
+among the dear sex), and, though something in Nina's
+eye startled her, she sat down beside her, and began to
+talk most kindly, most sympathisingly. She was <i>chagrin&eacute;e,
+d&eacute;sol&eacute;e</i> that her <i>ch&egrave;re</i> Nina should have been so
+insulted; every one knew M. Vaughan was quite <i>ent&ecirc;t&eacute;</i>
+with that little, horrid, coarse thing, Bluette; but it was
+certainly very shocking; men were such <i>d&eacute;mons</i>. The
+affair was already <i>r&eacute;pandue</i> in Paris; everybody was talking
+of it. Ernest was unfortunately so well known; he
+could not be in his senses; she almost wished he <i>was</i>
+mad, it would be the only excuse for him; wild as he was,
+she should scarcely have thought, &amp;c., &amp;c., &amp;c. "Ah!
+ch&egrave;re enfant," madame went on at the finish, "you do not
+know these men&mdash;I do. I fear you have been dazzled by
+this naughty fellow; he <i>is</i> very attractive, certainly: if
+so, though it will be a sharp pang, it will be better to
+know his real character at once. Voyez donc! he has
+been persuading you that you were all the world to him,
+while at the same time, he has been trying to make me<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>
+believe the same. See, only two days ago he sent me
+this."</p>
+
+<p>She held out a miniature. Nina, who hitherto had listened
+in haughty silence, gave a sharp cry of pain as she
+saw Vaughan's graceful figure, stately head, and statue-like
+features. But, before the widow could pursue her
+advantage, Nina rallied, threw back her head, and said,
+her soft lips set sternly:</p>
+
+<p>"If you repulsed his love, why was he obliged to repulse
+yours? Why did you tell him on Saturday night
+that 'you had loved him more than he would ever know
+now?'"</p>
+
+<p>The shot Eusebius had unconsciously provided, struck
+home. Madame was baffled. Her eyes sank under
+Nina's, and she colored through her rouge.</p>
+
+<p>"You have played two r&ocirc;les, madame," said Nina, rising,
+"and not played them with you usual skill. Excuse
+my English ill-breeding, if I ask you to do me the favor
+of ending this comedy."</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly, mademoiselle, if it is your wish," answered
+the widow, now smiling blandly. "If it please you to
+be blind, I have no desire to remove the bandage from
+your eyes. Seulement, je vous prie de me pardonner
+mon indiscr&eacute;tion, et j'ai l'honneur, mademoiselle, de vous
+dire adieu!"</p>
+
+<p>With the lowest of <i>r&eacute;v&eacute;rences</i> madame glided from the
+room, and, as the door closed, Nina bowed her head on
+the miniature left behind in the <i>d&eacute;route</i>, and burst into
+tears.</p>
+
+<p>Scarcely had la M&eacute;lusine's barouche rolled away, when
+another visitor was shown in, and Nina, brushing the
+tears from her cheeks, looked up hurriedly, and saw a
+small woman, finely dressed, with a Shetland veil on,
+through which her small black eyes roved listlessly.</p>
+
+<p>"Mademoiselle," she said, in very quick but very bad<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>
+English, "I is come to warn you against dat ver
+wrong man, Mr. Vaughan. I have like him, helas! I
+have like him too vell, but I do not vish you to suffer too."</p>
+
+<p>Nina knew the voice in a moment, and rose like a little
+empress, though she was flushed and trembling. "I
+wish to hear nothing of Mr. Vaughan. If this is the sole
+purport of your visit, I shall be obliged by your leaving
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"But mademoiselle&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I have told you I wish to hear nothing," interposed
+Nina, quietly.</p>
+
+<p>"Ver vell, ma'amselle; den read dat. It is a copy,
+and I got de original."</p>
+
+<p>She laid a letter on the sofa beside Nina. Two minutes
+after, Bluette joined her friend C&eacute;line Gamelle in a
+fiacre, and laughed heartily, clapping her little plump
+hands. "Ah, mon Dieu! C&eacute;line, comme elle est fi&egrave;re,
+la petite! Je ne lui ai pas dit un seul mot&mdash;elle m'a
+arr&ecirc;t&eacute;e si vite, si vite! Mais la lettre fera notre affaire
+n'est pas? Oui, oui!"</p>
+
+<p>The letter unfolded in Nina's hand. It was a promise
+of marriage from Ernest Vaughan to Bluette Lemaire.
+Voiceless and tearless, Nina sat gazing on the paper: first
+she rose, gasping for breath; then she threw herself
+down, sobbing convulsively, till she heard a step, caught
+up the miniature and letter, dreading to see her father,
+and, instead, saw Ernest, pale, worn, deep lines round
+his mouth and eyes, standing in the doorway. Involuntarily
+she sprang towards him. Ernest pressed her to
+heart, and his hot tears fell on the chevelure dor&eacute;e, as
+he bent over her, murmuring, "<i>You</i> have not deserted
+me. God bless you for your noble faith." At last he
+put her gently from him, and, leaning against the mantelpiece,
+said, with an effort, between his teeth, "Nina,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>
+I came to bid you farewell, and to ask your forgiveness
+for the wrong I have done you."</p>
+
+<p>Nina caught hold of him, much as Malibran seized
+hold of <i>Elvino</i>: "Leave me! leave me! No, no; you
+cannot mean it!"</p>
+
+<p>"I have no strength for it now I see you," said Ernest,
+looking down into her eyes; and the bold, reckless <i>Lion</i>
+shivered under the clinging clasp of her little hands. "I
+need not say I was not the cause of the insult you received
+the other night. Pauline de M&eacute;lusine was the
+agent, women willing to injure me the actors in it. But
+there is still much for you to forgive. Tell me, at once,
+what have you heard of me?"</p>
+
+<p>She silently put the miniature and letter in his hand.
+The blood rushed to his very temples, and, sinking his
+head on his arms, his chest rose and fell with uncontrollable
+sobs. All the pent-up feelings of his vehement and
+affectionate nature poured out at last.</p>
+
+<p>"And you have not condemned me even on these?"
+he said at length, in a hoarse whisper.</p>
+
+<p>"Did I not promise?" she murmured.</p>
+
+<p>"But if I told you they were true?"</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him through her tears, and put her
+hand in his. "Tell me nothing of your past; it can
+make no difference to my love. Let the world judge you
+as it may, it cannot alter me."</p>
+
+<p>Ernest strained her to him, kissing her wildly. "God
+bless you for your trust! would to God I were more worthy
+of it! I have nothing to give you but a love such as I
+have never before known; but most would tell you all
+<i>my</i> love is worthless, and my life has been one of reckless
+dissipation and of darker errors still, until you awoke
+me to a deeper love&mdash;to thoughts and aspirations that I
+thought had died out for ever. Painful as it is to confess&mdash;&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Hush!" interrupted Nina, gently. "Confess nothing;
+with your past life I can have nothing to do, and I
+wish never to hear anything that it gives you pain to
+tell. You say that you love me now, and will never love
+another&mdash;that is enough for me."</p>
+
+<p>Ernest kissed the flushed cheeks and eloquent lips,
+and thanked her with all the fiery passion that was in
+him; and his heart throbbed fiercely as he put her promise
+to the test.</p>
+
+<p>"No, my darling! Priceless as your love is to me I
+will not buy it by concealment. I will not sully your
+ears with the details of my life. God forbid I should!
+but it is only due to you to know that I did give both
+these women the love-tokens they brought you. Love!
+It is desecration of the name, but I knew none better
+then! Three years ago, Bluette Lemaire first appeared
+at the Od&eacute;on. She is illiterate, coarse, heartless, but
+she was handsome, and she drew me to the coulisses. I
+was infatuated with her, though her ignorance and vulgarity
+constantly grated against all my tastes. One night
+at her petit souper I drank more Sillery than was wise.
+I have a stronger head than most men: perhaps there
+was some other stimulant in it; at any rate, she who
+was then poor, and is always avaricious, got from me a
+promise to marry her, or to pay twenty thousand francs.
+Three months after I gave it I cared no more for her
+than for my old glove. France is too wise to have Breach
+of Promise cases, and give money to coarse and vengeful
+women for their pretended broken hearts; but I had
+no incentive to create a scene by breaking with her, and
+so she kept the promise in her hands. What Pauline de
+M&eacute;lusine is, you can judge. Twelve months ago I met
+her at Vichy; the love she gave me, and the love I vowed
+her, were of equal value&mdash;the love of Paris boudoirs.
+That I sent her that picture only two days ago, is, of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>
+course, false. On my word, as a man of honor, since the
+moment I felt your influence upon me I have shunned
+her. Now, my own love, you know the truth. Will you
+send me from you, or will you still love and still forgive?"</p>
+
+<p>In an agony of suspense he bent his head to listen for
+her answer. Tears rained down her cheeks as she put
+her arms round his neck, and whispered:</p>
+
+<p>"Why ask? Are you not all the world to me? I
+should love you little if I condemned you for any errors
+of your past. I know your warm and noble heart, and I
+trust to it without a fear. There is no doubt between
+us now!"</p>
+
+<p>Oh, my prudent and conventional young ladies, standing
+ready to accuse my poor little Nina, are you any
+wiser in your generation? You who have had all nature
+taken out of you by "finishing," whose heads are
+crammed with "society's" laws, and whose affections are
+measured out by rule, who would have been cold, and
+dignified, and read Ernest a severe lesson, and sent him
+back hopeless and hardened to go ten times worse than
+he had gone before&mdash;believe me, that impulse points truer
+than "the world," and that the dictates of the heart are
+better than the regulations of society. Take my word
+for it, that love will do more for a man than lectures;
+and faith in him be more likely to keep him straight than
+all your moralising; and before you judge him severely
+for having drunk a little too deep of the Sillery of life,
+remember that his temptations are not your temptations,
+nor his ways your ways, and be gentle to dangers which
+society and custom keep out of your own path. The
+stern thorn crows you offer to us when we are inclined
+to ask your absolution, are not the right means to win
+us from the rose wreaths of our bacchanalia.</p>
+
+<p>Nina, as you see, loved her <i>Lion</i> too well to remember<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>
+dignity, or take her stand on principle; and gallantly did
+the young lady stand the bombardment from all sides
+that sought to break her resolutions and crush her "misplaced
+affections." Gordon chanced to come in that
+day and light upon Ernest, and the fury into which he
+worked himself ill beseemed so respectable a pharisee.
+Vaughan kept tranquilly haughty, and told the banker,
+calmly, that he "thanked God he had his daughter's
+love, and his money he would never have stooped to accept."
+Gordon forbade him the house, and carried Nina
+back to England; but before she went they had a parting
+interview, in which Ernest offered to leave her free.
+But such freedom would have been worse than death to
+Nina, and, before they separated, she told him that in
+three months more she should be of age, and then, come
+what might, she would be his if he would take her without
+wealth. Take her he would have done from the
+arms of Satanus himself, but to disentangle himself from
+all his difficulties was a task that beat the Augean stables
+hollow. The three months of his probation he
+worked hard; he sold off all his pictures, his stud, and
+his <i>meubles</i>; he sold, what cost him a more bitter pang,
+his encumbered estates in Surrey; he paid off all his
+debts, Bluette's twenty thousand francs included; and
+shaking himself free of the accumulated embarrassments
+of fifteen years, he crossed the water to claim his last
+love. No poor little Huguenot was ever persecuted for
+her faith more than poor little Nina for her engagement.
+Every relative she had thought it his duty to write admonitory
+letters, plentifully interspersed with texts.
+Eusebius and his 4000<i>l.</i> a year, and his perspective bishopric,
+were held up before her from morning to night;
+the banker, whose deception in the M&eacute;lusine had turned
+him into sharper vinegar than before, told her with chill
+stoicism that she must of course choose her own path in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>
+life, but that if that path led her into the Chauss&eacute;e d'Antin,
+she need never expect a sou from him, for all his
+property would be divided between her two brothers.
+But Nina was neither to be frightened nor bribed. She
+kept true to her lover, and disinherited herself.</p>
+
+<p>They were married a week or two after Nina's majority;
+and Gordon knew it, though he could not prevent
+it. They did not miss the absence of bridesmaids, bishop,
+d&eacute;je&ucirc;ner, and the usual fashionable crowd. It was a
+marriage of the heart, you see, and did not want the
+trappings with which they gild that bitter pill so often
+swallowed now-a-days&mdash;a "mariage de convenance."
+Nina, as she saw further still into the wealth of deep
+feeling and strong affection which, at her touch, she had
+awoke in his heart, felt that money, and friends, and the
+world's smile were well lost since she had won him. And
+Ernest&mdash;Ernest's sacrifice was greater; for it is not a little
+thing, young ladies, for a man to give up his accustomed
+freedom, and luxuries, and careless vie de gar&ccedil;on,
+and to have to think and work for another, even
+though dearer than himself. But he had long since seen
+so much of life, had exhausted all its pleasures so rapidly,
+that they palled upon him, and for some time he had
+vaguely wanted something of deeper interest, of warmer
+sympathy. Unknown to himself, he had felt the "besoin
+d'&ecirc;tre aim&eacute;"&mdash;a want the trash offered him by the
+women of his acquaintance could never satisfy&mdash;and his
+warm, passionate nature found rest in a love which,
+though the strongest of his life, was still returned to him
+fourfold.</p>
+
+<p>After some months of delicious <i>far niente</i> in the south
+of France, they came back to Paris. Though anything
+but rich, he was not absolutely poor, after he had paid
+his debts, and the necessity to exertion rousing his dormant
+talents, the <i>Lion</i> turned <i>litt&eacute;rateur</i>. He was too<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>
+popular with men to be dropped because he had sold
+his stud or given up his petits soupers. The romance
+of their story charmed the Parisians, and, though (behind
+his back) they sometimes jested about the "Lion
+amoureux," there were not a few who envied him his
+young love, and the sunshine that shone round them in
+his inexpensive appartement garni.</p>
+
+<p>Ernest <i>was</i> singularly happy&mdash;and suddenly he became
+the star of the literary, as he had been of the fashionable
+world. His mots were repeated, his vaudevilles applauded,
+his feuilletons adored. The world smiled on
+Nina and her <i>Lion</i>; it made little difference to them&mdash;they
+had been as contented when it frowned.</p>
+
+<p>But it made a good deal of difference across the Channel.
+Gordon began to repent. Ernest's family was
+high, his Austrian connexions very aristocratic: there
+would be something after all in belonging to a man so
+well known. (Be successful, ami lecteur, and all your
+relatives will love you.) Besides, he had found out that
+it is no use to put your faith in princes, or clergymen.
+Eusebius had treated him very badly when he found he
+could not get Nina and her money, and spoke against the
+poor banker everywhere, calling him, with tender pastoral
+regret, a "worldly Egyptian," a "Dives," a "whitened
+sepulchre," and all the rest of it.</p>
+
+<p>Probably, too, stoic though he was, he missed the
+chevelure dor&eacute;e; at any rate, he wrote to her stiffly, but
+kindly, and settled two thousand a year upon her. Vaughan
+was very willing she should be friends with her father,
+but nothing would make him draw a sou of the money.
+So Nina&mdash;the only sly thing she ever did in her life&mdash;after
+a while contrived to buy back the Surrey estate,
+and gave it to him, with no end of prayers and caresses,
+on the Jour de l'An.</p>
+
+<p>"And you do not regret, my darling," smiled Ernest,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>
+after wishing her the new year's wishes, "having forgiven
+me for once drinking too much Sillery, and all the other
+naughty things of my vie de gar&ccedil;on?"</p>
+
+<p>"Regret!" interrupted Nina, vehemently&mdash;"regret that
+I have won your love, live your life, share your cares and
+joys, regret that my existence is one long day of sunshine?
+Oh, why ask! you know I can never repay you for the
+happiness of my life."</p>
+
+<p>"Rather can I never repay you," said Vaughan, looking
+down into her eyes, "for the faith that made you
+brave calumny and opposition, and cling to my side
+despite all. I was heart-sick of the world, and you called
+me back to life. I was weary of the fools who misjudged
+me, and I let them think me what they might."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah, how happy you make me!" cried Nina. "I
+should have been little worthy of your love if I had suffered
+slander to warp me against you, or if any revelations
+you cared enough for me to make of your past life,
+had parted us:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Love is not love<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">That alters where it alteration finds,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Or bends with the remover to remove.<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>There, monsieur!" she said, throwing her arms round
+him with a laugh, while happy tears stood in her eyes&mdash;"there
+is a grand quotation for you. Mind and take
+care, Ernest, that you never realise the Ruskinstone predictions,
+and make me repent having caught and caged
+such a terrible thing as a hunted <span class="smcap">Paris Lion</span>!"</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="sep1" />
+<hr class="sep2" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span></p>
+<h1>SIR GALAHAD'S RAID.</h1>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span></p>
+<hr class="sep3" />
+<hr class="sep4" />
+
+<h2><a name="SIR_GALAHADS_RAID" id="SIR_GALAHADS_RAID"></a>SIR GALAHAD'S RAID.</h2>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<h2>AN ADVENTURE ON THE SWEET WATERS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>For the punishment of my sins may the gods never
+again send me to Pera! That I might have plenty on
+my shoulders I am frankly willing to concede; all I protest
+is, that when one submissively acknowledges the justice
+of ones future terminating in Tophet, it comes a little
+hard to get purgatory in this world into the bargain.
+Purgatory lies <i>perdu</i> for one all over the earth. I have
+had fifty times more than my share already, and the gout
+still remains an untried experience, a Gehenna grimly
+waiting to avenge every morsel of white truffle and every
+glass of comet claret with which I innocently solace my
+frail mortality. Purgatory!&mdash;I have been chained in it
+fifty times; <i>et vous</i>?</p>
+
+<p>When you rush to a Chancell&eacute;rie, with the English
+Arms gorgeous above its doorway, on the spur of a frightfully
+mysterious and autocratic telegram, that makes it
+life or death to catch the train for England in ten minutes,
+and have time enough to smoke about two dozen very
+big cheroots, cooling your heels in the bureau, and then
+hear (when properly tortured into the due amount of
+frantic agony for the intelligence to be fully appreciated)
+that his Excellency is gone snipe-shooting to &mdash;&mdash;, and
+that the First Secretary is in his bath, and has given
+orders not to be disturbed; your informant languidly
+pricking his cigar with his toothpick, and politely<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span>
+intimating, by his eyebrows, that you and your necessities
+may go to the deuce&mdash;what's <i>that</i>? When you are doing
+the sanitary at Weedon, by some hideous conjunction of
+evil destinies, in the very Ducal week itself, and thinking
+of the rush with which Tom Alcroft will land the filly, or
+the close finish with which Fordham will get the cup,
+while you are not there to see, are sorely tempted to
+realize the Parisian vision of Anglo suicide, and load the
+apple-trees with suspended human fruit;&mdash;what's <i>that</i>?
+When, having got leave, and established yourself in cosy
+hunting-quarters, with some cattle not to be beat in stay,
+blood, and pace, close to a killing pack that never score
+a blank day, there falls a bitter, black frost, locking the
+country up in iron bonds, and making every bit of ridge
+and furrow like a sheet of glass&mdash;what's <i>that</i>?</p>
+
+<p>Bah! I could go on ad infinitum, and cite "circles of
+purgatory" in which mortal man is doomed to pass his
+time, beside which Dante's Ca&iuml;na, Antenora, and Ptolomea
+sink into insignificance. But of all Purgatories, chiefest
+in my memory, is&mdash;&mdash;Pera. Pera in the old Crimean
+time&mdash;Pera the "beautiful suburb" of fond "fiction"&mdash;Pera,
+with the dirt, the fleas, the murders, the mosquitoes,
+the crooked streets, the lying Greeks, the stench, the hubbub,
+the dulness, and the everlasting "Bono Johnny."</p>
+
+<p>"Call a dog Hervey, and I shall love him," said Johnson,
+so dear was his friend to him:&mdash;"call a dog Johnny,
+and I shall kick him," so abominable grew that word in
+the eternal Turkish jabber! Tell me, O prettiest, softest-voiced,
+most beguiling, feminine &AElig;othen, in as romantic
+periods as you will, of bird-like feluccas darting over the
+Bosphorus, of curled ca&iuml;ques gliding through fragrant
+water-weeds; of Arabian Nights reproduced, when up
+through the darkness peals the roll of the drums calling the
+Faithful to prayers; of the nights of Ramadan, with the
+starry clusters of light gleaming all down Stamboul, and
+flashing, firefly-like, through the dark citron groves;&mdash;tell<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_287" id="Page_287">[Pg 287]</a></span>
+me of it as you will, I don't care; you may think me
+a Goth, <i>ce m'est bien &eacute;gal</i>, and <i>you</i> were not in cavalry
+quarters at Pera. I wasn't exacting; I did not mind
+having ants in my jam, nor centipedes in my boots, nor a
+shirt in six months, nor bacon for a luxury that strongly
+resembled an old file rusted by sea-water, nor any little
+trifle of that sort up in the front; all that is in the fortune
+of war: but I confess that Pera put me fairly out of
+patience, specially when a certain trusty friend of mine,
+who has no earthly fault, that I wot of, except that of
+perpetually looking at life through a Claude glass (which
+is the most aggravating opticism to a dispassionate and
+unblinded mind that the world holds), <i>would</i> poetize upon
+it, or at least on the East in general, which came pretty
+much to the same thing.</p>
+
+<p>The sun poured down on me till (conscience, probably)
+I remembered the scriptural threat to the wicked, "their
+brains shall boil in their skulls like pots;"&mdash;Sir Galahad,
+as I will call him, would murmur to himself, with his
+cheroot in his teeth, Manfred's <i>salut</i> to the sun, looking
+as lovingly at it as any eagle. Mosquitoes reduced me to
+the very borders of madness,&mdash;Sir Galahad would placidly
+remark, how Buckland would revel here in all those
+gorgeous beetles. A Greek told crackers till I had to
+double-thong him like a puppy,&mdash;Sir Galahad would
+shout to me to let the fellow alone, he looked so deuced
+picturesque, he must have him for a study. I made
+myself wretched in a ticklish ca&iuml;que, the size of a cockle-shell,
+where, when one was going full harness to the Great
+Effendi's, it was a moral impossibility to be doubled without
+one's sash swinging into the water, one's sword sticking
+over the side, and the liveliest sensation of cramp
+pervading one's body,&mdash;Sir Galahad, blandly indifferent,
+would discourse, with superb Ruskin obscurity, of "tone,"
+and "coloring," and "harmonized light," while he looked
+down the Golden Horn, for he was a little Art-mad, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_288" id="Page_288">[Pg 288]</a></span>
+painted so well that if he had been a professional, the
+hanging committee would have shut him out to a certainty.</p>
+
+<p>Now he was a good fellow, a <i>beau sabreur</i>, who had
+fetched some superb back strokes in the battery at Balaclava,
+who could send a line spinning, and land his horse
+in a gentleman riders' race, and pot the big game, and
+lead the first flight over Northamptonshire doubles at
+home, as well as a man wants to do; but I put it to any
+dispassionate person, whether this persistent poetism of
+his, flying in the face of facts and of fleas, was not enough
+to make anybody swear in that mosquito-purgatorio of
+Pera?</p>
+
+<p>Sir Galahad was a capital fellow, and the men would
+have gone after him to the death; the fair, frank, handsome
+face, a little womanish perhaps, was very pleasant
+to look at, and he got the Victoria not long ago for a
+deed that would suit Arthur's Table; but in Pera, I avow,
+he made me swear hard, and if he would just have set his
+heel on his Claude glass, cursed the Turks, and growled
+refreshingly, I should have loved him better. He was
+philosophic and he was poetic; and the combination of
+temperaments lifted him in a mortifying altitude above
+ordinary humanity, that was baked, broiled, grumbling,
+savage, bitten, fleeced, and holding its own against
+miserable rats, Greeks, and Bono Johnnies, with an Aristides
+thieving its last shirt, and a Pisistratus getting
+drunk at its case-bottle! That sublime serenity of his
+in Pera ended in making me unholy and ungenerous; if
+he would but have sworn once at the confounded country,
+I should have borne it, but he never did, and I longed to
+see him out of temper, I pined and thirsted to get him
+disenchanted. "<i>Tout vient a point, &agrave; qui sait attendre</i>,"
+they say; a motto, by the way, that might be written
+over the Horse Guards for the comfort of gloomy souls,
+when, in the words of the Psalmist, "Promotion cometh
+neither from the south, nor from the east, nor from the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_289" id="Page_289">[Pg 289]</a></span>
+west"&mdash;by which lament one might conclude David of
+Israel to have been a sufferer by the Purchase-system!</p>
+
+<p>"Delicious!" said Sir Galahad, sending a whiff of
+Turkish tobacco into the air one morning after exercise,
+when he and I, having ridden out a good many miles
+along the Sweet Waters, turned the horses loose, bought
+some grapes and figs of an old Turk, dispossessed him of
+his bit of cocoa-matting, and flung ourselves under a plane-tree.
+And the fellow looked round him through his race-glass
+at the cypress woods, the mosques and minarets, the
+almond thickets, the "soft creamy distance," as he called
+it in his <i>argot d'atelier</i>, and the Greek fishermen near,
+drawing up a net full of silvery prismatic fishes, with a
+relish absolutely exasperating. Exasperating&mdash;when the
+sun was broiling one's brain through the linen, and there
+wasn't a drop of Bass or soda and B to be got for love or
+money, and one thought thirstily of days at home in
+England, with the birds whirring up from the stubble in
+the cool morning, and the cold punch uncorked for luncheon,
+under the home woods fringing the open.</p>
+
+<p>"One wants Hunt to catch that bit of color," murmured
+Sir Galahad, luxuriously eying a mutilated Janissary's
+tomb covered with scarlet creepers.</p>
+
+<p>"Hunt be hanged!" said I (meaning no disrespect to
+that eminent Pre-Raphaelite, whose "Light of the World"
+I took at first sight to be a policeman going his night
+rounds, and come out in his shirt by mistake; by the way,
+it is a droll idea to symbolize the "light of the world" by
+a watchman with a dark lantern, <i>lux in tenebras</i> with a
+vengeance!). "Give me the sweet shady side of Pall
+Mall, and the devil may take the Sweet Waters. What's
+the Feast of Bairam beside the Derby-day, or your confounded
+coloring beside a well-done cutlet? What's
+lemonade by Brighton Tipper, and a veiled bundle by a
+pretty blonde, and an eternity of Stamboul by an hour of
+Piccadilly?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_290" id="Page_290">[Pg 290]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Sir Galahad smiled superior, and shied a date at me.</p>
+
+<p>"Goth! can't you be content to feed like the Patriarchs
+and live an idyl?"</p>
+
+<p>"No! I'd rather feed like a Parisian and live an idler!
+Eat grapes if you choose; I agree with Brillat-Savarin,
+and don't like my wine in pills."</p>
+
+<p>"My good fellow, you're all prose."</p>
+
+<p>"And you're all poetry. You're as bad as that pretty
+little commissariat girl who lisped me to death last night
+at the Embassy with platitudes of bosh about the 'poetry
+of marriage.'"</p>
+
+<p>"The deuce!" said Sir Galahad, with a whistle, "that
+must be like most other poetry nowadays&mdash;uncommon
+dull prose, sliced up in uneven lengths! Didn't you tell
+her so?"</p>
+
+<p>"Couldn't; I should have pulled the string for a
+shower-bath of sentiment! When a woman's bolted on
+romance you only make the pace worse if you gall her
+with the curb of common sense. When romance is in,
+reason's out,&mdash;excuse the personality!"</p>
+
+<p>He didn't hear me; he was up like a retriever who
+scents a wild duck or a water-rat among the sedges, for
+sweeping near us with soft gliding motion, as pretty as a
+toy and as graceful as a swan, came a ca&iuml;que, with the
+wife of a Pacha of at least a hundred tails in it, to judge
+by the costliness of her exquisite attire. Now, women
+were not rare, but then they were always veiled, which is
+like giving a man a nugget he mustn't take out of the
+quartz, a case of champagne he mustn't undo, a cover-side
+he is never to beat, a trout stream in which he must
+never fling a fly; and Sir Galahad, whose loves were not,
+I admit, quite so saintly as Arthur's code exacted, lost
+his head in a second as the ca&iuml;que drifted past us, and,
+raising herself on her cushions, the Leilah Duda, or Salya
+within it, glanced toward the myrtle screen that half hid
+us, with the divinest antelope eyes in the world, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_291" id="Page_291">[Pg 291]</a></span>
+letting the silver gauze folds of her veil float half aside,
+showed us the beautiful warm bloom, the proud lips, and
+the chestnut tresses braided with pearls and threaded with
+gold, of your genuine Circassian beauty. Shade of Don
+Juan! what a face it was!</p>
+
+<p>A yataghan might have been at his throat, a bowstring
+at his neck, eunuchs might have slaughtered, and
+pachas have impaled him, Galahad would have seen more
+of that loveliness: headlong he plunged down the slope,
+crushing through the almond thickets and scattering the
+green tree-frogs right and left; the ca&iuml;que was just rounding
+past as he reached the water's edge, and the beauty's
+veil was drawn in terror of her guard. But as the little
+cockle-shell, pretty and ticklish as a nautilus, was moored
+to a broad flight of marble stairs, the Circassian turned
+her head towards the place where the Unbeliever stood
+in the sunlight&mdash;her eyes were left her, and with them
+women speak in a universal tongue. Then the green
+lattice gate shut, the white impenetrable walls hid her
+from sight, and Sir Galahad stood looking down the
+Sweet Waters in a sort of beatific vision, in love for the
+1360th time in his life. And certainly he had never
+been in love with better reason; for is there anything
+on earth so divine as your antelope-eyed and gold-haired
+Circassian?</p>
+
+<p>"I shall be inside those walls or know the reason why,"
+said he, whom two gazelle eyes had fired and captured,
+there by the side of the sunny Sweet Waters, where the
+lazy air was full of syringa and rose odors, and there was
+no sound but the indolent beating of the tired oars on
+the ripples.</p>
+
+<p>"Which reason you will rapidly find," I suggested, "in
+a knock on the head from the Faithful!"</p>
+
+<p>"Well! a very picturesque way of coming to grief; to
+go off the scene in the sick-wards, from raki and fruit,
+would be commonplace and humiliating, but to die in a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_292" id="Page_292">[Pg 292]</a></span>
+serail, stabbed through and through by green-eyed jealousy,
+would be piquant and refreshing to the last degree;
+do you really think there's a chance of it?" said Galahad,
+rather anxiously&mdash;the eager wistful anxiety of a man
+who, athirst for the forest, hears of the rumored slot of an
+outlying deer&mdash;while he shouted the Greek fishermen to
+him, and learned after sore travail through a slough of
+mixed Italian, Turkish, and Albanian, that the white
+palace, with its green lattice and its hanging gardens, belonged
+to a rich merchant of Constantinople, and that
+this veiled angel was the favorite of his harem, Leilah
+Derran, a recent purchase in Circassia, and the queen of
+the Ander&ugrave;n.</p>
+
+<p>"The old rascal!" swore Galahad, in his wrath, which
+was not, however, I think, caused by any particular
+Christian disgust at polygamy. "A fat old sinner, I'll
+be bound, who sits on his divan puffing his chibouque and
+stuffing his sweetmeats, as yellow as Beppo, and as round
+as a ball. Bah! what pearls before swine! It's enough
+to make a saint swear. Those heavenly eyes!..." And
+Galahad went into a somewhat earthly reverie, colored
+with a thirsty jealousy of the purchaser and the possessor
+of this Circassian gazelle, as he rode reluctantly back
+towards Pera.</p>
+
+<p>The Circassian was in his head, and did not get out
+again. He let himself be bewitched by that lovely face
+which had flashed on him for a second, and began to feel
+himself as aggrieved by that innocent and unoffending
+Turkish lord of hers, as if the unlucky gentleman had
+stolen his own property! The antelope eyes had looked
+softly and hauntingly sad, moreover: I demonstrated to
+him that it was nothing more than the way that the eyelashes
+drooped, but nobody in love (very few people out
+of it) have any taste for logic; he was simply disgusted
+with my realism, and saw an instant vision for himself of
+this loveliest of slaves, captive in a bazaar and sold into<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_293" id="Page_293">[Pg 293]</a></span>
+the splendid bondage of the harem as into an inevitable
+fate, mournful in her royalty as a nightingale in a cage
+stifled with roses, and as little able to escape as the bird.
+A vision which intoxicated and enraptured Sir Galahad,
+who, in the teeth of every abomination of Pera, had been
+content to see only what he wished to see, and had maintained
+that the execrable East, to make it the East of
+Hafiz and all the poets, only wanted&mdash;available Haidees!</p>
+
+<p>"Hang it! I think it's nothing <i>but</i> Hades," said an
+Aide, overhearing that statement one night, as we stumbled
+out of a half-caf&eacute;, half-gambling-booth pandemonium
+into the crooked, narrow, pitch-dark street, where dogs
+were snarling over offal, jackals screaming, Turkish bands
+shrieking, cannon booming out the hour of prayer, women
+yelling alarms of fire, a Zouave was spitting a Greek by
+way of practice, and an Irishman had just potted a Dalmatian,
+in as brawling, rowing, pestiferous, unodorous an
+earthly Gehenna as men ever succeeded in making.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Galahad was the least vain of mortals; nevertheless,
+being as well-beloved by the "maidens and young widows,"
+for his fair handsome face, as Harold the Gold-haired, he
+would have been more than mortal if he had not been
+tolerably confident of "killing," and luxuriously practised
+in that pleasant pastime. That if he could once get the
+antelope eyes to look at him, they would look lovingly
+before long, he was in comfortable security; but how to
+get into a presence, which it was death for an unbeliever
+and a male creature to approach, was a knottier question,
+and the difficulty absorbed him. There were several
+rather telling Englishwomen out there, with whom he had
+flirted <i>faute de mieux</i>, at the cavalry balls we managed to
+get up in Pera, at the Embassy costume-ball, on board
+yacht-decks in the harbor, and in picnics to Therapia or
+the Monastery. But they became as flavorless as twice-told
+tales, and twice-warmed entremets, beside the new
+piquance, the delicious loveliness, the divine difficulty of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_294" id="Page_294">[Pg 294]</a></span>
+this captive Circassian. That he had no more earthly
+business to covet her than he had to covet the unlucky
+Turkish trader's lumps of lapis-lazuli and agate, never
+occurred to him; the stones didn't tempt him, you see,
+but the beauty did. That those rich, soft, unrivalled
+Eastern charms, "merely born to bloom and drop,"
+should be caged from the world and only rejoice the eyes
+of a fat old opium-soddened Stamboul merchant, seemed
+a downright reversal of all the laws of nature, a tampering
+with the balance of just apportionment that clamored
+for redress; but, like most other crying injustice, the
+remedy was hard to compass.</p>
+
+<p>Day after day he rode down to the same place on the
+Sweet Waters on the chance of the ca&iuml;que's passing;
+and, sure enough, the ca&iuml;que did pass nine times out of
+ten, and, when opportunity served for such a hideous
+Oriental crime not to be too perilous, the silver gauze
+floated aside unveiling a face as fair as the morning, or,
+when that was impossible, the eyes turned on him shyly
+and sadly in their lustrous appeal, as though mutely
+bewailing such cruel captivity. Those eyes said as
+plainly as language could speak that the lovely Favorite
+plaintively resisted her bondage, and thought the Frank
+with his long fair beard, and his six feet of height, little
+short of an angel of light, though he might be an infidel.</p>
+
+<p>Given&mdash;hot languid days, nothing to do, sultry air
+heavy with orange and rose odors, and those "silent
+passages," repeating themselves every time that Leilah
+Derran's ca&iuml;que glided past the myrtle screen, where her
+Giaour lay <i>perdu</i>, the result is conjectural: though they
+had never spoken a word, they had both fallen in love.
+Voiceless <i>amourettes</i> have their advantages:&mdash;when a
+woman speaks, how often she snaps her spell! For
+instance, when the lips are divine but the utterance is
+slangy, when the mouth is adorably rosebud but what it
+says is most horrible horsy!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_295" id="Page_295">[Pg 295]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A tender pity, too, gave its spur to his passion; he saw
+that, all Queen of the Serail though she might be, this
+fettered gazelle was not happy in her rose-chains, and to
+Galahad, who had a wonderful twist of the knight-errant
+and lived decidedly some eight centuries too late, no
+wiliest temptation would have been so fatal as this.</p>
+
+<p>He swore to get inside those white inexorable walls, and
+he kept his oath: one morning the latticed door stood
+ajar, with the pomegranates and the citrons nodding
+through the opening; he flung prudence to the winds and
+peril to the devil, and entered the forbidden ground where
+it was death for any man, save the fat Omar himself, to
+be found. The fountains were falling into marble basins,
+the sun was tempered by the screen of leaves, the lories
+and humming-birds were flying among the trumpet-flowers,
+altogether a most poetic and pleasant place for
+an erratic adventure; more so still when, as he went
+farther, he saw reclining alone by the mosaic edge of a
+fountain his lovely Circassian unveiled. With a cry of
+terror she sprang to her feet, graceful as a startled antelope,
+and casting the silver shroud about her head, would
+have fled; but the scream was not loud enough to give
+the alarm&mdash;perhaps she attuned it so&mdash;and flight he prevented.
+Such Turkish as he had he poured out in passionate
+eloquence, his love declaration only made the more
+piquant by the knowledge that in a trice the gardens
+might swarm with the Mussulman's guards and a scimitar
+smite his head into the fountain. But the danger he disdained,
+<i>la belle</i> Leilah remembered; rebuke him she did
+not, nor yet call her eunuchs to rid her of this terrible
+Giaour, but the antelope eyes filled with piteous tears and
+she prayed him begone&mdash;if he were seen here, in the
+gardens of the women, it were his death, it were hers!
+Her terror at the infidel was outweighed by her fear for
+his peril; how handsome he was with his blue eyes and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_296" id="Page_296">[Pg 296]</a></span>
+fair locks, after the bald, black-browed, yellow, obese little
+Omar!</p>
+
+<p>"Let me see again the face that is the light of my soul
+and I will obey thee; thou shalt do with thy slave as thou
+wilt!" whispered Galahad in the most impassioned and
+poetical Turkish he could muster, thinking the style of
+Hafiz understood better here than the style of Belgravia,
+while the almond-eyed Leilah trembled like a netted bird
+under his look and his touch, conscious, pretty creature,
+that were it once known that a Giaour had looked on her,
+poison in her coffee, or a sullen plunge by night into the
+Bosphorus, would expiate the insult to the honor of Omar,
+a master whom she piteously hated. She let her veil float
+aside, nevertheless, blushing like a sea-shell under the
+shame of an unbeliever's gaze&mdash;a genuine blush that is
+banished from Europe&mdash;his eyes rested on the lovely
+youth of her face, his cheek brushed the</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Loose train of her amber dropping hair,<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>his lips met her own; then, with a startled stifled cry, his
+coy gazelle sprang away, lost in the aisles of the roses, and
+Galahad quitted the dangerous precincts, in safety so far,
+not quite clear whether he had been drinking or dreaming,
+and of conviction that Pera had changed into Paradise.
+For he was in love with two things at once, a
+romance and a woman; and an anchorite would fairly
+have lost his head after the divine dawn of beauty in
+Leilah Derran.</p>
+
+<p>The morrow, of course, found him at the same place, at
+the same hour, hoping for a similar fortune, but the lattice
+door was shut, and defied all force; he was just about to
+try scaling the high slippery walls by the fibres of a clinging
+fig-tree, when a negress, the sole living thing in sight,
+beckoned him, a hideous Abyssinian enough for a messenger
+of Eros; a grinning good-natured black, who had
+been bought in the same bazaar and of the same owner as<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_297" id="Page_297">[Pg 297]</a></span>
+the lovely Circassian, to whose service she was sworn.
+She told him by scraps of Turkish, and signs, that Leilah
+had bidden her watch for and warn him, that it were
+as much as both their lives were worth for him to be
+seen again in the women's gardens, or anywhere near
+her presence; that the merchant Omar was a monster
+of jealousy, and that the rest of the harem, jealous of her
+supremacy and of the unusual liberty her ascendancy
+procured her, would love nothing so well as to compass
+her destruction. Further meeting with her infidel lover
+she pronounced impossible, unless he would see her consigned
+to the Bosphorus; an ice avalanche of intelligence,
+which, falling on the tropical Eden of his passion, had
+the effect, as it was probably meant that it should have,
+of drowning the lingering remnant of prudence and sanity
+that had remained to him after his lips had once touched
+the exquisite Eastern's.</p>
+
+<p>Under the circumstances the negress was his sole hope
+and chance; he pressed her into his service and made her
+Mercury and mediatrix in one. She took his messages,
+sent in the only alphabet the pretty gazelle could read,
+i. e. flowers, plotted against her owner with true Eastern
+finesse, wrought on the Circassian's tenderness for the
+Giaour, and her terrified hatred of her grim lord Omar,
+and threw herself into the intrigue with the avidity of all
+womanhood, be it black or be it white, for anything on
+the face of the earth that has the charm of being forbidden.
+The affair was admirably <i>en train</i>, and Galahad
+was profoundly happy; he was deliciously in love,&mdash;a
+pleasant spice as difficult to find in its full flavor as it is
+to bag a sand grouse;&mdash;and had an adventure to amuse
+him that might very likely cost him his head, and might
+fairly claim to rise into the poetic. The only reward he
+received (or ever got, for that matter) for the Balaclava
+brush, where he cut down three gunners, and had a ball
+put in his hip, had been a cavil raised by a critic, not<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_298" id="Page_298">[Pg 298]</a></span>
+there, of doubt whether he had ever ridden inside the
+lines at all; but his Circassian would have recompensed
+him at once for a score of years of Chersonnesus campaigning,
+and unprofessional chroniclers: he was perfectly
+happy, and his soft, careless, <i>couleur de rose</i> enjoyment of
+the paradise was aggravating to behold,&mdash;when one was
+in Pera, and the heat broiled alive every mortal thing that
+wasn't a negro, and Bass was limited, and there were no
+Dailies, and one thought even lovingly and regretfully
+of the old "beastly shells," that had at least this merit,
+that they scattered bores when they burst!</p>
+
+<p>"Old fellow!&mdash;want something to do?" he asked me
+one day. I nodded, being silent and savage from having
+had to dance attendance on the Sultan at an Embassy reception.
+Peace to his <i>manes</i> now! but I know I wished
+him heartily in Eblis at that time.</p>
+
+<p>"Come with me to-night then, if you don't mind a probability
+of being potted by a True Believer," went on
+Leilah Derran's lover, going into some golden water
+Soyer had sent me.</p>
+
+<p>"For the big game? Like it of all things; but you
+know I'm tied by the leg here."</p>
+
+<p>Galahad laughed. "Oh, I only want you an hour or
+two. I've got six days' leave for the pigs and the deer:
+but the hills won't see much of me, I'm going to make a
+raid in the rose-gardens. It may be hot work, so I
+thought you would like it."</p>
+
+<p>Of course I did, and asked the programme which Sir
+Galahad, as lucidly as a man utterly in love can tell
+anything, unfolded to me. Fortune favored him; it was
+the night of the Feast of Bairam, when all the world of
+Turkey lights its lamps and turns out; he had got leave
+under pretext of a shooting trip into Roumelia, but the
+game he was intent on was the captive Circassian, who in
+the confusion and <i>tintamarre</i> attendant on Bairam, was
+to escape to him by the rose-gardens, and being carried<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_299" id="Page_299">[Pg 299]</a></span>
+off as swiftly as Syrian stallions could take them, would
+be borne away by her infidel lover on board a yacht, belonging
+to a man whom he knew who was cruising in the
+Bosphorus, which would steam them away down the
+Dardanelles before the Turk had a chance of getting in
+chase. Nothing could be better planned for everybody
+but the luckless Mussulman who was to be robbed,&mdash;and
+the whole thing had a fine flavor about it of dash and
+difficulty, of piquance and poetry, of Medi&aelig;val errantry
+and Oriental coloring, that put Leilah's Giaour most
+deliciously in his element, setting apart the treasure that
+he would carry off in that rich, soft, antelope-eyed, bright-haired
+Circassian loveliness which made all the dreams
+in Lalla Rookh and Don Juan look pale.</p>
+
+<p>So his raid was planned, and I agreed to go with him
+to cover the rear in case of pursuit, which was likely
+enough to be hot and sharp, for the Moslems, for all their
+apathy, lack the philosophic gratitude which your British
+husband usually exhibits towards his despoiler&mdash;but then,
+to be sure, an Englishman can't make a fresh purchase
+unless he's first robbed of the old! Night came; and the
+nights, I am forced to admit, have a witching charm of
+their own in the East, that the West never knows. The
+Commander of the Faithful went to prayer, with the roar
+of cannon and the roll of drums pealing down the Golden
+Horn, and along the cypress-clad valleys. The mosques
+and minarets, starred and circled with a myriad of lamps,
+gleamed through the dark foliage, and were mirrored in
+the silvery sheet of the waves. The ca&iuml;ques, as they swept
+along, left tracks of light in the phosphor-lit waves, and
+while the chant of the Muezzin rang through the air, the
+children of Allah, from one end of the Bosphorus to the
+other, held festival on the most holy eve of Bairam. A
+splendid night for a lyric of Swinburne's!&mdash;a superb
+scene for an amorous adventure! And as we mingled
+amongst the crowds of the Faithful, swarming with their<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_300" id="Page_300">[Pg 300]</a></span>
+painted lanterns, their wild music, their gorgeous colors,
+their booming guns, in street and ca&iuml;que, on land and sea,
+Sir Galahad, though an infidel, had certainly entered the
+Seventh Heaven. He had never been more intensely in
+love in his life; and, if the fates should decree that the
+dogs of Islam should slay him at her feet, in the sanctuary
+of her rose-paradise, he was ready to say in his pet poet's
+words, with the last breath of his lips,</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">It was ordained to be so, sweet and best<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Comes now beneath thine eyes and on thy breast.<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Still kiss me! Care not for the cowards! Care<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">Only to put aside thy beauteous hair<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">My blood will hurt!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>In the night of the feast all the world was astir, Franks
+and Moslems, believers and unbelievers, and we made our
+way through the press unwatched to where Omar's house
+was illumined, the cressets, and wreaths, and stars of light
+sparkling through the black foliage. Under the walls,
+hidden by a group of planes, we fastened the stallions in
+readiness, and Galahad, at the latticed door, gave the
+signal word, "Kef," low whispered. The door unclosed,
+and, true to her tryst, in the silvery Bosphorus moonlight,
+crouching in terror and shame, was the veiled and trembling
+Circassian.</p>
+
+<p>But not in peace was her capture decreed to be made;
+scarce had the door flown open, when the shrill yell of
+"Allah hu! Allah hu!" rung through the air; and from
+the dark aisles of the gardens poured Mussulmans, slaves,
+and eunuchs, the Turk with a shoal at his back, giving
+the alarm with hideous bellowings, while their drawn
+scimitars flashed in the white starlight, and their cries
+filled the air with their din. "Make off, while I hold the
+gate!" I shouted to Galahad, who, catching Leilah Derran
+in his arms before the Moslems could be nigh us,
+held her close with one hand, while with his right he<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_301" id="Page_301">[Pg 301]</a></span>
+levelled his revolver, as I did, and backed&mdash;facing the
+Turks. At sight of the lean shining barrels, the Moslems
+paused in their rush for a second&mdash;only a second; the
+next, shouting to Allah till the minarets gave back the
+echo, they sprang at us, their curled naked yataghans
+whirling above their heads, their jetty eyeballs flaming
+like tigers' on the spring. Our days looked numbered;&mdash;I
+gave them the contents of one barrel, and in the moment's
+check we gained the outside of the gardens; the
+swarm rushed after us, their shots flying wide, and whistling
+with a shrill hiss harmlessly past; we reserved further
+fire, not wishing to kill, if we could manage to cut
+our way through without bloodshed, and backed to the
+plane-trees, where the horses were waiting. There was a
+moment's blind but breathless struggle, swift and indistinct
+to remembrance, as a flash of lightning; the Turks
+swarmed around us, while we beat them off, and hurled
+them asunder somehow. Omar sprang like a rattlesnake
+on to his spoiler, his yataghan circling viciously in the
+air, to crash down upon Galahad's skull, who was encumbered
+by the clinging embrace of his stolen Circassian.
+I straightened my left arm with a remnant of "science"
+that savored more of old Cambridge than of Crimean
+custom; the Moslem went down like an ox, and keeping
+the yelling pack at bay with the levelled death-dealer, I
+threw myself into saddle just as Galahad flung himself on
+his stallion, and the Syrians, fleet as Arab breeding could
+make them, tore down the beach in the rich Eastern night,
+while the balls shrieked through the air past our ears,
+and the shouts of our laughter, with the salute of a ringing
+English cheer in victorious farewell, answered the
+howls of our distant and baffled pursuers.</p>
+
+<p>Sir Galahad's Raid was a triumph!</p>
+
+<p>On we went through the hot fragrant air, through the
+silvery moonlight, through the deep shade of cypress and
+pine woods; on we went through gorge, and ravine, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_302" id="Page_302">[Pg 302]</a></span>
+defile, through stretches of sweet wild lavender, of shining
+sands, of trampled rose-fields, with the phosphor-lit sea
+gleaming beside us, and the Islam Feast of Bairam left
+far distant behind. On and on&mdash;while the glorious night
+itself was elixir, and one shouted to the starry silence
+Robert Browning's grand challenge&mdash;</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">How good is man's life, the mere living! how fit to employ<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">All the heart, and the soul, and the senses, for ever in joy!<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>That ride was superb!</p>
+
+<p>We never drew rein till some ten miles farther on,
+where we saw against the clear skies the dark outline of
+the yacht with a blue light burning at her mast-head, the
+signal selected; then Galahad checked the good Syrian,
+who had proved pace as fleet as the "wild pigeon blue"
+is ever vouched in the desert, and bent over his prize who,
+through that long ride, had been held close to his breast,
+with her arms wound about him, and the beautiful veiled
+face bowed on his heart. The moon was bright as day,
+and he stooped his head to uplift the envious veil, and
+see the radiant beauty that never again would be shrouded,
+and to meet once more the lips which his own had
+touched before but in one single caress; he bowed his
+head, and I thought that my disinterested ungrudging
+friendship made the friendships of antiquity look small;
+when&mdash;&mdash;an oath that chilled my blood rang through
+the night and over the seas, startling the echoes from
+rock and hill; the veiled captive reeled from the saddle
+with a wailing scream, hurled to earth by the impetus
+with which his arms loosed her from him; and away into
+the night, without word or sign, plunging headlong down
+the dark defile, riding as men may ride from a field that
+reeks with death, far out of sight into the heart of the
+black dank woods, his Syrian bore Sir Galahad. And
+lo! in the white moonlight, against the luminous sea,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_303" id="Page_303">[Pg 303]</a></span>
+slowly there rose before me, unveiled and confessed&mdash;<span class="smcap">The
+Negress</span>!</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>The history of that night we never learnt. Whether
+Leilah Derran herself played the cruel trick on her
+Giaour lover (but this <i>he</i> always scouted), whether Omar
+himself was a man of grim humor, whether the Abyssinian,
+having betrayed her mistress, was used as a decoy-bird,
+dressed like the Circassian, to lure the infidels into the
+rose-gardens where the Faithful intended to dispatch
+them hastily to Eblis&mdash;no one knows. We could never
+find out. The negress escaped me before my surprise let
+me stay her, and the fray made the place too hot for close
+investigation. Nor do I know where Galahad tore in that
+wild night-ride, whose spur was the first maddened pain
+and rage of shame that his life had tasted. I never heard
+where he spent the six days of his absence; but when he
+joined us again, six weeks in the sick-wards would not
+have altered him more; all he said to me was one piteous
+phrase&mdash;"For God's sake don't tell the fellows!"&mdash;and
+I never did; I liked him well enough not to make chaff of
+him. Unholily had I thirsted to see him disenchanted,
+ungenerously had I pined to see him goaded out of
+temper: I had my wish, and I don't think I enjoyed it.
+I saw him at last in passion that I had much to do to
+tame down from a deadly vengeance that would have
+rung through the Allied Armies; and I saw him loathe the
+East, curse romance, burn all the poets with Hafiz at
+their head, and shun a woman's beauty like the pestilence.
+To this day I believe that the image of Leilah
+Derran haunts his memory, and that a certain remorse
+consumes him for his lost gazelle, whom <i>he</i> always thought
+paid penalty for their love under the silent waves of the
+Bosphorus, with those lost ones whose souls, according to
+the faith of Stamboul, flit ceaselessly above its waters, in<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_304" id="Page_304">[Pg 304]</a></span>
+the guise of its white-winged unrestful sea-gulls. He is
+far enough away just now&mdash;in which of the death-pots
+where we are simmering and fritting away in little
+wretched driblets men and money that would have
+sufficed C&aelig;sar or Scipio to conquer an Empire, matters not
+to his story. When he reads this, he will remember the
+bitterest night of his life, and the fiasco that ended <span class="smcap">Sir
+Galahad's Raid</span>!</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="sep1" />
+<hr class="sep2" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_305" id="Page_305">[Pg 305]</a></span></p>
+<h1>'REDEEMED.'</h1>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_306" id="Page_306">[Pg 306]</a></span></p>
+<hr class="sep3" />
+<hr class="sep4" />
+<h2><a name="REDEEMED" id="REDEEMED"></a>"REDEEMED."</h2>
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_307" id="Page_307">[Pg 307]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<h2>AN EPISODE WITH THE CONFEDERATE HORSE.</h2>
+
+
+
+<p>Bertie Winton had got the Gold Vase.</p>
+
+<p>The Sovereign, one of the best horses that ever had a
+dash of the Godolphin blood in him, had led the first
+flight over the ridge-and-furrow, cleared the fences, trying
+as the shire-thorn could make them, been lifted over the
+stiffest doubles and croppers, passed the turning-flags, and
+been landed at the straight run-in with the stay and pace
+for which his breed was famous, enrapturing the fancy,
+who had piled capfuls of money on him, and getting the
+Soldiers' Blue Riband from the Guards, who had stood
+crackers on little Benyon's mount&mdash;Ben, who is as pretty
+as a girl, with his <i>petites mains blanches</i>, riding like any
+professional.</p>
+
+<p>Now, I take it&mdash;and I suppose there are none who will
+disagree with me&mdash;that there are few things pleasanter
+in this life than to stand, in the crisp winter's morning,
+winner of the Grand Military, having got the Gold Vase
+for the old corps against the best mounts in the Service.</p>
+
+<p>Life must look worth having to you, when you have
+come over those black, barren pastures and rugged
+ploughed lands, where the field floundered helplessly in
+grief, with Brixworth brook yawning gaunt and wide
+beneath you, and the fresh cold north wind blowing full
+in your teeth, and have ridden in at the distance alone,
+while the air is rent by the echoing shouts of the surging<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_308" id="Page_308">[Pg 308]</a></span>
+crowd, and the best riding-men are left "nowhere" behind.
+Life must look pleasant to you, if it had been black as
+thunder the night before. Nevertheless, where Bertie
+Winton sat, having brought the Sovereign in, winner of
+the G. M., with that superb bay's head a little drooped,
+and his flanks steaming, but scarce a hair turned, while
+the men who had won pots of money on him crowded
+round in hot congratulation, and he drank down some
+Cura&ccedil;oa punch out of a pocket-pistol, with his habitual
+soft, low, languid laugh, he had that in his thoughts
+which took the flavor out of the Cura&ccedil;oa, and made the
+sunny, cheery winter's day look very dull and gray to
+him. For Bertie, sitting there while the cheers reeled
+round him like mad, with a singularly handsome, reckless
+face, long tawny moustaches, tired blue eyes, and a
+splendid length and strength of limb, knew that this was
+the last day of the old times for him, and that he had
+sailed terribly near the wind of&mdash;dishonor.</p>
+
+<p>He had been brought to <i>envisager</i> his position a little
+of late, and had seen that it was very bad indeed&mdash;as
+bad as it could be. He had run through all his own fortune
+from his mother, a good one enough, and owed almost
+as much again in bills and one way and another. He
+had lost heavily on the turf, gamed deeply, travelled with
+the most expensive adventuresses of their day, startled
+town with all its worst crim. cons.; had every vice under
+heaven, save that he drank not at all; and now, having
+shot a Russian prince at Baden the August before, about
+Lillah Lis, had received on the night just passed, from
+the Horse Guards, a hint, which was a command, that his
+absence was requested from her Majesty's Service&mdash;a
+mandate which, politely though inexorably couched,
+would have taken a more forcible and public form but
+for the respect in which his father, old Lion Winton, as
+he was called, was held by the Army and the authorities.
+And Bertie, who for five-and-thirty years had never<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_309" id="Page_309">[Pg 309]</a></span>
+thought at all, except on things that pleasured him, and
+such bagatelles as <i>barri&egrave;re</i> duels abroad, delicately-spiced
+intrigues, bills easily renewed, the <i>cru</i> of wines, and the
+siege of women, found himself pulled up with a rush, and
+face to face with nothing less than ruin.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm up a tree, Melcombe," he said to a man of his
+own corps that day as he finished a great cheroot before
+mounting.</p>
+
+<p>"Badly?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, yes. It'll be smash this time, I suppose."</p>
+
+<p>"Bother! That's hard lines."</p>
+
+<p>"It's rather a bore," he answered, with a little yawn,
+as he got into the saddle; and that was all he ever said
+then or afterwards on the matter; but he rode the Sovereign
+superbly over the barren wintry grass-land, and
+landed him winner of the Blue Riband for all that,
+though Black Care, for the first time in his life, rode behind
+him and weighted the race.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Bertie! nobody would have believed him if he
+had said so, but he had been honestly and truly thinking,
+for some brief time past, whether it would not be possible
+and worth while for him to shake himself free of this life,
+of which he was growing heartily tired, and make a name
+for himself in the world in some other fashion than by
+winging Russians, importing new dancers, taking French
+women to the Bads, scandalizing society, and beggaring
+himself. He had begun to wonder whether it was not
+yet, after all, too late, and whether if&mdash;&mdash;when down had
+come the request from the Horse Guards for him to sell
+out, and the rush of all his creditors upon him, and away
+forever went all his stray shapeless fancies of a possible
+better future. And&mdash;consolation or aggravation, whichever
+it be&mdash;he knew that he had no one, save himself, to
+thank for it; for no man ever had a more brilliant start
+in the race of life than he, and none need have made
+better running over the course, had he only kept straight<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_310" id="Page_310">[Pg 310]</a></span>
+or put on the curb as he went down-hill. Poor Bertie!
+you must have known many such lives, or I can't tell
+where your own has been spent; lives which began so
+brilliantly that none could rival them, and which ended&mdash;God
+help them!&mdash;so miserably and so pitifully that you
+do not think of them without a shudder still?</p>
+
+<p>Poor Bertie!&mdash;a man of a sweeter temper, a more generous
+nature, a more lavish kindliness, never lived. He
+had the most versatile talents and the gentlest manners
+in the world; and yet here he was, having fairly come to
+ruin, and very nearly to disgrace.</p>
+
+<p>It was little wonder that his father, looking at him and
+thinking of all he might have been, and all he might have
+done, was lashed into a terrible bitterness of passionate
+grief, and hurled words at him of a deadly wrath, in the
+morning that followed on the Grand Military. Fiery as
+his comrades the Napiers, of a stern code as a soldier, and
+a lofty honor as a man, haughty in pride and swift to
+passion, old Sir Lionel was stung to the quick by his son's
+fall, and would have sooner, by a thousand-fold, have followed
+him to his grave, than have seen him live to endure
+that tacit dismissal from the service of the country&mdash;the
+deepest shame, in his sight, that could have touched his
+race.</p>
+
+<p>"I knew you were lost to morality, but I did not know
+till now that you were lost to honor!" said the old Lion,
+with such a storm of passion in him that his words swept
+out, acrid and unchosen, in a very whirlwind. "I knew
+you had vices, I knew you had follies, I knew you wasted
+your substance with debtors and gamblers like yourself,
+on courtesans and gaming-tables, in Parisian enormities,
+and vaunted libertinage, but I did not think that you
+were so utterly a traitor to your blood as to bring disgrace
+to a name that never was approached by shame until <i>you</i>
+bore it!"</p>
+
+<p>Bertie's face flushed darkly, then he grew very pale.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_311" id="Page_311">[Pg 311]</a></span>
+The indolence with which he lay back in an &eacute;carte-chair
+did not alter, however, and he stroked his long moustaches
+a little with his habitual gentle indifferentism.</p>
+
+<p>"It is all over. Pray do not give it that tremendous
+earnestness," he said, quietly. "Nothing is ever worth
+that; and I should prefer it if we kept to the language of
+gentlemen!"</p>
+
+<p>"The language of gentlemen is <i>for</i> gentlemen," retorted
+the old man, with fiery vehemence. His heart was cut to
+the core, and all his soul was in revolt against the degradation
+to his name that came in the train of his heir's
+ruin. "When a man has forgot that he has been a gentleman,
+one may be pardoned for forgetting it also! You
+may have no honor left for your career to shame; <i>I</i> have&mdash;and,
+by God, sir, from this hour you are no son of mine.
+I disown you&mdash;I know you no longer! Go and drag out
+all the rest of a disgraced life in any idleness that you
+choose. If you were to lie dying at my feet, I would not
+give you a crust!"</p>
+
+<p>Bertie raised his eyebrows slightly.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Soit!</i> But would it not be possible to intimate this
+quietly? A scene is such very bad style&mdash;always exhausting,
+too!"</p>
+
+<p>The languid calmness, the soft nonchalance of the tone,
+were like oil upon flame to the old Lion's heart, lashed to
+fury and embittered with pain as it was. A heavier oath
+than print will bear broke from him, with a deadly imprecation,
+as he paced the library with swift, uneven steps.</p>
+
+<p>"It had been better if your 'style' had been less and
+your decency and your honor greater! One word more is
+all you will ever hear from my lips. The title must come
+to you; that, unhappily, is not in my hands to prevent.
+It must be yours when I die, if you have not been shot in
+some gambling brawl or some bagnio abroad before then;
+but you will remember, not a shilling of money, not a rood
+of the land are entailed; and, by the heaven above us,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_312" id="Page_312">[Pg 312]</a></span>
+every farthing, every acre shall be willed to the young
+children. <i>You</i> are disinherited, sir&mdash;disowned for ever&mdash;if
+you died at my feet! Now go, and never let me see
+your face again."</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, Bertie rose.</p>
+
+<p>The two men stood opposite to each other&mdash;singularly
+alike in form and feature, in magnificence of stature, and
+distinction of personal beauty, save that the tawny gold
+of the old Lion's hair was flaked with white, and that his
+blue eyes were bright as steel and flashing fire, while the
+younger man's were very worn. His face, too, was deeply
+flushed and his lips quivered, while his son's were perfectly
+serene and impassive as he listened, without a
+muscle twitching, or even a gleam of anxiety coming into
+his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>They were of different schools.</p>
+
+<p>Bertie heard to the end; then bowed with a languid
+grace. "It will be fortunate for Lady Winton's children!
+Make her my compliments and congratulations. Good-day
+to you."</p>
+
+<p>Their eyes met steadily once&mdash;that was all; then the
+door of the library closed on him; Bertie knew the worst;
+he was face to face with beggary. As he crossed the hall,
+the entrance to the conservatories stood open; he looked
+through, paused a moment, and then went in. On a low
+chair, buried among the pyramids of blossom, sat a
+woman reading, aristocrat to the core, and in the earliest
+bloom of her youth, for she was scarcely eighteen, beautiful
+as the morning, with a delicate thorough-bred beauty,
+dark lustrous eyes, arched pencilled brows, a smile like
+sunshine, and lips sweet as they were proud. She was Ida
+Deloraine, a ward of Sir Lionel, and a cousin of his
+young second wife's.</p>
+
+<p>Bertie went up to her and held out his hand.</p>
+
+<p>"Lady Ida, I am come to wish you good-bye."</p>
+
+<p>She started a little and looked up.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_313" id="Page_313">[Pg 313]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Good-bye! Are you going to town?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;a little farther. Will you give me that camellia
+by way of <i>bon voyage</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>A soft warmth flushed her face for a moment; she hesitated
+slightly, toying with the snowy blossom; then she
+gave it him. He had not asked it like a love gage.</p>
+
+<p>He took it, and bowed silently over her hand.</p>
+
+<p>"You will find it very cold," said Lady Ida, with a
+trifle of embarrassment, nestling herself in her dormeuse
+in her warm bright nest among the exotics.</p>
+
+<p>He smiled&mdash;a very gentle smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I am frozen out. Adieu!"</p>
+
+<p>He paused a moment, looking at her&mdash;that brilliant
+picture framed in flowers; then, without another word, he
+bowed again and left her, the woman he had learned too
+late to love, and had lost by his own folly for ever.</p>
+
+<p>"Frozen out? What could he mean?&mdash;there is no
+frost," thought Lady Ida, left alone in her hot-house
+warmth among the white and scarlet blossoms, a little
+startled, a little disappointed, a little excited with some
+vague apprehension, she could not have told why; while
+Bertie Winton went on out into the cold gray winter's
+morning from the old Northamptonshire Hall that would
+know him no more, with no end so likely for him as that
+which had just been prophesied&mdash;a shot in a gambling
+hell.</p>
+
+<p><i>Facilis descensus Averni</i>&mdash;and he was at the bottom of
+the pit. Well, the descent had been very pleasant. Bertie
+set his teeth tight, and let the waters close over his head
+and shut him out of sight. He knew that a man who is
+down has nothing more to do with the world, save to
+quietly accept&mdash;oblivion.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>It was a hot summer night in Secessia.</p>
+
+<p>The air was very heavy, no wind stirring the dense
+woods crowning the sides of the hills or the great fields of<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_314" id="Page_314">[Pg 314]</a></span>
+trodden maize trampled by the hoofs of cavalry and the
+tramp of divisions. The yellow corn waved above the
+earth where the dead had fallen like wheat in harvest-time,
+and the rice grew but the richer and the faster
+because it was sown in soil where slaughtered thousands
+rotted, unsepulchred and unrecorded. The shadows were
+black from the reared mountain range that rose frowning
+in the moonlight, and the stars were out in southern
+brilliancy, shining as calmly and as luminously as though
+their rays did not fall on graves crammed full with dead,
+on flaming homesteads, crowded sick-wards, poisonous
+waters that killed their thousands in deadly rivalry with
+shot and shell, and vast battalions sleeping on their arms
+in wheat-fields and by river-swamps, in opposing camps,
+and before beleaguered cities, where brethren warred with
+brethren, and Virginia was drenched with blood. There
+was no sound, save now and then the challenge of some
+distant picket or the faint note of a trumpet-call, the roar
+of a torrent among the hills, or the monotonous rise and
+fall from miles away in the interior, of the negroes'
+funeral song, "Old Joe,"&mdash;more pathetic, somehow, when
+you catch it at night from the far distance echoing on the
+silence as you sit over a watch-fire, or ride alone through
+a ravine, than many a grander requiem.</p>
+
+<p>It was close upon midnight, and all was very still; for
+they were in the heart of the South, and on the eve of a
+perilous enterprise, coined by a bold brain and to be
+carried out by a bold hand.</p>
+
+<p>It was in the narrow neck of a valley, pent up between
+rocky shelving ridges, anywhere you will between Maryland
+and Georgia&mdash;for he who did this thing would not
+care to have it too particularly drawn out from the million
+other deeds of "derring-do" that the mighty story of
+the Great War has known and buried. Eight hundred
+Confederate Horse, some of Stuart's Cavalry, had got
+driven and trapped and caged up in this miserable defile<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_315" id="Page_315">[Pg 315]</a></span>,
+misled and intercepted; with the dense mass of a Federal
+army marching on their rear, within them by bare fifteen
+miles, and the forward route through the crammed defile
+between the hills, by which alone they could regain Lee's
+forces, dammed up by a deep, rapid, though not broad
+river; by a bridge strongly fortified and barricaded; and,
+on the opposite bank, by some Federal corps a couple of
+thousand strong, well under cover in rifle-pits and earthworks,
+thrown up by keen woodsmen and untiring trench-diggers.
+It was close peril, deadly as any that Secessia
+had seen, here in the hot still midnight, with the columns
+of the Federal divisions within them by eight hours'
+march, stretching out and taking in all the land to the
+rear in the sweep of their semicircular wings; while in
+front rose, black and shapeless in the deep gloom of the
+rocks above, the barricades upon the bridge, behind which
+two thousand rifles were ready to open fire at the first
+alarm from the Federal guard. And alone, without the
+possibility of aid, caged in among the trampled corn and
+maize that filled the valley, imprisoned between the two
+Federal forces as in the iron jaws of a trap, the handful
+of Southern troopers stood, resolute to sell their lives
+singly one by one, and at a costly price, and perish to a
+man, rather than fall alive into the hands of their foes.</p>
+
+<p>When the morning broke they would be cut to pieces,
+as the chaff is cut by the whirl of the steam-wheels. They
+knew that. Well, they looked at it steadily; it had no
+terrors for them, the Cavaliers of Old Virginia, so that
+they died with their face to the front. There was but
+one chance left for escape; aid there could be none; and
+that chance was so desperate, that even to them&mdash;reckless
+in daring, living habitually between life and death,
+and ever careless of the issue&mdash;it looked like madness to
+attempt it. But one among them had urged it on their
+consideration&mdash;urged it with passionate entreaty, pledging
+his own life for its success; and they had given their<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_316" id="Page_316">[Pg 316]</a></span>
+adhesion to it, for his name was famous through the
+Confederacy.</p>
+
+<p>He had won his spurs at Manasses, at Antietam, at
+Chancellorsville; he had been in every headlong charge
+with Stuart; he had been renowned for the most dashing
+Border raids and conspicuous staff service of any soldier
+in Secessia; he had galloped through a tempest of the
+enemy's balls, and swept along their lines to reconnoitre,
+riding back through the storm of shot to Lee, as coolly as
+though he rode through a summer shower at a review;
+and his words had weight with men who would have gone
+after him to the death. He stood now, the only man
+dismounted, in true Virginia uniform; a rough riding-coat,
+crossed by an undressed chamois belt, into which
+his sabre and a brace of revolvers were thrust, a broad
+Spanish sombrero shading his face, great Hessians reaching
+above his knee, and a long silken golden-colored
+beard sweeping to his waist,&mdash;a keen reconnoitrer, a
+daring raider, a superb horseman, and a soldier heart and
+soul.</p>
+
+<p>When he had laid before them the solitary chance of
+the perilous enterprise that he had planned, each man of
+the eight hundred had sought the post of danger for himself;
+but there he was, inexorable&mdash;what he had proposed
+he alone would execute. The Federals were ignorant
+of their close vicinity, for their near approach had
+been unheard, the trodden maize and rice, and the angry
+foaming of the torrent above, deadening the sound of
+their horses' hoofs; and the Union-men, satisfied that the
+"rebels" were entrapped beyond escape, were sleeping
+securely behind their earth-works, the passage of the
+river blockaded by their barricade, while the Southerners
+were drawn up close to the head of the bridge in sections
+of threes, screened by the intense shadow of the overhanging
+rocks; shadow darker from the brilliance of the
+full summer moon that, shining on the enemy's encampment,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_317" id="Page_317">[Pg 317]</a></span>
+and on the black boiling waters thundering through
+the ravine, was shut out from the defile by the leaning
+pine-covered walls of granite. It was terribly still, that
+awful silence, only filled with the splashing of the water
+and the audible beat of the Federal sentinel's measured
+tramp, as they were drawn up there by the bridge-head;
+and though they had cast themselves into the desperate
+effort with the recklessness of men for whom death waited
+surely on the morrow, it looked a madman's thought, a
+madman's exploit, to them, as their leader laid aside his
+sword and pistols, and took up a small barrel of powder,
+part of some ammunition carried off from some sappers
+and miners' stores in the raid of the past day, the sight
+of which had brought to remembrance a stray, half-forgotten
+story told him in boyhood of one of Soult's Army&mdash;the
+story on which he was about to act now.</p>
+
+<p>"For God's sake, take care!" whispered the man nearest
+him; and though he was a veteran who had gone through
+the hottest of the campaign since Bull's Run, his voice
+shook, and was husky as he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>The other laughed a little&mdash;a slight, soft, languid laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"All right, my dear fellow," he whispered back.
+"There's nothing in it to be alarmed at; a Frenchman
+did it in the Peninsula, you know. Only if I get shot, or
+blown up, and the alarm be given, do you take care to bolt
+over and cut your way through in the first of the rush,
+that's all."</p>
+
+<p>Then, without more words, he laid himself down at full
+length with a cord tied round his ankle, that they might
+know his progress, and the cask of gunpowder, swathed in
+green cloth, that it should roll without noise along the
+ground; and, creeping slowly on his way, propelling the
+barrel with his head, and guiding it by his hands, was
+lost to their sight in the darkness. By the string, as it
+uncoiled through their hands, they could tell he was
+advancing; that was all.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_318" id="Page_318">[Pg 318]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The chances were as a million to one that his life would
+pay the forfeit for that perilous and daring venture; a
+single shot and he would be blown into the air a charred
+and shapeless corpse; one spark on that rolling mass that
+he pushed before him, and the explosion would hurl him
+upward in the silent night, mangled, dismembered, blackened,
+lifeless. But his nerve was not the less cool, nor did
+his heart beat one throb the quicker, as he crept noiselessly
+along in the black shade cast by the parapet of the
+bridge, with the tramp of the guard close above on his
+ear, and rifles ready to be levelled on him from the covered
+earthworks if the faintest sound of his approach or
+the dimmest streak of moonlight on his moving body told
+the Federals of his presence. He had looked death in
+the teeth most days through the last five years; it had no
+power to quicken or slacken a single beat of his pulse as
+he propelled himself slowly forward along the black,
+rugged, uneven ground, and on to the passage of the
+bridge, as coolly, as fearlessly, as he would have crept
+through the heather and bracken after the slot of a deer
+on the moor-side at home.</p>
+
+<p>He heard the challenge and the tramp of the sentinel
+on the opposite bank; he saw the white starlight shine on
+the barrels of their breech-loaders as they paced to and
+fro in the stillness, filled with the surge and rush of the
+rapid waters beneath him. Shrouded in the gloom, he
+dragged himself onward with slow and painful movement,
+stretched out on the ground, urging himself forward by
+the action of his limbs so cautiously that, even had the
+light been on him, he could scarcely have been seen to
+move, or been distinguished from the earth on which he
+lay. Eight hundred lives hung on the coolness of his
+own; if he were discovered, they were lost. And, without
+haste, without excitation, he drew himself along under
+the parapet until he came to the centre of the bridge,
+placed the barrel close against the barricades, uncovered<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_319" id="Page_319">[Pg 319]</a></span>
+the head of the cask, and took his way back by the same
+laborious, tedious way, until he reached the Virginian
+Troopers gathered together under the shelving rocks.</p>
+
+<p>A deep hoarse murmur rolling down the ranks, the repressed
+cheer they dared not give aloud, welcomed him
+and the dauntless daring of his act; man after man pressed
+forward entreating to take his place, to share his peril; he
+gave it up to none, and three times more went back again
+on that deadly journey, until sufficient powder for his purpose
+was lodged under the Federal fortifications on the
+bridge. Two hours went by in that slow and terrible passage;
+then, for the last time, he wound a saucisson round
+his body serpent-wise, and, with that coil of powder curled
+around him, took his way once more in the same manner
+through the hot, dark, heavy night.</p>
+
+<p>And those left behind in the impenetrable gloom, ignorant
+of his fate, knowing that with every instant the crack
+of the rifles might roll out on the stillness, and the ball
+pierce that death-snake twisted round his limbs, and the
+rocks echo with the roar of the exploding powder, blasting
+him in the rush of its sheet of fire and stones, sat mute
+and motionless in their saddles, with a colder chill in
+their bold blood, and a tighter fear at their proud hearts,
+than the Cavaliers of the South would have known for
+their own peril, or than he knew for his.</p>
+
+<p>Another half-hour went by&mdash;an eternity in its long
+drawn-out suspense&mdash;then in the darkness under the rocks
+his form rose up amongst them.</p>
+
+<p>"Ready?"&mdash;"Ready."</p>
+
+<p>The low whisper passed all but inaudible from man to
+man. He took back his sabre and pistols and thrust them
+into his belt, then stooped, struck a slow match, and laid
+it to the end of the saucisson, whose mouth he had fastened
+to the barrels on the bridge, and rapidly as the lightning,
+flung himself across the horse held for him, and fell
+into line at the head of the troop.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_320" id="Page_320">[Pg 320]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>There was a moment of intense silence while the fire
+crept up the long stick of the match; then the shrill, hissing,
+snake-like sound, that none who have once heard ever
+forget, rushed through the quiet of the night, and with a
+roar that startled all the sleeping echoes of the hills, the
+explosion followed; the columns of flame shooting upward
+to the starlit sky, and casting their crimson lurid light
+on the black brawling waters, on the rugged towering
+rocks, on the gnarled trunks of the lofty pines, and on the
+wild, picturesque forms and the bold, swarthy, Spanish-like
+faces of the Confederate raiders. With a shock that
+shook the earth till it rocked and trembled under them,
+the pillar of smoke and fire towered aloft in the hush of
+the midnight, blasting and hurling upward, in thunder
+that pealed back from rock to rock, lifeless bodies, mangled
+limbs, smouldering timbers, loosened stones, dead
+men flung heavenward like leaves whirled by the wind,
+and iron torn up and bent like saplings in a storm, as the
+mass of the barricades quivered, oscillated, and fell with
+a mighty crash, while the night was red with the hot glare
+of the flame, and filled with the deafening din.</p>
+
+<p>The Federals, sleeping under cover of their intrenchments,
+woke by that concussion as though heaven and
+earth were meeting, poured out from pit and trench, from
+salient and parallel, to see their fortifications and their
+guard blown up, while the skies were lurid with the glow
+of the burning barricades, and the ravine was filled with
+the yellow mist of the dense and rolling smoke. Confused,
+startled, demoralized, they ran together like sheep,
+vainly rallied by their officers, some few hundred opening
+an aimless desultory fire from behind their works, the rest
+rushing hither and thither, in that inextricable intricacy,
+and nameless panic, which doom the best regiments that
+were ever under arms, when once they seize them.</p>
+
+<p>"Charge!" shouted the Confederate leader, his voice<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_321" id="Page_321">[Pg 321]</a></span>
+ringing out clear and sonorous above the infernal tempest
+of hissing, roaring, shrieking, booming sound.</p>
+
+<p>With that resistless impetus with which they had, over
+and over again, broken through the granite mass of packed
+squares and bristling bayonets, the Southerners, raising
+their wild war-whoop, thundered on to the bridge, which,
+strongly framed of stone and iron, had withstood the
+shock, as they had foreseen; and while the fiery glare
+shone, and the seething flame hissed, on the boiling
+waters below, swept, full gallop, over the torn limbs, the
+blackened bodies, the charred wood, the falling timbers,
+the exploding powder, with which the passage of the
+bridge was strewn, and charged through the hellish din,
+the lurid fire, the heavy smoke, at a headlong pace, down
+into the Federal camp.</p>
+
+<p>A thousand shots fell like hail amongst them, but not
+a saddle was emptied, not even a trooper was touched;
+and with their line unbroken, and the challenge of their
+war-shout pealing out upon the uproar, they rode through
+the confusion worse confounded, and cutting their way
+through shot and sabre, through levelled rifles, and
+through piled earthworks, with their horses breathing
+fire, and the roar of the opening musketry pealing out
+upon their rear, dashed on, never drawing rein, down into
+the darkness of the front defile, and into the freshness of
+the starry summer night, saved by the leader that they
+loved, and&mdash;<span class="smcap">FREE</span>!</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>"Tarnation cheeky thing to do. Guess they ain't wise
+to rile us that way," said a Federal general from Vermont,
+as they discussed this exploit of the Eight Hundred
+at the Federal head-quarters.</p>
+
+<p>"A splendid thing!" said an English visitor to the
+Northern camp, who had come for a six months' tour to
+see the war for himself, having been in his own time the
+friend of Paget and Vivian and Londonderry, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_322" id="Page_322">[Pg 322]</a></span>
+comrade of Picton, of Mackinnon, and of Arthur Wellesley.
+"A magnificent thing! I remember Bouchard did something
+the same sort of thing at Amarante, but not half so
+pluckily, nor against any such odds. Who's the fellow
+that led the charge? I'd give anything to see him and
+tell him what I think of it. How Will Napier would
+have loved him, by George!"</p>
+
+<p>"Who's the d&mdash;&mdash;d rebel, Jed?" said the General, taking
+his gin-sling.</p>
+
+<p>"Think he's an Englishman. We'd give ten thousand
+dollars for him, alive or dead: he's fifty devils in one,
+that <i>I</i> know," responded the Colonel of Artillery, thus
+appealed to, a gentlemanlike, quiet man, educated at
+West Point.</p>
+
+<p>"God bless the fellow! I'm glad he's English!" said
+the English visitor, heartily, forgetting his Federal situation
+and companions. "Who is he? Perhaps I know
+the name."</p>
+
+<p>"Should say you would. It's the same as your own&mdash;Winton.
+Bertie Winton, they call him. Maybe he's
+a relative of yours!"</p>
+
+<p>The blood flushed the Englishman's face hotly for a
+second; then a stern dark shadow came on it, and his
+lips set tight.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no knowledge of him," he said, curtly.</p>
+
+<p>"Haven't you now? That's curious. Some said he
+was a son of yours," pursued the Colonel.</p>
+
+<p>The old Lion flung back his silvery mane with his
+haughtiest imperiousness.</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir; he's no son of mine."</p>
+
+<p>Lion Winton sat silent, the dark shadow still upon his
+face. For five years no rumor even had reached him of
+the man he had disowned and disinherited; he had believed
+him dead&mdash;shot, as he had predicted, after some
+fray in a gaming-room abroad; and now he heard of him
+thus in the war-news of the American camp! His denial<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_323" id="Page_323">[Pg 323]</a></span>
+of him was not less stern, nor his refusal to acknowledge
+even his name less peremptory, because, with all his
+wrath, his bitterness, his inexorable passion, and his fierce
+repudiation of him as his son, a thrill of pleasure stirred
+in him that the man still lived&mdash;a proud triumph swept
+over him, through all his darker thoughts, at the magnificent
+dash and daring of a deed wholly akin to him.</p>
+
+<p>Bertie, a listless man about town, a dilettante in pictures,
+wines, and women, spending every moment that he
+could in Paris, gentle as any young beauty, always bored,
+and never roused out of that habitual languid indolent
+indifferentism which the old man, fiery and impassioned
+himself as the Napiers, held the most damnable effeminacy
+with which the present generation emasculates itself,
+had been incomprehensible, antagonistic, abhorrent to
+him. Bertie, the Leader of the Eight Hundred, the reckless
+trooper of the Virginian Horse, the head of a hundred
+wild night raids, the hero of a score of brilliant charges,
+the chief in the most daring secret expeditions and the
+most intrepid cavalry skirmishes of the South, was far
+nearer to the old Lion, who had in him all the hot fire of
+Crawford's school, with the severe simplicity of Wellington's
+stern creeds. "He is true to his blood at last," he
+muttered, as he tossed back his silky white hair, while
+his blue flashing eyes ranged over the far distance where
+the Southern lines lay, with something of eager restlessness;
+"he is true to his blood at last!"</p>
+
+<p>There was fighting some days later in the Shenandoah
+Valley.</p>
+
+<p>Longstreet's corps, with two regiments of cavalry, had
+attacked Sheridan's divisions, and the struggle was hot and
+fierce. The day was warm, and a brilliant sun poured
+down into the green cornland and woodland wealth of the
+valley as the Southern divisions came up to the attack in
+beautiful precision, and hurled themselves with tremendous
+<i>&eacute;lan</i> on the right front of the Federals, who, covered by<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_324" id="Page_324">[Pg 324]</a></span>
+their hastily thrown-up breastworks, opened a deadly fire
+that raked the whole Confederate line as they advanced.
+Men fell by the score under the murderous mitraille, but
+the ranks closed up shoulder to shoulder, without pause
+or wavering, only maddened by the furious storm of shot,
+as the engagement became general and the white rolling
+clouds of smoke poured down the valley, and hid conflict
+and combatants from sight, the thunder of the musketry
+pealing from height to height; while in many places men
+were fighting literally face to face and hand to hand in a
+death-struggle&mdash;rare in these days, when the duello of
+artillery and the rivalry of breech-loaders begins, decides,
+and ends most battles.</p>
+
+<p>On Longstreet's left, two squadrons of Virginian Cavalry
+were drawn up, waiting the order to advance, and passionately
+impatient of delay as regiment after regiment were
+sent up to the attack and were lost in the whirling cloud
+of dust and smoke, and they were kept motionless, in reserve.
+At their head was Bertie Winton, unconscious
+that, on a hill to the right, with a group of Federal commanders,
+his father was looking down on that struggle in
+the Shenandoah. Bertie was little altered, save that on
+his face there was a sterner look, and in his eyes a keener
+and less listless glance; but the old languid grace, the
+old lazy gentleness, were there still. They were part of
+his nature, and nothing could kill them in him. In the
+five years that had gone by, none whom he had known in
+Europe had ever heard a word of him or from him; he
+had cut away all the moorings that bound him to his old
+life, and had sought to build up his ruined fortunes, like
+the penniless soldier that he was, by his sword alone. So
+far he had succeeded: he had made his name famous
+throughout the States as a bold and unerring cavalry
+leader, and had won the personal friendship and esteem
+of the Chiefs of the Southern Confederacy. The five
+years had been filled with incessant adventures, with ever<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_325" id="Page_325">[Pg 325]</a></span>
+present peril, with the din of falling citadels, with the
+rush of headlong charges, with daring raids in starless
+autumn nights, with bivouacs in trackless Western forests,
+with desert-thirst in parching summer heats, with winters
+of such frozen roofless misery as he had never even
+dreamed&mdash;five years of ceaseless danger, of frequent suffering,
+of habitual renunciation; but five years of <i>life</i>&mdash;real,
+vivid, unselfish&mdash;and Bertie was a better man for
+them. What he had done at the head of Eight Hundred
+was but a sample of whatever he did whenever duty called,
+or opportunity offered, in the service of the South; and
+no man was better known or better trusted in all Lee's
+divisions than Bertie Winton, who sat now at the head of
+his regiment, waiting Longstreet's orders. An aide galloped
+up before long.</p>
+
+<p>"The General desires you to charge and break the
+enemy's square to the left, Colonel."</p>
+
+<p>Bertie bowed with the old Pall Mall grace, turned, and
+gave the word to advance. Like greyhounds loosed from
+leash, the squadrons thundered down the slope, and swept
+across the plain in magnificent order, charging full gallop,
+riding straight down on the bristling steel and levelled
+rifles of the enemy's kneeling square. They advanced in
+superb condition, in matchless order, coming on with the
+force of a whirlwind across the plain; midway they were
+met by a tremendous volley poured direct upon them;
+half their saddles were emptied; the riderless chargers
+tore, snorting, bleeding, terrified, out of the ranks; the
+line was broken; the Virginians wavered, halted, all but
+recoiled; it was one of those critical moments when hesitation
+is destruction. Bertie saw the danger, and, with a
+shout to the men to come on, he spurred his horse through
+the raking volley of shot, while a shot struck his sombrero,
+leaving his head bare, and urging the animal straight at
+the Federal front, lifted him in the air as he would have
+done before a fence, and landed him in the midst of the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_326" id="Page_326">[Pg 326]</a></span>
+square, down on the points of the levelled bayonets. With
+their fierce war-cheer ringing out above the sullen uproar
+of the firing, his troopers followed him to a man, charged
+the enemy's line, broke through the packed mass opposed
+to them, cut their way through into the centre, and hewed
+their enemies down as mowers hew the grass. Longstreet's
+work was done for him; the Federal square was broken,
+never again to rally.</p>
+
+<p>But the victory was bought with a price; as his horse
+fell, pierced and transfixed by the crossed steel of the
+bayonets, a dozen rifles covered the Confederate leader;
+their shots rang out, and Bertie Winton reeled from his
+saddle and sank down beneath the press as his own Southerners
+charged above him in the rush of the onward attack.
+On an eminence to the right, through his race-glass, his
+father watched the engagement, his eyes seldom withdrawn
+from the Virginian cavalry, where, for aught he
+knew, one of his own blood and name might be&mdash;memories
+of Salamanca and Quatre Bras, of Moodkee
+and Ferozeshah, stirring in him, while the fire of his dead
+youth thrilled through his veins with the tramp of the
+opposing divisions, and he roused like a war-horse at
+the scent of the battle as the white shroud of the smoke
+rolled up to his feet, and the thunder of the musketry
+echoed through the valley. Through his glass, he saw the
+order given to the troopers held in reserve; he saw the
+magnificent advance of that charge in the morning light;
+he saw the volley poured in upon them; and he saw them
+under that shock reel, stagger, waver, and recoil. The old
+soldier knew well the critical danger of that ominous moment
+of panic and of confusion; then, as the Confederate
+Colonel rode out alone and put his horse at that leap on to
+the line of steel, into the bristling square, a cry loud as the
+Virginian battle-shout broke from him. For when the
+charger rose in the air, and the sun shone full on the
+uncovered head of the Southern leader, he knew the fair<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_327" id="Page_327">[Pg 327]</a></span>
+English features that no skies could bronze, and the fair
+English hair that blew in the hot wind. He looked once
+more upon the man he had denied and had disowned; and,
+as Bertie Winton reeled and fell, his father, all unarmed
+and non-combatant as he was, drove the spurs into his
+horse's flanks, and dashing down the steep hill-side, rode
+over the heaps of slain, and through the pools of gore,
+into the thick of the strife.</p>
+
+<p>With his charger dead under him, beaten down upon
+one knee, his sword-arm shivered by a bullet, while the
+blood poured from his side where another shot had lodged,
+Bertie knew that his last hour had come, as the impetus
+of the charge broke above him&mdash;as a great wave may sweep
+over the head of a drowning man&mdash;and left him in the
+centre of the foe. Kneeling there, while the air was red
+before his sight that was fast growing blind from the loss
+of blood, and the earth seemed to reel and rock under
+him, he still fought to desperation, his sabre in his left
+hand; he knew he could not hold out more than a second
+longer, but while he had strength he kept at bay.</p>
+
+<p>His life was not worth a moment's purchase,&mdash;when,
+with a shout that rang over the field, the old Lion rode
+down through the carnage to his rescue, his white hair
+floating in the wind, his azure eyes flashing with war-fire,
+his holster-pistol levelled; spurred his horse through the
+struggle, trampled aside all that opposed him, dashed
+untouched through the cross-fire of the bullets, shot
+through the brain the man whose rifle covered his son
+who had reeled down insensible, and stooping, raised the
+senseless body, lifted him up by sheer manual strength to
+the level of his saddle-bow, laid him across his holsters,
+holding him up with his right hand, and, while the
+Federals fell asunder in sheer amazement at the sudden
+onslaught, and admiration of the old man's daring,
+plunged the rowels into his horse, and, breaking through
+the reeking slaughter of the battle-field, rode back, thus<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_328" id="Page_328">[Pg 328]</a></span>
+laden with his prisoner, through the incessant fire of the
+cannonade up the heights to the Federal lines.</p>
+
+<p>"If you were to lie dying at my feet!"&mdash;his father
+remembered those words, that had been spoken five years
+before in the fury of a deadly passion, as Bertie lay
+stretched before him in his tent, the blood flowing from
+the deep shot-wound in his side, his eyes closed, his face
+livid, and about his lips a faint and ghastly foam.</p>
+
+<p>Had he saved him too late? had he too late repented?</p>
+
+<p>His heart had yearned to him when, in the morning
+light, he had looked once more upon the face of his son,
+as the Virginian Horse had swept on to the shock of the
+charge; and all of wrath, of bitterness, of hatred, of dark,
+implacable, unforgiving vengeance, were quenched and
+gone for ever from his soul as he stooped over him where
+he lay at his feet, stricken and senseless in all the glory
+of his manhood. He only knew that he loved the man&mdash;he
+only knew that he would have died for him, or died
+with him.</p>
+
+<p>Bertie stirred faintly, with a heavy sigh, and his left
+hand moved towards his breast. Old Sir Lion bent over
+him, while his voice shook terribly, like a woman's.</p>
+
+<p>"Bertie! My God! don't you know <i>me</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>He opened his eyes and looked wearily and dreamily
+around; he did not know what had passed, nor where he
+was; but a faint light of wonder, of pleasure, of recognition,
+came into his eyes, and he smiled&mdash;a smile that
+was very gentle and very wistful.</p>
+
+<p>"I am glad of that&mdash;before I die! Let us part friends&mdash;<i>now</i>.
+They will tell you I have&mdash;redeemed&mdash;the
+name."</p>
+
+<p>The words died slowly and with difficulty on his lips,
+and as his father's hand closed upon his in a strong
+grasp of tenderness and reconciliation, his lids closed, his
+head fell back, and a deep-drawn, labored sigh quivered
+through all his frame; and Lion Winton, bowing down<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_329" id="Page_329">[Pg 329]</a></span>
+his grand white crest, wept with the passion of a woman.
+For he knew not whether the son he loved was living or
+dead&mdash;he knew not whether he was not at the last too
+late.</p>
+
+<hr style='width: 45%;' />
+
+<p>Three months further on, Lady Ida Deloraine sat in
+her warm bright nest among the exotics, gazing out
+upon the sunny lawns and the green woodlands of
+Northamptonshire. Highest names and proudest titles
+had been pressed on her through the five years that
+had gone, but her loveliness had been unwon, and
+was but something more thoughtful, more brilliant, more
+exquisite still than of old. The beautiful warmth that
+had never come there through all these years was in
+her cheeks now, and the nameless lustre was in her
+eyes, which all those who had wooed her had never
+wakened in their antelope brilliancy, as she sat looking
+outward at the sunlight; for in her hands lay a camellia,
+withered, colorless, and yellow, and eyes gazed down
+upon the marvellous beauty of her face which had remembered
+it in the hush of Virginian forests, in the
+rush of headlong charges, in the glare of bivouac fires, in
+the silence of night-pickets, and in the din of falling
+cities.</p>
+
+<p>And Bertie's voice, as he bent over her, was on her ear.</p>
+
+<p>"That flower has been on my heart night and day; and
+since we parted I have never done that which would have
+been insult to your memory. I have tried to lead a better
+and a purer life; I have striven to redeem my name and
+my honor; I have done all I could to wash out the vice
+and the vileness of my past. Through all the years we
+have been severed I have had no thought, no hope,
+except to die more worthy of you; but now&mdash;oh, my
+God!&mdash;if you knew how I love you, if you knew how my
+love alone saved me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>His words broke down in the great passion that had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_330" id="Page_330">[Pg 330]</a></span>
+been his redemption; and as she lifted her eyes upward
+to his own, soft with tears that had gathered but did not
+fall, and lustrous with the light that had never come there
+save for him, he bowed his head over her, and, as his lips
+met hers, he knew that the redeemed life he laid at her
+feet was dearer to her than lives, more stainless, but less
+nobly won.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr class="sep1" />
+<hr class="sep2" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_331" id="Page_331">[Pg 331]</a></span></p>
+<h1>OUR WAGER.</h1>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_332" id="Page_332">[Pg 332]</a></span></p>
+<hr class="sep3" />
+<hr class="sep4" />
+
+
+<h2><a name="OUR_WAGER" id="OUR_WAGER"></a>OUR WAGER;<br />
+<small>OR,</small><br />
+HOW THE MAJOR LOST AND WON.</h2>
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_333" id="Page_333">[Pg 333]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<h2>I</h2>
+
+<h3>INTRODUCES MAJOR TELFER OF THE 50TH DASHAWAY
+HUSSARS.</h3>
+
+
+<p>The softest of lounging-chairs, an unexceptionable hubble-bubble
+bought at Benares, the last <i>Bell's Life</i>, the
+morning papers, chocolate milled to a T, and a breakfast
+worthy of Francatelli,&mdash;what sensible man can ask more
+to make him comfortable? All these was my chum,
+Hamilton Telfer, Major (50th Dashaway Hussars),
+enjoying, and yet he was in a frame of mind anything but
+mild and genial.</p>
+
+<p>"The deuce take the whole sex!" said he, stroking his
+moustache savagely. "They're at the bottom of all the
+mischief going. The idea of my father at seventy-five,
+with hair as white as that poodle's, making such a fool of
+himself, when here am I, at six-and-thirty, unmarried; it's
+abominable, it's disgusting. A girl of twenty, taking in
+an old man of his age, for the sake of his money&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"But are you sure, Telfer," said I, "that the affair's
+really on the tapis?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure! Yes," said the Major, with immeasurable disgust.
+"I never saw her till last night, but the governor<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_334" id="Page_334">[Pg 334]</a></span>
+wrote no end of rhapsodies about her, and as I came
+upon them he was taking leave of her, holding her hand
+in his, and saying, 'I may write to you, may I not?' and
+the young hypocrite lifted her eyes so bewitchingly, 'Oh
+yes, I shall long so much to hear from you!' She colored
+when she saw me&mdash;well she might! If she thinks she'll
+make a fool of my father, and reign paramount at Torwood,
+give me a mother-in-law sixteen years younger than
+myself, and fill the house and cumber the estates with a
+lot of wretched little brats, she'll find herself mistaken,
+for I'll prevent it, if I live."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't be too sure of that," said I. "From what I
+know of Violet Tressillian, she's not the sort of girl to
+lure her quarry in vain."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course she'll try hard," answered Telfer. "She
+comes of a race that always were poor and proud; she's
+an orphan, and hasn't a sou, and to catch a man like my
+father worth 15,000<i>l.</i> a year, with the surety of a good
+dower and jointure house whenever he die, is one of the
+best things that could chance to her; but I'll be shot if
+she ever shall manage it."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Nous verrons.</i> I bet you my roan filly Calceolaria
+against your colt Jockeyclub that before Christmas is out
+Violet Tressillian will be Violet Telfer."</p>
+
+<p>"Done!" cried the Major, stirring his chocolate fiercely.
+"You'll lose, Vane; Calceolaria will come to my stables
+as sure as this mouthpiece is made of amber. Whenever
+this scheming little actress changes her name, it sha'n't be
+to the same cognomen as mine. I say, it's getting
+deuced warm&mdash;one must begin to go somewhere. What
+do you say to going abroad till the 12th? I've got three
+months' leave&mdash;that will give me one away, and two on
+the moor. Will you go?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, if you like; town's emptying gradually, and it is
+confoundedly hot. Where shall it be?&mdash;Naples&mdash;Paris&mdash;&mdash;"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_335" id="Page_335">[Pg 335]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Paris in July! Heaven forbid! Why, it would be
+worse than London in November. By Jove! I'll tell
+you where: let's go to Essellau."</p>
+
+<p>"And where may that be? Somewhere in the Arctic
+regions, I hope, for I've spent half my worldly possessions
+already in sherry and seltzer and iced punch, and if I go
+where it's warmer still, I shall be utterly beggared."</p>
+
+<p>"Essellau is in Swabia, as you ought to know by this,
+you Goth. It's Marc von Edenburgh's place, and a very
+jolly place, too, I can tell you; the sport's first-rate there,
+and the pig-sticking really splendid. He's just written
+to ask me to go, and take any fellows I like, as he's got
+some English people&mdash;some friends of his mother's. (A
+drawback that&mdash;I wonder who they are.) Will you
+come, Vane? I can promise you some fun, if only at the
+trente-et-quarante tables in Pipesandbeersbad."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes, I'll come," said I. "I hope the English
+won't be some horrid snobs he's picked up at some of the
+balls, who'll be scraping acquaintance with us when we
+come back."</p>
+
+<p>"No fear," said Telfer; "Marc's as English as you or
+I, and knows the good breed when he sees them. He'd
+keep as clear of the Smith, Brown, and Robinson style as
+we should. It's settled, then, you'll come. All right!
+I wish I could settle that confounded Violet, too, first. I
+hope nothing will happen while I'm in Essellau. I don't
+think it can. The Tressillian leaves town to-day with
+the Carterets, and the governor must stick here till
+parliament closes, and it's sure to be late this year."</p>
+
+<p>With which consolatory reflection the Major rose,
+stretched himself, yawned, sighed, stroked his moustache,
+fitted on his lavender gloves, and rang to order his tilbury
+round.</p>
+
+<p>Telfer was an only son, and when he heard it reported
+that his father intended to give him a <i>belle-m&egrave;re</i> in a
+young lady as attractive as she was poor, who, if she<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_336" id="Page_336">[Pg 336]</a></span>
+caught him, would probably make a fool of the old
+gentleman in the widest sense of the word, he naturally
+swore very heartily, and anything but relished the idea.
+Hamilton Telfer, senior, had certainly been a good deal
+with Violet that season, and Violet, a girl poor as a rat
+and beautiful as Semele, talked to him, and sang to him,
+and rode with him more than she did with any of us; so
+people talked and talked, and said the old member would
+get caught, and the Major, when he heard it, waxed
+fiercely wroth at the folly his parent had fallen into while
+he'd been off the scene down at Dover with his troop,
+but, like a wise man, said nothing, knowing, both by
+experience and observation, that opposition in such
+affairs is like a patent Vesta among hayricks. Telfer
+was a particular chum of mine: we'd lounged about
+town, and shot on the moors, and campaigned in India
+together, and I don't believe there was a better soldier, a
+cooler head, a quicker eye, or a steadier hand in the
+service than he was. He was six-and-thirty now, and
+had seen life pretty well, I can tell you, for there was not
+a get-at-able corner of the globe that he hadn't looked at
+through his eye-glass. Tall and muscular, with a stern,
+handsome face, with the prospect of Torwood (where
+there's some of the best shooting in England, I give you
+my word), and 15,000<i>l.</i> a year, Telfer was a great card in
+the matrimonial line, but hadn't let himself be played as
+yet, for the petty trickery the women used in trying to
+get him dealt to them disgusted him, and small wonder.
+Men liked him cordially, women thought him cold and
+sarcastic; and he was much more genial, I admit, at mess,
+or at lansquenet, or in the smoking-room of the U. S., than
+he was in boudoirs and ball-rooms, as the mere knowledge
+that mammas and their darlings were trying to hook him
+made him get on his stilts at once.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't feel easy in my mind about the governor,"
+said he, as we drove along to the South-Eastern Station a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_337" id="Page_337">[Pg 337]</a></span>
+few days after on our way to Essellau. "As I was bidding
+him good-bye this morning, Soames brought him a letter
+in a woman's hand. Heaven knows he may have a score
+of fair correspondents for anything I care, but if I thought
+it was the Tressillian, devil take her&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"And the devil won't have had a prettier prize since
+Proserpine was stolen," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"No, confound it, I saw she was handsome enough,"
+swore the Major, disgusted; "and a pretty face always
+did make a fool of my father, according to his own telling.
+Well, thank God, I don't take that weakness after him.
+I never went mad about any woman. You've just as
+much control over love, if you like, as over a quiet shooting
+pony; and if it don't suit you to gallop, you can rein
+up and give over the sport. Any man who's anything
+of a philosopher needn't fall in love unless he likes."</p>
+
+<p>"Were you never in love, then, old boy?" I asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I have been. I've made love to no end of
+women in my time; but when one love was died out I
+took another, as I take a cigar, and never wept over the
+quenched ashes. You need never fall in love unless it's
+convenient, and as to caring for a girl who don't care for
+you, that's a contemptible weakness, and one I don't sympathize
+with at all. Come along, or the train will be off."</p>
+
+<p>He went up to the carriages, opened a door, shut it
+hastily, and turned away, with the frigid bow with which
+Telfer, in common with every other Briton, can say, "Go
+to the devil," as plainly as if he spoke.</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove!" said I, "what's that eccentric move?
+Did you see the Medusa in that carriage, or a baby?"</p>
+
+<p>"Something quite as bad," said he, curtly. "I saw
+the Tressillian and her aunt. For Heaven's sake, let's
+get away from them. I'd rather have a special train, if
+it cost me a fortune, than travel with that girl, boxed up
+for four hours in the same compartment with such a little
+intrigante."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_338" id="Page_338">[Pg 338]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Calm your mind, old fellow; if she's aiming at your
+governor she won't hit you. She can't be your wife and
+your mother-in-law both," laughed Fred Walsham, a
+good-natured little chap in the Carabiniers, a friend of
+Von Edenburgh, who was coming with us.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll see her shot before she's either," said Telfer,
+fiercely stroking his moustache.</p>
+
+<p>"Hush! the deuce! hold your tongue," said Walsham,
+giving him a push. For past us, so close that the curling
+plumes in her hat touched the Major's shoulder, floated
+the "little intrigante" in question, who'd come out of her
+carriage to see where a pug of hers was put. She'd
+heard all we said, confound it, for her head was up, her
+color bright, and she looked at Telfer proudly and disdainfully,
+with her dark eyes flashing. Telfer returned
+it to the full as haughtily, for he never shirked the consequences
+of his own actions ('pon my life, they looked like
+a great stag and a little greyhound challenging each
+other), and Violet swept away across the platform.</p>
+
+<p>"You've made an enemy for life, Telfer," said Walsham,
+as we whisked along.</p>
+
+<p>"So much the better, if I'm a rock ahead to warn her
+off a marriage with the governor," rejoined the Major,
+smoking, as he always did, under the officials' very noses.
+"I hope I sha'n't come across her again. If the Tressillian
+and I meet, we shall be about as amicable as a rat
+and a beagle. Take a weed, Fred. I do it on principle
+to resist unjust regulations. Why shouldn't we take a
+pipe if we like? A man whose olfactory nerves are so
+badly organized as to dislike Cavendish is too great a
+muff to be considered."</p>
+
+<p>As ill luck would have it, when we crossed to Dover,
+who should cross, too, but the Tressillian and her party&mdash;aunt,
+cousins, maid, courier, and pug. Telfer wouldn't
+see them, but got on the poop, as far away as ever he
+could from the spot where Violet sat nursing her dog and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_339" id="Page_339">[Pg 339]</a></span>
+reading a novel, provokingly calm and comfortable to
+the envious eyes of all the <i>malades</i> around her.</p>
+
+<p>"Good Heavens!" said he, "was anything ever so provoking?
+Just because that girl's my particular aversion,
+she must haunt me like this. If she'd been anybody I
+wanted to meet, I should never have caught a glimpse of
+her. For mercy's sake, Vane, if you see a black hat and
+white feather anywhere again, tell me, and we'll change
+the route immediately."</p>
+
+<p>Change the route we did, for, going on board the
+steamer at D&uuml;sseldorf, there, on the deck, stood the Tressillian.
+Telfer turned sharp on his heel, and went back
+as he came. "I'll be shot if I go down the Rhine with
+her. Let's cut across into France." Cut across we did,
+but we stopped at Brussels on our way; and when at last
+we caught sight of the tops of the fir-trees around Essellau,
+Telfer took a long whiff at his pipe with an air of contentment.
+"I should say we're safe now. She'll hardly
+come pig-sticking into the middle of Swabia."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>II.</h2>
+
+<h3>VIOLET TRESSILLIAN.</h3>
+
+
+<p>Essellau was a very jolly place, with thick woods
+round it, and the river Beersbad running in sight; and
+his pretty sister, the Comtesse Virginie, his good wines,
+and good sport, made Von Edenburgh's a pleasant
+house to visit at. Marc himself, who is in the Austrian
+service (he was winged at Montebello the other day by
+a rascally Zouave, but he paid him off for it, as I hope
+his countrymen will eventually pay off all the Bonapartists
+for their <i>galimatias</i>)&mdash;Marc himself was a jolly
+fellow, a good host, a keen shot, and a capital &eacute;cart&eacute;
+player, and made us enjoy ourselves at Essellau as he had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_340" id="Page_340">[Pg 340]</a></span>
+done before, hunting and shooting with Telfer down at
+Torwood.</p>
+
+<p>"I've some countrywomen of yours here, Telfer," said
+Marc, after we'd talked over his English loves, given
+him tiding of duchesses and danseuses, and messages
+from no end of pretty women that he'd flirted with the
+Christmas before. "They're some friends of my mother's,
+and when they were at Baden-Baden last year, Virginie
+struck up a desperate young lady attachment with one of
+them&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Are they good-looking?&mdash;because, if they are, they
+may be drysalters' daughters, and I shan't care," interrupted
+Fred.</p>
+
+<p>Telfer stroked his moustache with a contemptuous
+smile&mdash;<i>he</i> wouldn't have looked at a drysalter's daughter
+if she'd had all the beauty of Amphitrite.</p>
+
+<p>"Come and see," said Marc. "Virginie will think
+you're neglecting her atrociously."</p>
+
+<p>Horribly bored to be going to meet some Englishwomen
+who might turn out to be Smiths or Joneses, and
+would, to a dead certainty, spoil all his pleasure in pig-sticking,
+shooting, and &eacute;cart&eacute;, by flirting with him whether
+he would or no, the Major strode along corridors and
+galleries after Von Edenburgh. When at length we
+reached the salon where Virginie and her mother and
+friends were, Telfer lifted his eyes from the ground as the
+door opened, started as if he'd been shot, and stepped
+back a pace or two, with an audible, "If that isn't the
+very devil!"</p>
+
+<p>There, in a low chair, sat the Tressillian, graceful as a
+Sphakiote girl, with a toilet as perfect as her profile, dark
+hair like waves of silk, and dark eyes full of liquid
+light, that, when they looked irresistible, could do anything
+with any man that they liked. Violet certainly
+looked as unlike that unlucky ogre and scapegoat, the
+devil, as a young lady ever could. But worse than a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_341" id="Page_341">[Pg 341]</a></span>
+score of demons was she in poor Telfer's eyes: to have
+come out to Essellau only to be shut up in a country-house
+for a whole month with his pet aversion!&mdash;certainly
+it <i>was</i> a hard case, and the fierce lightning glance he
+flashed on her was pardonable under the circumstances.
+But nobody's more impassive than the Major: I've seen
+him charge down into the Sikhs with just the same calm,
+quiet expression as he'd wear smoking and reading a
+novel at home; so he soon rallied, bowed to the Tressillian,
+who gave him an inclination as cold as the North Pole,
+shook hands with her aunt and cousins (three women I
+hate: the mamma's the most dexterous of man&#339;uvrers,
+and the girls the arrantest of flirts), and then sat down to
+a little quiet chat with Virginie von Edenburgh, who's
+pretty, intelligent, and unaffected, though she's a belle at
+the Viennese court. Telfer was pleasant with the little
+comtesse; he'd known her from childhood, and she was
+engaged to the colonel of Marc's troop, so that Telfer felt
+quite sure she'd no designs upon him, and talked to her
+<i>sans g&eacute;ne</i>, though to have wholly abstained from bitterness
+and satire would have been an impossibility to him,
+with the obnoxious Tressillian seated within sight. Once
+he fixed her with his calm gray eyes, she met them with
+a proud flashing glance; Telfer gave back the defiance,
+and <i>guerre &agrave; outrance</i> was declared between them. It
+was plain to see that they hated one another by instinct,
+and I began to think Calceolaria wasn't so safe in my
+stables after all, for if the Major set his face against anything,
+his father, who pretty well worshipped him, would
+never venture to do it in opposition; he'd as soon think
+of leaving Torwood to the country, to be turned into an
+infirmary or a museum.</p>
+
+<p>That whole day Telfer was agreeable to the Von Edenburgh,
+distantly courteous to the Carterets, and utterly
+oblivious of the very existence of the Tressillian. When<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_342" id="Page_342">[Pg 342]</a></span>
+we were smoking together, after dinner, he began to
+unburden himself of his mighty wrath.</p>
+
+<p>"Where the deuce did you pick up that girl, Marc?"
+asked he, as we stood looking at the sun setting over the
+woods of Essellau, and crimsoning the western clouds.</p>
+
+<p>"What girl?" asked Marc.</p>
+
+<p>"That confounded Tressillian," answered the Major,
+gloomily.</p>
+
+<p>"I told you the Carterets were friends of my mother's,
+and last year, when the Tressillian came with them to
+Baden, Virginie met her, and they were struck with a
+great and sudden love for one another, after the insane
+custom of women. But why on earth, Telfer, do you call
+her such names? I think her divine; her eyes are something&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I wish her eyes had been at the devil before she'd
+bewitched my poor father with them," said Telfer, pulling
+a rose to pieces fiercely. "I give you my word, Marc,
+that if I didn't like you so well, I'd go straight off home
+to-morrow. Here have I been turning out of my route
+twenty times, on purpose to avoid her, and then she must
+turn up at the very place I thought I was sure to be safe
+from her. It's enough to make a man swear, I should
+say, and not over-mildly either."</p>
+
+<p>"But what's she done?" cried Von Edenburgh, thinking,
+I dare say, that Telfer had gone clean mad. "Refused
+you&mdash;jilted you&mdash;what is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Refused me! I should like to see myself giving her
+the chance," said the Major, with intense scorn. "No
+but she's done what I'd never forgive&mdash;tried to cozen
+the poor old governor into marrying her. She's no money,
+you know, and no home of her own; but, for all that, for
+a girl of twenty to try and hook an old man of seventy-five,
+to cheat him into the idea that he's made a conquest,
+and chisel him into the belief that she's in love with him<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_343" id="Page_343">[Pg 343]</a></span>&mdash;faugh!
+the very idea disgusts one. What sort of a
+wife would a woman make who could act such a lie?"</p>
+
+<p>As he spoke, a form swept past him, and a beautiful
+face full of scorn and passion gleamed on him through
+the <i>demi-lumi&egrave;re</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove! you've done it now, Telfer," said Walsham.
+"She was behind us, I bet you, gathering those roses;
+her hands are full of them, and she took that means of
+showing us she was within earshot. You <i>have</i> set your
+foot in it nicely, certainly."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Ce m'est bien &eacute;gal</i>," said Telfer, haughtily. "If she
+hear what I say of her, so much the better. It's the
+truth, that a young girl who'd sell herself for money, as
+soon as she's got what she wanted will desert the man
+who's given it to her; and I like my father too well to
+stand by and see him made a fool of. The Tressillian
+and I are open foes now&mdash;we'll see which wins."</p>
+
+<p>"And a very fair foe you have, too," thought I, as I
+looked at Violet that night as she stood in the window, a
+wreath of lilies on her splendid hair, and her impassioned
+eyes lighting into joyous laughter as she talked nonsense
+with Von Edenburgh.</p>
+
+<p>"Isn't she first-rate style, in spite of your prejudice?"
+I said to Telfer, who'd just finished a game at &eacute;cart&eacute; with
+De Tintiniac, one of the best players in Europe. If the
+Major has any weakness, &eacute;cart&eacute; is one of them. He just
+glanced across with a sarcastic smile.</p>
+
+<p>"Well got up, of course; so are all actresses&mdash;on the
+stage."</p>
+
+<p>Then he dropped his glass and went back to his cards,
+and seemed to notice the splendid Tressillian not one
+whit more than he did her pup.</p>
+
+<p>Whether his discourteous speeches had piqued Violet
+into showing off her best paces, or whether it's a natural
+weakness of her sex to shine in all times and places that
+they can, certain it was that I never saw the Tressillian<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_344" id="Page_344">[Pg 344]</a></span>
+more brilliant and bewitching than she was that night.
+Waltzing with Von Edenburgh, singing with me, talking
+fun with Fred, or merely lying back in her chair, playing
+lazily with her bouquet, she was eminently dangerous
+in whatever she did, and there wasn't a man in the castle
+who didn't gather round her, except her sworn foe the
+Major. Even De Tintiniac, that old campaigner at the
+green tables, who has long ago given over any mistress
+save hazard, glanced once or twice at the superb eyes
+beaming with the <i>droit de conqu&ecirc;te</i>, but Telfer never
+looked up from his cards.</p>
+
+<p>Telfer and she parted with the chilliest of "good nights,"
+and met again in the morning with the most frigid of
+"good mornings," and to that simple exchange of words
+was their colloquy limited for an entire fortnight. Unless
+I'd been witness of it, I wouldn't have credited that any
+two people could live for that space of time in the same
+country-house and keep so distant. Nobody noticed it,
+for there were no end of guests at Essellau, and the Tressillian
+had so many liege subjects ready to her slightest
+bidding, that the Major's <i>l&egrave;se-majest&eacute;</i> wasn't of such
+consequence. But when day after day came, and he
+spent them all boar-hunting, shooting, fishing, or playing
+rouge-et-noir and roulette at the gaming-tables in Pipesandbeersbad,
+and when he was in the drawing-rooms at
+Essellau she saw him amusing and agreeable, and unbending
+to every one but herself, I don't know anything of
+woman's nature if I didn't see Violet's delicate cheek
+flush, and her eyes flash, whenever she caught the Major's
+cool, contemptuous, depreciating glance, much harder to
+her sex to bear than spoken ridicule or open war. Occasionally
+he cast a sarcasm, quick, sharp, and relentless
+as a Mini&eacute; ball, at her, which she fired back with such
+rifle-powder as she had in her flask; but the return shot
+fell as harmlessly as it might have done on Achilles's
+breast.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_345" id="Page_345">[Pg 345]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"A man is very silly to marry," he was saying one
+evening to Marc, "since, as Emerson says, from the beginning
+of the world such as are in the institution want to
+get out, and such as are out want to get in."</p>
+
+<p>Violet, sitting near at the piano, turned half round.
+"If all others are of my opinion, Major Telfer, you will
+never be tempted, for no one will be willing to enter it
+with you."</p>
+
+<p>The shot fell short. Telfer neither smiled nor looked
+annoyed, but answered, tranquilly,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Possibly; but my time is to come. When I own
+Torwood, ladies will be as kind to me as they are now to
+my father; for it is wonderful what a charm to renew
+youth, reform rakes, buy love, and make the Beast the
+Beauty, is '<i>un peu de poudre d'or</i>,' in the eyes of the <i>beau
+sexe</i>."</p>
+
+<p>The Tressillian flushed scarlet, but soon recovered
+herself.</p>
+
+<p>"I have heard," she said, pulling her bouquet to pieces
+with impatience, "that when people look through smoked
+glass the very sun looks dusky, and so I suppose, through
+your own moral perceptions, you view those of others.
+You know what De la Fayette wrote to Madame de
+Sabl&eacute;: '<i>Quelle corruption il faut avoir dans l'esprit pour
+&ecirc;tre capable d'imaginer tout cela!</i>'"</p>
+
+<p>"It does not follow," answered Telfer, impassively.
+"De la Fayette was quite wrong. Suard was nearer the
+truth when he said that Rochefoucauld, '<i>a peint les
+hommes comme il les &agrave; vus. Il n'appartenait qu'&agrave; un homme
+d'une r&eacute;putation bien pure et bien distingu&eacute;e d'oser fl&eacute;trir
+ainsi le principe de toutes les actions humaines.</i>'"</p>
+
+<p>"And Major Telfer is so unassailable himself that he
+can mount his pedestal and censure all weaker mortals,"
+said Violet, sarcastically. "Your judgments are, perhaps,
+not always as infallible as the gods'."</p>
+
+<p>"You are gone very wide of the original subject, Miss<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_346" id="Page_346">[Pg 346]</a></span>
+Tressillian," answered Telfer, coldly. "I was merely
+speaking of that common social fraud and falsehood, a
+<i>mariage de convenance</i>, which, as I shall never sin in that
+manner myself, I am at liberty to censure with the scorn
+I feel for it."</p>
+
+<p>He looked hard at her as he spoke. The Tressillian's
+eyes answered the stare as haughtily.</p>
+
+<p>"Some may not be all <i>mariages de convenance</i> that you
+choose to call such. It does not necessarily follow,
+because a girl marries a rich man, that she marries him
+for his money. There <i>may</i> be love in the case, but the
+world never gives her the grace of the doubt."</p>
+
+<p>"What hardy hypocrisy," thought Telfer. "She'd
+actually try to persuade me to my face that she was in
+love with the poor old governor and his gout!"</p>
+
+<p>"Pardon me," he said, with his most cynical smile.
+"In attributing disinterested affection to ladies, I think
+'<i>quelque disposition qu'ait le monde &agrave; mal juger, il fait
+plus souvent grace au faux m&eacute;rite qu'il ne fait injustice au
+v&eacute;ritable</i>.'"</p>
+
+<p>The Tressillian's soft lips curved angrily; she turned
+away, and began to sing again, at Walsham's entreaty.
+Telfer got up and lounged over to Virginie, with whom
+he laughed, talked, waltzed, and played chess for the rest
+of the evening.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>III.</h2>
+
+<h3>FROM WHICH IT WOULD APPEAR, THAT IT IS SOMETIMES WELL TO BEGIN WITH A
+LITTLE AVERSION.</h3>
+
+
+<p>After this split, Telfer and the Tressillian were rather further off
+each other than before; and whenever riding, and driving, at dinner, or
+in lionizing, they came by chance together, he avoided her silently as
+much as ever he could, without making a parade of it. Violet could see<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_347" id="Page_347">[Pg 347]</a></span>
+very well how cordially he hated her, and, woman-like, I dare say mine,
+and Edenburgh's, and Walsham's, and all her devoted friends' admiration
+was valueless, as long as her vowed enemy treated her with such careless
+contempt.</p>
+
+<p>One morning the two foes met by chance. Telfer and I, after a late night
+over at Pipesandbeersbad, with lansquenet, cheroots, and cognac, had
+betaken ourselves out to whip the Beersbad, whose fish, for all their
+boiling by the hot springs, are first-rate, I can assure you. Telfer
+tells you he likes fishing, but I never see that he does much more than
+lie full length under the shadiest tree he can find, with his cap over
+his eyes and his cigar in his mouth, doing the <i>dolce</i> lazily enough. A
+three-pound trout had no power to rouse him; and he's lost a salmon
+before now in the Tweed because it bored him to play it! Shade of old
+Izaak! is <i>that</i> liking fishing? But few things ever did excite him,
+except it was a charge, or a Kaffir scrimmage; and then he looked more
+like a concentrated tempest than anything else, and woe to the turban
+that his sabre came down upon.</p>
+
+<p>That part of the stream we'd tried first had been whipped before us, or
+the fish wouldn't bite; and I, who haven't as much patience as I might
+have, went up higher to try my luck. Telfer declined to come; he was
+comfortable, he said, and out of the sun; he preferred "Indiana" and his
+cheroot to catching all the fish in the Beersbad, so I bid him good-bye,
+and left him smoking and reading at his leisure under the linden-trees.
+I went further on than I had meant, up round a bend of the river, and
+was too absorbed in filling my basket to notice a storm coming up from
+the west, till I began to find myself getting wet to the skin, and the
+lightning flying up and down the hills round Essellau. I looked for the
+Major as I passed the lime-trees, but he wasn't there, and I made the
+best of my way back to the castle, supposing he'd got there before me;
+but I was mistaken.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_348" id="Page_348">[Pg 348]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"I've seen nothing of him," said Marc. "He's stalking about the woods, I
+dare say, admiring the lightning. That's more than the poor Tressillian
+does, I bet. She went out by herself, I believe, just before the storm,
+to get a water-lily she wanted to paint, and hasn't appeared since. By
+Jove! if Telfer should have to play knight-errant to his 'pet aversion,'
+what fun it would be."</p>
+
+<p>Marc had his fun, for an hour afterwards, when the storm had blown over,
+up the terrace steps came Violet and the Major. They weren't talking to
+each other, but they were actually walking together; and the courtesy
+with which he put a dripping rose-branch out of her path with his stick,
+was something quite new.</p>
+
+<p>It seems that Telfer, disliking disagreeable sensations, and classing
+getting wet among such, had arisen when the thunder began to growl, and
+slowly wended his way homewards. But before he was halfway to Essellau
+the rain began to drip off his moustache, and seeing a little marble
+temple (the Parthenon turned into a summer-house!) close by, he thought
+he might as well go in and have another weed till it grew finer. Go in
+he did; and he'd just smoked half a cigar, and read the last chapter of
+"Indiana," when he looked up, and saw the Tressillian's pug, looking a
+bedraggled and miserable object, at his feet, and the Tressillian
+herself standing within a few yards of him. If Telfer had abstained from
+a few fierce mental oaths, he would have been of a much more pacific
+nature than he ever pretended to be; and I don't doubt that he looked
+hauteur concentrated as he rose at his enemy's entrance. Violet made a
+movement of retreat, but then thought better of it. It would have seemed
+too much like flying from the foe. So with a careless bow she sank on
+one of the seats, took off her hat, shook the rain-drops off her hair,
+and busied herself in sedulous attentions to the pug. The Major thought
+it incumbent on him to speak a few sentences about the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_349" id="Page_349">[Pg 349]</a></span> thunder that was
+cracking over their heads; Violet answered him as briefly; and Telfer
+putting down his cigar with a sigh, sat watching the storm in silence,
+not troubling himself to talk any more.</p>
+
+<p>As she bent down to pat the pug she caught his eyes on her with a cold,
+critical glance. He was thinking how pure her profile was and how
+exquisite her eyes, and&mdash;of how cordially he should hate her if his
+father married her. Her color rose, but she met his look steadily, which
+is a difficult thing to do if you've anything to conceal, for the
+Major's eyes are very keen and clear. Her lips curved with a smile half
+amused, half disdainful. "What a pity, Major Telfer," she said, with a
+silvery laugh, "that you should be condemned to imprisonment with one
+who is unfortunately such a <i>b&ecirc;te noire</i> to you as I am! I assure you, I
+feel for you; if I were not coward enough to be a little afraid of that
+lightning, I would really go away to relieve you from your sufferings. I
+should feel quite honored by the distinction of your hatred if I didn't
+know, you, on principle, dislike every woman living. Is your judgment
+always infallible?"</p>
+
+<p>Beyond a little surprise in his eyes, Telfer's features were as
+impassive as ever. "Far from it," he answered, quietly "I merely judge
+people by their actions."</p>
+
+<p>The Tressillian's luminous eyes flashed proudly. "An unsafe guide, Major
+Telfer; you cannot judge of actions until you know their motives. I know
+perfectly well why you dislike and avoid me: you listened to a foolish
+report, and you heard me giving your father permission to write to me.
+Those are your grounds, are they not?"</p>
+
+<p>Telfer, for once in his life, <i>was</i> astonished, but he looked at her
+fixedly. "And were they not just ones?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Violet, vehemently,&mdash;"no, they were most rankly unjust; and
+it is hard, indeed, if a girl, who has no friends or advisers that she
+can trust, may not accept the kindness and ask the counsels of a man
+fifty-five years<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_350" id="Page_350">[Pg 350]</a></span> older than herself without his being given to her as a
+lover, and the world's whispering that she is trying to entrap him. You
+pique yourself on your clear-sightedness, Major Telfer, but for once
+your judgment failed you when you attributed such mean and mercenary
+motives to me, and supposed, because, as you so generously stated, I had
+'no money and no home,' I must necessarily have no heart or conscience,
+but be ready to give myself at any moment to the highest bidder, and
+take advantage of the kindness of your noble-minded, generous-hearted
+father to trick him into marriage." She stopped, fairly out of breath
+with excitement. Telfer was going to speak, but she silenced him with a
+haughty gesture. "No; now we are started on the subject, hear me to the
+end. You have done me gross injustice&mdash;an offence the Tressillians never
+forgive&mdash;but, for my own sake, I wish to show you how mistaken you were
+in your hasty condemnation. At the beginning of the season I was
+introduced to your father. He knew my mother well in her girlhood, and
+he said I reminded him of her. He was very kind to me, and I, who have
+no real friend on earth, of course was grateful to him, for I was
+thankful to have any one on whom I could rely. You know, probably as
+well as I do, that there is little love lost between the Carterets and
+myself, though, by my father's will, I must stay with them till I am of
+age. I have one brother, a boy of eighteen; he is with his regiment
+serving out in India, and the climate is killing him by inches, though
+he is too brave to try and get sick leave. Your father has been doing
+all he can to have him exchanged; the letters I have had from him have
+been to tell me of his success, and to say that Arthur is gazetted to
+the Buffs, and coming home overland. There is the head and front of my
+offending, Major Telfer; a very simple explanation, is it not? Perhaps
+another time you will be more cautious in your censure."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_351" id="Page_351">[Pg 351]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>A faint flush came over the Major's bronzed cheek; he looked out of the
+portico, and was silent for a minute. The knowledge that he has wronged
+another is a keen pang to a proud man of an honor almost fastidious in
+his punctilio of right. He swung quickly round, and held out his hand to
+her.</p>
+
+<p>"I beg your pardon; I have misjudged you, and I am thoroughly ashamed of
+myself for it," he said, in a low voice.</p>
+
+<p>When the Major does come down from his hauteur, and let some of his
+winning cordial nature come out, no woman living, unless she were some
+animated Medusa, could find it in her heart to say him nay. His frank
+self-condemnation touched Violet, despite herself, and, without
+thinking, she laid her small fingers in his proffered hand. Then the
+Tressillian pride flashed up again; she drew it hastily away, and walked
+out into the air.</p>
+
+<p>"Pray do not distress yourself," she said, with an effort (not
+successful) to seem perfectly calm and nonchalant. "It is not of the
+slightest consequence; we understand each other's sentiments now, and
+shall in future be courteous in our hate like two of the French
+<i>noblesse</i>, complimenting one another before they draw their swords to
+slay or to be slain. It has cleared now, so I will leave you to the
+solitude I disturbed. Come, Floss." And calling the pug after her,
+Violet very gracefully swept down the steps, but with a stride the Major
+was at her side.</p>
+
+<p>"Nay, Miss Tressillian," he said, gently, "it is true I've given you
+cause to think me as rude as Orson or Caliban, but I am not quite such a
+bear as to let you walk home through these woods alone."</p>
+
+<p>Violet made an impatient movement. "Pray don't trouble yourself. We are
+close to the castle, and&mdash;pardon me, but truth-telling seems the order
+for the day&mdash;I much prefer you in your open enmity to your simulated<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_352" id="Page_352">[Pg 352]</a></span>
+courtesy. We have been rude to each other for three weeks; in another
+one you will be gone, so it is scarcely worth while to begin politeness
+now."</p>
+
+<p>"As you please," said Telfer, coldly.</p>
+
+<p>He'd made great advances and concessions for him, and was far too
+English when repulsed to go on making any more. But he was
+astonished&mdash;extremely so&mdash;for he'd been courted and sought since he was
+in jackets, and couldn't make out a young girl like the Tressillian
+treating him so lightly. He walked along beside her in profound silence,
+but though neither of them spoke a word, he didn't leave her side till
+she was safe on the terrace at Essellau. The Major was very grave that
+night at dinner, and occasionally he looked at Violet with a strange,
+inquiring glance, as the young lady, in the most brilliant of spirits,
+fired away French repartees with Von Edenburgh and De Tintiniac, her
+face absolutely <i>rayonnant</i> in the gleam of the wax lights. I thought
+the spirits were a little too high to be real. Late at night, as he and
+I and Marc were smoking on the terrace, before turning in, Telfer
+constrained himself to tell us of the scene in the summer-house. He'd
+abused her to us. Common honor, he said, obliged him to tell us the
+truth about her.</p>
+
+<p>"I am sorry," said he, slowly, between the whiffs of his meerschaum. "If
+there is one thing I hate, it is injustice. I was never guilty of
+misjudging anybody before in my life, that I know of; and, I give you my
+word, I experienced a new sensation&mdash;I absolutely felt humbled before
+that girl's great, flashing, truthful eyes, to think that I'd been
+listening to report and judging from prejudice like any silly, gossiping
+woman."</p>
+
+<p>"It seems to have made a great impression on you, Telfer," laughed Marc.
+"Has your detestation of Violet changed to something as warm, but more
+gentle? Shall we have to say the love wherewith he loves her is greater
+than the hate wherewith he hated her?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_353" id="Page_353">[Pg 353]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Not exactly," answered the Major, calmly, with a supercilious twist of
+his moustaches. "But I like pluck wherever I see it, and she's a true
+Tressillian."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>IV.</h2>
+
+<h3>IN WHICH THE MAJOR PROVOKES A QUARREL IN BEHALF OF THE FAIR TRESSILLIAN.</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Well, Telfer," said I, two mornings after, "if you want to be at the
+moor by the 12th, we must start soon; this is the 6th. It will be sharp
+work to get there as it is."</p>
+
+<p>"What, do you think of not going at all?" said Telfer, laying down the
+<i>Revue des deux Mondes</i> with a yawn. "We are very well here. Marc
+bothers me tremendously to stay on another month, and the shooting's as
+good as we shall get at Glenattock. What do you say, Vane?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just as you like," I answered. "The pigs are as good as the grouse, for
+anything I know. They put me in mind of getting my first spear at
+Burampootra. I only thought you wanted to be off out of sight of the
+Tressillian."</p>
+
+<p>He laughed slightly. "Oh! the young lady's no particular eyesore to me
+now I don't regard her in the light of a <i>belle-m&egrave;re</i>. Well, shall we
+stop here, then?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Comme vous voulez.</i> I don't care."</p>
+
+<p>"No philosopher ever moves when he's comfortable," said the Major,
+laughing. "I'll write and tell Montague he can shoot over Glenattock if
+he likes. I dare say he can find some men who'll keep him company and
+fill the box. I say, old fellow, I've won Calceolaria, but I sha'n't
+have her, because I consider the bet drawn. Our wager was laid on the
+supposition that the Tressillian wished to<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_354" id="Page_354">[Pg 354]</a></span> marry the governor, but as
+she never has had the desire, I've neither lost nor won."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we'll wait and see," said I. "Christmas isn't come yet. Here
+comes Violet. She looks well, don't she? Confess now, prejudice apart,
+that you admire her, <i>nolens volens</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Telfer looked at her steadily as she came into the billiard-room in her
+hat and habit, as she'd been riding with Lucy Carteret, Marc, and De
+Tintiniac. "Yes," he said, slowly, under his breath, "she is very good
+style, I admit."</p>
+
+<p>Lucy Carteret challenged Telfer to a game; she has a tall, <i>svelte</i>
+figure, and knows she looks well at billiards. He played lazily, and let
+her win easily enough, paying as little attention to the <i>agaceries</i> and
+glances she lavished upon him as if he'd been an automaton. When they'd
+played it out, he went up to the Tressillian, who was talking to Marc in
+the window, and, to my supreme astonishment, asked her to have a game.</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, no," answered Violet, coldly; "it is too warm for
+billiards."</p>
+
+<p>This was certainly the first time the Major had ever been refused in any
+of his overtures to her sex, and I believe it surprised him exceedingly.
+He bent his head, and soon after he went for a walk in the rosery with
+Lucy Carteret, whom he hates. We always hate those man&#339;uvring,
+<i>mani&eacute;r&eacute;</i> girls, who are everlastingly flinging bait after us, whether
+or no we want to nibble; and just in proportion as they fixatrice, and
+crinoline, and cosmetique to hook us, will leave us to die in the sun
+when they've once trapped us into the basket.</p>
+
+<p>That night, when Telfer sat down to &eacute;cart&eacute;, Violet was singing in
+another room, out of which her voice came distinctly to us. I noticed he
+didn't play quite as well as usual. I don't suppose he could be
+listening, though,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_355" id="Page_355">[Pg 355]</a></span> for he doesn't care for music, and still less for
+the Tressillian.</p>
+
+<p>"Mademoiselle," said De Tintiniac, going up to her afterwards, "you can
+boast of greater conquests than Orpheus. He only charmed rocks, but you
+have distracted the two most inveterate <i>joueurs</i> in Europe."</p>
+
+<p>Telfer looked annoyed. Violet laughed. "Pardon me if I doubt your
+compliment. If you were so kind as to listen to me, I have not enough
+vanity to think that your opponent would yield to what <i>he</i> would think
+such immeasurable weakness."</p>
+
+<p>"You are not magnanimous, Miss Tressillian," said Telfer, in a low tone,
+leaning down over the piano. "You are ceaselessly reminding me of a
+hasty prejudice, unjustly formed, of which I have told you I am heartily
+ashamed."</p>
+
+<p>"A hasty prejudice!" repeated Violet. "I beg your pardon, Major Telfer;
+I think ours is a very strong and lasting enmity, as mutual as it is
+well founded. Don't contradict me; you know you could have shot me with
+as little remorse as a partridge."</p>
+
+<p>"But can you never forget," continued Telfer, impatiently, "that my
+enmity, as you please to term it, was grafted on erroneous opinions and
+false reports, and will you never credit that when I see myself in the
+wrong, I am too just to others to continue in it?"</p>
+
+<p>The Tressillian laughed&mdash;a mischievous, <i>provoquant</i> laugh. "No, I
+believe neither in sudden conversions nor sudden friendships. Pray do
+not trouble yourself to be 'just' to me; you see I did not droop and die
+under the shadow of your wrath."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh no," said Telfer, with a sardonic twist of his moustaches, "one
+would not accuse you of too much softness, Miss Tressillian."</p>
+
+<p>She colored, and the pride of her family flashed out of her eyes. The
+Tressillians are all deucedly proud, and would die sooner than yield an
+inch. "If by softness<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_356" id="Page_356">[Pg 356]</a></span> you mean weakness, you are right," she said,
+haughtily. "As I have told you, we never forgive injustice."</p>
+
+<p>Telfer frowned. If there was one thing he hated more than another, it
+was a woman who had anything hard about her. He smiled his chilliest
+smile. "Those are harsh words from a lady's lips&mdash;not so becoming to
+them as something gentler. You remind me, Miss Tressillian, of a young
+panther I once had, beautiful to look at, but eminently dangerous to
+approach, much less to caress. Everybody admired my panther, but no one
+dared to choose it for a pet."</p>
+
+<p>With this uncourteous allegory the Major turned away, leaving Violet to
+make it out as best she might. It was good fun to watch the
+Tressillian's face: I only, standing near, had caught what he said, for
+he had spoken very low. First she looked haughty and annoyed, then a
+little troubled and perplexed: she sat quiet a minute, playing
+thoughtfully with her bracelets; then shook her head with a movement of
+defiance, and began to sing a Venetian barcarole with more <i>&eacute;lan</i> and
+spirit than ever.</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove! Telfer," said I, as we sat in the smoking-room that night,
+"your would-have-been mother-in-law has plenty of pluck. She'd have kept
+you in good training, and made a better boy of you; it's quite a loss to
+your morals that your father didn't marry her."</p>
+
+<p>Telfer didn't look best pleased. He stretched himself full length on one
+of the divans, and answered not.</p>
+
+<p>"I shouldn't be surprised if, with all her beauty, she hangs on hand,"
+said Walsham, "for she hasn't a rap, you know; her governor gamed it all
+away, and she's certainly a bit of a flirt."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't think so," said Telfer, shortly.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, by George! don't you? but I do," cried Fred. "Why, she takes a turn
+at us all, from old De Tintiniac, with his padded figure and coulisses
+compliments, to Marc, young and beautiful, as the novels say,&mdash;but we'll
+spare<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_357" id="Page_357">[Pg 357]</a></span> his blushes&mdash;from Vane, there, with his long rent-roll, to poor
+me, who she knows goes on tick for my weeds and gloves. She flirts with
+us all, one after the other, except you, whom she don't dare to touch.
+Tell me where you get your <i>noli me tangere</i> armor, Telfer, and I'll
+adopt it to-morrow, for the girls make such desperate love to me I know
+some of them will propose before long."</p>
+
+<p>Telfer smoked vigorously during Fred's peroration, and his brow
+darkened. "I do not consider Miss Tressillian a flirt," he said, slowly.
+"She's too careless in showing you her weak points to be trying to trap
+you. What <i>I</i> call a coquette is a woman who is all things to all men,
+whose every languishing glance is a bait, and whose every thought is a
+conquest."</p>
+
+<p>"And pray how can you tell but what the Tressillian's naturalness and
+carelessness may be only a superior bit of acting? The highest art, you
+know, is to imitate nature so close that you can't tell which is which,"
+laughed Walsham.</p>
+
+<p>Telfer didn't seem to relish the suggestion, but went on smoking
+fiercely.</p>
+
+<p>"Not that I want to speak against the girl," Fred went on; "she's very
+amusing, and well enough, I dare say, if she weren't so devilish proud."</p>
+
+<p>"You seem rather inconsistent," said Telfer, impatiently. "First, you
+accuse her of being too free, and then blame her for being too
+reserved."</p>
+
+<p>Walsham laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"If I'm inconsistent, you're a perfect weathercock. A month ago you were
+calling Violet every name you could think of, and now you snap us all
+off short if we say a word against her."</p>
+
+<p>Telfer looked haughty enough to extinguish Fred upon the spot; Fred
+being a small, lively little chap, with not the slightest dignity about
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"I know little or nothing of Miss Tressillian, but as I<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_358" id="Page_358">[Pg 358]</a></span> was the first
+to prejudice you all against her, it is only common honor to take her
+part when I think her unjustly attacked."</p>
+
+<p>Fred gave me a wink of intense significance, but remonstrated no
+further, for Telfer had something of the dark look upon him that our men
+knew so well when he led them down to the slaughter at Alma and
+Balaklava.</p>
+
+<p>"I tell you," continued the Major, after a little silence, "that I am
+disgusted with myself for having listened to whispers and reports, and
+believed in them just because they suited the bias of my prejudice. It
+didn't matter to me whom my father married, as far as money went, for
+beyond 10,000<i>l.</i> or so, it must all come in the entail; but I couldn't
+endure the idea of his being chiselled by some Becky Sharp or Blanche
+Armory, and I made up my mind that the Tressillian was of that genre.
+I've changed my opinion now. I don't think she either is an actress or
+an intrigante; and I should be a coward indeed if I hesitated to say so,
+out of common justice to a young girl who has no one to defend her."</p>
+
+<p>"Bravo, my boy!" said Walsham; "I thought the Tressillian's bright eyes
+wouldn't let you hate her long. You're quite right, though 'pon my life
+it is really horrid how women contrive to damage each other. If there's
+an unlucky girl who has made the best match of the season&mdash;she might be
+an angel from heaven&mdash;her bosom-friends would manage gently to spread
+abroad the interesting facts that she's a 'dreadful flirt,' 'has a snub
+nose,' is an awful temper, had a ballet-girl for her mamma, or something
+detrimental. An attractive woman is the target for all her sex to shoot
+their sneers at, and if the poor thing isn't so riddled with arrows that
+she's no beauty left, it isn't her sisters' fault."</p>
+
+<p>"I believe you," said Telfer. "My gauge of a woman's fascinations is the
+amount of hatred all the others bear her. It often amuses me to hear the
+tone that ladies<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_359" id="Page_359">[Pg 359]</a></span> take in talking of some girl whom we admire. She's a
+charming creature&mdash;a darling&mdash;their particular friend but ... there's
+always a 'but' to neutralize the praise, and with their honeyed hatred
+they contrive to damn the luckless object irretrievably. If another
+man's a good shot, or whip, or billiard-player, we're not spiteful to
+him for it. We think him a good fellow, and like him the better; but the
+dear <i>beau sexe</i> cannot bear a rival, and never rest while one of their
+acquaintance has diamonds a carat larger, dresses a trifle more costly,
+has finer horses, or more conquests. The only style of friend I ever
+heard women speak well of is some plain and timorous individual,
+good-natured to foolery, and weak as water, who never comes in their
+orbit, and whom we never look at; and then what a darling she is, and
+how eloquently they will laud her to the skies, despising her miserably
+all the while for not having been born pretty!"</p>
+
+<p>"True enough," Marc began. "Why do the Carterets treat the Tressillian
+so disagreeably?&mdash;only because, though without their fortune, she makes
+ten times their coups; and get themselves up how they may, they know
+none of us care to waltz with them if she's in the room. Let's drink her
+health in Marcobrunnen&mdash;she's magnificent eyes."</p>
+
+<p>"And first-rate style," said I.</p>
+
+<p>"And a deuced pretty foot," cried Fred.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Et une taille superbe</i>," added de Tintiniac, just come in. "<i>En
+v&eacute;rit&eacute;, elle est chouette cette Violette Anglaise.</i>"</p>
+
+<p>So we chanted the Tressillian's praises. Telfer drank the toast in
+silence&mdash;<i>I</i> thought with a frown on his brow at the freedom with which
+we discussed his fair foe.</p>
+
+<p>Little Countess Virginie's wedding was to come off in another month, and
+Marc begged us so hard to stay on till then, that, Telfer seeming very
+willing, I consented, though it would be the first September I had ever
+spent out of the English open since I was old enough to know<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_360" id="Page_360">[Pg 360]</a></span> partridges
+from pheasants. The Tressillian being Virginie's pet friend, after young
+ladies' custom of contracting eternal alliances (which ordinarily
+terminate in a quarrel about the shade of a ponceau ribbon, or a mauve
+flower, or a cornet's eyes, some three months after the signing and
+sealing thereof), was of course to be one of the <i>filles d'honneur</i>. So,
+as I said to Telfer, he'd have time for a few more battles before the
+two enemies parted to meet again&mdash;nobody could tell when.</p>
+
+<p>I began to think that the Major had really been wounded, and that his
+opponent's bright eyes wouldn't let him come out of the fight wholly
+scathless, as I saw him leaning against the wall at a ball in the
+Redoute at Pipesandbeersbad, watching Violet with great earnestness as
+she whirled round in a <i>deux temps</i>, bewitching as was her wont all the
+frequenters of the Bad. Rich English dyspeptics, poverty-stricken
+princes, Austrian diplomats, come to cure their hypochondria; French
+<i>d&eacute;cor&eacute;s</i>, to try their new cabals and martingales; British snobs, to
+indulge the luxury of grumbling,&mdash;all of them found some strange
+attraction in the "Violette Anglaise."</p>
+
+<p>Violet sank on a seat after her valse. Telfer quietly displaced a young
+dragoon from Lucca, and sat down by her.</p>
+
+<p>"I am going to stay on another month, Miss Tressillian; are you not
+sorry to hear it?" he said, with a smile, but I thought a little anxiety
+in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>The color flushed over her face, and she answered, with a laugh, not
+quite a real one: "Of course I am very sorry. I would go away myself to
+let you enjoy your last week in peace if I were not engaged to Virginie.
+Cannot you get me leave of absence from her? I know you would throw your
+whole heart into the petition."</p>
+
+<p>Telfer curled his moustaches impatiently.</p>
+
+<p>"Truth has come out of her well at last," he said, with<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_361" id="Page_361">[Pg 361]</a></span> a dash of
+bitterness, "and has disguised herself in Miss Tressillian's tulle
+illusion."</p>
+
+<p>Violet colored brighter still.</p>
+
+<p>"Well," she said, quickly, "was it not your decision that we should
+never waste courtesy on one another? Was not your own desire <i>guerre &agrave;
+outrance</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," answered Telfer, his brow darkening; "that I certainly must deny.
+I did you injustice, and I offered you an apology. No man could do more
+than acknowledge he was in the wrong. I offered you the palm-branch
+once; you were pleased to refuse it. I am not a man, Miss Tressillian,
+to run the chance of another repulse. My friendship is not so cheap that
+I shall intrude it where it is undesired." He spoke with a laugh, but
+his eyes had a grave anger in them that Violet didn't quite relish.</p>
+
+<p>She looked a little bit frightened up at him. The proud, brilliant
+Tressillian was as pale and quiet as a little child after a good
+scolding. But she soon rallied, and flashed up haughtier than ever.</p>
+
+<p>"Major Telfer, you make one great error&mdash;one very common to your sex.
+You drop us one day, and take us up the next, and then think that we
+must be grateful to you for the supreme honor you do us. You are cold to
+us, absolutely rude, as long as it pleases your lordly will, and then,
+at the first word of courtesy and kindness, you expect us to rise and
+make you a <i>r&eacute;v&eacute;rence</i> in the utmost humiliation and thanksgiving. You
+men"&mdash;and Violet began destroying her bouquet with immense
+energy&mdash;"treat us exactly as a cat will treat a mouse. You yourself, for
+instance, in a moment's hasty judgment, construed all my actions by the
+light of your own unjust suspicions, and believing everything, no matter
+how unfounded, spoke against me to all your acquaintance, and treated me
+with, as you must admit, but scanty courtesy, for one whom I have heard
+piques himself on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_362" id="Page_362">[Pg 362]</a></span> his high breeding. And now, when you discover that
+your suspicions had no foundation, and your hatred no grounds, you
+wonder that I find it difficult to be as grateful as you seem to think I
+should be for your having so kindly misjudged me."</p>
+
+<p>As the young lady gave all this forth with much vehemence and spirit,
+Telfer's lips set, and the blood forced itself through the bronze of his
+cheeks. He bent towards her till his moustache touched her hair.</p>
+
+<p>"You have no mercy, Violet Tressillian," he said, between his teeth.
+"Take care that no one is as pitiless to you in return."</p>
+
+<p>She started, and her bouquet fell to the ground. Telfer gave it her back
+without looking at her, and turned round to an Austrian with his usual
+impassive air.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you know where De Tintiniac is, Staumgaurn? In the roulette room?
+All right. I am going there now."</p>
+
+<p>He did go there, and I've a notion that the croupier of Pipesandbeersbad
+made something that night out of the Major's preoccupation.</p>
+
+<p>Violet, meanwhile, was waltzing with Staumgaurn and a dozen others, but
+looked rather white&mdash;not using any rouge but what nature had given
+her&mdash;and by the end of the evening her bouquet had utterly come to
+grief. Days went on till a fortnight of our last month had gone, and
+Telfer, to my sorrow (not surprise, for I always thought the Tressillian
+was a dangerous foe, and that, like Ringwood, he'd find himself unhorsed
+by a woman), grew grave and stern, haunted with ten times more
+recklessness than usual, and threw away his guineas at the Redoute in a
+wild way, quite new with him, for though he liked play <i>pour s'amuser</i>,
+he had too much control over his passions ever to let play get
+ascendancy over him. I used to think he had the strongest passions and
+the strongest will over them of any man I knew; but<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_363" id="Page_363">[Pg 363]</a></span> now a passion least
+undesired and most hopeless of any that ever entered his soul, seemed to
+have mastered him. Not that he showed it; with the Tressillian he was
+simply distantly courteous; but I, who was on the <i>qui vive</i> for his
+first sign of being conquered, saw his eyebrows contract when somebody
+was paying her desperate court, and his glance lighten and flash when
+she passed near him. They had never been alone since the night of the
+ball, and Violet was too proud to try for a reconciliation, even if
+she'd cared for one.</p>
+
+<p>One night we were at a ball at the Prince Humbugandschwerinn's. The
+Tressillian had been waltzing with all her might, and had all the men in
+the room, Humbugandschwerinn himself included, round her. Telfer leaned
+against a console ten minutes, watching her, and then abruptly left the
+ball-room, and did not return again. He came instead into the card-room,
+and sat down to <i>&eacute;cart&eacute;</i> with De Tintiniac, and lost two games at ten
+Napoleons a side. Generally, he played very steadily, never giving his
+attention to anything but the game; but now he was listening to what a
+knot of men were saying, who were laughing, chatting, and sipping
+coffee, while they talked about&mdash;the Tressillian.</p>
+
+<p>"I mark the king and play," said Telfer, his eyes fixed fiercely on a
+young fellow who was discussing Violet much as he'd have discussed his
+new Danish dog or English hunter. He was Jack Snobley, Lord
+Featherweight's son, who was doing the grand, a confounded young
+parvenu, vulgar as his cotton-spinning ancestry could make him, who
+could appreciate the Tressillian about as much as he could Dannecker's
+Ariadne, which work of art he pronounced, in my hearing, "a pretty girl,
+but the dawg very badly done&mdash;too much like a cat." "I take your three
+to two," continued Telfer, his brow lowering as he heard the young fool
+praising and criticising Violet with small ceremony. The Major had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_364" id="Page_364">[Pg 364]</a></span> the
+haughtiest patrician principles, and to hear a snob like this
+sandy-haired honorable, speaking of the woman <i>he</i> chose to champion as
+he might have done of some ballerina or Chaumi&egrave;re belle, was rather too
+much for Telfer's self-control.</p>
+
+<p>When the game was done, he rose, and walked quietly over to where
+Snobley stood. He looked him down with that cold, haughty glance that
+has cowed men bolder than Lord Featherweight's hopeful offspring, and
+said a word or two to him in a low tone, which caused that gentleman to
+flush up red and look fierce with all his might.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the girl to you, that I mayn't speak as I choose of her?" he
+retorted; the Sillery, of which he'd taken a good deal too much, working
+up in his weak brain. "I've heard that she jilted you, and that was why
+you've been setting them all against her, and saying she wanted to hook
+your old governor."</p>
+
+<p>The Sillery must have indeed obscured Jack's reason with a vengeance to
+make him venture this very elegant and refined speech with the Major,
+most fastidious in his ideas of good breeding, and most direful in his
+wrath, of any man I ever knew. Telfer's cheek turned as white with
+passion as the bronze would let it; his gray eyes grew almost black as
+they stared at the young snob. He was so supremely astonished that this
+ill-bred boy had actually dared thus to address him!</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Snobley," he said, with his chilled and most ironical smile, and
+his quietest, most courteous voice, "you must learn good manners before
+you venture to parley with gentlemen. Allow me to give you your first
+lesson." And stooping, as if to a very little boy&mdash;young Snobley was a
+good foot shorter than he&mdash;the Major struck him on the lips with his
+left-hand French kid glove. It was a very gentle blow&mdash;it would scarcely
+have reddened the Tressillian's delicate skin&mdash;but on the Hon. Jack it
+had<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_365" id="Page_365">[Pg 365]</a></span> electric effect. He was beginning to swear, to look big, to talk of
+satisfaction, insult, and all the rest of it; but Telfer laughed, bent
+his head, told him he was quite ready to satisfy him to any extent he
+required; and, turning away, sat down to <i>&eacute;cart&eacute;</i> calm and impassive as
+ever, and pleased greatly with himself for having silenced this silly
+youth. The affair was much less exciting to him than it was to any other
+man in the room. "It's too great an honor for him, the young brute, for
+me to be called out by him, as if he were one of us. I hate snobs; Lord
+Featherweight's grandfather was butler to mine, and he himself was a
+cotton-spinner in Lancashire, and then this little contemptible puppy
+dares to&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Telfer finished his sentence with a puff of smoke from his meerschaum,
+as he sat in his bedroom after the ball, into which sanctuary I had
+followed him to talk a little before turning in.</p>
+
+<p>"To discuss the Tressillian," said I. "But that surprises me less, old
+fellow, than that you should champion her. What's it for? Has hate
+turned to the other thing? Have you come to think that, though she'd
+make a very bad mother-in-law, she'd make a charming wife? 'Pon my life,
+if you have&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Hush! Don't jest!"</p>
+
+<p>I knew by the tone of those three little monosyllables that the Major
+was done for&mdash;caught, conquered, and fettered by his dangerous foe.</p>
+
+<p>Telfer sat silent for some minutes, looking out of the window where the
+dawn was rising over the hills, with a settled gloom upon his face. Then
+he rose, and began swinging about the room with his firm cavalry tread,
+his arms crossed on his chest, and his head bent down.</p>
+
+<p>"By Heaven! Vane," he said at length, in a tone low, but passionate and
+bitter, "I have gone on like a baby or a fool, playing with tools till
+they have cut me. Against my will, against my judgment, against reason,
+hope,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_366" id="Page_366">[Pg 366]</a></span> everything, I have lingered in that girl's fascinations till I am
+bound by them hand and foot. I cannot deceive myself, I cannot shut the
+truth out; it was not honor, nor chivalry, nor friendship that made me
+to-night insult the man who spoke jestingly of her; it was love&mdash;love as
+mad, as reckless, as misplaced, as ever cursed a man and drove him to
+his ruin." He paused, breathing hard, with his teeth set, then broke out
+again: "I, who held love in such disdain, who have so long kept my
+passions in such strong control, who thought no woman had the power to
+move me against my will&mdash;I love at last, despite myself, though I know
+that she is pitiless, that nothing I have said has been able to touch
+her into softer feeling, and that, mad as my passion is for her, if her
+nature be as hard and haughty as I fear, I dare not, if I could, make
+her my wife. No, Vane, no," he went on, hastily, as I interrupted. "She
+does not love me, she has no gentler feeling in her; I thought she had,
+but I was mistaken. I tried her several times, but she will never
+forgive my first injustice to her; and to one with so little softness in
+her nature I dare not trust my peace. It were a worse hell even than
+that I now endure, to have her with me, loving her as I do, and feel
+that her cold heart gave no response to mine; to possess her glorious
+beauty, and yet know that her love and her soul were dead in their chill
+pride to me&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He paused again, and leaned against the window, his chest heaving, and
+hot tears standing in his haughty eyes, wrung from the very anguish of
+his soul. The pride that had never before bent to any human thing, was
+now cast in the dust before a woman who never did, and probably never
+would, love him in return.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_367" id="Page_367">[Pg 367]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2>V.</h2>
+
+<h3>THE DUEL, AND ITS CONSEQUENCES.</h3>
+
+
+<p>The contemptible young puppy, for whom Telfer considered the honor of a
+ball from his pistol a great deal too good in the morning, sent
+Heavysides, of the 40th, a chum of his found up at the Bad, to claim
+"satisfaction," the valor produced in him by Sillery over night having
+been kept up since by copious draughts of cognac and Seltzer. Having
+signified to Heavysides that the Major would do Mr. Snobley the favor of
+shooting him in the retired valley of K&ouml;nigsh&ouml;hle at sunrise the next
+day, I went to tell Telfer, who had a hearty laugh at the young fellow's
+challenge.</p>
+
+<p>"I'd give him something to shoot me through the heart," said he,
+bitterly, "but I don't suppose he will. He's practised at pigeons, not
+at men, probably. I won't hurt him much, but a little lesson will do him
+good. Mind nobody in the house gets wind of the affair. Though I make a
+fool of myself in her defence, there is no need that she or others
+should know it. But if the boy should do for me, tell her, Vane&mdash;tell
+her," said the Major, shading his eyes with his hand, "that I have
+learnt to love her as I never dreamt I should love any woman, and that I
+do not blame her for the just lesson she has read me for the rudeness
+and the unjust prejudice I indulged in so long towards her. She
+retaliated fairly upon me, and God forbid that she should have one hour
+of her life embittered through remorse for me."</p>
+
+<p>His voice sank into a whisper as he spoke; then, with an effort, he
+forced himself into calmness, and went to play billiards with Marc. This
+was the man who, three months before, had told me with such contemptuous
+decision that "we need never fall in love unless it's<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_368" id="Page_368">[Pg 368]</a></span> convenient; and
+as to caring for a girl who doesn't care for us, that was a weakness
+with which he couldn't sympathize at all!"</p>
+
+<p>Late that night, Telfer and I, coming down the stairs, met the
+Tressillian going up them to her room. The Major stopped her, and held
+out his hand, with a softened light in his eyes. "Will you not bid me
+good-bye? I may not see you again."</p>
+
+<p>There was a sadness in his smile bitterly significant to me, but very
+likely she didn't see it, not having any key to it, as I had.</p>
+
+<p>Violet turned pale, and I fancied her lips twitched, but it might be the
+flickering of the light of the staircase lamps on her face. At any rate,
+being a young lady born and bred in good society, she put her hand in
+his, with a simple "What! are you going away?"</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps. At any rate, let us part in peace."</p>
+
+<p>The proud man laughed as he said it, though he was enduring tortures.
+Violet heard the laugh, and didn't see the straining anxiety in his
+gaze.</p>
+
+<p>She drew her hand rapidly away. "Certainly. <i>Bon voyage</i>, Major Telfer,
+and good night," she answered, carelessly; and, with a graceful bend,
+the Tressillian floated on up the stairs with the dignity of a young
+empress.</p>
+
+<p>Telfer looked after the white gossamer dress and the beautiful head,
+with its wreath of scarlet flowers, and an iron sternness settled on his
+face. All hope was gone now. She could not have parted with him like
+this if she had cared for him one straw more than for the flowers in her
+hair. Yet, in the morning, he was going to risk his life for her. Ah,
+well! I've always seen that in love there's one of the two who gives all
+and gets nothing.</p>
+
+<p>In the morning, by five o'clock, in the valley of K&ouml;nigsh&ouml;hle, a snug
+bit of pasture land between two rocks, where no gendarme could pounce
+upon us, young Snobley made<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_369" id="Page_369">[Pg 369]</a></span> his appearance to enjoy the honor of being
+a target for one of the best shots in Europe. Snobley had a good deal of
+swagger and would-be dash, and made a great show of pluck, which your
+man of true pluck never does. Telfer stood talking to me up to the last
+minute, took his pistol carelessly in his hand, and, without taking any
+apparent aim, fired.</p>
+
+<p>If Telfer made up his mind to shoot off your fifth waistcoat-button,
+your fifth waistcoat-button would be irrevocably doomed; and therefore,
+having determined to himself to lodge a bullet in this young puppy's
+left wrist, in the left wrist did the ball lodge. Snobley was
+"satisfied," very amply satisfied, I fancy, by his looks. He'd fired,
+and sent his shot right into the trunk of a chestnut growing some seven
+yards off his opponent, to Heavyside's supreme scorn.</p>
+
+<p>"That'll teach him not to talk of young ladies in his Mabille slang,"
+said Telfer, lighting his cigar. "I hope the little snob may be the
+better for my lesson. Now I am <i>en route</i>, I'll go over to
+Pipesandbeersbad, breakfast at the H&ocirc;tel de France, and go and see
+Humbugandschwerinn: he wants me to look at some English racers Brookes
+has just sent him over. Make my excuses at Essellau; and I say, Vane,
+see if you can't get us away in a day or two; have some call home, or
+something, for I shall never stand this long."</p>
+
+<p>With which not over-clear speech the Major mounted his horse and
+cantered off towards the Bad.</p>
+
+<p>I rode back; went to my own room, had some chocolate, read Pigault le
+Brun, and about noon, seeing Virginie, the Tressillian, and several
+others out on the terrace, went to join them. Marc slipped his arm
+through mine and drew me aside.</p>
+
+<p>"I say, Vane, what's all this about Telfer striking some fellow for
+talking about the Tressillian? Staurmgaurn was over here just now, and
+told me there was a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_370" id="Page_370">[Pg 370]</a></span> row in the card-room at Humbugandschwerinn's
+between Telfer and another Englishman. I knew nothing about it. Is it
+true?"</p>
+
+<p>"So far true," I answered, "that Telfer put a ball in the youth's wrist
+at seven o'clock this morning; and serve him right too&mdash;he's an impudent
+young snob."</p>
+
+<p>"By Jove!" cried Marc, "what in the world made him take the
+Tressillian's part? Have the <i>beaux yeux</i> really made an impression on
+the most unimpressionable of men?"</p>
+
+<p>"The devil they have," said I, crossly; "but I wish she'd been at the
+deuce first, for he's too good a fellow to waste his best years pining
+after a pair of dark eyes."</p>
+
+<p>Marc shrugged his shoulders. "<i>C'est vrai</i>; but we're all fools some
+time or other. The idea of Telfer's chivalry! I declare it's quite like
+the old days of Froissart and Commines&mdash;fighting for my lady's favor."
+And away he went, singing those two famous lines from Alcyon&eacute;e:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i0">Pour m&eacute;riter son c&#339;ur, pour plaire &agrave; ses beaux yeux,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">J'ai fait la guerre aux rois: je l'aurais faite aux dieux;<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>and I thought to myself that if the Tressillian proved a De Longueville,
+I could find it in my soul to shoot her without remorse.</p>
+
+<p>But as I turned away from Marc, I came upon her, looking pale and ill
+enough to satisfy anybody. The color flushed into her cheeks as she saw
+me; we spoke of the weather, the chances of storm, Floss's new collar,
+and other trifles; then she asked me, bending over her little dog,&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Is Captain Staurmgaurn's news true, that your friend has&mdash;has been
+quarrelling with a young Englishman?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," I answered. "I wonder Staurmgaurn told you; it is scarcely a
+topic to interest ladies. Telfer has given the young gentleman a
+well-merited lesson."</p>
+
+<p>"Have they fought?" she asked, breathlessly, laying her hand on my arm,
+and looking as white as a ghost.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_371" id="Page_371">[Pg 371]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Yes, they have," said I; "and he fought, Miss Tressillian, for one who
+gave him a very cold adieu last night."</p>
+
+<p>Her head drooped, she trembled perceptibly, and the color rushed back to
+her cheeks.</p>
+
+<p>"Is he safe?" she asked, in the lowest of whispers.</p>
+
+<p>"Quite," I answered, quickly, as De Tintiniac lounged up to us; and I
+left my words, like a prudent diplomatist, to bear fruit as best they
+might.</p>
+
+<p>I wondered if she cared for him, or if it was merely a girl's natural
+feeling for a man who had let himself be shot at, rather than hear a
+light word spoken of her. But they were both so deuced proud, Heaven's
+special intervention alone seemed likely to bring them together.</p>
+
+<p>The Major didn't come home from Pipesandbeersbad till between two and
+three that night, and he's told me since that being <i>un peu fou</i> with
+his self-willed and vehement passion, never went to bed at all, but sat
+and walked about his room smoking, unable to sleep, in a frame of mind
+that, when sane, a few months before, he would have pronounced spoony
+and contemptible in the lowest degree. At eight he strode forth into the
+park, brushing off the dew with his impatient steps, glad of the fresh
+morning air upon his brow, which was as burning as our first headache
+from "that cursed punch of Jones's," the day after our "first wine,"
+which acute suffering any gentleman who ever tasted that delicious
+<i>m&eacute;lange</i> of rum and milk and lemons, will keenly recall among other
+passed-away passages of his green youth.</p>
+
+<p>Telfer strode on and on, over the molehills and through the ferns, down
+this slope and up that, under the oaks, and lindens, and fir-trees
+gleaming red beneath the October sun, with very little notion of where
+he was going or what he was doing, a great stag-hound of Marc's
+following at his heels. The path he took, without thinking, led him to
+the top of a rock overhanging the Beersbad, where that historic stream
+was but a few yards in width; <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_372" id="Page_372">[Pg 372]</a></span>and here Telfer, lying down with his head
+against a plane-tree, struck a fusee and lighted a cigar&mdash;for a weed's a
+pleasant companion in any stage of existence: if we're happy we smoke in
+the fulness of our hearts, and build airy castles on each fragrant
+cloud; and if we're unhappy, we smoke to console ourselves, and draw in
+with each whiff philosophy and peace. So the Major smoked and thought,
+till a bark from the staghound made him look up. On the top of the
+cliffs on the other side of the stream, looking down into the valleys
+below, with her head turned away from him, stood Violet Tressillian; and
+at the sight of that graceful figure, with its indescribable high-bred
+air, I don't doubt the Major's once unimpressive heart beat faster than
+it had ever done in a charge or a skirmish. She was full twenty feet
+above him, and the rocks on which she stood sloped precipitately down to
+a ledge exactly opposite that on which he lay smoking&mdash;a ledge in
+reality but a few inches wide, but to which the treacherous boughs and
+ferns waving over it gave a semblance of a firm broad footing&mdash;a
+semblance which (like a good many other things one meets with) it
+utterly failed to carry out when you came to try it.</p>
+
+<p>Violet, not seeing Telfer lying <i>perdu</i> among the grass at the foot of
+his plane-tree, walked along to the edge of the cliff, her eyes on the
+ground, so deep in thought that she never noticed the river beneath, but
+began to descend the slope, little Floss coming with exceeding
+trepidation after her. Telfer sprang up to warn her. "Violet! Violet! go
+back! go back! Oh! my God, do you not hear?"</p>
+
+<p>His passionate tones startled her. Never dreaming he was there, she
+looked hurriedly up; her foot slipped; unable to stay her descent, she
+came down the steep cliff with an impetus which, to a certainty, would
+send her over the narrow ledge into the river below&mdash;a fall of full
+thirty feet. To see her perish thus before his eyes&mdash;die<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_373" id="Page_373">[Pg 373]</a></span> thus while he
+stood calmly by! A whole age of torture was crowded into the misery of
+that one brief moment. There was but one way to save her. He sprang
+across the gulf that parted them, while the river in its straitened bed
+hissed and foamed beneath him, and, standing on the narrow ledge, where
+there seemed scarce footing for a dog, he caught her as she fell in his
+iron grasp, as little swayed by the shock as the rock on which he stood.
+Holding her tight to him with one arm, he swung himself down by the
+other to a less dangerous position, on a flat plateau of cliff, and
+leaning against one of the linden-trees on its summit, he bent over her;
+his eyes dim, and his pulses beating with the emotions he had controlled
+while he wanted cool thought and firm nerve to save her, but over which
+he had no more power now. He pressed her to his heart, forgetting pride,
+and doubt, and fear; and Violet, by way of answer, only burst into a
+passion of tears. Who would have recognized the proud, brilliant
+Tressillian, in the pale, trembling woman who sobbed on his breast with
+the <i>abandon</i> of a child, and who, at his passionate kisses, only
+blushed like a wild rose?</p>
+
+<p>Telfer evidently thought the transformation complete, for he forgot all
+his reserve resolutions and hauteur, and poured out the tenderest love
+for a girl who, three months before, he had wished at the devil! And the
+Tressillian was conquered at last; she was pitiless no longer, and,
+having vanquished him, was, woman-like, ready to be a slave to her
+captive; and her eyes were never more dangerous than now, when, shy and
+softened, they looked up through their tears into Telfer's.</p>
+
+<p>What old De Tintiniac said of her was true, that all her beauty wanted
+to make it perfect was for her to be in love!</p>
+
+<p>So at least I thought, when, several hours afterwards, I met them coming
+across the park, and I knew by the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_374" id="Page_374">[Pg 374]</a></span> gleam of the Major's eyes that he
+had lost Calceolaria and won Violet.</p>
+
+<p>"How strange it is," laughed Telfer that evening, when they were alone
+in the conservatory, "that you and I, who so hated each other, should
+now be so dear to one another. Oh, Violet! how ashamed I have been since
+of my unjustifiable prejudices, my abominable discourtesy&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You <i>were</i> dreadfully rude," said the Tressillian, smiling; "and judged
+me very cruelly by all the false reports that women chose to gossip of
+me. But you are wrong. I never hated you. Your father had spoken of you
+as so generous, so noble, so chivalrous a soldier, so kind a son, that I
+was prepared to admire you immensely, and when you looked so sternly on
+me at our first introduction, and I overheard your bitter words about me
+at the station, I really was never more vexed and disappointed in my
+life. And then a demon entered into me, and I thought&mdash;forgive me,
+Hamilton&mdash;that I would try to make you repent your hasty judgment and
+recant your prejudices. But I could not always fight you with the
+coolness I wished; your indifference began to pique me more and more.
+Wounds from you ranked as they did from no one else, and something
+besides pride made me feel your neglect so keenly. I had meant&mdash;yes, I
+must tell you all," and the Tressillian, in her soft repentance, looked,
+Telfer thought, more bewitching than in her most brilliant moments&mdash;"I
+had wished," she went on in a whisper, with her color bright, "to make
+you regret your injustice, to conquer your stubborn pride, and to
+revenge myself on you for all the wrong you had done me in thoughts and
+words. But, you see, I wasn't so strong as I fancied; I thought I could
+fence with the buttons on, but I was mistaken, and&mdash;and&mdash;when I heard
+that you had fought for me, I knew then that&mdash;&mdash;" And Violet<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_375" id="Page_375">[Pg 375]</a></span> stopped
+with a smile and a sigh; the sigh for the past, I suppose, and the smile
+for the present.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, <i>nous sommes quittes</i>, dearest," smiled Telfer. "Thank Heaven! we
+no longer need reproach each other. Too many elevate the one they love
+into an ideal of such superhuman excellence, that at the first shadow of
+mortality they see their poor idol is shivered from its pedestal. But we
+have seen the worst side of each other's character, Violet, and
+henceforth love shall cover all faults, and subdue all pride between
+us."</p>
+
+<p>Telfer kept his word. They had had their last quarrel, and buried their
+last suspicion before their marriage, and were not, like the generality,
+doves first and tigers after. The governor, of course, was charmed that
+a match on which he had secretly set his heart had brought itself about
+so neatly without his interference. He had begun to despair of his son's
+ever giving Torwood a mistress, and the diamonds he gave Violet, in the
+excess of his pleasure, brought her no end of female enemies, for they
+were some of the finest water in the kingdom. Seldom, indeed, has
+slander been productive of such good fruits, for rarely, <i>very</i> rarely,
+does that Upas-tree put forth any but Dead Sea apples.</p>
+
+<p>Violet Tressillian <i>was</i> Violet Telfer before the Christmas recess, but
+I considered the bet drawn. So Telfer and I exchanged the roan filly and
+the colt, and Calceolaria in the Torwood stables, and Jockey Club in my
+stalls, stand witnesses to this day of <span class="smcap">Our Wager, and how the Major Lost
+and Won</span>.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_376" id="Page_376">[Pg 376]</a></span></p>
+
+
+<hr class="sep1" />
+<hr class="sep2" />
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_377" id="Page_377">[Pg 377]</a></span></p>
+<h1>OUR COUNTRY QUARTERS.</h1>
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_378" id="Page_378">[Pg 378]</a></span></p>
+<hr class="sep3" />
+<hr class="sep4" />
+
+
+<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_379" id="Page_379">[Pg 379]</a></span></p>
+<h2><a name="OUR_COUNTRY_QUARTERS" id="OUR_COUNTRY_QUARTERS"></a>OUR COUNTRY QUARTERS.</h2>
+
+
+<p>I remember well the day that we (that is the 110th Lancers) were ordered
+down to Layton Rise. Savage enough we all were to quit P&mdash;&mdash; for that
+detestable country place. Many and miserable were the tales we raked up
+of the <i>ennui</i> we had experienced at other provincial quarters; sadly we
+dressed for Lady Dashwood's ball, the last <i>soir&eacute;e</i> before our
+departure. And then the bills and the <i>billets-doux</i> that rained down
+upon our devoted heads!</p>
+
+<p>However, by some miracle we escaped them all; and on a bright April
+morning, 184-, we were <i>en route</i> for this Layton Rise, this <i>terra
+incognita</i>, as grumpy and as seedy as ever any poor demons were. But
+there was no help for it; so leaving, we flattered ourselves, a great
+many hearts the heavier for this order from the Horse Guards, we, as I
+said, set out for Layton Rise.</p>
+
+<p>The only bit of good news that provoking morning had brought was that my
+particular chum, Drummond Fane, a captain of ours, who had been cutting
+about on leave from Constantinople to Kamtchatka for the last six
+months, would join us at Layton. Fane was really a good fellow, a
+perfect gentleman (<i>&ccedil;a va sans dire</i>, as he was one of <i>ours</i>),
+intensely plucky, knew, I believe, every language under the sun, and, as
+he had been tumbling about in the world ever since he went to Eton at
+eight years old, had done everything, seen everything, and could talk on
+every possible subject. He was a great<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_380" id="Page_380">[Pg 380]</a></span> favorite with ladies: I always
+wonder they did not quite spoil him. I have seen a young lady actually
+neglect a most eligible heir to a dukedom, that her mamma had been at
+great pains to procure for her, if this "fascinating younger son" were
+by. For Fane <i>was</i> the younger son of the Earl of Avanley, and would, of
+course, every one said, one day retrieve his fortunes by marriage with
+some heiress in want of rank.</p>
+
+<p>He has been my great friend ever since I, a small youth, spoiled by
+having come into my property while in the nursery, became his fag at
+Eton: and when I bought my commission in the 110th, of which he was a
+captain, our intimacy increased.</p>
+
+<p>But <i>revenons &agrave; nos moutons</i>. On the road we naturally talked of Layton,
+wondering if there was any one fit to visit, anybody that gave good
+dinners, if there was a pack of hounds, a billiard-room, or any pretty
+girls. Suddenly the Honorable Ennuy&eacute; L'Estrange threw a little light on
+the matter, by recollecting, "now he thought of it, he believed that was
+where an uncle of his lived; his name was Aspi&mdash;Aspinall&mdash;no! Aspeden."
+"Had he any cousins?" was the inquiry. He "y'ally could not remember!"
+So we were left to conjure up imaginary Miss Aspedens, more handsome
+than their honorable cousin, who might relieve for us the monotony of
+country quarters. The sun was very bright as we entered Layton Rise; the
+clattering and clashing that we made soon brought out the inhabitants,
+and, lying in the light of a spring day, it did not seem such a very
+miserable little town after all. Our mess was established at the one
+good inn of the one good street of the place, and I and two other young
+subs fixed our residence at a grocer's, where a card of "Lodgings to let
+furnished" was embordered in vine-leaves and roses.</p>
+
+<p>As I was leaning out of the window smoking my last cigar before mess,
+with Sydney and Mounteagle stretched<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_381" id="Page_381">[Pg 381]</a></span> in equally elegant attitudes on
+equally hard sofas, I heard our grocer, a sleek little Methodist,
+addressing some party in the street with&mdash;"I fear me I have done evil in
+admitting these young servants of Satan into mine habitation!" "Well,
+Nathan," replied a Quaker, "thou didst it for the best, and verily these
+officers seem quiet and gentlemanly youths." "Gentlemanlike," I should
+say we were, <i>rather</i>&mdash;but "quiet!"&mdash;how we shouted over the innocent
+"Friend's" mistake. Here the voices again resumed. "Doubtless, when the
+Aspedens return, there will be dances and devices of the Evil One, and
+Quelps will make a good time of it; however, the custom of ungodly men I
+would not take were it offered!" So these Aspedens were out&mdash;confound
+it! But the clock struck six; so, flinging the remains of my cigar on
+the Quaker's broad-brimmed hat, adorned with which ornament he walked
+unconsciously away, we strolled down to the mess-room.</p>
+
+<p>A few hours later some of them met in my room, and having sent out for
+some cards, which the grocer kindly wrapped in a tract against gambling,
+we had just sat down to loo, when the door was thrown open, and Captain
+Fane announced. A welcome addition!</p>
+
+<p>"Fane, by all that's glorious!"&mdash;"Well, young one, how are you?" were
+the only salutations that passed between two men who were as true
+friends as any in England. Fane was soon seated among us, and telling us
+many a joke and tale. "And so," said he, "we're sent down to ruralize?
+(Mounteagle, you are 'loo'd.') Any one you know here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Not a creature! I am awfully afraid we shall be found dead of <i>ennui</i>
+one fine morning. I'll thank you for a little more punch, Fitzspur,"
+said Sydney. "I suppose, as usual, Fane," he continued, "you left at the
+very least twelve dozen German princesses, Italian marchesas, and French
+countesses dying for you?"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_382" id="Page_382">[Pg 382]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"My dear fellow," replied Fane, "you are considerably under the mark
+(I'll take 'miss,' Paget!); but really, if women <i>will</i> fall in love
+with you, how <i>can</i> you help it? And if you <i>will</i> flirt with them, how
+can they help it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I see, Fane, <i>your</i> heart is as strong as ever," I added, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course," answered the gallant captain; "disinterested love is
+reserved for men who are too rich or too poor to mind its attendant
+evils. (The first, I must say, very rarely profit by the privilege!) No!
+I steel myself against all bright eyes and dancing curls not backed by a
+good dowry. Heiresses, though, somehow, are always plain; I never could
+do my duty and propose to one, though, of course, whenever I <i>do</i>
+surrender my liberty, which I have not the smallest intention of at
+present, it will be to somebody with at least fifty thousand a year.
+Hearts trumps, Mount?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes&mdash;hurrah! Paget's loo'd at last.&mdash;Here, my dear, let us have lots
+more punch!" said Mounteagle, addressing the female domestic, who was
+standing open-mouthed at the glittering pool of half-sovereigns.</p>
+
+<p>I will spare the gentle reader&mdash;if I <i>may</i> flatter myself that I
+entertain a <i>few</i> such&mdash;a recital of the conversation which followed,
+and which was kept up until the very, very "small hours;" also I will
+leave it to her imagination to picture how we spent the next few days,
+how we found out a few families worth visiting, how we inspired the
+Layton youths with a vehement passion for smoking, billiards, and the
+cavalry branch of the service, and how we and our gay uniforms and our
+prancing horses were the admiration of all the young damsels in the
+place.</p>
+
+<p>One morning after parade, Fane and I, having nothing better to do,
+lighted our cigars and strolled down one of those shady lanes which
+almost reconcile one to the country&mdash;<i>out</i> of the London season. Seeing
+the gate of a park standing invitingly open, we walked in and threw<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_383" id="Page_383">[Pg 383]</a></span>
+ourselves down under the trees. "Now we are in for it," said Fane, "if
+we are trespassing, and any adventurous-minded gamekeeper appears. Whose
+park is this?"</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Aspeden's, Ennuy&eacute; told me. It's rather a nice place," I replied.</p>
+
+<p>"And that castle, of which mine eyes behold the turrets afar off?" he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Lord Linton's, I believe; the father of Jack Vernon, of the Rifles, you
+know," I answered.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed! I never saw the old gentleman, but I remember his daughter
+Beatrice,&mdash;we had rather a desperate flirtation at Baden-Baden. She's a
+showy-looking girl," said the captain, stretching himself on the grass.</p>
+
+<p>"Why did you not allow her the sublime felicity of becoming Lady
+Beatrice Fane?" I asked, laughing.</p>
+
+<p>"My dear fellow, she had not a <i>sou</i>! That old marquis is as poor as a
+church-mouse. You forget that I am only a younger son, with not much
+besides my pay, and cannot afford to marry anywhere I like. I am not in
+your happy position, able to espouse any pretty face I may chance to
+take a fancy to. It would be utter madness in me. Do you think <i>I</i> was
+made for a little house, one maid-servant, dinner at noon, and six small
+children? <i>Very</i> much obliged to you, but love in a cottage is not <i>my</i>
+style, Fred; besides <i>j'aime &agrave; vivre gar&ccedil;on</i>!" added Fane.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Et moi aussi!</i>" said I. "Really the girls one meets seem all tarlatan
+and coquetry. I have never seen one worth committing matrimony for."</p>
+
+<p>"Hear him!" cried Fane. "Here is the happy owner of Wilmot Park, at the
+advanced age of twenty, despairing of ever finding anything more worthy
+of his affection than his moustaches! Oh, what will the boys come to
+next? But, eureka! here comes a pretty girl if you like. Who on earth is
+she?" he exclaimed, raising his eye-glass<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_384" id="Page_384">[Pg 384]</a></span> to a party advancing up the
+avenue who really seemed worthy the attention.</p>
+
+<p>Pulling at the bridle of a donkey, "what wouldn't go," with all her
+might, was indeed a pretty girl. Her hat had fallen off and showed a
+quantity of bright hair and a lovely face, with the largest and darkest
+of eyes, and a mouth now wreathing with smiles. Unconscious of our
+vicinity, on she came, laughing, and beseeching a little boy, seated on
+the aforesaid donkey, and thumping thereupon with, a large stick, "not
+to be so cruel and hurt poor Dapple." At this juncture the restive steed
+gave a vigorous stride, and toppling its rider on the grass, trotted off
+with a self-satisfied air; but Fane, intending to make the rebellious
+charger a means of introduction, caught his bridle and led him back to
+his discomfited master. The young lady, who was endeavoring to pacify
+the child, looked prettier than ever as she smiled and thanked him. But
+the gallant captain was not going to let the matter drop <i>here</i>, so,
+turning to the youthful rider, he asked him to let him put him on "the
+naughty donkey again." Master Tommy acquiesced, and, armed with his
+terrible stick, allowed himself to be mounted. Certainly Fane was a most
+unnecessary length of time settling that child, but then he was talking
+to the young lady, whom he begged to allow him to lead the donkey home.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! no, she was quite used to Dapple; she could manage him very well,
+and they were going farther." So poor Fane had nothing for it but to
+raise his hat and gaze at her through his eye-glass until some trees hid
+her from sight.</p>
+
+<p>"'Pon my word, that's a pretty girl!" said he, at length. "I wonder who
+she can be! However, I shall soon find out. Have another weed, Fred?"</p>
+
+<p>There was to be a ball that night at the Assembly Rooms, which we were
+assured only the "<i>best</i> families" would attend for Layton was a very
+exclusive little town<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_385" id="Page_385">[Pg 385]</a></span> in its way. Some of us who were going were
+standing about the mess-room, recalling the many good balls and pretty
+girls of our late quarters, when Fane, who had declined to go, as he
+said he had a horror of "bad dancing, bad perfumes, bad ventilation, and
+bad champagne, and really could not stand the concentration of all of
+them, which he foresaw that night," to our surprise declared his
+intention of accompanying us.</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose, Fane, you hope to see your heroine of the donkey again?"
+asked Sydney.</p>
+
+<p>"Precisely," was Fane's reply; "or if not, to find out who she is. But
+here comes Ennuy&eacute;, got up no end to fascinate the belles of Layton!"</p>
+
+<p>"The Aspedens are home; I saw 'em to-day," were the words of the
+honorable cornet, as he lounged into the room. "My uncle seems rather a
+brick, and hopes to make the acquaintance of all of you. He will mess
+with us to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"Have you any <i>belles cousines</i>?"&mdash;"Are they going to-night?" we
+inquired.</p>
+
+<p>"Yaas, I saw one; she's rather pretty," said L'Estrange.</p>
+
+<p>"Dark eyes&mdash;golden hair&mdash;about eighteen?" demanded Fane, eagerly.</p>
+
+<p>"Not a bit of it," replied the cornet, curling his moustache, and
+contemplating himself in the glass with very great satisfaction; "hair's
+as dark as mine, and eyes&mdash;y'ally I forget. But, let's have loo or
+whist, or something; we need not go for ages!" So down we sat, and soon
+nothing was heard but "Two by honors and the trick!" "Game and game!"
+&amp;c., until about twelve, when we rose and adjourned to the ball-room.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner had we entered the room than Fane exclaimed, "There's my
+houri, by all that's glorious! and looking lovelier than ever. By Jove!
+that girl's too good for a country ball-room!" And there, in truth,
+waltzing like a sylph, was, as Sydney called her, the<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_386" id="Page_386">[Pg 386]</a></span> "heroine of the
+donkey." The dance over, we saw her join a party at the top of the room,
+consisting of a handsome but <i>pass&eacute;e</i> woman, a lovely Hebe-like girl
+with dancing eyes, and a number of gentlemen, with whom they seemed to
+be keeping up an animated conversation.</p>
+
+<p>"Ennuy&eacute; is with them&mdash;he will introduce me," said Fane, as he swept up
+the room.</p>
+
+<p>I watched him bow, and, after talking a few minutes, lead off his
+"houri" for a <i>valse</i>; and disengaging myself from a Cambridge friend
+whom I had met with, I professed my intention of following his example.</p>
+
+<p>"What? Who did you say? That girl at the top there? Why, man, that's my
+cousin Mary, and the other lady is my most revered aunt, Mrs. Aspeden.
+Did you not know I and Ennuy&eacute; were related? Y'ally I forget how,
+exactly," he continued, mimicking the cornet. "But do you want to be
+introduced to her? Come along then."</p>
+
+<p>So, following my friend, who was a Trinity-man, of the name of
+Cleaveland, I soon made acquaintance with Mrs. Aspeden and her daughter
+Mary.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Who</i> is he?" I heard Mrs. Aspeden ask, in a low tone, of Tom
+Cleaveland, as I led off Mary to the <i>valse</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"A very good fellow," was the good-natured Cantab's reply, "with lots of
+tin and a glorious place. The shooting at Wilmot is really&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Bien!</i>" said his aunt, as she took Lord Linton's arm to the
+refreshment-room, satisfied, I suppose, on the strength of my "lots of
+tin," that I was a safe companion for her child.</p>
+
+<p>I found Mary Aspeden a most agreeable partner for a <i>dance</i>; she was
+lively, agreeable, and a coquette, I felt sure (women with those dancing
+eyes always are), and I thought I could not do better than amuse myself
+by getting up a flirtation with her. What an intensely good opinion I
+had of myself then! So I condescended to dance, though it was not
+Almack's, and actually<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_387" id="Page_387">[Pg 387]</a></span> permitted myself to be amused. Strolling through
+the rooms with Mary Aspeden on my arm, we entered one in which was an
+alcove fitted up with a <i>vis-&agrave;-vis</i> sofa (whoever planned that Layton
+ball-room had a sympathy in the bottom of his heart for <i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i>),
+and here Fane was seated, talking to his "houri" with the soft voice and
+winning smiles which had gained the heart, or at least what portion of
+that member they possessed, of so many London belles, and which would do
+their work <i>here</i> most assuredly.</p>
+
+<p>"There is my cousin Florence&mdash;ah! she does not observe us. Who is the
+gentleman with her?" said Miss Aspeden.</p>
+
+<p>"My friend, Captain Fane," I replied. "You have heard of their rencontre
+this morning?"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed! is he Tommy's champion, of whom he has done nothing but talk
+all day, and of whom I could not make Florence say one word?" asked
+Mary. "You must know our donkey is the most determined and resolute of
+animals: if she 'will, she will,' you may depend upon it!" she
+continued.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you honor those most untrue lines upon ladies by a quotation?" I
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I do not think they <i>are</i> so very untrue," laughed Mary, "except in
+confining obstinacy to us poor women and exempting the 'lords of the
+creation.' The Scotch adage knows better. 'A wilful <i>man</i>&mdash;&mdash;' You know
+the rest."</p>
+
+<p>"Quite well," I replied; "but another poet's lines on <i>you</i> are far more
+true. 'Ye are stars of the&mdash;&mdash;'" I commenced.</p>
+
+<p>"Mary, my love, let me introduce you to Lord Craigarven," said Mrs.
+Aspeden, coming up with Lord Linton's heir-apparent.</p>
+
+<p>At the same time I was introduced to Mr. Aspeden, a hearty Englishman,
+loving his horses, his dogs, and his<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_388" id="Page_388">[Pg 388]</a></span> daughter; and as much the inferior
+of his aristocratic-looking wife in <i>intellect</i> as he was her superior
+in <i>heart</i>. When we parted that night he gave Fane and me a most
+hospitable general invitation, and, what was more, an especial one for
+the next night. As we walked home "i' the grey o' the morning," I asked
+Fane who his "houri" was.</p>
+
+<p>"A niece of Mr. Aspeden's, and cousin to your friend Cleaveland," was
+the reply. "Those Aspedens really seem to be uncle and aunt to every
+one. She is staying there now."</p>
+
+<p>"So is Tom Cleaveland," said I. "But, pray, are your expectations quite
+realized? Is she as charming as she looks, this Miss Florence&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Aspeden?" added Fane. "Yes, quite. But here are my quarters; so good
+night, old fellow."</p>
+
+<p>We had soon established ourselves as <i>amis de la maison</i> at Woodlands,
+the Aspedens' place, and found him, as his nephew had stated, "rather a
+brick," and her daughter and niece something more. All of us, especially
+Fane and I, spent the best part of our time there, lounging away the
+days between the shady lanes, the little lake, and the music or
+billiard-rooms. Fane seemed entirely to appropriate Florence, and to
+fascinate her as he had fascinated so many others. I really felt angry
+with him; for, as Tom Cleaveland had candidly told me that poor Florie
+had not a rap&mdash;her father had run through all his property and left her
+an orphan, and a very poor one too&mdash;of course Fane could not marry her,
+but would, I feared, "ride away" some day, like the "gay dragoon,"
+heartwhole <i>himself</i>&mdash;but would <i>she</i> come out as scatheless? Poor
+Mounteagle, too, was getting quite spooney about Florence, and, owing to
+Fane, she paid him no more heed than if he had been an old dried-up
+Indianized major. <i>He</i>, poor fellow! followed her about everywhere,
+asked her to dance in quite an insane manner, and<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_389" id="Page_389">[Pg 389]</a></span> made the most
+horrible revokes in whist and mistakes in pool that can be imagined.</p>
+
+<p>"By George! she is pretty, and no mistake!" said Sydney, as Florence
+rode past us one day as we were sauntering down Layton, looking
+charmingly <i>en amazone</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"Pretty! I should rather think so. She is more beautiful than any other
+woman upon earth!" cried Mounteagle.</p>
+
+<p>"Y'ally! well, I can't see <i>that</i>," replied Ennuy&eacute;. "She has tolerably
+good eyes, but she is too <i>petite</i> to please me."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah! the adjutant's girls have rendered L'Estrange <i>difficile</i>. He
+cannot expect to meet <i>their</i> equals in a hurry!" said Fane, in a very
+audible aside.</p>
+
+<p>Poor Ennuy&eacute; was silenced&mdash;nay, he even blushed. The adjutant's girls
+recalled an episode in which the gallant cornet had shone in a rather
+verdant light. Fane had effectually quieted him.</p>
+
+<p>"I wonder if Florence Aspeden will marry Mount?" I remarked to Fane,
+when the others had left us. "She does not seem to pay him much heed
+<i>yet</i>; but still&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The devil, no!" cried Fane, in an unusually energetic manner. "I would
+stake my life she would not have such a muff as that, if he owned half
+the titles in the peerage!"</p>
+
+<p>"You seem rather excited about the matter," I observed. "It would not be
+such a bad match for her, for you know she has no tin; but I am sure,
+with your opinion on love-matches, you would not counsel Mount to such a
+step."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course not!" replied Fane, in his ordinary cool tones. "A man has no
+right to marry for love, except he is one of those fortunate individuals
+who own half a county, or some country doctor or parson of whom the
+world takes no notice. There may be a few exceptions. But yet," he
+continued, with the air of a person trying to convince himself against
+his will, "did you ever see a<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_390" id="Page_390">[Pg 390]</a></span> love match turn out happily? It is all
+very well for the first week, but the roses won't bloom in winter, and
+then the cottage walls look ugly. Then a fellow cannot live as he did
+<i>en gar&ccedil;on</i>, and all his friends drop him, and altogether it is an act
+no wise man would perpetrate. But I shall forget to give you a message I
+was intrusted with. They are going to get up some theatricals at
+Woodlands. I have promised to take <i>Sir Thomas Clifford</i> (the piece is
+the 'Hunchback'). and they want you to play <i>Modus</i> to Mary Aspeden's
+<i>Helen</i>. Do, old fellow. Acting is very good fun with a pretty girl&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Like the <i>Julia</i> you will have, I suppose," I said. "Very well, I will
+be amiable and take it. Mary will make a first-rate <i>Helen</i>. Come and
+have a game of billiards, will you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Can't," replied the gallant captain. "I promised to go in half an hour
+with&mdash;with the Aspedens to see some waterfall or ruin, or something, and
+the time is up. So, <i>au revoir, monsieur</i>."</p>
+
+<p>Many of ours were pressed into the service for the coming theatricals,
+and right willingly did we rehearse a most unnecessary number of times.
+Many merry hours did we spend at Woodlands, and I sentimentalized away
+desperately to Mary Aspeden; but, somehow or other, always had an
+uncomfortable suspicion that she was laughing at me. She never seemed
+the least impressed by all my gallantries and pretty speeches, which was
+peculiarly mortifying to a moustached cornet of twenty, who thought
+himself irresistible. I began, too, to get terribly jealous of Tom
+Cleaveland, who, by right of his cousinship, arrived at a degree of
+intimacy <i>I</i> could not attain.</p>
+
+<p>One morning Fane and I (who were going to dine there that evening), the
+Miss Aspedens, and, of course, that Tom Cleaveland, were sitting in the
+drawing-room at Woodlands. Fane and Florence were going it at some<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_391" id="Page_391">[Pg 391]</a></span>
+opera airs (what passionate emphasis that wicked fellow gave the loving
+Italian words as his rich voice rolled them out to her accompaniment!),
+the detestable Trinity-man had been discoursing away to Mary on
+boat-racing, outriggers, bumping, and Heaven knows what, and I was just
+taking the shine out of him with the description of a shipwreck I had
+had in the Mediterranean, when Mary, who sat working at her <i>broderie</i>,
+and provokingly giving just as sweet smiles to the one as to the other,
+interrupted me with&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"Goodness, Florie, there is Mr. Mills coming up the avenue. He is my
+cousin's admirer and admiration!" she added, mischievously, as the door
+opened, and a little man about forty entered.</p>
+
+<p>There was all over him the essence of the country. You saw at once he
+had never passed a season in London. His very boots proclaimed he had
+never been presented; and we felt almost convulsed with laughter as he
+shook hands with us all round, and attempted a most <i>empress&eacute;</i> manner
+with Florence.</p>
+
+<p>"Beautiful weather we have now," remarked Mrs. Aspeden.</p>
+
+<p>"She is indeed!" answered the little squire, with a gaze of admiration
+at Florence.</p>
+
+<p>Fane, who was leaning against the mantelpiece, looking most superbly
+haughty and unapproachable, shot an annihilating glance at the small
+man, which would have quite extinguished him had he seen it.</p>
+
+<p>"The country is very pretty in June," said Mrs. Aspeden, hazarding
+another original remark.</p>
+
+<p>"Lovely&mdash;too lovely!" echoed Mr. Mills, with a profound sigh, at which
+the country must have felt exceedingly flattered.</p>
+
+<p>"Glorious creature your new mare is, Mr. Mills," cried the Cantab;
+"splendid style she took the fences in yesterday."<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_392" id="Page_392">[Pg 392]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"Wilkins may well say she is the <i>belle</i> of the county!" continued Mr.
+Mills, dreamily. "I beg your pardon, what did you say? my mother took
+the fences well? No, she never hunts."</p>
+
+<p>"Pray tell Mrs. Mills I am very much obliged for the beautiful azalias
+she sent me," interposed Florence, with her sweet smile.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;I am sure anything we have <i>you</i> are welcome to. I&mdash;I&mdash;allow me&mdash;&mdash;"
+And the poor squire, stooping for Florence's thimble, upset a tiny
+table, on which stood a vase with the azalias in question, on the back
+of a little bull of a spaniel, who yelled, and barked, and flew at the
+squire's legs, who, for his part, became speechless from fright,
+reddened all over, and at last, stammering out that he wanted to see Mr.
+Aspeden, and would go to him in the grounds, rushed from the room.</p>
+
+<p>We all burst out laughing at this climax of the poor little man's
+misery.</p>
+
+<p>"I will not have you laugh at him so," said Florence, at length. "I know
+him to be truly good and charitable, for all his peculiarities of
+manner."</p>
+
+<p>"It is but right Miss Aspeden should defend a <i>soupirant</i> so charming in
+every way," said the captain, his moustache curling contemptuously.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Florie's made an out-and-out conquest, and no mistake!" cried Tom
+Cleaveland.</p>
+
+<p>Florence did not heed her cousin, but looked up in Fane's face, utterly
+astonished at his sarcastic tones. No man could have withstood that look
+of those large, beautiful eyes, and Fane bent down and asked her to sing
+"<i>Roberto, oh tu che adoro!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, that will just do. Robert is his name; pity he is not here to hear
+it. 'Robert Mills, <i>oh tu che adoro!</i>'" sang the inexorable Cantab, as
+he walked across the room and asked Mary to have a game of billiards.
+For once I had the pleasure of forestalling him, but he, nevertheless,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_393" id="Page_393">[Pg 393]</a></span>
+came and marked for us in a very amiable manner. "How well you play,
+Mary," said he. "Really, stunningly for a woman. Do you know Beauchamp
+of Kings won three whole pools the other day without losing a life!"</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!" said Mary. "What good fun it is to see Mr. Mills play; he
+holds his queue as if he were afraid of it."</p>
+
+<p>"I say, Mary," said Cleaveland, "you don't think that Florence will
+marry that contemptible little wretch, do you? Hang it, I should be
+savage if she had not better taste. There's a cannon."</p>
+
+<p>"She has better taste," replied Mary, in a low tone, as Mrs. Aspeden and
+Fane entered the room.</p>
+
+<p>I never could like Mrs. Aspeden&mdash;peace be with her now, poor woman&mdash;but
+there was such a want of delicacy and tact, and such open man&#339;uvring
+in all she did, which surprised me, clever woman as she was.</p>
+
+<p>No sooner had she approached the billiard-table that day, than she
+began:</p>
+
+<p>"Florence was called away from her singing to a conference with her
+uncle, and&mdash;with somebody else, I fancy." (Fane darted a keen look of
+inquiry at her.) "Poor dear girl! being left so young an orphan, I have
+always felt such a great interest and affection for her, and I shall
+rejoice to see her happily settled as&mdash;as I trust there is a prospect of
+now," she continued.</p>
+
+<p>Could she mean Florence Aspeden had engaged herself to Mr. Mills? A
+roguish smile on Mary's face reassured me, but Fane walked hastily to
+the window, and stood with folded arms looking out upon the sunny
+landscape.</p>
+
+<p>Inveterate flirt that he was, his pride was hurt at the idea of a rival,
+and <i>such</i> a rival, winning in a game in which <i>he</i> deigned to have
+<i>ever</i> so small a stake, <i>ever</i> such a passing interest!</p>
+
+<p>The dinner passed off heavily&mdash;<i>very</i> heavily&mdash;for gay<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_394" id="Page_394">[Pg 394]</a></span> Woodlands, for
+the gallant captain and Florence were both of them <i>distraits</i> and
+<i>g&ecirc;n&eacute;s</i>, and he hardly spoke to the poor girl. Oh, wicked Fane!</p>
+
+<p>We sat but little time after the ladies had retired, and Tom and Mr.
+Aspeden going after some horse or other, Fane and I ascended to the
+drawing-room alone. It was unoccupied, and we sat down to await them, I
+amusing myself with teaching Master Tommy, the young heir of Woodlands,
+some comic songs, wherewith to astonish his nurse pretty considerably,
+and Fane leaning back in an arm-chair, with Florence's dog upon his knee
+in <i>that</i>, for <i>him</i>, most extraordinary thing, a "brown study."</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly some voices were heard in the next room.</p>
+
+<p>"Florence, it is your duty, recollect."</p>
+
+<p>"Aunt, I can recollect nothing, save that it would be far, far worse
+than death to me to marry Mr. Mills. I hold it dread sin to marry a man
+for whom one can have nothing but contempt. Once for all, I cannot,&mdash;I
+will not."</p>
+
+<p>Here the voice was broken with sobs. Fane had raised his head eagerly at
+the commencement of the dialogue, but now, recollecting that we were
+listeners, rose, and closed the door. I did not say a word on the
+conversation we had just heard, for I felt out of patience with him for
+his heartless flirtation; so, taking up a book on Italy, I looked over
+the engravings for a little time, and then, Tommy having been conveyed
+to the nursery in a state of rebellion, I reminded Fane of a promise he
+had once made to accompany me to Rome the next winter, and asked him if
+he intended to fulfil it.</p>
+
+<p>"Really, my dear fellow, I cannot tell what I may possibly do next
+winter; I hate making plans for the future. We may none of us be alive
+then," said he, in an unusually dull strain for him: "I half fancy I may
+exchange into some regiment going on foreign service. But <i>l'homme<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_395" id="Page_395">[Pg 395]</a></span>
+propose</i>, you know. By the by, poor Castleton" (his elder brother) "is
+very ill at Brussels."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. I was extremely sorry to hear it, in a letter I had from Vivian
+this morning," I replied. "He is at Brussels also, and mentions a
+<i>belle</i> there, Lady Adeliza Fitzhowden, with whom, he says, the world is
+associating <i>your</i> name. Is it true, Fane?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Les on dit font la gazette des fous!</i>" cried the captain, impatiently,
+stroking Florence's little King Charles. "I saw Lady Adeliza at Paris
+last January, but I would not marry her&mdash;no! not if there were no other
+woman upon earth! I thought, Fred, really you were too sensible to
+believe all the scandal raked up by that gossiping Vivian. I do hope you
+have not been propagating his most unfounded report?" asked my gallant
+friend, in quite an excited tone.</p>
+
+<p>At this moment the ladies entered. Florence with her dark eyes looking
+very sad under their long lashes, but they soon brightened when Fane
+seated himself by her side, and began talking in a lower tone, and with
+even more <i>tendresse</i> than ever.</p>
+
+<p>I had the pleasure of quite eclipsing Tom Cleaveland, I thought, as I
+turned over the leaves of Mary's music, and looked unutterable things,
+which, however, I fear were all lost, as Mary <i>would</i> look only at the
+notes of the piano, and I firmly believe never heard a word I said.</p>
+
+<p>How Florence blushed as Fane whispered his soft good night; she looked
+so happy, poor girl, and he, heartless demon, talked of going into
+foreign service! By the by, what put that into his head, I wonder?</p>
+
+<p>The night of our grand theatricals at length arrived, and we were all
+assembled in the library, converted for the time into a green-room.
+Mounteagle was repeating to himself, for the hundredth time, his part of
+<i>Lord Tinsel</i>; I, in my <i>Modus</i> dress, which I had a disagreeable idea
+was not becoming, was endeavoring to make an<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_396" id="Page_396">[Pg 396]</a></span> impression on the
+not-to-be impressed Mary, and Florence was looking lovelier than ever in
+her rich old-fashioned dress, when Fane entered, and bending, offered
+her a bouquet of rare flowers. She blushed deeply as she took it. Oh!
+Fane, Fane, what will you have to answer for?</p>
+
+<p>We were waiting the summons for the first scene, when, to Mary's horror,
+I suddenly exclaimed that I could not play!</p>
+
+<p>"Good Heavens! why not?" was the general inquiry.</p>
+
+<p>"Why!" I said. "I never thought of it until now, but certainly <i>Modus</i>
+ought to appear without moustaches, and, hang it, I cannot cut mine
+off."</p>
+
+<p>"Take my life, but spare my moustaches!" cried Mary, in tragic tones.
+"Certainly though, Mr. Wilmot, you are right; <i>Modus</i> ought not to be
+seen with the characteristic 'musk-toshes,' as nurse calls them; of an
+English officer. What is to be done?"</p>
+
+<p>"Please, sir, will you come? Major Vaughan says the group is agoing to
+be set for the first scene, and you are wanted, sir," was a flunkey's
+admonition to Fane, who went off accordingly, after advising me to add a
+dishevelled beard to my tenderly cared-for moustaches, which would seem
+as if <i>Modus</i> had entirely neglected his toilette.</p>
+
+<p>There was a general rush for part books, a general cry for things that
+were not forthcoming, and a general despair on the parts of the youngest
+amateurs at forgetting their cues just when they were most wanted.</p>
+
+<p>Fane, when he came off the stage after the first scene, leant against a
+pillar to watch the pretty one between <i>Julia</i> and <i>Helen</i>, so near that
+he must have been seen by the audience, and presented a most handsome
+and interesting spectacle, I dare say, for young ladies to gaze at.
+Fixing his eyes on Florence, whose rendering of the part was really
+perfect as she uttered these words, "Helen, I'm<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_397" id="Page_397">[Pg 397]</a></span> constancy!" he
+unconsciously muttered aloud, "I believe it!"</p>
+
+<p>"So do I!" I could not help saying, "and therefore more shame to whoever
+wins such a heart to throw it away. 'Beneath her feet, a duke&mdash;a duke
+might lay his coronet!'" I quoted.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you in love yourself, Fred?" laughed the captain; then, stroking
+his moustaches thoughtfully for some minutes, he said at last, as if
+with an effort, "You are right, young one, and yet&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>If I was right, what need was there for him to throw such passion into
+his part&mdash;what need was there for him to say with such <i>empressement</i>
+those words:</p>
+
+<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
+<span class="i4">A willing pupil kneels to thee,<br /></span>
+<span class="i0">And lays his title and his fortune at thy feet?<br /></span>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>If he intended to go into foreign service, why did he not go at once?
+Though I confess it seemed strange to me why Fane&mdash;the courted, the
+flattered, the admired Fane&mdash;should wish to leave England.</p>
+
+<p>Reader, mind, the gallant captain is a desperate flirt, and I do not
+believe he will go into foreign service any more than I shall, but I
+<i>am</i> afraid he will win that poor girl's heart with far less thought
+than you buy your last "little darling French bonnet," and when he is
+tired of it will throw it away with quite as little heed. But I was not
+so much interested in his flirtation as to forget my own, still I was
+obliged to confess that Mary Aspeden did not pay me as much attention as
+I should have wished.</p>
+
+<p>I danced the first dance with her, after the play was over&mdash;(I forgot to
+tell you we were very much applauded)&mdash;and Tom Cleaveland engaging her
+for the next, I proposed a walk through the conservatories to a
+sentimental young lady who was my peculiar aversion, but to whom I
+became extremely <i>d&eacute;vou&eacute;</i>, for I thought I would try and pique Mary if I
+could.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_398" id="Page_398">[Pg 398]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The light strains of dance music floated in from the distance, and the
+air was laden with the scent of flowers, and many a <i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i> and
+<i>partie carr&eacute;e</i> was arranged in that commodious conservatory.</p>
+
+<p>Half hidden by an orange-tree, Florence Aspeden was leaning back in a
+garden-chair, close to where we stood looking out upon the beautiful
+night. Her fair face was flushed, and she was nervously picking some of
+the blossoms to pieces; before her stood Mounteagle, speaking eagerly. I
+was moving away to avoid being a hearer of his love-speech, as I doubted
+not it was, but my companion, with many young-ladyish expressions of
+adoration of the "sublime moonlight," begged me to stay "one moment,
+that she might see the dear moon emerge like a swan from that dark,
+beautiful cloud!" and in the pauses of her ecstatics I heard poor
+Mount's voice in a tone of intense entreaty.</p>
+
+<p>At that moment Fane passed. He glanced at the group behind the
+orange-trees, and his face grew stern and cold, and his lips closed with
+that iron compression they always have when he is irritated. His eyes
+met Florences, and he bowed haughtily and stiffly as he moved on, and
+his upright figure, with its stately head, was seen in the room beyond,
+high above any of those around him. A heavy sigh came through the orange
+boughs, and her voice whispered, "I&mdash;I am very sorry, but&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! <i>do</i> look at the moonbeams falling on that darling little piece of
+water, Mr. Wilmot!" exclaimed my decidedly <i>moonstruck</i> companion.</p>
+
+<p>"Is there no hope?" cried poor Mount.</p>
+
+<p>"None!" And the low-whispered knell of hope came sighing over the
+flowers. I thought how little she guessed there was none for her. Poor
+Florence!</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, this night! I could gaze on it forever, though it is saddening in
+its sweetness, do not you think?" asked<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_399" id="Page_399">[Pg 399]</a></span> my romantic demoiselle. "Ah!
+what a pretty <i>valse</i> they are playing!"</p>
+
+<p>"May I have the pleasure of dancing it with you?" I felt myself obliged
+to ask, although intensely victimized thereby, as I hate dancing, and
+wonder whatever idiot invented it.</p>
+
+<p>Miss Chesney, considering her devotion to the moon, consented very
+joyfully to leave it for the pleasures (?) of a <i>valse &agrave; deux temps</i>.</p>
+
+<p>As we moved away, I saw that Florence was alone, and apparently occupied
+with sad thoughts. She, I dare say, was grieving over Fane's cold bow,
+and poor Mount had rushed away somewhere with his great sorrow. Fane
+came into my room next morning while I was at breakfast, having been
+obliged to get up at the unconscionable hour of ten, to be in time for a
+review we were to have that day on Layton Common for the glorification
+of the country around.</p>
+
+<p>The gallant captain flung himself on my sofa, and, after puffing away at
+his cigar for some minutes, came out with, "Any commands for London? I
+am going to apply for leave, and I think I shall start by the express
+to-morrow."</p>
+
+<p>"What's in the wind now?" I asked. "Is Lord Avanley unwell?"</p>
+
+<p>"No; the governor's all right, thank you. I am tired of rural felicity,
+that is all," replied Fane. "I must stay for this review to-day, or the
+colonel would make no end of a row. He is a testy old boy. I rather
+think I shall set out, or exchange into the Heavies."</p>
+
+<p>"What in the world have you got into your head, Fane?" I asked, utterly
+astonished to see him diligently smoking an extinguished cigar. "I am
+sorry you are going to leave us. The 110th will miss you, old fellow;
+and what <i>will</i> the Aspedens say to losing their <i>preux<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_400" id="Page_400">[Pg 400]</a></span> chevalier</i>? By
+the way, speaking of them, poor Mount received his <i>cong&eacute;</i> last night, I
+expect."</p>
+
+<p>"What! are you sure? What did you say?" demanded Fane, stooping to
+relight his cigar.</p>
+
+<p>I told him what I had overheard in the conservatory.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! well&mdash;ah! indeed&mdash;poor fellow!" ejaculated the captain. "But
+there's the bugle-call! I must go and get into harness."</p>
+
+<p>And I followed his example, turning over in my mind, as I donned my
+uniform, what might possibly have induced Fane to leave Layton Rise so
+suddenly. Was it, at last, pity for Florence? And if it were, would not
+the pity come too late?</p>
+
+<p>Layton Rise looked very pretty and bright under the combined influence
+of beauty and valor (that is the correct style, is it not?). The
+Aspedens came early, and drew up their carriages close to the
+flag-staff. Fane's eye-glass soon spied them from our distant corner of
+the field, and, as we passed before the flagstaff, he bent low to his
+saddle with one of those fascinating smiles which have gone deep to so
+many unfortunate young ladies' hearts. Again I felt angry with him, as I
+rode along thinking of that girl, her whole future most likely clouded
+for ever, and he going away to-morrow to enjoy himself about in the
+world, quite reckless of the heart he had broken, and&mdash;&mdash; But in the
+midst of my sentimentalism I was startled by hearing the sharp voice of
+old Townsend, our colonel, who was a bit of a martinet, asking poor
+Ennuy&eacute; "what he lifted his hand for?"</p>
+
+<p>"There was a bee upon my nose, colonel."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sir, and if there were a whole hive of bees upon your nose, what
+right have you to raise your hand on parade?" stormed the colonel.</p>
+
+<p>There was a universal titter, and poor Ennuy&eacute; was glad to hide his
+confusion in the "charge" which was sounded.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_401" id="Page_401">[Pg 401]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>On we dashed our horses at a stretching gallop, our spurs jingling, our
+plumes waving in the wind, and our lances gleaming in the sunlight.
+Hurrah! there is no charge in the world like the resistless English
+dragoons'! On we went, till suddenly there was a piercing cry, and one
+of the carriages, in which the ponies had been most negligently left,
+broke from the circle and tore headlong down the common, at the bottom
+of which was a lake. One young lady alone was in it. It was impossible
+for her to pull in the excited little grays, and, unless they <i>were</i>
+stopped, down they would all go into it. But as soon as it was
+perceived, Fane had rushed from the ranks, and, digging his spurs into
+his horse, galloped after the carriage. Breathless we watched him. We
+would not follow, for we knew that he would do it, if any man could, and
+the sound of many in pursuit would only further exasperate the ponies.
+Ha! he is nearing them now. Another moment and they will be down the
+sloping bank into the lake. The girl gives a wild cry; Fane is straining
+every nerve. Bravo! well done&mdash;-he has saved her! I rushed up, and
+arrived to find Fane supporting a half-fainting young lady, in whose
+soft face, as it rested on his shoulder, I recognized Florence Aspeden.
+Her eyes unclosed as I drew near, and, blushing, she disengaged herself
+from his arms. Fane bent his head over her, and murmured, "Thank God, I
+have saved you!" But perhaps I did not hear distinctly.</p>
+
+<p>By this time all her friends had gathered round them, and Fane had
+consigned her to her cousin's care, and she was endeavoring to thank
+him, which her looks, and blushes, and smiles did most eloquently; Mr.
+Aspeden was shaking Fane by the hand, and what further might have
+happened I know not, if the colonel (very wrathful at such an unseemly
+interruption to his cherished man&#339;uvres) had not shouted out, "Fall
+in, gentlemen&mdash;fall in! Captain Fane, fall in with your troop, sir!" We<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_402" id="Page_402">[Pg 402]</a></span>
+did accordingly fall in, and the review proceeded; but my friend
+actually made some mistakes in his evolutions, and kept his eye-glass
+immovably fixed on the point in the circle, and behaved altogether in a
+<i>distrait</i> manner&mdash;Fane, whom I used to accuse of having too much <i>sang
+froid</i>&mdash;whom nothing could possibly disturb&mdash;whom I never saw agitated
+before in the whole course of my acquaintance!</p>
+
+<p>What an inexplicable fellow he is!</p>
+
+<p>The review over, we joined the Aspedens, and many were the
+congratulations Florence had heaped upon her; but she looked
+<i>distraite</i>, too, until Fane came up, and leaning his hand on the
+carriage, bent down and talked to her. Their conversation went on in a
+low tone, and as I was busy laughing with Mary, I cannot report it, save
+that from the bright blushes on the one hand, and the soft whispered
+tones on the other, Fane was clearly at his old and favorite work of
+winning hearts.</p>
+
+<p>"You seem quite <i>occup&eacute;</i> this morning, Mr. Wilmot," said Mary, in her
+winning tones. "I trust you have had no bad news&mdash;no order from the
+Horse Guards for the Lancers to leave off moustaches."</p>
+
+<p>"No, Miss Aspeden," said Sydney; "if such a calamity as that had
+occurred, you would not see Wilmot here, he would never survive the loss
+of his moustaches&mdash;they are his first and only love."</p>
+
+<p>"And a first affection is never forgotten," added that provoking Mary,
+in a most melancholy voice.</p>
+
+<p>"It would be a pity if it were, as it seems such a fertile source of
+amusement to you and Miss Aspeden," I said, angrily, to Sydney, too much
+of a boy then to take a joke.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Fane has an invitation for you and Mr. Sydney," said Mary, I
+suppose by way of <i>amende</i>. "We are going on the river, to a picnic at
+the old castle;&mdash;you will come?"</p>
+
+<p>The tones were irresistible, so I smoothed down my<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_403" id="Page_403">[Pg 403]</a></span> indignation and my
+poor moustache, and replied that I would have that pleasure, as did
+Sydney.</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Bien!</i> good-bye, then, for we must hasten home," said Mary, whipping
+her ponies. And off bowled the carriage with its fair occupants.</p>
+
+<p>"You won't be here for this picnic, old fellow," I remarked to Fane, as
+we rode off the ground.</p>
+
+<p>"Well! I don't know. I hardly think I shall go just yet. You see I had
+six months' leave when I was in Germany, before I came down here, and I
+hardly like to ask for another so soon, and&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"It is so easy to find a reason for what one <i>wishes</i>," I added,
+smiling.</p>
+
+<p>"Come and look at my new chestnut, will you?" said Fane, not deigning to
+reply to my insinuation. "I am going to run her against Stuckup of the
+Guards' bay colt!"</p>
+
+<p>That beautiful morning in June! How well I remember it, as we dropped
+down the sunlit river, under the shade of the branching trees, the
+gentle plash of the oars mingling with the high tones and ringing
+laughter of our merry party, on our way to the castle picnic.</p>
+
+<p>"How beautiful this is," I said to Mary Aspeden; "would that life could
+glide on calmly and peacefully as we do this morning!"</p>
+
+<p>"How romantic you are becoming!" laughed Mary. "What a pity that I feel
+much more in mood to fish than to sentimentalize!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" I replied, "with the present companionship I could be content to
+float on forever."</p>
+
+<p>"Hush! I beg your pardon, but <i>do</i> listen to that dear thrush,"
+interrupted Mary, not the least disturbed, or even interested, by my
+pretty speeches.</p>
+
+<p>I was old enough to know I was not the least in love with Mary Aspeden,
+but I was quite too much of a boy not to feel provoked I did not make
+more impression. I was<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_404" id="Page_404">[Pg 404]</a></span> a desperate puppy at that time, and she served
+me perfectly right. However, feeling very injured, I turned my attention
+to Fane, who sat talking of course to Florence, and left Mary to the
+attentions of her Cantab cousin.</p>
+
+<p>"Miss Aspeden does not agree with you, Fred," said Fane. "She says life
+was not intended to glide on like a peaceful river; she likes the waves
+and storms," he added, looking down at her with very visible admiration.</p>
+
+<p>"No, not for myself," replied Florence, with a sweet, sad smile. "I did
+not mean <i>that</i>. One storm will wreck a <i>woman's</i> happiness; but were I
+a man I should glory in battling with the tempest-tossed waves of life.
+If there be no combat there can be no fame, and the fiercer, the more
+terrible it is, the more renown to be the victor in the struggle!"</p>
+
+<p>"You are right," answered Fane, with unusual earnestness. "That used to
+be <i>my</i> dream once, and I think even now I have the stuff in me for it;
+but then," he continued, sinking his voice, "I must have an end, an aim,
+and, above all, some one who will sorrow in my sorrow, and glory in my
+glory; who will be&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Quite ready for luncheon, I should think; hope you've enjoyed your
+boating!" cried Mr. Aspeden's hearty voice from the shore, where, having
+come by land, he now stood to welcome us, surrounded by a crowd of
+anxious mammas, wondering if the boating had achieved the desirable end
+of a proposal from Captain A&mdash;&mdash;; hoping Mr. B&mdash;&mdash;, who had nothing but
+his pay, had not been paying too much attention to Adelina; and that
+Honoria had given sufficient encouragement to Mr. C&mdash;&mdash;, who, on the
+strength of 1000<i>l.</i> a year, and a coronet in prospect, was considered
+an eligible <i>parti</i> (his being a consummate scamp and inveterate gambler
+is nothing); and that D&mdash;&mdash; has too much "consideration for his family"
+to have any "serious intentions" to Miss E&mdash;&mdash;, whom he is assisting to
+land. However,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_405" id="Page_405">[Pg 405]</a></span> whatever proposals have been accepted or rejected, here
+we all were ready for luncheon, which was laid out on the grass, and
+Fane will be obliged to finish his speech another time, for little now
+is heard but <i>bons mots</i>, laughter, and champagne corks. The captain is
+more brilliant than ever, and I make Mary laugh if I cannot make her
+sigh. Luncheon over, what was to be done? See the castle, of course, as
+we were in duty bound, since it was what we came to do; and the
+<i>t&ecirc;te-&agrave;-t&ecirc;te</i> of the boats are resumed, as ladies and gentlemen ascended
+the grassy slopes on which the fine old ruins stood. I looked for Mary
+Aspeden, feeling sure that I should conquer her in time (though I did
+not <i>want</i> to in the least!), but she had gone off somewhere, I dare say
+with Tom Cleaveland; so I offered my arm to that same sentimental Miss
+Chesney who had bored me into a <i>valse &agrave; deux temps</i> the night of the
+theatricals, and I have no doubt her mamma contemplated her as Mrs.
+Wilmot, of Wilmot Park, with very great gratification and security.
+Becoming rather tired of the young lady's hackneyed style of
+conversation, which consisted, as usual, of large notes of exclamation
+about "the <i>sweet</i> nightingales!" "the <i>dear</i> ruins!" "the <i>darling</i>
+flowers!" &amp;c. &amp;c., I managed to exchange with another sub, and strolled
+off by myself.</p>
+
+<p>As I was leaning against an old wall in no very amiable frame of mind,
+consigning all young ladies to no very delightful place, and returning
+to my old conclusion that they were all tarlatan and coquetry, soft
+musical voices on the other side of the wall fell almost unconsciously
+on my ear.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! Florence, I am so unhappy!"</p>
+
+<p>"Are you, darling? I wish I could help you. Is it about Cyril Graham?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes!" with a tremendous sigh. "I am afraid papa, and I am sure mamma,
+will never consent. I know poor dear Cyril is not rich, but then he is
+so clever, he will<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_406" id="Page_406">[Pg 406]</a></span> soon make himself known. But if that tiresome Fred
+Wilmot should propose, I know they will want me to accept him." (There
+is one thing, I never, <i>never will</i>!) "I do snub him as much as ever I
+can, but he is such a puppy, I believe he thinks I am in love with
+him&mdash;as if Cyril, were not worth twenty such as he, for all he is the
+owner of Wilmot Park!"</p>
+
+<p>Very pleasant this was! What a fool I must have made of myself to Mary
+Aspeden, and how nice it was to hear one's self called "a puppy!"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, dear," resumed Florence, "as you love Cyril, it is
+impossible for you to love any one ever again; but I do not think Mr.
+Wilmot a puppy. He is conceited, to be sure, but I do not believe he
+would be so much liked by&mdash;by those who are his friends, if he were not
+rather nice. Come, dear, cheer up. I am sure uncle Aspeden is too kind
+not to let you marry Cyril when he knows how much you love one another.
+<i>I</i> will talk to him, Mary dear, and bring him round, see if I do not!
+But&mdash;but&mdash;will you think me <i>very</i> selfish if I tell you"&mdash;(a long
+pause)&mdash;"he has asked me&mdash;I mean&mdash;he wishes&mdash;he told me&mdash;he says he does
+love me!"</p>
+
+<p>"Who, darling? Let me think&mdash;Lord Athum?&mdash;Mr. Grant?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, Mary&mdash;Drummond&mdash;that is, Captain Fane&mdash;he said&mdash;&mdash;Oh, Mary, I am so
+happy!"</p>
+
+<p>At this juncture it occurred suddenly to me that I was playing the part
+of a listener. (But may not much be forgiven a man who has heard himself
+called "a puppy"?) So I moved away, leaving the fair Florence to her
+blushes and her happiness, unshared by any but her friend. Between my
+astonishment at Fane and my indignation at Mary, I was fairly
+bewildered. Fane actually had proposed! <i>He</i>, the Honorable Drummond
+Fane, who had always declaimed against matrimony&mdash;who had been
+proof-hardened against half the best<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_407" id="Page_407">[Pg 407]</a></span> matches in the country&mdash;that
+desperate flirt who we thought would never fall in love, to have tumbled
+in headlong like this!</p>
+
+<p>Well, there was some satisfaction, I would chaff him delightfully about
+it; and I was really glad, for if Florence had given her heart to Fane,
+she was not the sort of girl to forget, nor he the sort of man to be
+forgotten, in a hurry. But in what an awfully foolish light I must have
+appeared to Mary Aspeden! There was one thing, she would never know I
+had overheard her. I would get leave, and go off somewhere&mdash;I would
+marry the first pretty girl I met with&mdash;she should <i>not</i> think I cared
+for <i>her</i>. No, I would go on flirting as if nothing had happened, and
+then announce, in a natural manner, that I was going into the Highlands,
+and then <i>she</i> would be the one to feel small, as she had made so <i>very</i>
+sure of my proposal. And yet, if I went away, that was the thing to
+please her. <i>Hang</i> it! I did not know <i>what</i> to do! My vanity was most
+considerably touched, though my heart was not; but after cooling down a
+little, I saw how foolishly I should look if I behaved otherwise than
+quietly and naturally, and that after all <i>that</i> would be the best way
+to make Mary reverse her judgment.</p>
+
+<p>So, when I met her again, which was not until we were going to return, I
+offered her my arm to the boat where Fane and his <i>belle fianc&eacute;e</i> were
+sitting, looking most absurdly happy; and the idea of my adamantine
+friend being actually caught seemed so ridiculous, that it almost
+restored me to my good humor, which, sooth to say, the appellation of
+"puppy" had somewhat disturbed.</p>
+
+<p>And so the moon rose and shed her silver light over the young lady who
+had sentimentalized upon her, and a romantic cornet produced a
+concertina, and sent forth dulcet strains into the evening air, and
+Florence and her captain talked away in whispers, and Mary Aspeden sat
+with tears in her eyes, thinking, I suppose, of "Cyril"<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_408" id="Page_408">[Pg 408]</a></span> and I mused on
+my "puppyism;" and thus, wrapped each in our own little sphere, we
+floated down the river to Woodlands, and, it being late, with many a
+soft good night, and many a gentle "<i>Au revoir</i>," we parted, and Mr.
+Aspeden's castle picnic was over!</p>
+
+<p>I did not see Fane the next day, except at parade, until I was dressing
+for mess, when he stalked into my room, and stretching himself on a
+sofa, said, after a pause,</p>
+
+<p>"Well, old boy, I've been and gone and done it."</p>
+
+<p>"Been and gone and done what?" I asked, for, by the laws of retaliation,
+I was bound to tease him a little.</p>
+
+<p>"Confound you, what an idiot you are!" was the complimentary rejoinder.
+"Why, my dear fellow, the truth is, that, like most of my unfortunate
+sex, I have at last turned into that most tortuous path called love, and
+surrendered myself to the machinations of beautiful woman. The long and
+the short of it is&mdash;I am engaged to be married!"</p>
+
+<p>"Good Heavens! Fane!" I exclaimed, "what next? <i>You</i> married! Who on
+earth is she? I know of no heiress down here!"</p>
+
+<p>"She is no heiress," said the captain; "but she is what is much
+better&mdash;the sweetest, dearest, most lovable&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Of <i>course</i>!" I said, "but no heiress! My dear Fane, you cannot mean
+what you say?"</p>
+
+<p>"I should be sorry if I did not," was the cool reply; "and you must be
+more of a fool, Fred, than I took you for, if you cannot see that
+Florence Aspeden is worth all the heiresses upon earth, and is the
+embodiment of all that is lovely and winning in woman&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No doubt of it, <i>tout cela saute aux yeux</i>," I answered. "But reflect,
+Fane; it would be utter madness in <i>you</i> to marry anything but an
+heiress. Love in a cottage is not <i>your</i> style. <i>You</i> were not made for
+a small house, one maid-servant, and dinner&mdash;&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" laughed Fane, "you are bringing my former<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_409" id="Page_409">[Pg 409]</a></span> nonsense against me.
+Some would say I was committing worse folly now, but believe me, Fred,
+the folly even of the heart is better than the calculating wisdom of the
+world. I do not hesitate to say that if Florence had fortune I should
+prefer it, for such a <i>vaurien</i> as I was made to spend money; but as she
+has not, I love her too dearly to think about it, and my father, I have
+no doubt, will soon get me my majority, and we shall get on stunningly.
+So marry for <i>love</i>, Fred, if you take my advice."</p>
+
+<p>"A <i>rather</i> different opinion to that which you inculcated so
+strenuously a month ago," I observed, smiling; "but let me congratulate
+you, old fellow, with all my heart. 'Pon my word, I am very glad, for I
+always felt afraid you would, like Morvillier's <i>gar&ccedil;on</i>, resist all the
+attractions of a woman until the '<i>cent mille &eacute;cus</i>,' and then, without
+hesitation, declare, '<i>J'&eacute;pouse</i>.' But you were too good to be spoiled."</p>
+
+<p>"As for my goodness, there's not much of <i>that</i>," replied Fane; "I am
+afraid I am much better off than I deserve. I wrote to the governor last
+night: dear old boy! he will do anything <i>I</i> ask him. By the by, Mary
+will be married soon too. I hope you are not <i>&eacute;pris</i> in that quarter,
+Fred?&mdash;pray do not faint if you are. <i>My</i> Florence, who can do anything
+she likes with anybody (do you think any one <i>could</i> be angry with
+<i>her</i>?) coaxed old Aspeden into consenting to Mary's marriage with a
+fellow she really is in love with&mdash;Graham, a barrister. I think she
+would have had more difficulty with the lady-mother, if a letter had not
+most opportunely come from Graham this morning, announcing the agreeable
+fact that he had lots of tin left him unexpectedly. I wish somebody
+would do the same by me. And so this Graham will fly down on the wings
+of love&mdash;represented in these days by the express train&mdash;to-morrow
+evening."</p>
+
+<p>"And how about the foreign service, Fane?" I could<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_410" id="Page_410">[Pg 410]</a></span> not help asking.
+"And do you intend going to London to-morrow?"</p>
+
+<p>"I made those two resolutions under very different circumstances to the
+<i>present</i>, my dear fellow," laughed Fane: "the first, when I determined
+to cut away from Florence altogether, as the only chance of forgetting
+her; sad the second, when I thought poor Mount was an accepted lover,
+and I confess that I did not feel to have stoicism enough to witness his
+happiness. But how absurd it seems that <i>I</i> should have fallen in love,"
+continued he; "<i>I</i>, that defied the charms of all the Venuses upon
+earth&mdash;the last person any one would have taken for a marrying man. I am
+considerably astonished myself! But I suppose love is like the
+whooping-cough, one must have it some time or other." And with these
+words the gallant captain raised himself from the sofa, lighted a cigar,
+and, strolling out of the room, mounted his horse for Woodlands, where
+he was engaged of course to dinner that evening.</p>
+
+<p>And now, gentle reader, what more is there to tell? I fear as it is I
+have written too "much about nothing," and as thou hast, I doubt not, a
+fine imagination, what need to tell how Lord Avanley and Mr. Aspeden
+arranged matters, not like the cross papas in books and dramas, but
+amicably, as gentlemen should; how merrily the bells pealed for the
+double wedding; how I, as <i>gar&ccedil;on d'honneur</i>, flirted with the
+bridesmaids to my heart's content; how Fane is my friend, <i>par
+excellence</i>, still, and how his love is all the stronger for having
+"come late," he says. How all the young ladies hated Florence, and all
+the mammas and chaperones blessed her for having carried off the
+"fascinating younger son," until his brother Lord Castleton dying at the
+baths, Fane succeeded of course to the title; how she is, if possible,
+even more charming as Lady Castleton than as Florence Aspeden, and how
+they were <i>really</i> heart-happy until the Crimean campaign<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_411" id="Page_411">[Pg 411]</a></span> separated
+them; and how she turns her beautiful eyes ever to the East and heeds
+not, save to repulse, the crowd of admirers who seek to render her
+forgetful of her soldier-husband.</p>
+
+<p>True wife as she is, may he live to come back with laurels hardly won,
+still to hold her his dearest treasure.</p>
+
+<p><i>May 1, 1856.</i>&mdash;Fane <i>has</i> come back all safe. I hope, dear reader, you
+are as glad as I am. He has distinguished himself stunningly, and is now
+lieutenant-colonel of the dear old 110th. You have gloried in the charge
+of ours at Balaklava, but as I have not whispered to you my name, you
+cannot possibly divine that a rascally Russian gave me a cut on the
+sword-arm that very day in question, which laid me <i>hors de combat</i>, but
+got me my majority.</p>
+
+<p>Well may I, as well as Fane, bless the remembrance of Layton Rise, for
+if I had never made the acquaintance of Mary Aspeden&mdash;I mean Graham&mdash;I
+might never have known her <i>belle-s&#339;ur</i> (who is now shaking her head
+at me for writing about her), and whom, either through my interesting
+appearance when I returned home on the sick-list, and my manifold
+Crimean adventures, or through the usual perversity of women, who will
+fall always in love with scamps who do not deserve half their
+goodness&mdash;(Edith, you shall <i>not</i> look over my shoulder)&mdash;I prevailed on
+to accept my noble self and Lancer uniform, with the "<i>puppyism</i>" shaken
+pretty well out of it! And so here we are <i>very happy of course</i>.&mdash;"As
+yet," suggests Edith.</p>
+
+<p>Ah! Fane and I little knew&mdash;poor unhappy wretches that we were&mdash;what our
+fate was preparing for us when it led us discontented <i>blas&eacute;s</i> and
+<i>ennuy&eacute;s</i> down to our Country Quarters!<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_412" id="Page_412">[Pg 412]</a></span></p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 100%;" />
+
+<div class="bbox">
+<h3>THE CHALLONERS</h3>
+
+<p class="center">BY E. F. BENSON<br />
+
+<i>12mo. Cloth, $1.50.</i></p>
+
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>The theme is a father's concern lest his children become contaminated by
+what he considers an unwholesome social atmosphere. The book is filled
+with Mr. Benson's clever observations on the English smart set, and the
+love-story shows him at his best.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>MORGANATIC</h3>
+
+<p class="center">BY MAX NORDAU<br />
+
+<i>12mo. Decorated cloth, $1.50.</i></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>This new book by the author of "Degeneration," has many of the qualities
+which gave its predecessor such a phenomenal sale. It is a study of
+morganatic marriage, and full of strong situations.</p>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>OLIVE LATHAM</h3>
+
+<p class="center">By E. L. VOYNICH<br />
+Author of "Jack Raymond" and "The Gadfly." Cloth, $1.50</p>
+
+<div class="cblockquot">
+<p>"The author's knowledge of this matter has been painfully personal. Her
+husband, a Polish political refugee, at the age of twenty-two, was
+arrested and thrown into a vile Russian prison without trial, and spent
+five years of his life thereafter in Siberian exile, escaping in 1890
+and fleeing to England. Throughout 'Olive Latham' you get the impression
+that it is a veritable record of what one woman went through for
+love.... This painful, poignant, powerfully-written story permits one
+full insight into the cruel workings of Russian justice and its effects
+upon the nature of a well-poised Englishwoman. Olive comes out of the
+Russian hell alive, and lives to know what happiness is again, but the
+horror of those days in St. Petersburg, the remembrance of the
+inhumanity which killed her lover never leaves her.... It rings true. It
+is a grewsome study of Russian treatment of political offenders. Its
+theme is not objectionable&mdash;a criticism which has been brought against
+other books of Mrs. Voynich's."&mdash;<i>Chicago Record-Herald.</i></p>
+
+<p>"So vividly are the coming events made to cast their shadows before,
+that long before the half-way point is reached the reader knows that
+Volodya's doom is near at hand, and that the chief interest of the story
+lies not with him, but with the girl, and more specifically with the
+curious mental disorders which her long ordeal brings upon her. It is
+seldom that an author has succeeded in depicting with such grim horror
+the sufferings of a mind that feels itself slipping over the brink of
+sanity, and clutches desperately at shadows in the effort to drag itself
+back."&mdash;<i>New York Globe.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>BACCARAT</h3>
+
+<p class="center">BY FRANK DANBY<br />
+AUTHOR OF "PIGS IN CLOVER"<br /><br />
+
+<i>12 mo. Six illustrations in color. Cloth, $1.50.</i></p>
+
+<div class="blockquot">
+<p>The story of a young wife left by her husband at a Continental watering
+place for a brief summer stay, who, before she is aware, has drifted
+into the feverish current of a French Monte Carlo.</p>
+
+<p>A dramatic and intense book that stirs the pity. One cannot read
+"Baccarat" unmoved.</p>
+</div>
+
+<div class="cblockquot">
+<p>"The finished style and unforgettable story, the living characters, and
+compact tale of the new book show it to be a work on which care and time
+have been expended.</p>
+
+<p>"Much more dramatic than her first novel, it possesses in common with it
+a story of deep and terrible human interest."&mdash;<i>Chicago Tribune.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h3>THE ISSUE</h3>
+
+<p class="center">By GEORGE MORGAN<br />
+
+Illustrated. Cloth, $1.50</p>
+
+<div class="cblockquot">
+<p>"Will stand prominently forth as the strongest book that the season has
+given us. The novel is a brilliant one, and will command wide
+attention."&mdash;<i>Philadelphia Public Ledger.</i></p>
+
+<p>"The love story running through the book is very tender and
+sweet."&mdash;<i>St. Paul Despatch.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Po, a sweet, lovable heroine."&mdash;<i>The Milwaukee Sentinel.</i></p>
+
+<p>"Such novels as 'The Issue' are rare upon any theme. It is a work that
+must have cost tremendous toil, a masterpiece. It is superior to 'The
+Crisis.'"&mdash;<i>Pittsburg Gazette.</i></p>
+
+<p>"The best novel of the Civil War that we have had."&mdash;<i>Baltimore Sun.</i></p>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 15%;" />
+<h5>J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA.</h5>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
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+</pre>
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Beatrice Boville and Other Stories, by Ouida
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Beatrice Boville and Other Stories
+
+Author: Ouida
+
+Release Date: October 6, 2010 [EBook #33942]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK BEATRICE BOVILLE AND OTHER STORIES ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by David Edwards and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This book was
+produced from scanned images of public domain material
+from the Google Print project.)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ TRANSCRIBER'S NOTE: Punctuation has been normalized. All other
+ printer's errors have been retained.
+
+
+
+
+ BEATRICE BOVILLE
+ AND
+ OTHER STORIES.
+
+ BY
+
+ "OUIDA."
+
+ AUTHOR OF
+ "STRATHMORE," "GRANVILLE DE VIGNE," "CHANDOS,"
+ "IDALIA," "RANDOLPH GORDON," ETC., ETC.
+
+
+ Third Series.
+
+
+ PHILADELPHIA:
+ J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY.
+ 1905
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+BEATRICE BOVILLE.
+
+ I.--OF EARLSCOURT'S FIANCEE. 9
+ II.--THE FIRST SHADOW. 13
+ III.--HOW PRIDE SOWED AND REAPED. 23
+ IV.--WHERE I SAW BEATRICE BOVILLE AGAIN. 33
+ V.--HOW IN PERFECT INNOCENCE I PLAYED THE PART OF A RIVAL. 44
+ VI.--HOW PRIDE BOWED AND FELL. 51
+
+
+A LINE IN THE "DAILY."
+
+ WHO DID IT, AND WHO WAS DONE BY IT. 65
+
+
+HOLLY WREATHS AND ROSE CHAINS.
+
+ I.--THE COLONEL OF THE "WHITE FAVORS" AND CECIL ST. AUBYN. 109
+ II.--THE CANADIAN'S COLD BATH WARMS UP THE COLONEL. 119
+ III.--SHOWING THAT LOVE-MAKING ON HOLY GROUND DOESN'T PROSPER. 132
+ IV.--THE COLONEL KILLS HIS FOX, BUT LOSES HIS HEAD AFTER
+ OTHER GAME. 146
+
+
+SILVER CHIMES AND GOLDEN FETTERS.
+
+ I.--WALDEMAR FALKENSTEIN AND VALERIE L'ESTRANGE. 161
+ II.--FALKENSTEIN BREAKS LANCES WITH "LONGS YEUX BLEUS." 174
+ III.--"SCARLET AND WHITE" MAKES A HIT, AND FALKENSTEIN FEELS
+ THE WEIGHT OF THE GOLDEN FETTERS. 188
+ IV.--THE GOLDEN FETTERS ARE SHAKEN OFF AND OTHERS ARE PUT ON. 202
+ V.--THE SILVER CHIMES RING IN A HAPPY NEW YEAR. 215
+
+
+SLANDER AND SILLERY.
+
+ I.--THE LION OF THE CHAUSSEE D'ANTIN. 225
+ II.--NINA GORDON. 233
+ III.--LE LION AMOUREUX. 242
+ IV.--MISCHIEF. 252
+ V.--MORE MISCHIEF, AND AN END. 263
+
+
+SIR GALAHAD'S RAID.
+
+ AN ADVENTURE ON THE SWEET WATERS. 285
+
+
+"REDEEMED."
+
+ AN EPISODE WITH THE CONFEDERATE HORSE. 307
+
+
+OUR WAGER; OR, HOW THE MAJOR LOST AND WON.
+
+ I.--INTRODUCES MAJOR TELFER OF THE 50TH DASHAWAY HUSSARS. 333
+ II.--VIOLET TRESSILLIAN. 339
+ III.--FROM WHICH IT WOULD APPEAR, THAT IT IS SOMETIMES WELL
+ TO BEGIN WITH A LITTLE AVERSION. 346
+ IV.--IN WHICH THE MAJOR PROVOKES A QUARREL IN BEHALF OF
+ THE FAIR TRESSILLIAN. 353
+ V.--THE DUEL, AND ITS CONSEQUENCES. 367
+
+
+OUR COUNTRY QUARTERS. 379
+
+
+
+
+BEATRICE BOVILLE.
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+OF EARLSCOURT'S FIANCEE.
+
+ "To compass her with sweet observances,
+ To dress her beautifully and keep her true."
+
+
+That, according to Mr. Tennyson's lately-published opinion, is the
+devoir of that deeply-to-be-pitied individual, l'homme marie. Possibly
+in the times of which the Idyls treat, Launcelot and Gunevere _might_
+have been the sole, exceptional mauvais sujets in the land, and woad,
+being the chief ingredient in the toilet-dress, mightn't come quite so
+expensive. But nowadays "sweet observances," rendered, I presume, by
+gifts from Hunt and Roskell's and boxes in the grand tier, tell on a
+cheque-book so severely; "keeping her true" is such an exceedingly
+problematical performance, to judge by Sir C. C.'s breathless work, and
+"dressing her beautifully" comes so awfully expensive, with crinoline
+and cashmeres, pink pearls, and Mechlin, and the beau sexe's scornful
+repudiation, not alone of a faded silk, like poor Enid's, but of the
+handsomest dress going, if it's damned by being "seen twice," that I
+have ever vowed that, plaise a Dieu, I will never marry, and with
+heaven's help will keep the vow better than I might most probably keep
+the matrimonial ones if I took them. Yet if ever I saw a woman for whom
+I could have fancied a man's committing that semisuicidal act, that
+woman was Beatrice Boville. Not for her beauty, for, except one of the
+loveliest figures and a pair of the most glorious eyes, she did not
+claim much; not for her money, for she had none; not for her birth, for
+on one side that was somewhat obscure; but for _herself_; and had I ever
+tried the herculean task of dressing anybody beautifully and keeping
+anybody true, it should have been she, but for the fact that when I knew
+her first she was engaged to my cousin Earlscourt. We had none of us
+ever dreamt he would marry, for he had been sworn to political life so
+long, given over so utterly to the battle-ground of St. Stephen's and
+the intrigues of Downing Street, that the ladies of our house were
+sorely wrathful when they heard that he had at last fallen in love and
+proposed to Beatrice Boville, who, though she was Lady Mechlin's niece,
+was the daughter of a West Indian who had married her mother, broken her
+heart, spent her money, deserted her, and never been heard of since; the
+more wrathful as they had no help for themselves, and were obliged to be
+contented with distinguishing her with refreshing appellations of a
+"very clever schemer," evidently a "perfect intrigante," and similar
+epithets with which their sex is driven for consolation under such
+trying circumstances. It's a certain amount of relief to us to call a
+man who has cut us down in a race "a stupid owl; very little in him!"
+but it is mild gratification to that enjoyed by ladies when they
+retaliate for injury done them by that delightful bonbon of a sentence,
+"No doubt a most artful person!" You see it conveys so much and proves
+three things in one--their own artlessness, their enemy's worthlessness,
+and their victim's folly. Being with Earlscourt at the time of his
+"singularly unwise, step," as they phrased it, I knew that he wasn't
+trapped in any way, and that he was loved irrespectively of his social
+rank; but where was the good of telling that to deeply-injured and
+perforce silenced ladies? "They knew better;" and when a woman says
+that, always bow to her superior judgment, my good fellow, even when
+she knows better than you what you did with yourself last evening, and
+informs you positively you were at that odious Mrs. Vanille's opera
+supper, though, to the best of your belief, you never stirred from the
+U. S. card-room; or you will be voted a Goth, and make an enemy for the
+rest of your natural life.
+
+In opposition to the rest of the family, _I_ thought (and you must know
+by this time, amis lecteurs, that I hardly think marriage so enjoyable
+an institution as some writers do, but perhaps a little like a pipe of
+opium, of which the dreams are better than the awakening)--I thought
+that he could hardly have done better, as far as his own happiness went,
+as I saw her standing by him one evening in the window of Lady Mechlin's
+rooms at Lemongenseidlitz, where we all were that August, a brilliant,
+fascinating woman already, though then but nineteen, noble-hearted,
+frank, impetuous, with something in the turn of her head and the proud
+glance of her eyes, that told you, you might trust her; that she was of
+the stuff to keep her word even to her own hinderance; that neither
+would she tell a lie, nor brook one imputed to her; that she might err
+on the side of pride, on the side of meanness never; that she might have
+plenty of failings, but not anything petty, low, or ungenerous among
+them. The evening sun fell on them as they stood, on her high, white
+forehead, with its chestnut hair turned off it as you see it in old
+pictures, which Earlscourt was touching caressingly with his hand as he
+talked to her. They seemed well suited, and yet--his fault was pride,
+an unassailable, unyielding pride; hers was pride, too, pride in her own
+truth and honor, which would send you to the deuce if you ever presumed
+to doubt either; and I wondered idly as I looked at them, whether those
+two prides would ever come in conflict, and if so, whether either of
+them would give in in such a case--whether there would be submission on
+one side or on both, or on neither? Such metaphysical and romantic
+calculations are not often my line; but as they stood together, the sun
+faded off, and a cold, stormy wind blew up in its stead, which, perhaps,
+metaphorically suggested the problem to me. As one goes through life one
+gets up to so many sunny, balmy, cloudless days, and so often before the
+night is down gets wetted to the skin by a drenching shower, that one
+contracts an uncomfortable habit when the sun _does_ shine, of looking
+out for squalls, a fear that, sans doute, considerably damps the
+pleasures of the noon. But the fear is natural, isn't it, more's the
+pity, when one has been often caught?
+
+I chanced to ask her that night what made her so fond of Earlscourt. She
+turned her fearless, flashing eyes half laughingly, half haughtily on
+me, the color brighter in her face:
+
+"I should have thought you would rather have asked how could I, or any
+other woman whom he stooped to notice, fail to love him? There are few
+hearts and intellects so noble: he is as superior to you ball-room
+loungers, you butterfly flutterers, as the stars to that chandelier."
+
+"Bien oblige!" laughed I. "But that is just what I meant. Most young
+ladies are afraid of him; you never were?"
+
+She laughed contemptuously.
+
+"Afraid! You do not know much of me. It is precisely his giant
+intellect that first drew me to him, when I heard his speech on the
+Austrian question. Do you remember how the Lords listened to him so
+quietly that you could have heard a feather fall? I like that silence of
+theirs when they hear what they admire, better than I do the cheers of
+the other house. Afraid of him! What a ludicrous idea! Do you suppose I
+should be afraid of any one? It is only those who are conceited or
+cowardly, who are timid. If you have nothing to assume, or to conceal,
+what cause have you to fear? I love, honor, reverence Lord Earlscourt,
+God knows; but fear him--never!"
+
+"Not even his anger, if you ever incurred it?" I asked her, amused with
+her haughty indignation.
+
+"Certainly not. Did I merit it, I would come to him frankly, and ask his
+pardon, and he would give it; if I did not deserve it, _he_ would be the
+one to repent."
+
+She looked far more attractive than many a handsomer woman, and
+infinitely more noble than a more tractable one. She was admirably
+fitted for Earlscourt, if he trusted her; but it was just possible he
+might some day _mis_trust and _mis_understand her, and then there might
+be the devil to pay!
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+THE FIRST SHADOW.
+
+
+Lemongenseidlitz was a charming little Bad. Beatrice Boville
+and her aunt Lady Mechlin, Earlscourt and I, had been there
+six weeks. His brother peers--of whom there were scores at
+Lemongenseidlitz--complimented Earlscourt on his fiancee.
+
+"So you're caught at last?" said an octogenarian minister, who was as
+sprightly as a schoolboy. "Well, my dear fellow, you might have gone
+higher, sans doute, but on my honor I don't think you could have done
+better."
+
+It was the universal opinion. Beatrice was not the belle of the Bad,
+because there were dozens of beautiful women, and beautiful she was not;
+but she was more admired than any of them, and had Earlscourt wanted
+voices to justify his choice he would have had them, but he didn't; he
+was entirely independent of the opinions of others, and had he chosen to
+set his coronet on the brows of a peasant girl, would have cared little
+what any one thought or said. We all of us enjoyed that six weeks. Lady
+Mechlin lost to her heart's content at roulette, and was as complacent
+over her losses as any old dowager could be. Beatrice Boville shone
+best, as nice natures ever do, in a sunny atmosphere; and if she had any
+faults of impatient temper or pride, there was nothing to call them
+forth. Earlscourt, cold politician though he'd been, gave himself up
+entirely to the warmer, brighter existence, which he found in his new
+passion; and I, not being in love with anybody, made the pleasantest
+love possible wherever I liked. We all of us found a couleur de rose
+tint in the air of little Lemongenseidlitz, and I'd quite forgotten my
+presentiment, when, one night at the Kursaal, a cloud no bigger than a
+man's hand came up on the sunny horizon, and put me in mind of it.
+
+Earlscourt came into the ball room rather late; he had been talking with
+some French ministers on some international project which he was anxious
+to effect, and asked Lady Mechlin where Beatrice was.
+
+"She was with me a moment ago; she is waltzing, I dare say," said the
+old lady, whose soul was hankering after the ivory ball.
+
+"Very likely," he answered, as he looked among the dancers for her; he
+was restless without her, though he would have liked none to see the
+weakness, for he was a man who felt more than he told. He could not see
+her, and went through the rooms till he found her, which was in a small
+anteroom alone. She started as he spoke to her, and a start being a
+timorous and nervous thing of which Beatrice Boville was never guilty,
+he drew her to him anxiously.
+
+"My darling, has anything annoyed you?"
+
+She answered him with her habitual candor:
+
+"Yes; but I cannot tell you what, just now."
+
+"Cannot tell me! and why?"
+
+"Because I cannot. I can give no other reason. It is nothing of import
+to you, or you are sure I should not keep it from you."
+
+"Yes; but I am equally sure that anything that concerns you _is_ of
+import to me. To whom should you tell anything, if not to me? I do not
+like concealment, Beatrice."
+
+His tone was grave; indeed, too much like reproof to a fractious child
+to suit Beatrice's pride. She drew away from him.
+
+"Nor I. You must think but meanly of me if you can impute anything like
+concealment to me."
+
+"How can I do otherwise? You tell me you have been annoyed, and refuse
+to say how, and by whom. Is that anything but concealment? If any one
+has offended or insulted you, I ought to be the first you came to. A
+woman, Beatrice, should have nothing hidden from the man who is, or will
+be, her husband."
+
+She threw her arms around him. Her moods were variable as a child's.
+Perhaps this very variability Earlscourt hardly understood, for it was
+utterly opposed to his own character: you always found him the same;
+_she_ would be all storm one moment, all sunshine the next.
+
+"Do you suppose I would hide anything from you? Do you think for a
+moment I would hold back anything you had a right to know? You might
+look into my heart; there would be no thought or feeling there I should
+wish to keep from you. But if you exact confidence, so do I. Would you
+think of taking as your wife one you could not trust?"
+
+He answered her a little sternly:
+
+"No; if I once ceased to believe in your truth or honor, as I believe in
+my own, I should part from you forever, though God knows what it would
+cost me!"
+
+"God knows what it would cost _me!_ But I give you free leave. The
+instant you find a flaw in either, I am no longer worthy of your love;
+withdraw it, and I will never complain. But trust me you must and will;
+I merit your confidence, and I exact it. Look at me, Ernest. Do you
+believe I could ever deceive you?"
+
+He looked into her eyes long and earnestly.
+
+"No. When you do, your eyes will droop before mine. I trust you,
+Beatrice, fully, and I know you will never wrong it."
+
+She clung to him with caressant softness, softer in her than in a
+meeker-spirited woman, as she whispered, 'Never!' and a man would need
+have been obtuse and skeptical, indeed, who could then have doubted her.
+And so that cloud blew over, for a time, at the least--trusted, Beatrice
+Boville was soft and gentle as a lamb; mistrusted or misjudged, she was
+fiery as a young lioness, and Earlscourt, I thought, though originally
+won by her intellect, held her too much as a child to fully understand
+her character, and to see that, though she was his darling and
+plaything, she was also a passionate, ardent, proud-spirited woman,
+stung by injustice and impatient of doubt. No two people could be more
+fitted to make each other's happiness, yet it struck me that it was just
+possible they might make each other's misery very completely, through
+want of comprehension on the one side, through want of explanation on
+the other.
+
+"Your marriage is fixed, isn't it, Earlscourt?" asked his sister, Lady
+Clive Edghill, who had come to Lemongenseidlitz, and, though compelled
+by him, as he compelled all the rest of the family, to show Beatrice
+strict courtesy, disliked her, because she was not an advantageous
+match, was much too young in their opinion, and had no money--the
+gravest crimes a woman can have in the eyes of any man's relatives.
+"The 14th! Indeed! yours is a very short engagement!"
+
+"Is there any reason why it should be longer?"
+
+"O, dear, no! none that I am aware of. I wish, earnestly, my dear
+Earlscourt, I could congratulate you more warmly; but I can never say
+what I do not feel, and I had so much hoped--"
+
+"My dear Helena, as long as I have so much reason to congratulate
+myself, it matters very little whether you do or do not," smiled
+Earlscourt. He was too much of a lion to be stung by gnats.
+
+"I dare say. I sincerely trust you may ever have reason. But I heard
+some very disagreeable things about that Mr. Boville, Beatrice's father.
+Do you know that he was in a West India regiment, but was deprived of
+his commission even there?--a perfect blackleg and sharper, I
+understand. I suppose she has never mentioned him to you?"
+
+"You are very much mistaken; all that Beatrice knows of him, I know;
+that is but little, for Lady Mechlin took her long ago, when her mother
+died, from such unfit guardianship. Beatrice is as open as the day--"
+
+"Indeed! A little too frank, perhaps?"
+
+"Too frank? That is a paradox. No one can have too much candor. It is
+not a virtue of your sex, but it is one, thank God! which she possesses
+in a rare degree, though possibly it gains her enemies where it should
+gain her friends."
+
+"Still frankness _may_ merge into indiscretion," said Helena, musingly.
+
+"I doubt it. An indiscreet woman is never frank, for she has always the
+memory of silly things said and done which require concealment."
+
+"I was merely thinking," Helena went on, regardless of a speech which
+she did not perhaps relish, pour cause, "merely from my deep interest in
+you, and my knowledge of all you will wish your wife to be, that perhaps
+Beatrice might be, in pure insouciance, a little too careless, a little
+too candid for so prominent a position as she will occupy. Last night,
+in passing a little anteroom in the Redoute, I saw her in such extremely
+earnest conversation with a man, a handsome man, about your height and
+age, and--"
+
+The anteroom! Earlscourt thought, with a pang, of the start she had
+given when he entered it the previous night. But he was not of a jealous
+temperament, nor a curious one; his mind was too constantly occupied
+with great projects and ambitions to be capable of joining petty things
+together into an elaborate mosaic; he had no petitesses himself, and
+trifles passed unheeded. He interrupted her decidedly:
+
+"What is there in that to build a pyramid of censure from? Doubtless it
+was one of her acquaintances--probably one of mine also. I should have
+thought you knew me better, Helena, than to attempt this gossiping
+nonsense with me."
+
+"O, I say no more. I only thought you, of all men, would wish Caesar's
+wife to be above--"
+
+The gnat-strings had been too insignificant to rouse him before, but at
+this one his eyebrows contracted, and he rose.
+
+"Silence! Never venture to make such a speech as that to me again. In
+insulting Beatrice you insult me. Unless you can mention her in terms of
+proper respect and reverence, never presume to speak her name to me
+again. Her enemies are my enemies, and, whoever they may be, I will
+treat them as such."
+
+Helena was sorely frightened; if she held anybody in veneration it was
+Earlscourt, and she would never have ventured so far with him but for
+the causeless hate she had taken to Beatrice, simply because Lady Clive
+had decided long ago that her brother was too voue to public life ever
+to marry, and that her son would succeed to his title. She was sorely
+frightened, but she comforted herself--the little thorn she had thrust
+in might rankle after a while; as pleasant a consolation under failure
+as any lady could desire.
+
+Beatrice was coming along the corridor as Earlscourt left Helena's
+rooms, which were in the same hotel as Lady Mechlin's. She was stopping
+to look out of one of the windows at the sunset; she did not see him at
+first, and he watched her unobserved, and smiled at the idea of
+associating anything deceitful with her--smiled still more at the idea
+when she came up to him, with her frank, bright, regard, lifting her
+face for a caress, and patting both her hands through his arm.
+Accustomed to chill and reserved women in his own family, her abandon
+had a great charm for him; but perhaps it led him into his error in
+holding her still as half a child.
+
+"You have been seeing my enemy?" she said, laughingly. "Your sister does
+not like me, does she?"
+
+"Not like you! Why should you think so? She may not like my marrying,
+perhaps, because she had decided for me that I should never do so; and
+no woman can bear any prophecies she makes to prove wrong."
+
+"Very possibly that may be one reason; but she does not think me good
+enough for you."
+
+Her tips curved disdainfully, and Earlscourt caught a glimpse of her in
+her fiery mood. He laughed at her where, with her, he had better have
+admitted the truth. Beatrice had too much pride to be wounded by it, and
+far too much good sense to measure herself by money and station.
+
+"Nonsense, Beatrice; I should have thought you too proud to suppose such
+a thing," he said, carelessly.
+
+"It is the truth, nevertheless."
+
+"More foolish she, then; but if you and I do not, what can it signify?"
+
+"Nothing. As long as I am worthy of you in your eyes, what others think
+or say is nothing to me. I honor you too much to make the gauge between
+us a third person's opinion; or measure you or myself by a few stops
+higher or lower in the social ladder. Your sister thinks me below you in
+rank, soit! She is right; I am quite ready to admit it; but that I am
+your equal in all that makes men and women equal in the sight of Heaven,
+I know. When she finds me unworthy of you in thought or deed, then she
+may call me beneath you--not till then."
+
+Her cheeks were flushed; he could hear her quick breathings, and in her
+vehemence and haughty indignation she picked the petals of her bouquet
+de corsage to pieces and flung them away. Another time he would have
+thought how well her pride became her, and given her some fond reply.
+Just now the thorn rankled as Lady Clive had hoped, and he answered her
+gravely, in the tone which it was as unwise to use to her as to prick a
+thorough-bred colt with both spurs.
+
+"You are quite right. Were I a king, you would be my equal as long as
+your heart was mine, your mind as noble, and your character as unsullied
+as I hope them to be now."
+
+She turned on him rapidly with the first indignant look she had ever
+given to him.
+
+"_Hope!_ You might say _know_, I think!"
+
+"I would have said 'know,' and meant it too, yesterday."
+
+"Yesterday? What do you mean? Why am I less worthy your confidence
+to-day than yesterday?"
+
+She looked wonderingly at him, her eyes full of inquiry and
+bewilderment. It was marvellous acting, if it was acting; yet he thought
+she could scarcely have so soon forgotten their scene in the anteroom
+the previous night. They had now come into the salon; he left her side
+and walked to the mantel-piece, leaning his arm on it, and speaking
+coldly, as he had never done to her since they first met.
+
+"Beatrice, do not attempt to act with me. You cannot have forgotten what
+we said in the anteroom last night. Nothing assumed ever deceives me,
+and you only lower yourself in my estimation."
+
+She clinched her hands till the rings he had given her crushed together.
+
+"Act! assume! Great Heaven, how dare you speak such words to me?"
+
+"Dare? You speak like an angry child, Beatrice. When you are reasonable
+I will answer you."
+
+The tears welled into her eyes, but she would not let them fall.
+
+"Reasonable? Is there anything unreasonable in resenting words utterly
+undeserved? Would you be calm under them yourself, Lord Earlscourt? I
+remember now what you mean by yesterday; I did not remember when I asked
+you. Had I done so I should never have simulated ignorance and surprise.
+Only last night you promised to trust me. Is this your trust, to accuse
+me of artifice, of acting, of falsehood? I would bear no such imputation
+from any one, still less from you, who ought to know me so well. What
+happiness can we have if you--"
+
+She stopped, the tears choking her voice, but he did not see them; he
+only saw her indignant attitude, her flushed cheeks, her flashing eyes,
+and put them down to her girlish passion.
+
+"Calm yourself, Beatrice, I beg. This sort of scene is very distasteful
+to me; to figure in a lover's quarrel hardly suits me. I am not young
+enough to find amusement in disputation and reconciliation, sparring one
+moment and caresses the next. My life is one of grave pursuits and
+feverish ambitions; I am often harassed, annoyed, worn out in body and
+mind. What I hoped for from you was, to borrow the gayety and brightness
+of your own youth, to find rest, and happiness, and distraction. A life
+of disputes, reproaches, and misconstruction, would be what I never
+would endure."
+
+Beatrice was silent; she leaned her forehead on her arms and did not
+answer him. His tone stung her pride, but his words touched her heart.
+Her passion was always short-lived, and no evil spirit possessed her
+long. She rebelled against the first part of his speech with all her
+might, but she softened to the last. She came up to him with her hands
+out.
+
+"I had no right to speak so impatiently to you. God knows, to make your
+life happy will be my only thought, and care, and wish. If I spoke
+angrily, forgive me!"
+
+Earlscourt knew that the nature so quick to acknowledge error was worth
+fifty unerring and unruffled ones; still he sighed as he answered her,--
+
+"My dear child, I forgive you. But, Beatrice, there is no foe to love so
+sure and deadly as dissension!" And as he drew her to him and felt her
+soft warm lips on his, he thought, half uneasily yet, "She has never
+told me who annoyed her--never mentioned her companion in the anteroom
+last night."
+
+Lady Clive had her wish; the thorn festered as promisingly as she could
+have desired. Ce n'est que le premier pas qui coute in quarrels as in
+all else. Dispute once, you are very sure to dispute again, whether with
+the man you hate or the woman you love.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+HOW PRIDE SOWED AND REAPED.
+
+
+It only wanted three weeks to Beatrice Boville's marriage. We were all
+to leave Lemongenseidlitz together in a fortnight's time for old Lady
+Mechlin's house in Berks, where the ceremony was to take place.
+
+"Earlscourt is quite infatuated," said Lady Clive to me one evening.
+"Beatrice is very charming, of course, but she is not at all suited to
+him, she is so fiery, so impetuous, so self-reliant."
+
+"I think you are mistaken," said I. I admired Beatrice Boville--comme je
+vous ai dit--and I didn't like our family's snaps and snarls at her.
+"She may be impetuous, but, as her impulses are always generous, that
+doesn't matter much. She is only fiery at injustice, and, for myself, I
+prefer a woman who can stand up for her own rights and her friends' to
+one who'll sit by in--you'll call it meekness, I suppose? I call it
+cowardice and hypocrisy--to hear herself or them abused."
+
+"Thank you, mon ami," said Beatrice's voice at my elbow, as Lady Clive
+rose and crossed the room. "I am much obliged for your defence; I
+couldn't help hearing it as I stood in the balcony, and I wish very much
+I deserved it. I am afraid, though, I cannot dispute Helena's verdict of
+'fiery,' 'impetuous,'--"
+
+"And self-reliant?" I asked her. She laughed softly, and her eyes
+unconsciously sought Earlscourt, who was talking to Lady Mechlin.
+
+"Well? Not quite, now! But, by the way, why should people charge
+self-reliance on to one as something reprehensible and undesirable? A
+proper self-reliance is an indispensable ground-work to any success. If
+you cannot rely upon yourself, upon your power to judge and to act, you
+must rely upon some other person, possibly upon many people, and you
+become, perforce, vacillating and unstable.
+
+ 'To thine own self be true,
+ And it shall follow, as the day the night,
+ Thou canst not then be false to any man.'"
+
+As she spoke a servant brought a note to her, and I noticed her cheeks
+grow pale as she saw the handwriting upon it. She broke it open, and
+read it hastily, an oddly troubled, worried look coming over her face, a
+look that Earlscourt could not help but notice as he stood beside her.
+
+"Is there anything in that letter to annoy you, Beatrice?" he asked,
+very naturally.
+
+She started--rather guiltily, I thought--and crushed the note in her
+hand.
+
+"Whom is it from? It troubles you, I think. Tell me, my darling, is it
+anything that vexes or offends you?" he whispered, bending down to her.
+
+She laughed, a little nervously for her, and tore the note into tiny
+pieces.
+
+"Why do you not tell me, Beatrice?" he said again, with a shade of
+annoyance on his face.
+
+"Because I would rather not," she said, frankly enough, letting the
+pieces float out of the window into the street below. The shadow grew
+darker in his face; he bent his head in acquiescence, and said no more,
+but I don't think he forgot either the note or her destroyal of it.
+
+"I thought there was implicit confidence _before_ marriage whatever
+there is after," sneered his sister, as she passed him. He answered her
+calmly:--
+
+"I should say, Helena, that neither before nor after marriage would any
+man who respected his wife suffer curiosity or suspicion to enter into
+him. If he do, he has no right to expect happiness, and he will
+certainly not go the way to get it."
+
+That was the only reply he gave Lady Clive, but her thorn No. 2 festered
+in him, and when he bade Beatrice good night, standing alone with her in
+the little drawing room, he took both her hands in his, and looked
+straight into her eyes.
+
+"Beatrice, why would you not let me see that note this evening?"
+
+She looked up at him as fearlessly and clearly.
+
+"If I tell you why, I must tell you whom the note was from, and what it
+was about, and I would much rather do neither as yet."
+
+"That is very strange. I dislike concealment of all kinds, especially
+from you, who so soon will be my wife. It is inconceivable to me why you
+should need or desire any. I thought your life was a fair open book,
+every line of which I might read if I desired."
+
+Beatrice looked at him in amazement.
+
+"So you may. Do you suppose, if I had any secret from you that I feared
+you should know, I could have a moment's peace in your society, or look
+at you for an instant as I do now? I give you my word of honor that
+there was nothing either in the note that concerns you, or that you
+would wish me to tell you. In a few days you shall know all that was in
+it, but I ask you as a kindness not to press me now. Surely you do not
+think me such a child but that you can trust me in so small a trifle. If
+you say I am not worthy of your confidence, you imply that I am not
+worthy of your love. You spoke nobly to your sister just now, Ernest; do
+not act less nobly to me."
+
+He could not but admire her as she looked at him, with her fearless,
+unshadowed regard, her head thrown a little back, and her attitude
+half-commanding, half-entreating. He smiled in spite of himself.
+
+"You are a wayward, spoiled child, Beatrice. You must have your own
+way?"
+
+She gave a little stamp of her foot. She hated being called a spoiled
+child, specially by him, and in a serious moment.
+
+"If I have my own way, have I your full confidence too?"
+
+"Yes; but, my dear Beatrice, the only way to gain confidence is never to
+excite suspicion." And Lady Clive's thorn rankled a ravir; for even as
+he pressed his goodnight kisses on her lips, he thought, restlessly,
+"Shall we make each other happy?--am I too grave for her?--and is she
+too wilful for me? I want rest, not contention."
+
+The night after that there was a bal-masque at the Redoute. I was just
+coming out of my room as Beatrice came down the corridor; She had her
+mask in her hand, her dress was something white starred with gold, and
+round her hair she had a little band of pearls of Earlscourt's gift. I
+never saw her look better, specially when her cheeks flushed and her
+eyes brightened as Earlscourt opened his door next mine, and met her. He
+did not see me, the corridor was empty, and he bent down to her with
+fond words and caresses.
+
+"Do I look well?" she said, with child-like delight.
+
+"I am so glad, Ernest, I want to do you honor."
+
+In that mood he understood her well enough, and he pressed her against
+his heart with the passion that was in him, whose strength he so rarely
+let her see. Then he drew her hand through his arm, and led her down the
+stairs; and, as I laughed to find to what lengths our cold statesman
+could come at last, I thought Lady Clive's thorns would be innocuous,
+however well planted.
+
+Earlscourt never danced; nothing but what was calm and stately could
+possibly have suited him; but Beatrice did, and waltzed like a Willis,
+(though she liked even better than that standing on his arm and talking
+with his friends--diplomatic, military, and ministerial--on all sorts of
+questions, most of which she could handle nearly as well as they;) and
+about the middle of the evening, while she was waltzing with some man or
+other who had begged to be introduced to her, Earlscourt left the
+ball-room for ten minutes in earnest conversation with one of the French
+ministers, who was leaving the next morning. As he came back again, I
+asked him where Beatrice was, because Powell, of the Bays, was bothering
+my life out to introduce him to her.
+
+"In the ball room, isn't she? She is with Lady Mechlin, of course, if,
+the waltz is over."
+
+A familiar voice stopped him.
+
+"She is not in the ball room. Go where you found her the other night,
+and see if Caesar's promised wife be above suspicion!"
+
+I could have sworn the voice was Lady Clive's; a pink domino passed us
+too fast for detention, but Earlscourt's lips turned white at the subtle
+whisper, and he muttered a fierce oath--fiercer from him, because he's
+never stirred into fiery expletives. "There is some vile plot against
+her. I must sift it to the bottom;" and, pushing past me, he entered the
+ball room. Beatrice was not there; and wending his way through the
+crowd, he went in through several other apartments leading off to the
+right, and involuntarily I followed him, to see what the malicious
+whisper of the pink domino had meant. Earlscourt lifted the curtain that
+parted the anteroom from the other chamber--lifted it to see Beatrice
+Boville, as the pink domino had prophesied, and not alone! With her was
+a man, masked, but about Earlscourt's height, and seemingly about his
+age, who, as he saw us, let go her hand with a laugh, turned on to a
+balcony, which was but a yard or so from the street, and dropped on to
+the pave below. Beatrice started and colored, but I thought she must be
+the most desperate actress going, for she came up to Earlscourt with a
+smile, and was about to put her hand through his arm, but he signed her
+away from him.
+
+"Your acting is quite useless with me. I am not to be blinded by it
+again. I have believed in your truth as in my own--"
+
+"So you may still. Listen to me, Ernest!"
+
+"Hush! Do not add falsehood to falsehood."
+
+He spoke sternly and coldly; his pride, which was as strong as his love
+for her, would not gratify her by a sign of the torture within him, and
+even in his bitterest anger Earlscourt would never have been ungentle to
+a woman. That word acted like an incantation on her, the blood crimsoned
+her temples, her eyes literally flashed fire, and she threw back her
+head with the haughty, impatient gesture habitual to her.
+
+"Falsehood? Three times of late you have used that word to me."
+
+"And why? Because you merited it."
+
+She stood before him, the indignant flush hotter still upon her cheeks,
+her lips curved into scornful anger. If she was an actress, she knew her
+role to perfection.
+
+"Do you speak that seriously, Lord Earlscourt? Do you believe that I
+have lied to you?"
+
+"God help me! What else can I believe?" he muttered, too low for her to
+hear it.
+
+She asked him the question again, fiercely, and he answered her briefly
+and sternly,--
+
+"I believe that all your life with me has been a lie. I trusted you
+implicitly, and how do you return it? By carrying on clandestine
+intercourse with another man, giving him interviews that you conceal
+from me, having letters that you destroy, doubtless receiving caresses
+that you take care are unwitnessed; while you dare to smile in my face,
+and to dupe me with child-like tenderness, and to bid me 'trust' you and
+believe in you! Love shared to me is worthless, and on my wife,
+Beatrice, no stain must rest!"
+
+As he spoke, a dark shadow spread over her countenance, her evil spirit
+rose up in her, and her bright, frank, fearless face grew almost as
+hard and cold as his, while her teeth were set together, till her lips,
+usually soft and laughing, were pressed into one straight haughty line.
+
+"Since you give me up so easily, far be it from me to dispute your will.
+We part from this hour, if you desire it. My honor is as dear to me as
+yours to you, and to those who dare to suspect it I never stoop to
+defend it!"
+
+"But, my God! Beatrice, what _am_ I to believe?"
+
+"Whatever you please!"
+
+"What I please! Child, you must be mad. What _can_ I believe, but that
+you are the most perfect of all actresses, that your art is the greatest
+of all sins, the art that clothes itself in innocence, and carries
+would-be truth upon its lips. Prove to me that I wrong you!"
+
+She shook her head; the devil in her had still the victory; her eyes
+glittered, and her little teeth were clinched together.
+
+"What I exact is trust without proof. I am not your prisoner, Lord
+Earlscourt, to be tried coldly, and acquitted if you find legal evidence
+of innocence; convicted, if there be a link wanting. If you choose to
+trust me, I have told you often your trust will never be wronged; if you
+choose to condemn me, do. I shall not stoop to show you your injustice."
+
+Earlscourt's face grew dark and hard as hers, but it was wonderful how
+well his pride chained down all evidence of suffering; the only sign was
+in the hoarseness of, and quiver in, his voice.
+
+"Say nothing more--prevarication is guilt! God forgive you, Beatrice
+Boville! If you loved me, and knelt at my feet, I would not make you my
+wife after the art and the lies with which you have repaid my trust.
+Thank God, you do not already bear my name and my honor in your hands!"
+
+With those words he left her. Beatrice stood still in the same place,
+her lips set in one scornful line, her eyes glittering, her brow
+crimson, her whole attitude defiant, wronged, and unyielding. Earlscourt
+passed me, his face white as death, and was out of sight in a second. I
+waited a moment, then I followed my impulse, and went up to her.
+
+"Beatrice, for Heaven's sake, what is all this?"
+
+She turned her large eyes on me haughtily.
+
+"Do _you_ believe what your cousin does?"
+
+I answered her as briefly:--
+
+"No, I do not. There is some mistake here."
+
+She seized my arm, impetuously:--
+
+"Promise me, on your honor, never to tell what I tell to you while I
+live. Promise me, on your faith as a gentleman."
+
+"On my honor, I promise. Well?"
+
+"The man whom you saw with me to-night is my father. Lord Earlscourt
+chose to condemn me without inquiry; so let him! But I tell you, that
+you may tell him if I die before him, that he wronged me. You know Mr.
+Boville's--my father's--character. I had not seen him since I was a
+child, but when he heard of my engagement to Lord Earlscourt he found me
+out, and wanted to force himself on him, and borrow money of him, and--"
+She stopped, her face was crimson, but she went on, passionately. "All
+my efforts, of course, were to keep them apart, to spare my father such
+degradation, and your cousin such an application. I could not tell Lord
+Earlscourt, for he is generous as the winds, and I knew what he would
+have done. My note was from my father; he wanted to frighten me into
+introducing him to Lord Earlscourt, but he did not succeed. I would not
+have your cousin disgraced or pained by--Arthur, that is all my crime!
+No very great one, is it?" And she laughed a loud, bitter laugh, as
+unlike her own as the stormy shadow on her face was like the usual
+sunshine.
+
+"But, great Heaven! why not have told this to Earlscourt?"
+
+She signed me to silence with a passionate gesture.
+
+"No! He dishonored me with suspicion; let him go. I forbid you ever to
+breathe a word of what I have told you to him. If he has pride, so have
+I. He would hold no dishonor greater than for another man to charge him
+with a lie. My truth is as untainted as his, and my honor as dear to me.
+He accused me wrongly; let him repent. I would have loved and reverenced
+him as never any woman yet could do; but once suspected, I could find no
+happiness with him. His bitter words are stamped into my heart. I shall
+never forget--I doubt if I shall ever forgive--them. I can bear anything
+but injustice or misconception. If any doubt me, they are free to do so;
+theirs is the sin, not mine. As he has sown so must he reap, and so must
+I!" A low, gasping sob choked her voice, but she stood like a little
+Pythoness, the pearl gleaming above her brow, her eyes unnaturally
+bright, the color burning in her face, her attitude what it was when he
+left her, defiant, wronged, unyielding. She swept away from me to a man
+who was coming through the other room, and he stared at her set lips and
+her gleaming eyes as she asked him, carelessly, "Count Avonyl, will you
+have the kindness to take me to Lady Mechlin?"
+
+That was the last I saw of her. She left the Bad with her aunt as soon
+as the day dawned, and when I went to our hotel, I found that Earlscourt
+had ordered post-horses immediately he quitted the ball room, and
+gone--where he did not leave word. So my presentiment was verified; the
+pride of both had come in conflict, and the pride of neither had
+succumbed. How long it would sustain and satisfy them, I could not
+guess; but Lady Clive smiled again, as sweetly as ladies ever do when
+their thorns have thriven and brought forth abundant fruit. Some other
+time I will tell you how I saw Beatrice Boville again; but I often
+thought of
+
+ "Pauline, by pride
+ Angels have fallen ere thy time!"
+
+when I recalled her with the pearls above her brow, and her passionate,
+gleaming eyes, and her fearless, scornful, haughty anguish, as she had
+stood before me that night when Pride _v_. Pride caused the wreck of
+both their lives.
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+WHERE I SAW BEATRICE BOVILLE AGAIN
+
+
+I don't belong to St. Stephen's myself, thank Heaven. Very likely they
+would have returned me for the county when the governor departed this
+life had I tried them; but as I generally cut the county, from not being
+one of the grass countries, and as I couldn't put forward any patriotic
+claims like Mr. Harper Twelvetrees, (who, as he's such a slayer of
+vermin, thought, I suppose, that he'd try his hand at the dry-rot and
+the red tapeworms, which, according to cotton grumblers, are sapping the
+nation,) I haven't solicited its suffrages. The odds at Tattersall's
+interest me more than the figures of the ways and means; and
+Diophantus's and Kettledrum's legerdemain at Newmarket and Epsom is more
+to my taste than our brilliant rhetorician's with the surplus. I don't
+care a button about Lord Raynham and Sir C. Burrell's maids-of-all-work;
+they are not an attractive class, I should say, and, if they like to
+amuse their time tumbling out of windows, I can't see for the life of me
+why peers and gentlemen should rush to the rescue like Don Quixote to
+Dulcinea's. And as for that great question, Tea _v_. Paper, bohea
+delights the souls of old ladies and washerwomen--who destroy crumpets
+and character over its inebriating cups, and who will rush to crown Lord
+Derby's and Mr. Disraeli's brows with laurels if they ever go to the
+country with a teapot blazoned on their patriotic banners--more than it
+does mine, which prefers Bass and Burgundy, seltzer and Sillery; and,
+though I dare say Brown, Jones, and Robinson find the Divorce News
+exciting, and paper collars very showy and economical, as I myself am
+content with the _Times_ and its compeers, and think, with poor Brummel,
+that life without daily clean linen were worthless, _that_ subject
+doesn't absorb me as it does those gentlemen who find "the last tax of
+knowledge" so grandiloquent and useful a finishing period. So I have
+never stood for the county, nor essayed to stand for it, seeing that to
+one Bernal Osborne there are fifty prosers in St. Stephen's, and to be
+bored is, to a butterfly flutterer, as the young lady whose name heads
+this paper once obligingly called me, torture unparalleled by anything
+short of acid wine or the Chinese atrocities, though truly he who heads
+our Lower House with his vernal heart and his matchless brain were
+enough to make any man, coxcomb or hero, oppositionist or
+ministerialist, proud to sit in the same chamber with him. But there are
+nights now and then, of course, when I like to go to both Houses, to
+hear Lord Derby's rich, intricate oratory, or Gladstone's rhetoric,
+(which has so potent a spell even for his foes, and is yet charged so
+strangely against him as half a crime; possibly by the same spirit with
+which plain women reproach a pretty one for her beauty: what business
+has he to be more attractive than his compeers? of course it's a peche
+mortel in their eyes!) and when Mrs. Breloques, who is a charming little
+woman, to whom no man short of a Goth could possibly say "No" to any
+petition, gave me a little blow with her fan, and told me, as I valued
+her friendship, to get an order and take her and Gwen to hear the Lords'
+debate on Tuesday, when my cousin Viscount Earlscourt, one of the best
+orators in the Upper House, was certain to speak, of course I obliged
+her. Her sister Gwen, who was a girl of seventeen, barely out, and whom
+I wished at Jerico, (three is so odious a number, one of the triad must
+ever be _de trop_,) was wrathful with the Upper House; it in no wise
+realized her expectations; the peers should have worn their robes, she
+thought, (as if the horrors of a chamber filled with Thames odors in
+June wasn't enough without being bored with velvet and ermine) she would
+have been further impressed by coronets also; they had no business to
+lounge on their benches as if they were in a smoking-room; they should
+have declaimed like Kean, not spoken colloquially; and--in fact, they
+shouldn't have been ordinary men at all. I think a fine collection from
+Madame Tussaud's, with a touch of the Roman antique, would have been
+much more to Gwen's ideal, and she wasn't at all content till Earlscourt
+rose; _he_ reconciled her a little, for he had a grand-seigneur air, she
+said, that made up for the incongruities of his dress. It was a measure
+that he had much at heart; he had exerted for it all his influence in
+the cabinet, and he was determined that the bill should pass the Lords,
+though the majority inclined to throw it out. As he stood now against
+the table, with his calm dignity of gesture, his unstrained flow of
+words, and his rich and ringing voice, which could give majesty to
+commonplace subjects, and sway even an apathetic audience as completely
+as Sheridan's Begum speech, every one in the House listened attentively,
+and each of his words fell with its due weight. I heard him with pride,
+often as I had done so before, though I noticed with pain that the lines
+in his forehead and his mouth were visibly deepened; that he seemed to
+speak with effort, for him, and looked altogether, as somebody had said
+to me at White's in the morning, as if he were wearing out, and would go
+down in his prime, like Canning and Pitt.
+
+"Lord Earlscourt looks very ill--don't you think so?" said Lelia
+Breloques.
+
+As I answered her, I heard a sharp-wrung sigh, and I looked for the
+first time at the lady next me. I saw a delicate profile, lips
+compressed and colorless, chestnut hair that I had last seen with his
+pearls gleaming above it: I saw, en deux mots, Beatrice Boville for the
+first time since that night eight months before, when she had stood
+before me in her passion and her pride. She never took her eyes off
+Earlscourt while he spoke, and I wondered if she regretted having lost
+him for a point of honor. Had she grown indifferent to him, that she had
+come to his own legislative chamber, or was her love so much stronger
+than her pride that she had sought to see him thus rather than not see
+him at all? When his speech was closed, and he had resumed his place on
+the benches, she leaned back, covering her eyes with her hand for a
+moment: and, as I said aloud (more for her benefit than Mrs.
+Breloques's) my regret that Earlscourt would wear himself out, I was
+afraid, in his devotion to public life, Beatrice started at the sound
+of my voice, turned her head hastily, and her face was colorless enough
+to tell me she had not gratified her pride without some cost. Of course
+I spoke to her; she had been a favorite of mine always, and I had often
+wished to come across her again; but beyond learning that she was with
+Lady Mechlin in Lowndes Square, and had been spending the winter at Pau
+for her aunt's health, I had no time to hear more, for Lelia, having
+only come for Earlscourt's speech, bade me take her to her carriage,
+while Beatrice and her party remained for the rest of the debate; but
+the rencontre struck me as so odd, that I believe it occupied my
+thoughts more than Mrs. Breloques liked, who got into her carriage in
+not the best of humors, and asked me if _I_ was going in for public life
+that I'd grown so particularly unamusing. We're always unamusing to one
+woman if we're thinking at all about another.
+
+"Do you know who was at the House to-night, Earlscourt, to hear your
+speech?" I asked him, as I met him, a couple of hours afterwards, in one
+of the passages, as he was leaving the House. He had altered much in
+eight months; he stooped a little from his waist; he looked worn, and
+his lips were pale. Men said his stamina was not equal to his brain;
+physicians, that he gave himself too much work and too little sleep. I
+knew he was more wrapped in public life than ever; that in his place in
+the government he worked unwearyingly, and that he found time in spare
+moments for intellectual recreation that would have sufficed for their
+life's study for most men. Still, I thought possibly there might be a
+weakness still clinging round his heart, though he never alluded to it;
+a passion which, though he appeared to have crushed it out, might be
+sapping his health more than all his work for the nation.
+
+"Do you mean any one in particular? Persigny said he should attend, but
+I did not see him."
+
+"No, I meant among the ladies. Beatrice Boville was in the seat next
+me." I had no earthly business to speak of her so abruptly, for when I
+had seen him for the first time after he left the Bad when Parliament
+met that February, he had forbidden me ever to mention her name to him,
+and no allusion to her had ever passed his lips. The worn, stern
+gravity, that had become his habitual expression, changed for a moment;
+bullet-proof he might be, but my arrow had shot in through the chain
+links of his armor; a look of unutterable pain, eagerness, anxiety,
+passion, passed over his face; but, whatever he felt, he subdued it,
+though his voice was broken as he answered me:--
+
+"Once for all, I bade you never speak that name to me. Without being
+forbidden, I should have thought your own feeling, your own delicacy,
+might--"
+
+"Have checked me? O, hang it, Earlscourt, listen one second without
+shutting a fellow up. I never broached the subject before, by your
+desire; but, now I have once broken the ice, I must ask you one
+question: Are you sure you judged the girl justly? are you sure you were
+not too quick to slan--"
+
+He pressed his hand on his chest and breathed heavily as I spoke, but he
+wouldn't let me finish.
+
+"That is enough. Would any man sacrifice what he held dearest wantonly
+and without proof? She is dear to me _now_. You are the only living
+being so thoughtless or so merciless as to force her name upon me, and
+rake up the one folly, the one madness, the one crowning sorrow of my
+life. See that you never dare bring forward her name again."
+
+He went out before me into the soft night air. His carriage was
+waiting; he entered it, threw himself back on its cushions, and was
+driven off before I had time to break my word of honor to Beatrice
+Boville, which I felt sorely tempted to do just then. Who among the
+thousands that heard his briliant speech that night, or read it the next
+morning, who saw him pass in his carriage, and had him pointed out to
+them as the finest orator of his day, or dined with him at his
+ministerial dinners at his house in Park Lane, would have believed that,
+with all his ambition, fame, honors, and attainments, the one cross, the
+one shadow, the one dark thread, in the successful stateman's life, was
+due to a woman's hand, and that underneath all his strength lay that
+single weakness, sapping and undermining it?
+
+"_Did you_ see that girl Boville at the House last night?" Lady Clive
+(who had smiled most sweetly ever since her thorns had brought forth
+their fruit--her son _would_ be his heir--Earlscourt would never marry
+now!) said to me, the next day, at one of the Musical Society concerts.
+"Incredible effrontery, wasn't it, in her, to come and hear Earlscourt's
+speech? One would have imagined that conscience and delicacy might have
+made her reluctant to see him, instead of letting her voluntarily seek
+his own legislative chamber, and listen coolly for an hour and a half to
+the man whom she misled and deceived so disgracefully."
+
+I laughed to think how long a time a woman's malice _will_ flourish,
+n'importe how victorious it may have been in crushing its object, or how
+harmless that object may have become.
+
+"You are very bitter about her still, Lady Clive. Is that quite fair?
+You know you were so much obliged to her for throwing Earlscourt away.
+You want Horace to come in for the title, don't you?" Which truism
+being unpalatable, Lady Clive averred that she had no wish on earth but
+for Earlscourt's happiness; that of course she naturally grieved for his
+betrayal by that little intrigante, but that had his marriage been a
+well-advised one, nobody would have rejoiced more, etc., etc., and bade
+me be silent and listen to Vieuxtemps, both of which commands I obeyed,
+pondering in my own mind whether I should go and call in Lowndes Square
+or not: if anybody heard of it, they would think it odd for me alone, of
+all the family, to continue acquainted with a girl whom report
+(circulated through Lady Clive) said had used Earlscourt so ill, and
+wrong constructions might get put upon it; but, thank God! I never have
+considered the qu'en dira-t-on. If constructions are wrong, to the deuce
+with them! they matter nothing to sensible people; and the man who lives
+in dread of "reports" will have to shift his conduct as the old man of
+immortal fable shifted his donkey, and won't ever journey in any peace
+at all. If anybody remarked my visiting Lowndes Square, I couldn't help
+it: I wanted to see Beatrice Boville again, and to Lowndes Square, after
+the concert, I drove my tilbury accordingly, which, as that turn-out is
+known pretty tolerably in those parts, I should be wisest to leave
+behind me when I don't want my calls noticed. By good fortune, I saw
+Beatrice alone. They were going to drive in the Park, and she was in the
+drawing room, dressed and waiting for her aunt. She was not altered: at
+her age sorrow doesn't tell physically as it does at Earlscourt's. In
+youth we have Hope; later on we know that of all the gifts of Pandora's
+box none are so treacherous and delusive as the one that Pandora left at
+the bottom. True, Beatrice had none of that insouciant, shadowless
+brightness that had been her chief charm at Lemongenseidlitz, but she
+was one of those women whose attractions, dependent on fascination, not
+on beauty, grow more instead of less as time goes on. She met me with a
+trace of embarrassment; but she was always self-possessed under any
+amount of difficulties, and stood chatting, a trifle hurriedly, of all
+the subjects of the year, of anything, I dare say, rather than of that
+speech the night before, or of the secret of which I was her sole
+confidant. But I was not going to let her off so easily. I had come
+there for a definite purpose, and was not going away without
+accomplishing it. I was afraid every second that Lady Mechlin might come
+down, or some visitor enter, and as she sat in a low chair among the
+flowers in the window, leant towards her, and plunged into it _in medias
+res_.
+
+"Miss Boville, I want you to release me from my promise."
+
+She looked up, her face flushing slightly, but her lips and eyes
+shadowed already with that determined pride and hauteur that they had
+worn the last time I had seen her. She did not speak, but played with
+the boughs of a coronella near her.
+
+"You remember" (I went on speaking as briefly as possible, lest the old
+lady's toilet should be finished, and our tete-a-tete cut short) "I gave
+you my word of honor never to speak again of what you told me in the
+Kursaal last autumn until you gave me leave; that leave I ask you for
+now. Silence lies in the way of your own happiness, I feel sure, and not
+alone of yours. If you give me carte blanche, you may be certain I shall
+use it discreetly and cautiously. You made the prohibition in a moment
+of heat and passion; withdraw it now--believe me, you will never
+repent."
+
+The flush died out of her cheeks as I spoke; but her little, white
+teeth were set together as they had been that night, and she answered me
+bitterly,--
+
+"You ask what is impossible; I cannot, in justice to myself, withdraw
+it. I would never have told you, but that I deemed you a man of honor,
+whom I could trust."
+
+"I do not think I have proved myself otherwise, Beatrice. I have kept my
+word to you, when I have been greatly tempted to break it, when I have
+doubted whether it were either right or wise to stand on such punctilio,
+when greater stakes were involved by my silence. Surely, if you once had
+elevated mind enough to comprehend and admire such a man as Earlscourt,
+and be won by the greatness of his intellect to prefer him to younger
+rivals, it is impossible you can have lowered your taste and found any
+one to replace him. No woman who once loved Earlscourt could stoop to an
+inferior man, and almost all men _are_ his inferiors; it is impossible
+you can have grown cold towards him."
+
+She turned her eyes upon me luminous with her old passion--the color hot
+in her cheeks, and her attitude full of that fiery pride which became
+her so infinitely well.
+
+"_I_ changed!--_I_ grown cold to him! I love him more than all the
+world, and shall do to my grave. Do you think that any who heard him
+last night could glory in him as I did? Did you think any physical
+torture would not have been easier to bear than what I felt when I saw
+his face once more, and thought of what we _should have been_ to one
+another, and of what we _are_? We women have to act, and smile, and wear
+a calm semblance, while our hearts are bursting; and so you fancy that
+we never feel."
+
+"But, great Heavens! Beatrice, if you love Earlscourt like this, why not
+give me leave to tell him? Why not write to him yourself? A word would
+clear you, a word restore you to him. Your anger, your pride, he would
+forgive in a moment."
+
+I'm a military man, not a diplomatist, or I shouldn't have added that
+last sentence.
+
+She rose, and looked at me haughtily and amazedly.
+
+"It is I who have to forgive, not he. I wronged him in no way; he
+wronged me bitterly. He dared to misjudge, to suspect, to insult me. I
+shall never stoop to undeceive him. He gave me up without a trial. I
+never will force myself upon him. He thanked God I was not his
+wife--could I seek to be his wife after that? Love him passionately I
+do, but forgive him I do _not_! I forbid you, on your faith as a
+gentleman, ever to tell him what I told you that night. I trusted to
+your honor; I shall hold you _dis_honored if you betray me."
+
+Just as she paused an open carriage rolled past. I looked down
+mechanically; in it was Earlscourt lying back on his cushions,
+returning, I believe, from a Cabinet Council. There, in the street,
+stood my tilbury, with the piebald Cognac that everybody in Belgravia
+knew. There, in the open window, stood Beatrice and I; and Earlscourt,
+as he happened to glance upwards, saw us both! His carriage rolled on;
+Beatrice grew as white as death, and her lips quivered as she looked
+after him; but Lady Mechlin entered, and I took them down to their
+barouche.
+
+"You are determined not to release me from my promise?" I asked
+Beatrice, as I pulled up the tiger-skin over her flounces.
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"Certainly not; and I should think you are too much of a gentleman not
+to hold a promise sacred."
+
+Pride and determination were written in every line of her face, in the
+very arch of her eyebrows, the very form of her brow, the very curve of
+her lips--a soft, delicate face enough otherwise, but as expressive of
+indomitable pride as any face could be. And yet, though I swore at her
+as I drove Cognac out of the square, I couldn't help liking her all the
+better for it, the little Pythoness! for, after all, it was natural and
+very intelligible to me--she had been misjudged and wrongly suspected,
+and the noblest spirits are always the quickest to rebel against
+injustice and resent false accusation.
+
+
+
+
+V.
+
+HOW IN PERFECT INNOCENCE I PLAYED THE PART OF A RIVAL.
+
+
+The season whirled and spun along as usual. They were having stormy
+debates in the Lower House, and throwing out bills in the Upper; stifled
+by Thames odors one evening, and running down to Epsom the next morning;
+blackguarding each other in parliamentary language--which, on my honor,
+will soon want duels revived to keep it within decent breeding, if Lord
+Robert Cecil and others don't learn better manners, and remember the
+golden rule that "He alone resorts to vituperation whose argument is
+illogical and weak." We, luckier dogs, who weren't slaves to St.
+Stephen's, nor to anything at all except as parsons and moralists, with
+whom the grapes sont verts et bons pour des goujats, said to our own
+worldly vitiated tastes and evil leanings, spent our hours in the Ring
+and the coulisses, White's and the United, crush balls and opera
+suppers, and swore we were immeasurably bored, though we wouldn't have
+led any other life for half a million. The season whirled along.
+Earlscourt devoted himself more entirely than ever to public life; he
+filled one of the most onerous and important posts in the ministry, and
+appeared to occupy himself solely with home politics and foreign
+politics. Lady Mechlin, only a baronet's widow, though she had very
+tolerable society of her own, was not in _his_ monde; and Beatrice
+Boville and he, with only Hyde Park Corner between them, might as well,
+for any chance of rapprochement, have been severally at Spitzbergen and
+Cape Horn. Two or three times they passed each other in Pall-Mall and
+the Ride; but Earlscourt only lifted his hat to Lady Mechlin, and
+Beatrice set her little teeth together, and wouldn't have solicited a
+glance from him to save her life. Earlscourt was excessively distant to
+me after seeing my tilbury at her door; no doubt he thought it strange
+for me to have continued my intimacy with a woman who had wronged him so
+bitterly. He said nothing, but I could see he was exceedingly
+displeased; and the more I tried to smooth it with him, the more
+completely I seemed to set my foot in it. It was exceedingly difficult
+to touch on any obnoxious subject with him; he was never harsh or
+discourteous, but he could freeze the atmosphere about him gently, but
+so completely, that no mortal could pierce through it; and, fettered by
+my promise to her and his prohibition to me, I hardly knew how to bring
+up her name. As the Fates would have it, I often met Beatrice myself, at
+the Regent Park fetes, at concerts, at a Handel Festival at Sydenham, at
+one or two dinner parties; and, as she generally made way for me beside
+her, and was one of those women who are invariably, though without
+effort, admired and surrounded in any society, possibly people remarked
+it--possibly our continued intimacy might have come round to Earlscourt,
+specially as Lady Clive and Mrs Breloques abused me roundly, each a sa
+mode, for countenancing that "abominable intrigante." I couldn't help
+it, even if Earlscourt took exception at me for it. I knew the girl was
+not to blame, and I took her part, and tried my best to tame the little
+Pythoness into releasing me from my promise. But Beatrice was firm; had
+she erred, no one would have acknowledged and atoned for it quicker, but
+innocent and wrongly accused, she kept silent, coute que coute, and in
+my heart I sympathized with her. Nothing stings so sharply, nothing is
+harder to forgive, than injustice; and, knowing herself to be frank,
+honorable, and open as the day, his charge of falsehood and deception
+rankled in her only more keenly as time went on. Men ran after her like
+mad; she had more of them about her than many beauties or belles. There
+was a style, a charm, a something in her that sent beauties into the
+shade, and by which, had she chosen, she could soon have replaced
+Earlscourt. Still, it needed to be no Lavater to see, by the passionate
+gleam of her eyes and the haughty pride on her brow, that Beatrice
+Boville was not happy.
+
+"Why _will_ you let pride and punctilio wreck your own life, Beatrice?"
+I asked her, in a low tone, as we stood before one of Ed. Warren's
+delicious bits of woodland in the Water-Color Exhibition, where we had
+chanced to meet one day. "That he should have judged you as he did was
+not unnatural. Think! how was it possible for him to guess your father
+was your companion? Remember how very much circumstances were against
+you."
+
+"Had they been ten times more against me, a man who cared for me would
+have believed in me, and stood by me, not condemned me on the first
+suspicion. It was unchivalrous, ungenerous, unjust. I tell you, his
+words are stamped into my memory forever. I shall never forgive them."
+
+"Not even if you knew that he suffered as much and more than you do?"
+
+She clinched her hands on the rolled-up catalogue with a passionate
+gesture.
+
+"No; because he _misjudged_ me. Anything else I would have pardoned,
+though I am no patient Griselda, to put up tamely with any wrong; but
+_that_ I never could--I never would!"
+
+"I regret it, then. I thought you too warm and noble-hearted a woman to
+retain resentment so long. I never blamed you in the first instance, but
+I must say I blame you now."
+
+She laughed, a little contemptuously, and glanced at me with her
+haughtiest air; and on my life, much as it provoked one, nothing became
+her better.
+
+"Blame me or not, as you please--your verdict will be quite bearable,
+either way. I am the one sinned against. I can have nothing explained to
+Lord Earlscourt. Had he cared for me, as he once vowed, he would have
+been less quick then to suspect me, and quicker now to give me a chance
+of clearing myself. But you remember he thanked God I had not his name
+and his honor in my hands. I dare say he rejoices at his escape."
+
+She laughed again, turning over the catalogue feverishly and
+unconsciously. _Those_ were the words that rankled in her; and it was
+not much wonder if, to a proud spirit like Beatrice Boville's, they
+seemed unpardonable. As I handed her and Lady Mechlin into their
+carriage when they left the exhibition, Earlscourt, as ill luck would
+have it, passed us, walking on to White's, the fringe of Beatrice's
+parasol brushed his arm, and a hot color flushed into her cheeks at the
+sudden rencontre. By the instinct of courtesy he bowed to her and Lady
+Mechlin, but passed up Pall-Mall without looking at Beatrice. How well
+society drills us, that we meet with such calm impassiveness in its
+routine those with whom we have sorrowed and joyed, loved and hated, in
+such far different scenes!
+
+Their carriage drove on, and I overtook him as he went up Pall-Mall. He
+was walking slowly, with his hand pressed on his chest, and his lips set
+together, as if in bodily pain. He looked at me, as I joined him, with
+an annoyed glance of unusual irritation for him, for he was always calm
+and untroubled, punctiliously just, and though of a proud temper, never
+quick to anger.
+
+"You passed that girl wonderfully coldly, Earlscourt," I began, plunging
+recklessly into the thick of the subject.
+
+"Coldly!" he repeated, bitterly. "It is very strange that you will
+pursue me with her name. I forbade you to intrude it upon me; was not
+that sufficient?"
+
+"No; because I think you judged her too harshly."
+
+"Think so, if you please, but never renew the topic to me. If she gives
+you her confidence, enjoy it. If you choose, knowing what you do, to be
+misled by her, be so; but I beg of you to spare me your opinions and
+intentions."
+
+"But why? I say you _do_ misjudge her. She might err in impatience and
+pride; but I would bet you any money you like that you would prove her
+guilty of no indelicacy, no treachery, no underhand conduct, though
+appearances might be against her."
+
+"_Might_ be! You select your words strangely; you must have some deeper
+motive for your unusual blindness. I desire, for the last time, that you
+cease either the subject to me, or your acquaintance with me, whichever
+you prefer."
+
+With which, he went up the steps of White's, and I strolled on, amazed
+at the fierce acrimony of his tone, utterly unlike anything I had ever
+heard from him, wished their pride to the devil, called myself a fool
+for meddling in the matter at all, and went to have a quiet weed in the
+smoking-room of the U. S. to cool myself. I was heartily sick of the
+whole affair. If they wanted it cleared, they must clear it
+themselves--I should trouble myself no more about it. Yet I couldn't
+altogether dismiss Beatrice's cause from my mind. I thought her, to say
+the truth, rather harshly used. I liked her for her fearless, truthful,
+impassioned character. I liked her for the very courage and pride with
+which she preferred to relinquish any chance of regaining her forfeited
+happiness, rather than stoop to solicit exculpation from charges of
+which she knew she was innocent. Perhaps, at first, she did not consider
+sufficiently Earlscourt's provocation, and perhaps, now, she was too
+persisting in her resentment of it; still I liked her, and I was sorry
+to see her, at an age when life should have been couleur de rose, to one
+of her gay and insouciant nature, with a weary, passionate look on her
+face that she should not have had for ten years to come--a look that was
+rapidly hardening into stern and contemptuous sadness.
+
+"You tell me I am too bitter," she said to me one day, "how should I be
+otherwise? I, who have wronged no one, and have never in my life done
+anything of which I am ashamed, am called an intrigante by Lady Clive
+Edghill, and get ill-will from strangers, and misconstructions from my
+friends, merely because, thinking no harm myself, it never occurs to me
+that circumstances may look against me; and, hating falsehood, I cannot
+lie, and smile, and give soft words where I feel contempt and
+indignation. Mrs. Breloques yonder, with whom les presens ont toujours
+raison, and les absens ont toujours tort, who has honeyed speeches for
+her bitterest foes, and poisoned arrows (behind their back) for her most
+trusting friends, who goes to early matins every morning, and pries out
+for a second all over the top of her prayer-book, who kisses 'darling
+Helena,' and says she 'never looked so sweetly,' whispering en petit
+comite what a pity it is, when Helena is so passee, she _will_ dress
+like a girl just out--she is called the sweetest woman possible--so
+amiable! and is praised for her high knowledge of religion. You tell me
+I am too bitter. I think not. Honesty does _not_ prosper, and truth is
+at a miserable discount; straightforward frankness makes a myriad of
+foes, and adroit diplomacy as many friends. If you make a
+prettily-turned compliment, who cares if it is sincere? if you hold your
+tongue where you cannot praise, because you will not tell a conventional
+falsehood, the world thinks you very ill-natured, or odiously satirical.
+Society is entirely built upon insincerity and conventionality, from the
+wording of an acceptance of a dinner invitation, where we write 'with
+much pleasure,' thinking to ourselves 'what a bore!' to the giant
+hypocrisies daily spoken without a blush from pulpit and lecturn, and
+legitimatized both as permissible and praiseworthy. To truth and
+unconventionality society of course is adverse; and whoever dares to
+uphold them must expect to be hissed, as Paul by the Ephesians, because
+he shivered their silver shrines and destroyed the craft by which they
+got their wealth."
+
+Beatrice was right; her truth and fearlessness were her enemies with
+most people, even with the man who had loved her best. Had she been
+ready with an adroit falsehood and a quick excuse, Earlscourt's
+suspicions would never have been raised as they were by her frank
+admission that there was something she would rather not tell him, and
+her innocent request to be trusted. That must have been some very
+innocent and unworldly village schoolmaster, I should say, who first set
+going that venerable proverb, "Honesty is the best policy." He must have
+known comically little of life. A diplomatist who took it as his motto
+would soon come to grief, and ladies would soon stone out of their
+circles any woman bete enough to try its truth among them. There is no
+policy at greater discount in the world, and straightforward and candid
+people stand at very unequal odds with the rest of humanity; they are
+the one morsel of bread to a hogshead of sack, the handful of Spartans
+against a swarm of Persians, and they get the brunt of the battle and
+the worst of the fight.
+
+
+
+
+VI.
+
+HOW PRIDE BOWED AND FELL.
+
+
+Beyond meeting Earlscourt at White's, or, for an hour, at the reunion of
+some fair leader of ton, I scarcely saw him that season, for he was more
+and more devoted to public life. He looked wretchedly ill, and his
+physicians said if he wished to live he must go to the south of France
+in July, and winter at Corfu; but he paid them no heed; he occupied
+himself constantly with political and literary work, and grudged the
+three or four hours he gave to sleep that did him little good.
+
+"Will you get me admittance to the Lords to-morrow night?" Beatrice
+asked me, one morning, when I met her in the Ride. I looked at her
+surprised.
+
+"To the Lords? Of course, if you wish."
+
+"I do wish it." Her hands clinched on her bridle, and the color flushed
+into her face, for Earlscourt just then passed us, riding with one of
+his brother ministers. He looked at us both, and his face changed
+strangely, though he rode on, continuing his conversation with the other
+man, while I went round the turn with Beatrice and the other fellows who
+were about her; le fruit defendu is always most attractive, and
+Beatrice's profound negligence of them all made them more mad about her
+than all the traps and witcheries, beguilements and attractions, that
+coquettes and beauties set out for them. She rode beautifully; and a
+woman who _does_ sit well down on her saddle, and knows how to handle
+her horse, never looks better than en Amazone. Earlscourt met her three
+times at the turn of the Ride; and though you would not have told that
+he was passing any other than an utter stranger, I think it must have
+struck him that he had lost much in losing Beatrice Boville. I was
+riding on her off-side each time when we passed him. As I say, I never,
+thank God! have cared a straw for the qu'en dira-t-on? and if people
+remarked on my intimacy with my cousin's cast off fiancee, so they
+might, but to Earlscourt I wished to explain it more for Beatrice's sake
+than my own; and as I rode out by Apsley House afterwards, I overtook
+him, and went up to Piccadilly with him, though his manner was decidedly
+distant and chill, so pointedly so that it would have been rude, had he
+not been too entirely a disciple of Chesterfield to be ever otherwise
+than courteous to his deadliest foe; but, disregarding his coldness, I
+said what I intended to say, and began an explanation that I considered
+only due to him.
+
+"I beg your pardon, Earlscourt, for intruding on you a topic you have
+forbidden, but I shall be obliged to you to listen to me a moment. I
+wish to tell you my reasons for what, I dare say, seems strange to you,
+my continued intimacy with--"
+
+But I was not permitted to end my sentence; he divined what I was about
+to say, and stopped me, with a cold, wearied air.
+
+"I understand; but I prefer not to hear them. I have no desire to
+interfere with your actions, and less to be troubled with your motives.
+Of course, you choose your friendships as you please. All I beg is, that
+you obey the wish I expressed the other day, and intrude the subject no
+more upon me."
+
+And he bade me good morning, urged his mare into a sharp canter, and
+turned down St. James's Street. How little those in the crowd, who
+looked at him as he rode by, pointing him out to the women with them as
+Viscount Earlscourt, the most eloquent debater in the Lords, the
+celebrated foreign minister, author, and diplomatist, guessed that a
+woman's name could touch and sting him as nothing else could do, and
+that under the calm and glittering upper-current of his life ran a dark,
+slender, unnoticed thread that had power to poison all the rest! Those
+women, mon ami!--if we _do_ satirize them a little bit now and then, are
+we doing any more than taking a very mild revenge? Don't they make fools
+of the very best and wisest of us, play the deuce with Caesar as with
+Catullus, and make Achilles soft as Amphimachus?
+
+The next morning I met Beatrice at a concert at the Marchioness of
+Pursang's. Lady Pursang would not have been, vous concevez, on the
+visiting list of Lady Mechlin, as she was one of the creme de la creme,
+but she had met Beatrice the winter before at Pau, had been very
+delighted with her, and now continued the acquaintance in town. I
+happened to sit next our little Pythoness, who looked better, I think,
+that morning, than ever I saw her, though her face was set into that
+disdainful sadness which had become its habitual expression. She liked
+my society, and sought it, no doubt, because I was the only link between
+her and her lost past; and she was talking with me more animatedly than
+usual, thanking me for having got her admittance to the Lords that
+night, during a pause in the concert, when Earlscourt entered the room,
+and took the seat reserved for him, which was not far from ours. Music
+was one of his passions, the only delassement, indeed, he ever gave
+himself now; but to-day, though ostensibly he listened to Alboni and
+Arabella Goddard, Halle and Vieuxtemps, and talked to the marchioness
+and other women of her set, in reality he was watching Beatrice, who,
+her pride roused by his presence, laughed and chatted with me and other
+men with her old gay abandon, and, impervious to dereglement though he
+was, I fancy even _he_ felt it a severe trial of his composure when Lady
+Pursang, who had been the last five years in India with her husband, and
+who was ignorant of or had forgotten the name of the girl Earlscourt was
+to have married the year before, asked him, when the concert was over,
+to let her introduce him to her, yet Beatrice Boville, bringing him in
+innocent cruelty up to that little Pythoness, with whom he had parted so
+passionately and bitterly ten months before! Happy for them that they
+had that armor which the Spartans called heroism, the stoics philosophy,
+and we--simply style good breeding, or they would hardly have gone
+through that ordeal as well as they did when she introduced them to each
+other as strangers!--those two who had whispered such passionate love
+words, given and received such fond caresses, vowed barely twelve
+months before to pass their lifetime together! Happy for them they were
+used to society, or they would hardly have bowed to each other as calmly
+and admirably as they did, with the recollection of that night in which
+they had parted so bitterly, so full as it was in the minds of both.
+Beatrice was standing in one of the open windows of the little cabinet
+de peinture almost empty, and when the marchioness moved away, satisfied
+that she had introduced two people admirably fitted to entertain one
+another, Earlscourt, with people flirting and talking within a few yards
+of him, was virtually alone with Beatrice--for there is, after all, no
+solitude like the solitude of a crowd--and _then_, for the first time in
+his life, his self-possession forsook him. Beatrice was silent and very
+pale, looking out of the window on to the Green Park, which the house
+overlooked, and Earlscourt's pride had a hard struggle, but his passion
+got the better of him, malgre lui, and he leaned towards her.
+
+"Do you remember the last night we were together?"
+
+She answered him bitterly. She had not forgiven him. She had sometimes,
+I am half afraid, sworn to revenge herself.
+
+"I am hardly likely to forget it, Lord Earlscourt."
+
+He looked at her longingly and wistfully; his pride was softened, that
+granite pride, hitherto so unassailable! and he bent nearer to her.
+
+"Beatrice! I would give much to be able to wash out the memories of that
+night--to be proved mistaken--to be convicted of haste, of sternness--"
+
+The tears rushed into her eyes.
+
+"You need only have given one little thing--all I asked of you--trust!"
+
+"Would to God I dare believe you now! Tell me, answer me, did I judge
+you too harshly? Love at my age never changes, however wronged; it is
+the latest, and it only expires with life itself. I confess to you, you
+are dearer to me still than anything ever was, than anything ever will
+be. Prove to me, for God's sake, that I misjudged you! Only prove it to
+me; explain away what appeared against you, and we may yet--"
+
+He stopped; his voice trembled, his hand touched hers, he breathed short
+and fast. The Pythoness was very nearly tamed; her eyes grew soft and
+melting, her lips trembled; but pride was still strong in her. At the
+touch of his hand it very nearly gave way, but not wholly; it was there
+still, tenacious of its reign. She set her little teeth obstinately
+together, and looked up at him with her old hauteur.
+
+"No, as I told you then, you must believe in me _without_ proof. I have
+not forgotten your bitter words, nor yet forgiven them. I doubt if I
+ever shall. You roused an evil spirit in me that night, Lord Earlscourt,
+which you cannot exorcise at a moment's notice. Remember what was your
+own motto, 'An indiscreet woman is never frank,'--yet from my very
+frankness you accused me of indiscretion, and of far worse than
+indiscretion--"
+
+"My God! if I accused you falsely, Beatrice, forgive me!"
+
+He must have loved her very much to bow his pride so far as that. _He_
+was at _her_ feet--at _her_ mercy now; he, whom she had vainly sued,
+sued her; but a perverse, fiery devil in her urged her to take her own
+revenge, compelled her to throw away her own peace.
+
+"You should have asked me that ten months ago; it is too late now."
+
+His face dyed white, his eyes filled with passionate anguish. He crushed
+her hand in his.
+
+"Too late! Great Heavens! Answer me, child, I entreat you--I beseech
+you--is it 'too late' because report is true that you have replaced me
+with your cousin--that you are engaged to Hervey? Tell me truth now, for
+pity's sake. I will be trifled with no longer."
+
+Beatrice threw back her haughty little head contemptuously, though
+ladies _don't_ sneer at the idea of being liees with me generally, I can
+assure you. Her heart throbbed triumphantly and joyously. She had
+conquered him at last. The man of giant intellect and haughty will had
+bowed to her. She held him by a thread, he who ruled the fate of
+nations!--and she loved him so dearly! But the Pythoness was not wholly
+tamed, and she could not even yet forget her wrongs.
+
+"You told me before I spoke falsehoods to you, Lord Earlscourt; my word
+would find no more credence now."
+
+He looked at her, dropped her hand, and turned away, before Beatrice
+could detain him. Five minutes after he left the house. Little as I
+guessed it, he was jealous of me--I! who never in my own life rivalled
+any man who wished to _marry_! Beatrice had fully revenged herself. I
+wonder if she enjoyed it quite as much as she had anticipated, as she
+stood where he had left her looking out on the Green Park?
+
+I went with Beatrice and her party to the Lords that night; it was the
+tug of war for the bill which Earlscourt was so determined should pass,
+and a great speech was expected from him. We were not disappointed. When
+he rose he spoke with effort, and his oratory suffered from the slight
+hoarseness of his voice, for half the beauty of his rhetoric lay in the
+flexibility and music of his tones; still, it was emphatically a great
+speech, and Beatrice Boville listened to it breathlessly, with her eyes
+fixed on the face--weary, worn, but grandly intellectual--of the man
+whom Europe reverenced, and she--a girl of twenty!--ruled. Perhaps her
+heart smote her for the lines she had added there; perhaps she felt her
+pride misplaced to him, great as he was, with his stainless honor and
+unequalled genius; perhaps she thought of how, with all his strength,
+his hand had trembled as it touched hers; and how, with all her love,
+she had been wilful and naughty to him a second time. His voice grew
+weaker as he ended, and he spoke with visible effort; still it was one
+of his greatest political triumphs: his bill passed by a large majority,
+and the papers, the morning after, filled their leading articles with
+admiration of Viscount Earlscourt's speech. But before those journals
+were out, Earlscourt was too ill almost to notice the success of his
+measures: as he left the House, the presiding devil of beloved Albion,
+that plays the deuce with English statesmen as with Italian
+cantatrices,--the confounded east wind,--had caught him, finished what
+over-exertion had begun, and knocked him over, prostrated with severe
+bronchitis. What pity it is that the body _will_ levy such cruel black
+mail upon the mind; that a gust of wind, a horse's plunge, the effluvia
+of a sewer, the carelessness of a pointsman, can destroy the grandest
+intellect, sweep off the men whose genius lights the world, as
+ruthlessly as a storm of rain a cloud of gnats, and strike Peel and
+Canning, Macaulay and Donaldson, in the prime of their power, as
+heedlessly as peasants little higher than the brutes, dull as the clods
+of their own valley, who stake their ambitions on a surfeit of fat
+bacon, and can barely scrawl their names upon a slate!
+
+Unconscious that Earlscourt's jealousy had fastened so wrongly upon me,
+I was calling upon Beatrice late the next morning, ignorant myself of
+his illness, when his physician, who was Lady Mechlin's too, while
+paying her a complimentary visit, regretted to me my cousin's sudden
+attack.
+
+"Lord Earlscourt would speak last night," he began. "I entreated him
+not; but those public men are so obstinate; to-day he is very ill--very
+ill indeed, though prompt measures stopped the worst. He has risen to
+dictate something of importance to his secretary; he would work his
+brain if he were dying; but it has taken a severe hold on him, I fear. I
+shall send him somewhere south as soon as he can leave the house, which
+will not be for some weeks. He would be a great loss to the country. We
+have not such another foreign minister. But I admit to you, Major
+Hervey--though of course I do not wish it to go further--that I _do_
+think very seriously of Lord Earlscourt's state of health."
+
+Beatrice heard him as she sat at her Davenport; her face grew white, and
+her eyes filled with great anguish. She thought of his words to her only
+the day before, and of how her pride had repelled him a second time. I
+saw her hand clinch on the pen she was playing with, and her teeth set
+tight together, her habitual action under any strong emotion, thinking
+to herself, no doubt, "And my last words to him were bitter ones!"
+
+When the physician had left, I went up to her.--
+
+"Beatrice, you must let me tell him _now_!"
+
+She did not answer, but her hand clinched tighter on the pen-handle.
+
+"His life is in your hands; for God's sake relinquish your pride."
+
+But her pride was strong in her, and dear to her still, strong and dear
+as her love; and the two struggled together. Earlscourt had bowed _his_
+pride to her; but she had not yielded up her own, and it cost her much
+to yield it even now. All the Pythoness in her was not tamed yet. She
+was silent--she wavered--then her great love for him vanquished all
+else. She rose, white as death, her passionate eyes full of unshed
+tears, the bitterest, yet the softest, Beatrice Boville had ever known.
+
+"Take me to him. No one shall tell him but myself."
+
+Earlscourt was lying on a couch in his library; he had been unable to
+dictate or to write himself, for severe remedies had prostrated him
+utterly, and he could not speak above his breath, though he was loath to
+give up, and acknowledge himself as ill as he was. His eyes were closed,
+his forehead knitted together in pain, and his labored breathing told
+plainly enough how fiercely his foe had attacked him, and that it was by
+no means conquered yet. He had not slept all night, and had fallen into
+a short slumber now, desiring his attendants to leave him. I bade the
+groom of the chambers let us enter unannounced, and, opening the door
+myself, signed to Beatrice to go in, while her aunt and I waited in the
+anteroom. She stopped a moment at the entrance; her pride had its last
+struggle; but he turned restlessly, with a weary sigh, and by that sigh
+the Pythoness was conquered. Beatrice went forward and fell on her knees
+beside his sofa, bending down till her lips touched his brow, and her
+hot tears fell on his hands.
+
+"I was too proud last night to tell you you misjudged me. I have no
+pride now. I am your own--wholly your own. I never loved, I never should
+love, any but you. I forgive you now. O, how could you ever doubt me?
+Lord Earlscourt--Ernest--may we not yet be all we once were to one
+another?"
+
+Awakened by her kisses on his brow, bewildered by her sudden appearance,
+he tried to rise, but sank back exhausted. He did not disbelieve her
+now. He had no voice to speak to her, no strength to answer her; but he
+drew her down closer and closer to him, as she knelt by him, and, as her
+heart beat once more against his, the little Pythoness, tamed at last,
+threw her arms round him and sobbed like a child on his breast. And
+so--Beatrice Boville took her best REVENGE!--while I shut the library
+door, invited Lady Mechlin to inspect Earlscourt's collection of French
+pictures, and asked what she thought of _Punch_ this week.
+
+I don't know what his physicians would have said of the treatment, as
+they'd recommended him "perfect quiet;" all I do know is, that though
+Earlscourt went to the south of Europe as soon as he could leave the
+house, Beatrice Boville went with him; and he took his place on the
+benches and in the cabinet this season, without any trace of bronchia,
+or any sign of wearing out.
+
+Lady Clive, I regret to say, "does not know" Lady Earlscourt: anything
+for her beloved brother she _would_ do, were it possible; but she hopes
+we understand that, for her daughters' sakes, she feels it quite
+impossible to countenance that "shocking little intrigante."
+
+
+
+
+A LINE IN THE "DAILY."
+
+
+
+
+A LINE IN THE "DAILY."
+
+WHO DID IT, AND WHO WAS DONE BY IT.
+
+
+"Lieutenant-Colonel Fairlie's troop of Horse Artillery is ordered to
+Norwich to replace the 12th Lancers, en route to Bombay."--Those three
+lines in the papers spread dismay into the souls of Norfolk young
+ladies, and no less horror into ours, for we were very jolly at
+Woolwich, could run up to the Clubs and down to Epsom, and were far too
+material not to prefer ball-room belles to bluebells, strawberry-ice to
+fresh hautboys, the sparkle of champagne-cups to all the murmurs of the
+brooks, and the flutter of ballet-girls' wings to all the rustle of
+forest-leaves. But, unhappily, the Ordnance Office is no more given to
+considering the feelings of their Royal Gunners than the Horse Guards
+the individual desires of the two other Arms; and off we went to
+Norwich, repining bitterly, or, in modern English, swearing hard at our
+destinies, creating an immense sensation with our 6-pounders, as we
+flatter ourselves the Royals always contrive to do, whether on fair
+friends or fierce foes, and were looked upon spitefully by the one or
+two young ladies whose hearts were gone eastwards with the Twelfth,
+smilingly by the one or two hundred who, having fruitlessly laid out a
+great deal of tackle on the Twelfth, proceeded to manufacture fresh
+flies to catch us.
+
+We soon made up, I think, to the Norwich girls for the loss of the
+Twelfth. They set dead upon Fairlie, our captain, a Brevet
+Lieutenant-Colonel, and a C. B. for "services in India," where he had
+rivalled Norman Ramsay at Fuentes d'Onor, had had a ball put in his hip,
+and had come home again to be worshipped by the women for his romantic
+reputation. They made an immense deal, too, of Levison Courtenay, the
+beauty of the troop, and called Belle in consequence; who did not want
+any flummery or flirtation to increase his opinion of himself, being as
+vain of his almond eyes as any girl just entered as the favorite for the
+season. There were Tom Gower, too, a capital fellow, with no nonsense
+about him, who made no end of chaff of Belle Courtenay; and Little Nell,
+otherwise Harcourt Poulteney Nelson, who had by some miracle escaped
+expulsion both from Carshalton and the College; and _votre humble
+serviteur_ Phil Hardinge, first lieutenant; and one or two other
+fellows, who having cut dashing figures at our Woolwich reviews,
+cantering across Blackheath Common, or waltzing with dainty beauties
+down our mess-room, made the Artillery welcome in that city of shawls
+and oratorios, where according to the Gazetteer, no virtuous person
+ought to dwell, that volume, with characteristic lucidity, pronouncing
+its streets "ill-disposed."
+
+The Clergy asked us to their rectories--a temptation we were often proof
+against, there being three noticeable facts in rectories, that the talk
+is always slow, "the Church" being present, and having much the same
+chilling effect as the presence of a chaperone at a tete-a-tete; the
+daughters generally ugly, and, from leading the choir at morning
+services, perfectly convinced that they sing like Clara Novello, and
+that the harmonium is a most delightful instrument; and, last and worst,
+the wines are almost always poor, except the port which the reverend
+host drinks himself, but which, Dieu merci! we rarely or never touch.
+
+The County asked us, too; and there we went for good hock,
+tolerable-looking women, and first-rate billiard-tables. For the first
+month we were in Norfolk we voted it unanimously the most infernally
+slow and hideous county going; and I dare say we made ourselves
+uncommonly disagreeable, as people, if they are not pleased, be they
+ever so well bred, have a knack of doing.
+
+Things were thus quiescent and stagnant, when Fairlie one night at mess
+told us a bit of news.
+
+"Old fellows, whom do you think I met to-day?"
+
+"How should we know? Cut along."
+
+"The Swan and her Cygnets."
+
+"The Vanes? Oh, bravo!" was shouted at a chorus, for the dame and
+demoiselles in question we had known in town that winter, and a nicer,
+pleasanter, faster set of women I never came across. "What's bringing
+them down here, and how's Geraldine?"
+
+"Vane's come into his baronetcy, and his place is close by Norwich,"
+said Fairlie; "his wife's health has been bad, and so they left town
+early; and Geraldine is quite well, and counting on haymaking, she
+informed me."
+
+"Come, that is good news," said Belle, yawning. "There'll be one pretty
+woman in the county, thank Heaven! Poor little Geraldine! I must go and
+call on her to-morrow."
+
+"She has existed without your calls, Belle," said Fairlie, dryly, "and
+don't look as if she'd pined after you."
+
+"My dear fellow, how should you know?" said Belle, in no wise
+disconcerted. "A little rogue soon makes 'em look well, and as for
+smiles, they'll smile while they're dying for you. Little Vane and I
+were always good friends, and shall be again--if I care."
+
+"Conceited owl!" said Fairlie, under his moustaches. "I'm sorry to hurt
+your feelings, then, but your pretty 'friend' never asked after you."
+
+"I dare say not," said Belle, complacently. "Where a woman's most
+interested she's always quietest, and Geraldine----"
+
+"Lady Vane begged me to tell you you will always be welcome over there,
+old fellows," said Fairlie, remorselessly cutting him short. "Perhaps we
+shall find something to amuse us better than these stiltified Chapter
+dinners."
+
+The Vanes of whom we talked were an uncommonly pleasant set of people
+whom we had known at Lee, where Vane, a Q. C., then resided, his
+prospective baronetcy being at that time held by a third or fourth
+cousin. Fairlie had known the family since his boyhood; there were four
+daughters, tall graceful women, who had gained themselves the nickname
+of The Swan and her Cygnets; and then there were twins, a boy of
+eighteen, who'd just left Eton; and the girl Geraldine, a charming young
+lady, whom Belle admired more warmly than that dandy often admired
+anybody besides himself, and whom Fairlie liked cordially, having had
+many a familiar bit of fun with her, as he had known her ever since he
+was a dashing cadet, and she made her _debut_ in life in the first
+column of the _Times_. Her sisters were handsome women; but Geraldine
+was bewitching. A very pleasant family they were, and a vast acquisition
+to us. Miss Geraldine flirted to a certain extent with us all, but
+chiefly with the Colonel, whenever he was to be had, those two having a
+very free-and-easy, familiar, pleasant style of intercourse, owing to
+old acquaintance; and Belle spent two hours every evening on his
+toilette when we were going to dine there, and vowed she was a "deuced
+pretty little puss. Perhaps she might--he wasn't sure, but perhaps (it
+would be a horrid sacrifice), if he were with her much longer, he wasn't
+sure she mightn't persuade him to take compassion upon her, he _was_ so
+weak where women were concerned!"
+
+"What a conceit!" said Fairlie thereat, with a contemptuous twist of his
+moustaches and a shrug of his shoulders to me. "I must say, if I were a
+woman, I shouldn't feel over-flattered by a lover who admired his own
+beauty first, and mine afterwards. Not that I pretend to understand
+women."
+
+By which speech I argued that his old playmate Geraldine hadn't thrown
+hay over the Colonel, and been taught billiards by him, and ridden his
+bay mare over the park in her evening dress, without interesting him
+slightly; and that--though I don't think he knew it--he was deigning to
+be a trifle jealous of his Second Captain, the all-mighty conqueror
+Belle.
+
+"What fools they must be that put in these things!" yawned Belle one
+morning, reading over his breakfast coffee in the _Daily Pryer_ one of
+those "advertisements for a wife" that one comes across sometimes in the
+papers, and that make us, like a good many other things, agree with
+Goldsmith:
+
+ Reason, they say, belongs to man,
+ But let them prove it if they can;
+ Wise Aristotle and Smiglicious,
+ By ratiocinations specious,
+ Have strove to prove with great precision,
+ With definition and division,
+ Homo est ratione praeditum,
+ But for my soul I cannot credit 'em.
+
+"What fools they must be!" yawned Belle, wrapping his dressing-gown
+round him, and coaxing his perfumy whiskers under his velvet
+smoking-cap. Belle was always inundated by smoking-caps in cloth and
+velvet, silk and beads, with blue tassels, and red tassels, and gold
+tassels, embroidered and filigreed, rounded and pointed; he had them
+sent to him by the dozen, and pretty good chaff he made of the donors.
+"Awful fools! The idea of advertising for a wife, when the only
+difficulty a man has is to keep from being tricked into taking one. I
+bet you, if I did like this owl here, I should have a hundred answers;
+and if it was known it was I----"
+
+"Little Geraldine's self for a candidate, eh?" asked Tom Gower.
+
+"Very possibly," said Belle, with a self-complacent smile. "She's a fast
+little thing, don't check at much, and she's deucedly in love with me,
+poor little dear--almost as much trouble to me as Julia Sedley was last
+season. That girl all but proposed to me; she did, indeed. Never was
+nearer coming to grief in my life. What will you bet me that, if I
+advertise for a wife, I don't hoax lots of women?"
+
+"I'll bet you ten pounds," said I, "that you don't hoax one!"
+
+"Done!" said Belle, stretching out his hand for a dainty
+memorandum-book, gift of the identical Julia Sedley aforesaid, and
+entering the bet in it--"done! If I'm not asked to walk in the Close at
+noon and look out for a pink bonnet and a black lace cloak, and to
+loiter up the market-place till I come across a black hat and blue
+muslin dress; if I'm not requested to call at No. 20, and to grant an
+interview at No. 84; if I'm not written to by Agatha A. with hazel, and
+Belinda B. with black, eyes--all coming after me like flies after a
+sugar-cask, why you shall have your ten guineas, my boy, and my colt
+into the bargain. Come, write out the advertisement, Tom--I can't, it's
+too much trouble; draw it mild, that's all, or the letters we shall get
+will necessitate an additional Norwich postman. By George, what fun it
+will be to do the girls! Cut along, Tom, can't you?"
+
+"All right," said Gower, pushing away his coffee-cup, and drawing the
+ink to him. "Head it 'MARRIAGE,' of course?"
+
+"Of course. That word's as attractive to a woman as the belt to a
+prize-fighter, or a pipe of port to a college fellow."
+
+"'MARRIAGE.--A Bachelor----'"
+
+"Tell 'em a military man; all girls have the scarlet fever."
+
+"Very well--'an Officer in the Queen's, of considerable personal
+attractions----'"
+
+"My dear fellow, pray don't!" expostulated Belle, in extreme alarm; "we
+shall have such swarms of 'em!"
+
+"No, no! we must say that," persisted Gower--"'personal attractions,
+aged eight-and-twenty----'"
+
+"Can't you put it, 'in the flower of his age,' or his 'sixth lustre'?
+It's so much more poetic."
+
+"'--the flower of his age,' then (that'll leave 'em a wide range from
+twenty to fifty, according to their taste), 'is desirous of meeting a
+young lady of beauty, talent, and good family,'--eh?"
+
+"Yes. All women think themselves beauties, if they're as ugly as sin.
+Milliners and confectioner girls talk Anglo-French, and rattle a
+tin-kettle piano after a fashion, and anybody buys a 'family' for
+half-a-crown at the Heralds' Office--so fire away."
+
+"'--who, feeling as he does the want of a kindred heart and sympathetic
+soul, will accord him the favor of a letter or an interview, as a
+preliminary to the greatest step in life.'"
+
+"A step--like one on thin ice--very sure to bring a man to grief,"
+interpolated Belle. "Say something about property; those soul-and-spirit
+young ladies generally keep a look-out for tin, and only feel an
+elective affinity for a lot of debentures and consols."
+
+"'The advertiser being a man of some present and still more prospective
+wealth, requires no fortune, the sole objects of his search being love
+and domestic felicity.' Domestic felicity--how horrible! Don't it sound
+exactly like the end of a lady's novel, where the unlucky hero is always
+brought to an untimely end in a 'sweet cottage on the banks of the
+lovely Severn.'"
+
+"'Domestic felicity'--bah! What are you writing about?" yawned
+Belle. "I'd as soon take to teetotalism: however, it'll tell in the
+advertisement. Bravo, Tom, that will do. Address it to 'L. C., care of
+Mrs. Greene, confectioner, St. Giles Street, Norwich.' Miss Patty'll
+take the letters in for me, though not if she knew their errand. Tip
+seven-and-sixpence with it, and send it to the _Daily Pryer_."
+
+We did send it to the _Daily_, and in that broadsheet we all of us read
+it two mornings after.
+
+ MARRIAGE.--A Bachelor, an Officer of the Queen's, of
+ considerable personal attractions, and in the flower of
+ his age, is desirous of meeting a young lady of beauty,
+ accomplishments, and good family, who, feeling as he does the
+ want of a kindred heart and sympathetic soul, will accord him
+ the favor either of a letter or an interview, as a preliminary
+ to the greatest step in life. The advertiser being a man of
+ some present and still more prospective wealth, requires no
+ fortune, the sole objects of his search being love and domestic
+ felicity. Address, L. C., care of Mrs. Greene, confectioner,
+ St. Giles Street, Norwich.
+
+"Whose advertisement do you imagine that is?" said Fairlie, showing the
+_Daily_ to Geraldine, as he sat with her and her sisters under some
+lilac and larch trees in one of the meadows of Fern Chase, which had had
+the civility, Geraldine said, to yield a second crop of hay expressly
+for her to have the pleasure of making it. She leaned down towards him
+as he lay on the grass, and read the advertisement, looking uncommonly
+pretty in her dainty muslin dress, with its fluttering mauve ribbons,
+and a wreath she had just twisted up, of bluebells and pinks and white
+heaths which Fairlie had gathered as he lay, put on her bright hair. We
+called her a little flirt, but I think she was an unintentional one; at
+least, her agaceries were, all as unconscious as they were--her worst
+enemies (_i. e._ plain young ladies) had to allow--unaffected.
+
+"How exquisitely sentimental! Is it yours?" she asked, with demure
+mischief.
+
+"Mine!" echoed Fairlie, with supreme scorn.
+
+"It's some one's here, because the address is at Mrs. Greene's. Come,
+tell me at once, monsieur."
+
+"The only fool in the Artillery," said Fairlie, curtly: "Belle
+Courtenay."
+
+"Captain Courtenay!" echoed Geraldine, with a little flush on her
+cheeks, caused, perhaps, by the quick glance the Colonel shot at her as
+he spoke.
+
+"Captain Courtenay!" said Katherine Vane. "Why, what can he want with a
+wife? I thought he had _l'embarras de choix_ offered him in that line;
+at least, so he makes out himself."
+
+"I dare say," said Fairlie, dryly, "it's for a bet he's made, to see how
+many women he can hoax, I believe."
+
+"How can you tell it is a hoax?" said Geraldine, throwing cowslips at
+her greyhound. "It may be some medium of intercourse with some one he
+really cares for, and who may understand his meaning."
+
+"Perhaps you are in his confidence, Geraldine, or perhaps you are
+thinking of answering it yourself?"
+
+"Perhaps," said the young lady, waywardly, making the cowslips into a
+ball, "there might be worse investments. Your _bete noire_ is strikingly
+handsome; he is the perfection of style; he is going to be Equerry to
+the Prince; his mother is just married again to Lord Chevenix; he did
+not name half his attractions in that line in the _Daily_."
+
+With which Geraldine rushed across the meadow after the greyhound and
+the cowslip ball, and Fairlie lay quiet plucking up the heaths by the
+roots. He lay there still, when the cowslip ball struck him a soft
+fragrant blow against his lips, and knocked the Cuba from between his
+teeth.
+
+"Why don't you speak?" asked Geraldine, plaintively. "You are not half
+so pleasant to play with as you were before you went to India and I was
+seven or eight, and you had La Grace, and battledoor and shuttlecock,
+and cricket, and all sorts of games with me in the old garden at
+Charlton."
+
+He might have told her she was much less dangerous then than now; he was
+not disposed to flatter her, however. So he answered her quietly,
+
+"I preferred you as you were then."
+
+"Indeed!" said Geraldine, with a hot color in her cheeks "I do not think
+there are many who would indorse your complimentary opinion."
+
+"Possibly," said Fairlie, coldly.
+
+She took up her cowslips, and hit him hard with them several times.
+
+"Don't speak in that tone. If you dislike me, you can say so in warmer
+words, surely."
+
+Fairlie smiled _malgre lui_.
+
+"What a child you are, Geraldine! but a child that is a very mischievous
+coquette, and has learned a hundred tricks and _agaceries_ of which my
+little friend of seven or eight knew nothing. I grant you were not a
+quarter so charming, but you were, I am afraid--more true."
+
+Geraldine was ready to cry, but she was in a passion, nevertheless; such
+a hot and short-lived passion as all women of any spirit can go into on
+occasion, when they are unjustly suspected.
+
+"If you choose to think so of me you may," she said, with immeasurable
+hauteur, sweeping away from him, her mauve ribbons fluttering
+disdainfully. "I, for one, shall not try to undeceive you."
+
+The next night we all went up to a ball at the Vanes', to drink Rhenish,
+eat ices, quiz the women, flirt with the pretty ones in corners, lounge
+against doorways, criticise the feet in the waltzing as they passed us,
+and do, in fact, anything but what we went to do--dance,--according to
+our custom in such scenes.
+
+The Swan and her Cygnets looked very stunning; they "made up well," as
+ladies say when they cannot deny that another is good-looking, but
+qualify your admiration by an assurance that she is shockingly plain in
+the morning, and owes all to her milliner and maids. Geraldine, who, by
+the greatest stretch of scepticism, could not be supposed "made up," was
+bewitching, with her sunshiny enjoyment of everything, and her untiring
+waltzing, going for all the world like a spinning-top, only a top tires,
+and she did not. Belle, who made a principle of never dancing except
+under extreme coercion by a very pretty hostess, could not resist her,
+and Tom Gower, and Little Nell, and all the rest, not to mention half
+Norfolk, crowded round her; all except Fairlie, who leaned against the
+doorway, seeming to talk to her father or the members, or anybody near,
+but watching the young lady for all that, who flirted not a little,
+having in her mind the scene in the paddock of yesterday, and wishing,
+perhaps, to show him that if he did not admire her more than when she
+was eight, other men had better taste.
+
+She managed to come near him towards the end of the evening, sending
+Belle to get her an ice.
+
+"Well," she said, with a comical _pitie d'elle-meme_, "do you dislike me
+so much that you don't mean to dance with me at all? Not a single waltz
+all night?"
+
+"What time have you had to give me?" said Fairlie, coldly. "You have
+been surrounded all the evening."
+
+"Of course I have. I am not so disagreeable to other gentlemen as I am
+to you. But I could have made time for you if you had only asked for it.
+At your own ball last week you engaged me beforehand for six waltzes."
+
+Fairlie relented towards her. Despite her flirting, he thought she did
+not care for Belle after all.
+
+"Well," he said, smiling, "will you give me one after supper?"
+
+"You told me you shouldn't dance, Colonel Fairlie," said Katherine Vane,
+smiling.
+
+"One can't tell what one mayn't do under temptation," said Fairlie,
+smiling too. "A man may change his mind, you know."
+
+"Oh yes," cried Geraldine; "a man may change his mind, and we are
+expected to be eminently grateful to him for his condescension; but if
+_we_ change our minds, how severely we are condemned for vacillation:
+'So weak!' 'Just like women!' 'Never like the same thing two minutes,
+poor things!'"
+
+"You don't like the same thing two minutes, Geraldine," laughed Fairlie;
+"so I dare say you speak feelingly."
+
+"I changeable! I am constancy itself!"
+
+"Are you? You know what the Italians say of 'ocche azzure'?"
+
+"But I don't believe it, monsieur!" cried Geraldine:
+
+ "Blue eyes beat black fifty to seven,
+ For black's of hell, but blue's of heaven!"
+
+"I beg your pardon, mademoiselle," laughed Fairlie:
+
+ "Done, by the odds, it is not true!
+ One devil's black, but scores are blue!"
+
+He whirled her off into the circle in the midst of our laughter at their
+ready wit. Soon after he bid her good night, but he found time to
+whisper as he did so.
+
+"You are more like _my_ little Geraldine to-night!"
+
+The look he got made him determine to make her his little Geraldine
+before much more time had passed. At least he drove us back to Norwich
+in what seemed very contented silence, for he smoked tranquilly, and let
+the horses go their own pace--two certain indications that a man has
+pleasant thoughts to accompany him.
+
+I do not think he listened to Belle's, and Gower's, and my conversation,
+not even when Belle took his weed out of his mouth and announced the
+important fact: "Hardinge! my ten guineas, if you please. I've had a
+letter!"
+
+"What! an answer? By Jove!"
+
+"Of course, an answer. I tell you all the pretty women in the city will
+know my initials, and send after me. I only hope they _will_ be pretty,
+and then one may have a good deal of fun. I was in at Greene's this
+morning having mock-turtle, and talking to Patty (she's not bad-looking,
+that little girl, only she drops her 'h's' so. I'm like that
+fellow--what's his name?--in the 'Peau de Chagrin:' I don't admire my
+loves in cotton prints), when she gave me the letter. I left it on my
+dressing-table, but you can see it to-morrow. It's a horrid red
+daubed-looking seal, and no crest; but that she mightn't use for fear of
+being found out, and the writing is disguised, but that it would be. She
+_says_ she has the three requisites; but where's the woman that don't
+think herself Sappho and Galatea combined? And she was nineteen last
+March. Poor little devil! she little thinks how she'll be done. I'm to
+meet her on the Yarmouth road at two, and to look out for a lady
+standing by the first milestone. Shall we go, Tom? It may lead to
+something amusing, you know, though certainly it won't lead to
+marriage."
+
+"Oh! we'll go, old fellow," said I. "Deuce take you, Belle! what a lucky
+fellow you are with the women."
+
+"Luckier than I want to be," yawned Belle. "It's a horrid bore to be so
+set upon. One may have too much of a good thing, you know."
+
+At two the day after, having refreshed ourselves with a light luncheon
+at Mrs. Greene's of lobster-salad and pale ale, Belle, Gower, and I
+buttoned our gloves and rode leisurely up the road.
+
+"How my heart palpitates!" said Belle, stroking his moustaches with a
+bored air. "How can I tell, you know, but what I may be going to see the
+arbiter of my destiny? Men have been tricked into all sorts of
+tomfoolery by their compassionate feelings. And then--if she should
+squint or have a turn-up nose! Good Heavens, what a fearful idea! I've
+often wondered when I've seen men with ugly wives how they could have
+been cheated into taking 'em; they couldn't have done it in their
+senses, you know, nor yet with their eyes open. You may depend they took
+'em to church in a state of coma from chloroform. 'Pon my word, I feel
+quite nervous. You don't think the girl will have a parson and a
+register hid behind the milestone, do you?"
+
+"If she should, it won't be legal without a license, thanks to the fools
+who turn Hymen into a tax-gatherer, and won't let a fellow make love
+without he asks leave of the Archbishop of Canterbury," said Gower.
+"Hallo, Belle, here's the milestone, but where's the lady?"
+
+"Virgin modesty makes her unpunctual," said Belle, putting up his
+eye-glass.
+
+"Hang modesty!" swore Tom. "It's past two, and we left a good quarter of
+that salad uneaten. Confound her!"
+
+"There are no signs of her," said I. "Did she tell you her dress,
+Belle?"
+
+"Not a syllable about it; only mentioned a milestone, and one might have
+found a market-woman sitting on that."
+
+"Hallo! here's something feminine. Oh, good gracious! this can't be it,
+it's got a brown stuff dress on, and a poke straw bonnet and a green
+veil. No, no, Belle. If you married her, that _would_ be a case of
+chloroform."
+
+But the horrible brown stuff came sidling along the road with that
+peculiar step belonging to ladies of a certain age, characterized by
+Patty Greene as "tipputting," sweeping up the dust with its horrible
+folds, making straight _en route_ for Belle, who was standing a little
+in advance of us. Nineteen! Good Heavens! she must have been fifty if
+she was a day, and under her green veil was a chestnut front--yes,
+decidedly a front--and a face yellow as a Canadian's, and wrinkled as
+Madame Pipelet's, made infinitely worse by that sweet maiden simper and
+assumed juvenility common to _vieilles filles_. Up she came towards poor
+Belle, who involuntarily retreated step by step till he had backed
+against the milestone, and could get no farther, while she smiled up in
+his handsome face, and he stared down in her withered one, with the most
+comical expression of surprise, dismay, and horror that had ever
+appeared on our "beauty's" impassive features.
+
+"Are you--the--the--L. C.?" demanded the maiden of ten lustres, casting
+her eyes to the ground with virgin modesty.
+
+"L. C. ar----My dear madam, I don't quite understand you," faltered
+Belle, taken aback for once in his life.
+
+"Was it not you," faltered the fair one, shaking out a
+pocket-handkerchief that sent a horrible odor of musk to the olfactory
+nerves of poor Belle, most fastidious connoisseur in perfume, "who
+advertised for a kindred heart and sympathetic soul?"
+
+"Really, my good lady," began Belle, still too aghast by the chestnut
+front to recover his self-possession.
+
+"Because," simpered his inamorata, too agitated by her own feelings to
+hear his horrible appellative, keeping him at bay there with the fatal
+milestone behind him and the awful brown stuff in front of him--"because
+I, too, have desired to meet with some elective affinity, some
+spirit-tie that might give me all those more subtle sympathies which can
+never be found in the din and bustle of the heartless world; I, too,
+have pined for the objects of your search--love and domestic happiness.
+Oh, blessed words, surely we might--might we not?----"
+
+She paused, overcome with maidenly confusion, and buried her face in the
+musk-scented handkerchief. Tom and I, where we stood _perdus_, burst
+into uncontrollable shouts of laughter. Poor Belle gave one blank look
+of utter terror at the _tout ensemble_ of brown stuff, straw poke, and
+chestnut front. He forgot courtesy, manners, and everything else; his
+lips were parted, with his small white teeth glancing under his silky
+moustaches, his sleepy eyes were open wide, and as the maiden lady
+dropped her handkerchief, and gave him what she meant to be the softest
+and most tender glance, he turned straight round, sprang on his bay, and
+rushed down the Yarmouth road as if the whole of the dignitaries of the
+church and law were tearing after him to force him _nolens volens_ into
+carrying out the horrible promise in his cursed line in the _Daily_.
+What was Tom's and my amazement to see the maiden lady seat herself
+astride on the milestone, and join her cachinnatory shouts to ours,
+fling her green veil into a hawthorn tree, jerk her bonnet into our
+faces, kick off her brown stuff into the middle of the road, tear off
+her chestnut front and yellow mask, and perform a frantic war-dance on
+the roadside turf. No less a person than that mischievous monkey and
+inimitable mimic Little Nell!
+
+"You young demon!" shouted Gower, shrieking with laughter till he cried.
+"A pretty fellow you are to go tricking your senior officer like this.
+You little imp, how can you tell but what I shall court-martial you
+to-morrow?"
+
+"No, no, you won't!" cried Little Nell, pursuing his frantic dance.
+"Wasn't it prime? wasn't it glorious? wasn't it worth the Kohinoor to
+see? You won't go and peach, when I've just given you a better farce
+than all old Buckstone's? By Jove! Belle's face at my chestnut front!
+This'll be one of his prime conquests, eh? I say, old fellows, when
+Charles Mathews goes to glory, don't you think I might take his place,
+and beat him hollow, too?"
+
+When we got back to barracks, we found Belle prostrate on his sofa,
+heated, injured, crestfallen, solacing himself with Seltzer-and-water,
+and swearing away anything but mildly at that "wretched old woman." He
+bound us over to secrecy, which, with Little Nell's confidence in our
+minds, we naturally promised. Poor Belle! to have been made a fool of
+before two was humiliation more than sufficient for our all-conquering
+_blondin_. For one who had so often refused to stir across a ball-room
+to look at a Court beauty, to have ridden out three miles to see an old
+maid of fifty with a chestnut front! The insult sank deep into his soul,
+and threw him into an abject melancholy, which hung over him all through
+mess, and was not dissipated till a letter came to him from Mrs.
+Greene's, when we were playing loo in Fairlie's room. That night Fairlie
+was in gay spirits. He had called at Fern Chase that morning, and though
+he had not been able to see Geraldine alone, he had passed a pleasant
+couple of hours there, playing pool with her and her sisters, and had
+been as good friends as ever with his old playmate.
+
+"Well, Belle," said he, feeling good-natured even with him that night,
+"did you get any good out of your advertisement? Did your lady turn out
+a very pretty one?"
+
+"No: deuced ugly, like the generality," yawned poor Belle, giving me a
+kick to remind me of my promise. Little Nell was happily about the city
+somewhere with Pretty Face, or the boy would scarcely have kept his
+countenance.
+
+"What amusement you can find in hoaxing silly women," said Fairlie, "is
+incomprehensible to me. However, men's tastes differ, happily. Here
+comes another epistle for you, Belle; perhaps there's better luck for
+you there."
+
+"Oh! I shall have no end of letters. I sha'n't answer any more. I think
+it's such a deuced trouble. Diamonds trumps, eh?" said Belle, laying the
+note down till he should have leisure to attend to it. Poor old fellow!
+I dare say he was afraid of another onslaught from maiden ladies.
+
+"Come, Belle," said Glenville; "come, Belle, open your letter; we're all
+impatience. If you won't go, I will in your place."
+
+"Do, my dear fellow. Take care you're not pounced down upon by a
+respectable papa for intentions, or called to account by a fierce
+brother with a stubby beard," said Belle, lazily taking up the letter.
+As he did so, the melancholy indolence on his face changed to eagerness.
+
+"The deuce! the Vane crest!"
+
+"A note of invitation, probably?" suggested Gower.
+
+"Would they send an invitation to Patty Greene's? I tell you it's
+addressed to L. C.," said Belle, disdainfully, opening the letter,
+leaving its giant deer couchant intact. "I thought it very likely; I
+expected it, indeed--poor little dear! I oughtn't to have let it out.
+Ain't you jealous, old fellows? Little darling! Perhaps I may be tricked
+into matrimony after all. I'd rather a presentiment that advertisement
+would come to something. There, you may all look at it, if you like."
+
+It was a dainty sheet of scented cream-laid, stamped with the deer
+couchant, such as had brought us many an invitation down from Fern
+Chase, and on it was written, in delicate caligraphy:
+
+"G. V. understands the meaning of the advertisement, and will meet L. C.
+at the entrance of Fern Wood, at eleven o'clock to-morrow morning."
+
+There was a dead silence as we read it; then a tremendous buzz. Cheaply
+as we held women, I don't think there was one of us who wasn't surprised
+at Geraldine's doing any clandestine thing like this. He sat with a look
+of indolent triumph, curling his perfumed moustaches, and looking at the
+little autograph, which gave us evidence of what he often
+boasted--Geraldine Vane's regard.
+
+"Let me look at your note," said Fairlie, stretching out his hand.
+
+He soon returned it, with a brief, "Very complimentary indeed!"
+
+When the men left, I chanced to be last, having mislaid my cigar-case.
+As I looked about for it, Fairlie addressed me in the same brief, stern
+tone between his teeth with which he spoke to Belle.
+
+"Hardinge, you made this absurd bet with Courtenay, did you not? Is this
+note a hoax upon him?"
+
+"Not that I know of--it doesn't look like it. You see there is the Vane
+crest, and the girl's own initials."
+
+"Very true." He turned round to the window again, and leaned against it,
+looking out into the dawn, with a look upon his face that I was very
+sorry to see.
+
+"But it is not like Geraldine," I began. "It may be a trick. Somebody
+may have stolen their paper and crest--it's possible. I tell you what
+I'll do to find out; I'll follow Belle to-morrow, and see who does meet
+him in Fern Wood."
+
+"Do," said Fairlie, eagerly. Then he checked himself, and went on
+tapping an impatient tattoo on the shutter. "You see, I have known the
+family for years--known her when she was a little child. I should be
+sorry to think that one of them could be capable of such----"
+
+Despite his self-command he could not finish his sentence. Geraldine was
+a great deal too dear to him to be treated in seeming carelessness, or
+spoken lightly of, however unwisely she might act. I found my
+cigar-case. His laconic "Good night!" told me he would rather be alone,
+so I closed the door and left him.
+
+The morning was as sultry and as clear as a July day could be when Belle
+lounged down the street, looking the perfection of a gentleman, a trifle
+less bored and _blase_ than ordinary, _en route_ to his appointment at
+Fern Wood (a sequestered part of the Vane estate), where trees and
+lilies of the valley grew wild, and where the girls were accustomed to
+go for picnics or sketching. As soon as he had turned a corner, Gower
+and I turned it too, and with perseverance worthy a better cause, Tom
+and I followed Belle in and out and down the road which led to Fern
+Wood--a flat, dusty, stony two miles--on which, in the blazing noon of a
+hot midsummer day, nothing short of Satanic coercion, or love of
+Geraldine Vane, would have induced our beauty to immolate himself, and
+expose his delicate complexion.
+
+"I bet you anything, Tom," said I, confidently, "that this is a hoax,
+like yesterday's. Geraldine will no more meet Belle there than all the
+Ordnance Office."
+
+"Well, we shall see," responded Gower. "Somebody might get the
+note-paper from the bookseller, and the crest seal through the servants,
+but they'll hardly get Geraldine there bodily against her will."
+
+We waited at the entrance of the wood, shrouded ourselves in the wild
+hawthorn hedges, while we could still see Belle--of course we did not
+mean to be near enough to overhear him--who paced up and down the green
+alleys under the firs and larches, rendered doubly dark by the
+evergreens, brambles, and honeysuckles,
+
+ which, ripened by the sun,
+ Forbade the sun to enter.
+
+He paced up and down there a good ten minutes, prying about with his
+eye-glass, but unable to see very far in the tangled boughs, and heavy
+dusky light of the untrimmed wood. Then there was the flutter of
+something azure among the branches, and Gower gave vent to a low whistle
+of surprise.
+
+"By George, Hardinge! there's Geraldine! Well! I didn't think she'd have
+done it. You see they're all alike if they get the opportunity."
+
+It _was_ Geraldine herself--it was her fluttering muslin, her abundant
+folds, her waving ribbons, her tiny sailor hat, and her little veil, and
+under the veil her face, with its delicate tinting, its pencilled
+eyebrows, and its undulating bright-colored hair. There was no doubt
+about it: it was Geraldine. I vow I was as sorry to have to tell it to
+Fairlie as if I'd had to tell him she was dead, for I knew how it would
+cut him to the heart to know not only that she had given herself to his
+rival, but that his little playmate, whom he had thought truth, and
+honesty, and daylight itself, should have stooped to a clandestine
+interview arranged through an advertisement! Their retreating figures
+were soon lost in the dim woodland, and Tom and I turned to retrace our
+steps.
+
+"No doubt about it now, old fellow?" quoth Gower.
+
+"No, confound her!" swore I.
+
+"Confound her? _Et pourquoi!_ Hasn't she a right to do what she likes?"
+
+"Of course she has, the cursed little flirt; but she'd no earthly
+business to go making such love to Fairlie. It's a rascally shame, and I
+don't care if I tell her so myself."
+
+"She'll only say you're in love with her too," was Gower's sensible
+response. "I'm not surprised myself. I always said she was an
+out-and-out coquette."
+
+I met Fairlie coming out of his room as I went up to mine. He looked as
+men will look when they have not been in bed all night, and have watched
+the sun up with painful thoughts for their companions.
+
+"You have been----" he began; then stopped short, unwilling or unable to
+put the question into words.
+
+"After Belle? Yes. It is no hoax, Geraldine met him herself."
+
+I did not relish telling him, and therefore told it, in all probability,
+bluntly and blunderingly--tact, like talk, having, they say, been given
+to women. A spasm passed over his face. "_Herself!_" he echoed. Until
+then I do not think he had realized it as even possible.
+
+"Yes, there was no doubt about it. What a wretched little coquette she
+must have been; she always seemed to make such game of Belle----"
+
+But Fairlie, saying something about his gloves that he had left behind,
+had gone back into his room again before I had half done my sentence.
+When Belle came back, about half an hour afterwards, with an affected
+air of triumph, and for once in his life of languid sensations really
+well contented, Gower and I poured questions upon him, as, done up with
+the toil of his dusty walk, and horrified to find himself so low-bred as
+to be hot, he kicked off his varnished boots, imbibed Seltzer, and
+fanned himself with a periodical before he could find breath to answer
+us.
+
+"Was it Geraldine?"
+
+"Of course it was Geraldine," he said, yawning.
+
+"And will she marry you, Belle?"
+
+"To be sure she will. I should like to see the woman that wouldn't,"
+responded Belle, shutting his eyes and nestling down among the cushions.
+"And what's more, I've been fool enough to let her make me ask her. Give
+me some more sherry, Phil; a man wants support under such circumstances.
+The deuce if I'm not as hot as a ploughboy! It was very cruel of her to
+call a fellow out with the sun at the meridian; she might as well have
+chosen twilight. But, I say, you fellows, keep the secret, will you? she
+don't want her family to get wind of it, because they're bothering her
+to marry that old cove, Mount Trefoil, with his sixty years and his
+broad acres, and wouldn't let her take anybody else if they knew it;
+she's under age, you see."
+
+"But how did she know you were L. C.?"
+
+"Fairlie told her, and the dear little vain thing immediately thought it
+was an indirect proposal to herself, and answered it; of course I didn't
+undeceive her. She _raffoles_ of me--it'll be almost too much of a good
+thing, I'm afraid. She's deuced prudish, too, much more than I should
+have thought _she_'d have been; but I vow she'd only let me kiss her
+hand, and that was gloved."
+
+"I hate prudes," said Gower; "they've always much more devilry than the
+open-hearted ones. Videlicet--here's your young lady stiff enough only
+to give you her hand to kiss, and yet she'll lower herself to a
+clandestine correspondence and stolen interviews--a condescension I
+don't think I should admire in _my_ wife."
+
+"Love, my dear fellow, oversteps all--what d'ye call 'em?--boundaries,"
+said Belle, languidly. "What a bore! I shall never be able to wear this
+coat again, it's so ingrained with dust; little puss, why didn't she
+wait till it was cooler?"
+
+"Did you fix your marriage-day?" asked Tom, rather contemptuously.
+
+"Yes, I was very weak!" sighed Belle; "but you see she's uncommonly
+pretty, and there's Mount Trefoil and lots of men, and, I fancy, that
+dangerous fellow Fairlie, after her; so we hurried matters. We've been
+making love to one another all these three months, you know, and fixed
+it so soon as Thursday week. Of course she blushed, and sighed, and put
+her handkerchief to her eyes, and all the rest of it, _en regle_; but
+she consented, and I'm to be sacrificed. But not a word about it, my
+dear fellows! The Vanes are to be kept in profoundest darkness, and, to
+lull suspicion, I'm not to go there scarcely at all until then, and when
+I do, she'll let me know when she will be out, and I'm to call on her
+mother then. She'll write to me, and put the letters in a hollow tree in
+the wood, where I'm to leave my answers, or, rather, send 'em; catch me
+going over that road again! Don't give me joy, old boys. I know I'm
+making a holocaust of myself, but deuce take me if I can help it--she is
+so deuced pretty!"
+
+Fairlie was not at mess that night. Nobody knew where he was. I learnt,
+long months afterwards, that as soon as I had told him of Geraldine's
+identity, he, still thirsting to disbelieve, reluctant to condemn,
+catching at straws to save his idol from being shattered as men in love
+will do, had thrown himself across his horse and torn off to Fern Dell
+to see whether or no Geraldine was at home.
+
+His heart beat faster and thicker as he entered the drawing-room than it
+had done before the lines at Ferozeshah, or in the giant semicircle at
+Sobraon; it stood still as in the far end of the room, lying back on a
+low chair, sat Geraldine, her gloves and sailor hat lying on her lap.
+She sprang up to welcome him with her old gay smile.
+
+"Good God! that a child like that can be such an accomplished actress!"
+thought Fairlie, as he just touched her hand.
+
+"Have you been out to-day?" he asked suddenly.
+
+"You see I have."
+
+"Prevarication is conviction," thought Fairlie, with a deadly chill over
+him.
+
+"Where did you go, love?" asked mamma.
+
+"To see Adela Ferrers; she is not well, you know, and I came home
+through part of the wood to gather some of the anemones; I don't mean
+anemones, they are over--lilies of the valley."
+
+She spoke hurriedly, glancing at Fairlie all the time, who never took
+his iron gaze off her, though all the beauty and glory was draining away
+from his life with every succeeding proof that stared him in the face
+with its cruel evidence.
+
+At that minute Lady Vane was called from the room to give some
+directions to her head gardener about some flowers, over which she was
+particularly choice, and Fairlie and Geraldine were left in dead
+silence, with only the ticking of the timepiece and the chirrup of the
+birds outside the open windows to break its heavy monotony.
+
+Fairlie bent over a spaniel, rolling the dog backwards and forwards on
+the rug.
+
+Geraldine stood on the rug, her head on one side in her old pretty
+attitude of plaintiveness and defiance, the bright sunshine falling
+round her and playing on her gay dress and fair hair--a tableau lost
+upon the Colonel, who though he had risen too, was playing sedulously
+with the dog.
+
+"Colonel Fairlie, what is the matter with you? How unkind you are
+to-day!"
+
+Fairlie was roused at last, disgusted that so young a girl could be so
+accomplished a liar and actress, sick at heart that he had been so
+deceived, mad with jealousy, and that devil in him sent courtesy flying
+to the winds.
+
+"Pardon me, Miss Vane, you waste your coquetteries on me. Unhappily, I
+know their value, and am not likely to be duped by them."
+
+Geraldine's face flushed as deep a rose hue as the geraniums nodding
+their heads in at the windows.
+
+"Coquetteries?--duped? What do you mean?"
+
+"You know well enough what. All I warn you is, never try them again on
+me--never come near me any more with your innocent smiles and your lying
+lips, or, by Heaven, Geraldine Vane, I may say what I think of you in
+plainer words than suit the delicacy of a lady's ears!"
+
+Geraldine's eyes flashed fire; from rose-hued as the geraniums she
+changed to the dead white of the Guelder roses beside them.
+
+"Colonel Fairlie, you are mad, I think! If you only came here to insult
+me----"
+
+"I had better leave? I agree with you. Good morning."
+
+Wherewith Fairlie took his hat and whip, bowed himself out, and,
+throwing himself across his horse, tore away many miles beyond Norwich,
+I should say, and rode into the stable-yard at twelve o'clock that
+night, his horse with every hair wringing and limb trembling at the
+headlong pace he had been ridden; such a midnight gallop as only
+Mazeppa, or a Border rider, or Turpin racing for his life, or a man
+vainly seeking to leave behind him some pursuing ghost of memory or
+passion, ever took before.
+
+We saw little of him for the next few days. Luckily for him, he was
+employed to purchase several strings of Suffolk horses for the corps,
+and he rode about the country a good deal, and went over to Newmarket,
+and to the Bury horse fair, inspecting the cattle, glad, I dare say, of
+an excuse to get away.
+
+"I feel nervous, terribly nervous; do give me the Seltzer and hock, Tom.
+They wonder at the fellows asking for beer before their execution. I
+don't; and if a fellow wants it to keep his spirits up before he's
+hanged, he may surely want it before he's married, for one's a swing and
+a crash, and it's all over and done most likely before you've time to
+know anything about it; but the other you walk into so deliberately,
+superintend the sacrifice of yourself, as it were, like that old cove
+Seneca; feel yourself rolling down-hill like Regulus, with all the
+horrid nails of the 'domesticities' pricking you in every corner; see
+life ebbing away from you; all the sunshine of life, as poets have it,
+fading, sweetly but surely, from your grasp, and Death, _alias_ the
+Matrimonial Black Cap, coming down ruthlessly on your devoted heads. I
+feel low--shockingly low. Pass me the Seltzer, Tom, do!"
+
+So spake Geraldine's _sposo_ that was to be, on the evening before his
+marriage-day, lying on his sofa in his Cashmere dressing-gown, his gold
+embroidered slippers, and his velvet smoking-cap, puffing largely at his
+meerschaum, and unbosoming his private sentiments and emotions to the
+(on this score) sufficiently sympathetic listeners, Gower and I.
+
+"I don't pity you!" said Tom, contemptuously, who had as much disdain
+for a man who married as for one who bought gooseberry for champagne, or
+Cape for comet hock, and did not know the difference--"I don't pity you
+one bit. You've put the curb on yourself; you can't complain if you get
+driven where you don't like."
+
+"But, my dear fellow, _can_ one help it?" expostulated Belle,
+pathetically. "When a little winning, bewitching, attractive little
+animal like that takes you in hand, and traps you as you catch a pony,
+holding out a sieve of oats, and coaxing you, and so-ho-ing you till
+she's fairly got the bridle over your head, and the bit between your
+teeth, what is a man to do?"
+
+"Remember that as soon as the bit is in your mouth, she'll never trouble
+herself to give you any oats, or so-ho you softly any more, but will
+take the whip hand of you, and not let you have the faintest phantom of
+a will of your own ever again," growled the misogamistic Tom.
+
+"Catch a man's remembering while it's any use," was Belle's very true
+rejoinder. "After he's put his hand to a little bill, he'll remember
+it's a very green thing to do, but he don't often remember it before, I
+fancy. No, in things like this, one can't help one's self; one's time is
+come, and one goes down before fate. If anybody had told me that I
+should go as spooney about any woman as I have about that little girl
+Geraldine, I'd have given 'em the lie direct; I would, indeed! But then
+she made such desperate love to me, took such a deuced fancy to me, you
+see: else, after all, the women _I_ might have chosen----By George! I
+wonder what Lady Con, and the little Bosanquet, and poor Honoria, and
+all the rest of 'em will say?"
+
+"What?" said Gower; "say 'Poor dear fellow!' to you, and 'Poor girl, I
+pity her!' to your wife. So you're going to elope with Miss Geraldine? A
+man's generally too ready to marry his daughters, to force a fellow to
+carry them off by stealth. Besides, as Bulwer says somewhere,
+'_Gentlemen_ don't run away with the daughters of gentlemen.'"
+
+"Pooh, nonsense! all's fair in love or war," returned Belle, going into
+the hock and Seltzer to keep up his spirits. "You see, she's afraid, her
+governor's mind being so set on old Mount Trefoil and his baron's
+coronet; they might offer some opposition, put it off till she was
+one-and-twenty, you know--and she's so distractedly fond of me, poor
+little thing, that she'd die under the probation, probably--and I'm sure
+I couldn't keep faithful to her for two mortal years. Besides, there's
+something amusing in eloping; the excitement of it keeps up one's
+spirits; whereas, if I were marched to church with so many mourners--I
+mean groomsmen--I should feel I was rehearsing my own obsequies like
+Charles V., and should funk it, ten to one I should. No! I like eloping:
+it gives the certain flavor of forbidden fruit, which many things,
+besides pure water, want to 'give them a relish.'"
+
+"Let's see how's the thing to be managed?" asked Gower. "Beyond telling
+me I was to go with you, consigned ignominiously to the rumble, to
+witness the ceremony, I'm not very clear as to the programme."
+
+"Why, as soon as it's dawn," responded Belle, with leisurely whiffs of
+his meerschaum, "I'm to take the carriage up to the gate at Fern
+Wood--this is what she tells me in her last note; she was coming to meet
+me, but just as she was dressed her mother took her to call on some
+people, and she had to resort to the old hollow tree. The deuce is in
+it, I think, to prevent our meeting; if it weren't for the letters and
+her maid, we should have been horribly put to it for communication;--I'm
+to take the carriage, as I say, and drive up there, where she and her
+maid will be waiting. We drive away, of course, catch the 8.15 train,
+and cut off to town, and get married at the Regeneration, Piccadilly,
+where a fellow I know very well will act the priestly Calcraft. The
+thing that bothers me most of all is getting up so early. I used to hate
+it so awfully when I was a young one at the college. I like to have my
+bath, and my coffee, and my paper leisurely, and saunter through my
+dressing, and get up when the day's _warmed_ for me. Early parade's one
+of the crying cruelties of the service; I always turn in again after it,
+and regard it as a hideous nightmare. I vow I couldn't give a greater
+test of my devotion than by getting up at six o'clock to go after
+her--deuced horrible exertion! I'm quite certain that my linen won't be
+aired, nor my coffee fit to drink, nor Perkins with his eyes half open,
+nor a quarter of his wits about him. Six o'clock! By George! nothing
+should get me up at that unearthly hour except my dear, divine,
+delicious little demon Geraldine! But she's so deuced fond of me, one
+must make sacrifices for such a little darling."
+
+With which sublimely unselfish and heroic sentiment the bridegroom-elect
+drank the last of his hock and Seltzer, took his pipe out of his lips,
+flung his smoking-cap lazily on to his Skye's head, who did not relish
+the attention, and rose languidly to get into his undress in time for
+mess.
+
+As Belle had to get up so frightfully early in the morning, he did not
+think it worth while to go to bed at all, but asked us all to
+vingt-et-un in his room, where, with the rattle of half-sovereigns and
+the flow of rum-punch, kept up his courage before the impending doom of
+matrimony. Belle was really in love with Geraldine, but in love in his
+own particular way, and consoled himself for his destiny and her absence
+by what I dare say seems to mademoiselle, fresh from her perusal of
+"Aurora Leigh" or "Lucille," very material comforters indeed. But, if
+truth were told, I am afraid mademoiselle would find, save that from one
+or two fellows here and there, who go in for love as they go in for
+pig-sticking or tiger-hunting, with all their might and main, wagering
+even their lives in the sport, the Auroras and Lucilles are very apt to
+have their charms supplanted by the points of a favorite, their absence
+made endurable by the aroma of Turkish tobacco, and their last fond
+admonishing words, spoken with such persuasive caresses under the
+moonlight and the limes, against those "horrid cards, love," forgotten
+that very night under the glare of gas, while the hands that lately held
+their own so tenderly, clasp wellnigh with as much affection the
+unprecedented luck "two honors and five trumps!"
+
+ Man's love is of man's life a thing apart.
+
+Byron was right; and if we go no deeper, how can it well be otherwise,
+when we have our stud, our pipe, our Pytchley, our Newmarket, our club,
+our coulisses, our Mabille, and our Epsom, and they--oh, Heaven help
+them!--have no distraction but a needle or a novel! The Fates forbid
+that our _agremens_ should be _less_, but I dare say, if they had a vote
+in it, they'd try to get a trifle _more_. So Belle put his "love apart,"
+to keep (or to rust, whichever you please) till six A. M. that morning,
+when, having by dint of extreme physical exertion got himself dressed,
+saw his valet pack his things with the keenest anxiety relative to the
+immaculate folding of his coats and the safe repose of his shirts, and
+at last was ready to go and fetch the bride his line in the _Daily_ had
+procured him.
+
+As Belle went down the stairs with Gower, who should come too, with his
+gun in his hand, his cap over his eyes, and a pointer following close at
+his heels, but Fairlie, going out to shoot over a friend's manor.
+
+Of course he knew that Belle had asked for and obtained leave for a
+couple of months, but he had never heard for what purpose; and possibly,
+as he saw him at such an unusual hour, going out, not in his usual
+travelling guise of a wide-awake and a Maude, but with a delicate
+lavender tie and a toilet of the most unexceptionable art, the purport
+of his journey flashed fully on his mind, for his face grew as fixed and
+unreadable as if he had had on the iron mask. Belle, guessing as he did
+that Fairlie would not have disliked to have been in his place that
+morning, was too kind-hearted and infinitely too much of a gentleman to
+hint at his own triumph. He laughed, and nodded a good morning.
+
+"Off early, you see, Fairlie; going to make the most of my leave.
+'Tisn't very often we can get one; our corps is deuced stiff and strict
+compared to the Guards and the Cavalry."
+
+"At least our strictness keeps us from such disgraceful scenes as some
+of the other regiments have shown up of late," answered Fairlie between
+his teeth.
+
+"Ah! well, perhaps so; still, strictness ain't pleasant, you know, when
+one's the victim."
+
+"Certainly not."
+
+"And, therefore, we should never be hard upon others."
+
+"I perfectly agree with you."
+
+"There's a good fellow. Well, I must be off; I've no time for
+philosophizing. Good-bye, Colonel."
+
+"Good-bye--a safe journey."
+
+But I noticed that he held the dog's collar in one hand and the gun in
+the other, so as to have an excuse for not offering that _poignee de
+main_ which ought to be as sure a type of friendship, and as safe a
+guarantee for good faith, as the Bedouin Arab's salt.
+
+Belle nodded him a farewell, and lounged down the steps and into the
+carriage, just as Fairlie's man brought his mare round.
+
+Fairlie turned on to me with unusual fierceness, for generally he was
+very calm, and gentle, and impassive in manner.
+
+"Where is he gone?"
+
+I could not help but tell him, reluctant though I was, for I guessed
+pretty well what it would cost him to hear it. He did not say one word
+while I told him, but bent over Marquis, drawing the dog's leash
+tighter, so that I might not see his face, and without a sign or a reply
+he was out of the barracks, across his mare's back, and rushing away at
+a mad gallop, as if he would leave thought, and memory, and the curse of
+love for a worthless woman behind him for ever.
+
+His man stood looking at the gun Fairlie had thrown to him with a
+puzzled expression.
+
+"Is the Colonel gone mad?" I heard him say to himself. "The devil's in
+it, I think. He used to treat his things a little carefuller than this.
+As I live, he's been and gone and broke the trigger?"
+
+The devil wasn't in it, but a woman _was_, an individual that causes as
+much mischief as any Asmodeus, Belphegor, or Mephistopheles. Some fair
+unknown correspondents assured me the other day, in a letter, that my
+satire on women was "a monstrous libel." All I can say is, that if it
+_be_ a libel, it is like many a one for which one pays the highest, and
+which sounds the blackest--a libel that is _true_!
+
+While his rival rode away as recklessly as though he was riding for his
+life, the gallant bridegroom--as the _Court Circular_ would have
+it--rolled on his way to Fern Wood, while Gower, very amiably occupying
+the rumble, smoked, and bore his position philosophically, comforted by
+the recollection that Geraldine's French maid was an uncommonly
+good-looking, coquettish little person.
+
+They rolled on, and speedily the postilion pulled up, according to
+order, before the white five-bar gate, its paint blistering in the hot
+summer dawn, and the great fern-leaves and long grass clinging up round
+its posts, still damp with the six o'clock dew. Five minutes passed--ten
+minutes--a quarter of an hour. Poor Belle got impatient. Twenty
+minutes--five-and-twenty--thirty. Belle couldn't stand it. He began to
+pace up and down the turf, soiling his boots frightfully with the long
+wet grass, and rejecting all Tom's offers of consolation and a
+cigar-case.
+
+"Confound it!" cried poor Belle, piteously, "I thought women were always
+ready to marry. I know, when I went to turn off Lacquers of the Rifles
+at St. George's, his bride had been waiting for him half an hour, and
+was in an awful state of mind, and all the other brides as well, for you
+know they always marry first the girl that gets there first, and all the
+other poor wretches were kept on tenter-hooks too. Lacquers had lost the
+ring, and found it in his waistcoat after all! I say, Tom, devil take
+it, where can she be? It's forty minutes, as I live. We shall lose the
+train, you know. She's never prevented coming, surely. I think she'd let
+me hear, don't you? She could send Justine to me if she couldn't come by
+any wretched chance. Good Heavens, Tom, what shall I do?"
+
+"Wait, and don't worry," was Tom's laconic and common-sense advice;
+about the most irritating probably to a lover's feelings that could
+pretty well be imagined. Belle swore at him in stronger terms than he
+generally exerted himself to use, but was pulled up in the middle of
+them by the sight of Geraldine and Justine, followed by a boy bearing
+his bride's dainty trunks.
+
+On came Geraldine in a travelling-dress; Justine following after her,
+with a brilliant smile, that showed all her white teeth, at "Monsieur
+Torm," for whom she had a very tender friendship, consolidated by
+certain half-sovereigns and French phrases whispered by Gower after his
+dinners at Fern Chase.
+
+Belle met Geraldine with all that tender _empressement_ which he knew
+well how to put into his slightest actions; but the young lady seemed
+already almost to have begun repenting her hasty step. She hung her head
+down, she held a handkerchief to her bright eyes, and to Belle's
+tenderest and most ecstatic whispers she only answered by a convulsive
+pressure of the arm, into which he had drawn her left hand, and a
+half-smothered sob from her heart's depths.
+
+Belle thought it all natural enough under the circumstances. He knew
+women always made a point of impressing upon you that they are making a
+frightful sacrifice for your good when they condescend to accept you,
+and he whispered what tender consolation occurred to him as best fitted
+for the occasion, thanked her, of course, for all the rapture, &c. &c.,
+assured her of his life-long devotion--you know the style--and lifted
+her into the carriage, Geraldine only responding with broken sighs and
+stifled sobs.
+
+The boxes were soon beside Belle's valises, Justine soon beside Gower,
+the postilion cracked his whip over his outsider, Perkins refolded his
+arms, and the carriage rolled down the lane.
+
+Gower was very well contented with his seat in the rumble. Justine was a
+very dainty little Frenchwoman, with the smoothest hair and the whitest
+teeth in the world, and she and "Monsieur Torm" were eminently good
+friends, as I have told you, though to-day she was very coquettish and
+wilful, and laughed _a propos de bottes_ at Gower, say what Chaumiere
+compliments he might.
+
+"Ma chere et charmante petite," expostulated Tom, "tes moues mutines
+sont ravissantes, mais je t'avoue que je prefere tes----"
+
+"Tais-toi, becasse!" cried Justine, giving him a blow with her parasol,
+and going off into what she would have called _eclats de rire_.
+
+"Mais ecoute-moi, Justine," whispered Tom, piqued by her perversity; "je
+raffole de toi! je t'adore, sur ma parole! je----Hallo! what the devil's
+the matter? Good gracious! Deuce take it!"
+
+Well might Tom call on his Satanic Majesty to explain what met his eyes
+as he gave vent to all three ejaculations and maledictions. No less a
+sight than the carriage-door flying violently open, Belle descending
+with a violent impetus, his face crimson, and his hat in his hand,
+clearing the hedge at a bound, plunging up to his ankles in mud on the
+other side of it, and starting across country at the top of his speed,
+rushing frantically straight over the heavy grass-land as if he had just
+escaped from Hanwell, and the whole hue and cry of keepers and policemen
+was let loose at his heels.
+
+"Good Heavens! By Jove! Belle, Belle, I say, stop! Are you mad? What's
+happened? What's the row? I say--the devil!"
+
+But to his coherent but very natural exclamations poor Tom received no
+answer. Justine was screaming with laughter, the postilion was staring,
+Perkins swearing, Belle, flying across the country at express speed,
+rapidly diminishing into a small black dot in the green landscape, while
+from inside the carriage, from Geraldine, from the deserted bride, peals
+of laughter, loud, long, and uproarious, rang out in the summer
+stillness of the early morning.
+
+"By Jupiter! but this is most extraordinary. The deuce is in it. Are
+they both gone stark staring mad?" asked Tom of his Cuba, or the
+blackbirds, or the hedge-cutter afar off, or anything or anybody that
+might turn out so amiable as to solve his problem for him.
+
+No reply being given him, however, Tom could stand it no longer. Down he
+sprang, jerked the door open again, and put his head into the carriage.
+
+"Hallo, old boy, done green, eh? Pity 'tisn't the 1st of April!" cried
+Geraldine, with renewed screams of mirth from the interior.
+
+"Eh? What? What did you say, Miss Vane?" ejaculated Gower, fairly
+staggered by this extraordinary answer of a young girl, a lady, and a
+forsaken bride.
+
+"What did I say, my dear fellow? Why, that you're done most preciously,
+and that I fancy it'll be a deuced long time before your delectable
+friend tries his hand at matrimony again, that's all. Done! oh, by
+George, he is done, and no mistake. Look at me, sir, ain't I a charming
+bride?"
+
+With which elegant language Geraldine took off her hat, pulled down some
+false braids, pushed her hair off her forehead, shook her head like a
+water-dog after a bath, and grinned in Gower's astonished eyes--_not_
+Geraldine, but her twin-brother, Pretty Face!
+
+"Do you know me now, old boy?" asked the Etonian, with demoniacal
+delight,--"do you know me now? Haven't I chiselled him--haven't I
+tricked him--haven't I done him as green as young gooseberries, and as
+brown as that bag? Do you fancy he'll boast of his conquests again, or
+advertise for another wife? So you didn't know how I got Gary Clements,
+of the Ten Bells, to write the letters for me? and Justine to dress me
+in Geraldine's things? You know they always did say they couldn't tell
+her from me; I've proved it now, eh?--rather! Oh, by George, I never had
+a better luck! and not a creature guesses it, not a soul, save Justine,
+Nell, and I! By Jupiter, Gower, if you'd heard that unlucky Belle go on
+swearing devotion interminable, and enough love to stock all Mudie's
+novels! But I never dare let him kiss me, though my beard is down,
+confound it! Oh! what jolly fun it's been, Gower, no words can tell. I
+always said he shouldn't marry her; he'll hardly try to do it now, I
+fancy! What a lark it's been! I couldn't have done it, you know, without
+that spicy little French girl;--she did my hair, and got up my
+crinoline, and stole Geraldine's dress, and tricked me up altogether,
+and carried my notes to the hollow oak, and took all my messages to
+Belle. Oh, Jupiter! what fun it's been! If Belle isn't gone clean out of
+his senses, it's very odd to me. When he was going to kiss me, and
+whispered, 'My dearest, my darling, my wife!' I just took off my hat and
+grinned in his face, and said, 'Ain't this a glorious go? Oh! by
+George, Gower, I think the fun will kill me!'"
+
+And the wicked little dog of an Etonian sank back among the carriage
+cushions stifled with his laughter. Gower staggered backwards against a
+roadside tree, and stood there with his lips parted and his eyes wide
+open, bewildered, more than that cool hand had ever been in all his
+days, by the extraordinary finish of poor Belle's luckless wooing; the
+postilion rolled off his saddle in cachinnatory fits at the little
+monkey's narrative! Perkins, like a soldier as he was, utterly impassive
+to all surrounding circumstances, shouldered a valise and dashed at
+quick march after his luckless master; Justine clapped her plump
+French-gloved fingers with a million ma Fois! and mon Dieus! and O
+Ciels! and far away in the gray distance sped the retreating figure of
+poor Belle, with the license in one pocket and the wedding-ring in the
+other, flying, as if his life depended on it, from the shame, and the
+misery, and the horror of that awful sell, drawn on his luckless head by
+that ill-fated line in the _Daily_.
+
+While Belle drove to his hapless wooing, Fairlie galloped on and on.
+Where he went he neither knew nor cared. He had ridden heedlessly along,
+and the Grey, left to her own devices, had taken the road to which her
+head for the last four months had been so often turned--the road leading
+to Fern Chase,--and about a mile from the Vane estate lost her left
+hind-shoe, and came to a dead stop of her own accord, after having been
+ridden for a couple of hours as hard as if she had been at the Grand
+Military. Fairlie threw himself off the saddle, and, leaving the bridle
+loose on the mare's neck, who he knew would not stray a foot away from
+him, he flung himself on the grass, under the cool morning shadows of
+the roadside trees, no sound in the quiet country round him breaking in
+on his weary thoughts, till the musical ring of a pony's hoofs came
+pattering down the lane. He never heard it, however, nor looked up,
+till the quick trot slackened and then stopped beside him.
+
+"Colonel Fairlie!"
+
+"Good Heavens! Geraldine!"
+
+"Well," she said, with tears in her eyes and petulant anger in her
+voice, "so you have never had the grace to come and apologize for
+insulting me as you did last week?"
+
+"For mercy's sake do not trifle with me."
+
+"Trifle! No, indeed!" interrupted the young lady. "Your behavior was no
+trifle, and it will be a very long time before I forgive it, if ever I
+do."
+
+"Stay--wait a moment."
+
+"How can you ask me, when, five days ago, you bid me never come near you
+with my cursed coquetries again?" asked Geraldine, trying, and vainly,
+to get the bridle out of his grasp.
+
+"God forgive me! I did not know what I said. What I had heard was enough
+to madden a colder man than I. Is it untrue?"
+
+"Is what untrue?"
+
+"You know well enough. Answer me, is it true or not?"
+
+"How can I tell what you mean? You talk in enigmas. Let me go."
+
+"I will never let you go till you have answered me."
+
+"How can I answer you if I don't know what you mean?" retorted
+Geraldine, half laughing.
+
+"Do not jest. Tell me, yes or no, are you going to marry that cursed
+fool?"
+
+"What 'cursed fool'? Your language is not elegant, Colonel Fairlie!"
+said Geraldine, with demure mischief.
+
+"Belle! Would you have met him? Did you intend to elope with him?"
+
+Geraldine's eyes, always large enough, grew larger and a darker blue
+still, in extremest astonishment.
+
+"Belle!--elope with him? What are you dreaming? Are you mad?"
+
+"Almost," said Fairlie, recklessly. "Have you misled him, then--tricked
+him? Do you care nothing for him? Answer me, for Heaven's sake,
+Geraldine!"
+
+"I know nothing of what you are talking!" said Geraldine, with her
+surprised eyes wide open still. "Oblige me by leaving my pony's head. I
+shall be too late home."
+
+"You never answered his advertisement, then?"
+
+"The very question insults me! Let my pony go."
+
+"You never met him in Fern Wood--never engaged yourself to him--never
+corresponded with him?"
+
+"Colonel Fairlie, you have no earthly right to put such questions to
+me," interrupted Geraldine, with her hot geranium color in her cheeks
+and her eyes flashing fire. "I honor the report, whoever circulated it,
+far more than it deserves, by condescending to contradict it. Have the
+kindness to unhand my pony, and allow me to continue my ride."
+
+"You shall _not_ go," said Fairlie, as passionately as she, "till you
+have answered me one more question: Can you, will you ever forgive me?"
+
+"No," said Geraldine, with an impatient shake of her head, but a smile
+nevertheless under the shadow of her hat.
+
+"Not if you know it was jealousy of him which maddened me, love for you
+which made me speak such unpardonable words to you?--not if I tell you
+how perfect was the tale I was told, so that there was no link wanting,
+no room for doubt or hope?--not if I tell you what tortures I had
+endured in losing you--what bitter punishment I have already borne in
+crediting the report that you were secretly engaged to my rival--would
+you not forgive me then?"
+
+"No," whispered the young lady perversely, but smiling still, the
+geraniums brighter in her cheeks, and her eyes fixed on the bridle.
+
+Fairlie dropped the reins, let go her hand, and left her free to ride,
+if she would, away from him.
+
+"Will you leave me, Geraldine? Not for this morning only, remember, nor
+for to-day, nor for this year, but--for ever?"
+
+"No!" It was a very different "No" this time.
+
+"Will you forgive me, then, my darling?"
+
+Her fingers clasped his hand closely, and Geraldine looked at him from
+under her hat; her eyes, so like an April day, with their tears, and
+their tender and mischievous smile, were so irresistibly provocative
+that Fairlie took his pardon for granted, and thanked her in the way
+that seemed to him at once most eloquent and most satisfactory.
+
+If you wish to know what became of Belle, he fled across the country to
+the railway station, and spent his leave Heaven knows where--in
+sackcloth and ashes, I suppose--meditating on his frightful sell. _We_
+saw nothing more of him; he could hardly show in Norwich again with all
+his laurels tumbled in the dust, and his trophies of conquest
+laughing-stocks for all the troop. He exchanged into the Z Battery going
+out to India, and I never saw or heard of him till a year or two ago,
+when he landed at Portsmouth, a much wiser and pleasanter man. The
+lesson, joined to the late campaign under Sir Colin, had done him a vast
+amount of good; he had lost his conceit, his vanity, his affectation,
+and was what Nature meant him to be--a sensible, good-hearted fellow. As
+luck would have it, Pretty Face, who had joined the Eleventh, was there
+too, and Fairlie and his wife as well, and Belle had the good sense to
+laugh it over with them, assuring Geraldine, however, that no one had
+eclipsed the G. V. whom he had once hoped had answered his memorable
+advertisement. He has grown wiser, and makes a jest of it now; it may be
+a sore point still, I cannot say--nobody sees it; but, whether or no, in
+the old city of Norwich, and in our corps, from Cadets to Colonels,
+nobody forgets THE LINE IN THE "DAILY:" WHO DID IT, AND WHO WAS DONE BY
+IT.
+
+
+
+
+HOLLY WREATHS AND ROSE CHAINS.
+
+
+
+
+HOLLY WREATHS AND ROSE CHAINS.
+
+
+I.
+
+THE COLONEL OF THE "WHITE FAVORS" AND CECIL ST. AUBYN.
+
+"What are you going to do with yourself this Christmas, old fellow?"
+said Vivian, of the 60th Hussars: the White Favors we call them,
+because, after Edgehill, Henriette Maria gave their Colonel a white
+rosette off her own dress to hang to his sword-knot, and all the 60th
+have like ribbons to this day. "If you've nothing better to do,"
+continued their present Lieutenant-Colonel, "Come down with me to
+Deerhurst. The governor'll be charmed to see you; my mother has always
+some nice-looking girls there; and, as we keep the hounds, I can promise
+you some good hunting with the Harkaway."
+
+"I shall be delighted," said I, who, being in the ---- Lancers, had been
+chained by the leg at Kensington the whole year, and, of all the woes
+the most pitiable, had not been able to get leave for either the 12th or
+the 1st; but while my chums were shooting among the turnips, or stalking
+royals in Blackmount Forest, I had been tied to town, a solitary unit in
+Pall-Mall, standing on the forsaken steps of the U. S., or pacing my
+hack through the dreary desert of Hyde Park--like Macaulay's New
+Zealander gazing on the ruins of London Bridge.
+
+"Very well," continued Vivian, "come down with me next week, and you can
+send your horses with Steevens and my stud. The governor could mount you
+well enough, but I never hunt with so much pleasure as when I'm on Qui
+Vive; so I dare say you, like me, prefer your own horses. I only hope we
+shan't have a confounded 'black frost;' but we must take our chance of
+the weather. I think you'll like my sisters; they're just about half my
+age. Lots of children came in between, but were providentially nipped in
+the bud."
+
+"Are they pretty?"
+
+"Can't say, really; I'm too used to them to judge. I can't make love to
+them, so I never took the trouble to criticise them; but we've always
+been a good-looking race, I believe. I tell you who's staying
+there--that girl we met in Toronto. Do you remember her--Cecil St.
+Aubyn?"
+
+"I should say I did. How did she get here?"
+
+"She's come to live with her aunt, Mrs. Coverdale. You know that
+over-dressed widow who lives in Hyde Park gardens, and, when she can't
+afford Brighton, shuts the front shutters, lives in the back
+drawing-room, and says, 'Not at home to callers?' St. Aubyn is as poor
+as a rat, so I suppose he was glad to send Cecil here; and the Coverdale
+likes to have somebody who'll draw men to her parties, which I'm sure
+her champagne will never do. It's the most unblushing gooseberry ever
+ticketed 'Veuve Clicquot.'"
+
+"'Pon my life, I'm delighted to hear it," said I. "The St. Aubyn's
+superb eyes will make the gooseberry go down. Men in Canada would have
+swallowed cask-washings to get a single waltz with her. All Toronto
+went mad on that score. You admired her, too, old fellow, only you
+weren't with her long enough for such a stoic as you are to boil up into
+anything warmer."
+
+"Oh yes, I thought her extremely pretty, but I thought her a little
+flirt, nevertheless."
+
+"Stuff! An attractive girl can't make herself ugly or disagreeable, or
+erect a brick wall round herself, with iron spikes on the top, for fear,
+through looking at her, any fellow might come to grief. The men followed
+her, and she couldn't help that."
+
+"And she encouraged them, and she _could_ help that. However, I don't
+wish to speak against her; it's nothing to me how she kills and slays,
+provided I'm not among the bag. Take care you don't get shot yourself,
+Ned."
+
+"Keep your counsel for your own use, Syd. You put me in mind of the
+philanthropist, who ran to warn his neighbor of the dangers of soot
+while his own chimney was on fire."
+
+"As how? I don't quite see the point of your parable," said Vivian, with
+an expression of such innocent impassiveness that one would have thought
+he had never seen her fair face out of her furs in her sledge, or
+admired her small ankles when she was skating on the Ontario.
+
+The winter before, a brother of mine, who was out there in the Rifles,
+wrote and asked me to go and have some buffalo-hunting, and Vivian went
+out with me for a couple of months. We had some very good sport in the
+western woods and plains, and his elk and bison horns are still stuck up
+in Vivian's rooms at Uxbridge, with many another trophy of both
+hemispheres. We had sport of another kind, too, to the merry music of
+the silvery sledge-bells, over the crisp snow and the gleaming ice,
+while bright eyes shone on us under delicate lace veils, and little feet
+peeped from under heaps of sable and bearskin, and gay voices rang out
+in would-be fear when the horses shied at the shadow of themselves, or
+at the moon shining on the ice. Who thinks of Canada without in fancy
+hearing the ringing chimes of the gay sledge bells swinging joyous
+measure into the clear sunshine or the white moonlight, in tune with
+light laughter, and soft whispers, and careless hearts?
+
+There we saw Cecil St. Aubyn, one of the prettiest girls in Toronto,
+then about nineteen. My brother Harry was mad about her, so were almost
+all the men in the Canada Rifles, and Engineers, and, 61st that were
+quartered there; and Vivian admired her too, though in a calmer sort of
+way. Perhaps if he had been with her more than a fortnight he might have
+gone further. As it was, he left Toronto liking her long Canadian eyes
+no more than was pleasant. It was as well so, perhaps, for it would not
+have been a good match for him, St. Aubyn being a broken-down gambler,
+who, having lost a princely fortune at Crocky's, and the Bads, married
+at fifty a widow with a little money, and migrated to Toronto, where he
+was a torment to himself and to everybody else. Vivian, meanwhile, was a
+great matrimonial _coup_. Coming of a high county family, and being the
+only son, of course there was priceless value set on his life, which,
+equally, of course, he imperilled, after the manner of us all, in every
+way he could--in charges and skirmishes, yachting, hunting, and
+steeple-chasing--ever since some two-and-twenty years ago he joined as a
+cornet of fifteen--a man already in muscle and ideas, pleasures and
+pursuits.
+
+At the present time he had been tranquilly engaged in the House, as he
+represented the borough of Cacklebury.
+
+He spoke seldom, but always well, and was thought a very promising
+member, his speeches being in Bernal Osborne's style; but he himself
+cared little about his senatorial laurels, and was fervently hoping
+that there would be a row with Russia, and that we should be allowed to
+go and stick Croats and make love to Bayaderes, to freshen us up and
+make us boys again.
+
+Next week, the first in December, he and I drove to Paddington, put
+ourselves in the express, and whisked through the snow-covered
+embankments, whitened fields, and holly hedges on the line down to
+Deerhurst. If the frost broke up we should have magnificent runs, and we
+looked at the country with a longing eye. Ever since he was six years
+old, he told me, he had gone out with the Harkaway Hack on
+Christmas-eve. When the drag met us, with the four bays steaming in the
+night air, and the groom warming into a smile at the sight of the
+Colonel, the sleet was coming down heavily, and the wind blew as keen as
+a sabre's edge. The bays dashed along at a furious gallop under Vivian's
+hand, the frosty road cracked under the wheel, the leaders' breath was
+white in the misty night; we soon flew through the park gate--though he
+didn't forget to throw down a sovereign on the snow for the old
+porteress--and up the leafless avenue, and bright and cheery the old
+manor-house, with its score of windows, like so many bright eyes, looked
+out upon the winter's night.
+
+"By George! we did that four miles quick enough," said Vivian, jumping
+down, and shaking the snow off his hair and mustaches. "The old place
+looks cheery, doesn't it? Ah! there are the girls; they're sure to
+pounce on me."
+
+The two girls in question having warm hearts, not spoilt by the
+fashionable world they live in, darted across the hall, and, regardless
+of the snow, welcomed him ardently. They were proud of him, for he is a
+handsome dog, with haughty, aristocratic features, and a grand air as
+stately as a noble about Versailles in the polished "Age dore."
+
+He shook himself free, and went forward to meet his mother, whom he is
+very fond of; while the governor, a fine-looking, genial old fellow,
+bade me welcome to Deerhurst. In the library door I caught sight of a
+figure in white that I recognised as our belle of the sledge drives; she
+was looking at Vivian as he bent down to his mother. As soon as she saw
+me though, she disappeared, and he and I went up to our rooms to thaw,
+and dress for dinner.
+
+By the fire, talking to Blanche Vivian, stood Cecil, when we went down
+to the drawing-room. She always makes me think of a Sevres or Dresden
+figure, her coloring is so delicate, and yet brilliant; and if you were
+to see her Canadian eyes, her waving chestnut hair, and her
+instantaneous, radiant, coquettish smiles, you would not wonder at the
+Toronto men losing their heads about her.
+
+"Why, Cecil, you never told me you knew Sydney!" cried Blanche, as
+Vivian shook hands with the St. Aubyn. "Where did you meet him? how long
+have you been acquainted? why did you never tell me?"
+
+"How could I tell Colonel Vivian was your brother?" said Cecil, playing
+with a little silver Cupid driving a barrowful of matches on the
+mantelpiece till she tumbled all his matches into the fender.
+
+"You might have asked. Never mind the wax-lights," said Blanche, who,
+not having been long out, had a habit of saying anything that came into
+her head. "When did you see him? Tell me, Sydney, if she won't."
+
+"Oh, in Canada, dear!" interrupted Cecil, quickly. "But it was for so
+short a time I should have thought Colonel Vivian would have forgotten
+my face, and name, and existence."
+
+"Nay, Miss St. Aubyn," said Vivian, smiling. "Pardon me, but I think
+you must know your own power too well to think that any man who has seen
+you once could hope for his own peace to forget you."
+
+The words of course were flattering, but his quizzical smile made them
+doubtful. Cecil evidently took them as satire. "At least, you've
+forgotten anything we talked about at Toronto," she said, rather
+impatiently, "for I remember telling you I detested compliments."
+
+"I shouldn't have guessed it," murmured Vivian, stroking his mustaches.
+
+"And you," Cecil went on, regardless of the interruption, "told me you
+never complimented any woman you respected; so that speech just now
+doesn't say much for your opinion of me."
+
+"How dare I begin to like you?" laughed Vivian.
+
+"Don't you know Levinge and Castlereagh were great friends of mine? Poor
+fellows! the sole object of their desires now is six feet of Crimean
+sod, if we're lucky enough to get out there." Cecil colored. Levinge's
+and Castlereagh's hard drinking and gloomy aspect at mess were popularly
+attributed to the witchery of the St. Aubyn. Canada, while she was in
+it, was as fatal to the Service as the Cape or the cholera.
+
+"If I talked so romantically, Colonel Vivian, with what superb mockery
+you would curl your mustaches. Surely the Iron Hand (wasn't that your
+sobriquet in Caffreland?) does not believe in broken hearts?"
+
+"Perhaps not; but I _do_ believe in some people's liking to try and
+break them."
+
+"So do I. It is a favorite pastime with your sex," said Cecil, beating
+the hearth-rug impatiently with her little satin shoe.
+
+"I don't think we often attack," laughed Vivian. "We sometimes yield out
+of amiability, and we sometimes take out the foils in self-defence,
+though we are no match for those delicate hands that use their Damascus
+blades so skilfully. We soon learn to cry quarter!"
+
+"To a dozen different conquerors in as many months, then!" cried Cecil,
+with a defiant toss of her head.
+
+Vivian looked down on her as a Newfoundland might look down on a small
+and impetuous-minded King Charles, who is hoping to irritate him. Just
+then three other people staying there came in. A fat old dowager and a
+thin daughter, who had turquoise eyes, and from whom, being a great
+pianist, we all fled in mortal terror of a hailstorm of Thalberg and
+Hertz, and a cousin of Syd's, Cossetting, a young chap, a blondin, with
+fair curls parted down the centre, whose brains were small, hands like a
+girl's, and thoughts centred on dew _bouquets_ and his own beauty, but
+who, having a baronetcy, with much tin, was strongly set upon by the
+turquoise eyes, but appeared himself to lean more towards the Canadian,
+as a greater contrast to himself, I suppose.
+
+"How do you do, Cos?" said Vivian, carelessly. The Iron Hand very
+naturally scorned this effeminate _patte de velours_.
+
+"You here!" lisped the baronet. "Delighted to see you! thought you'd
+killed yourself over a fence, or something, before this----"
+
+"Why, Horace," burst in energetic little Blanche, "I have told you for
+the last month that he was coming down for Christmas."
+
+"Did you, my dear child?" said Cos. "'Pon my life I forgot it. Miss St.
+Aubyn, my man Cleante (he's the handiest dog--he once belonged to the
+Duc d'Aumale) has just discovered something quite new--there's no
+perfume like it; he calls it 'Fleurs des Tilleuls,' and the best of it
+is, nobody can have it. If you'll allow me----"
+
+"Everybody seems to make it their duty to forget Sydney," muttered
+Blanche, as the Baronet murmured the rest of his speech inaudibly.
+
+"Never mind, petite; I can bear it," laughed Vivian, leaning against the
+mantelpiece with that look of quiet strength characteristic of both his
+mind and body.
+
+Cecil overheard the whisper, and flushed a quick look at him; then
+turning to Cossetting, talked over the "Fleurs des Tilleuls" as if her
+whole mind was absorbed in _bouquet_.
+
+When dinner was announced, Vivian troubled himself, however, to give his
+arm to Cecil, and, tossing his head back in the direction of the
+turquoise eyes, said to the discomfited Horace, "You sing, don't you,
+Cosset? Miss Screechington will bore you less than she would me."
+
+"Is it, then, because I 'bore you less' that you do me the honor?" asked
+Cecil, quickly.
+
+"Yes," said Syd, calmly; "or, rather, to put it more courteously, you
+amuse me more."
+
+"Monseigneur! je vous remercie," said Cecil, her long almond eyes
+sparkling dangerously. "You promote me to the same rank with an opera, a
+hookah, a rat-hunt, and a French novel?"
+
+"And," Vivian went on tranquilly, "I dare say I shall amuse _you_ better
+than that poor little fool with his lisp and his talk of the toilet, and
+his hands that never pulled in a thorough-bred or aided a rowing match."
+
+"Oh, we're not in the Iliad and Odyssey days to deify physical
+strength," said Cecil, who secretly adored it, as all women do; "nor yet
+among the Pawnees to reverence a man according to his scalps. Though Sir
+Horace may not have followed your example and jeopardised his life on
+every possible occasion, he is very handsome, and can be very
+agreeable."
+
+"Is it possible you can endure that fop?" said Vivian, quickly.
+
+"Certainly. Why not?"
+
+The Colonel stroked his moustache contemptuously. "I should have fancied
+you more difficile, that is all; but Cos is, as you say, good-looking,
+and very well off. I wish----"
+
+"What? That you were 'less bored?'"
+
+"That I always wish; but I was thinking of Cos, there--milk-posset, as
+little Eardley in the troop says they called him at Eton--I was wishing
+he could see Levinge and Castlereagh, just as _epouvantails_, to make
+him turn and flee as the French noblesse did when they saw their cousins
+and brothers strung up a la lanterne."
+
+"Wasn't it very strange," Blanche was saying to me at the same time,
+"that Cecil never mentioned Sydney? I've so often spoken of him, told
+her his troop, and all about him. (He has always been so kind to me,
+though he is eighteen years older--just twice my age.) Besides, I found
+her one day looking at his picture in the gallery, so she must have
+known it was the same Colonel Vivian, mustn't she Captain Thornton?"
+
+"I should say so. Have you known her long?"
+
+"No. We met her at Brighton this August with that silly woman, Mrs.
+Coverdale. All her artifices and falsehoods annoy Cecil so; Cecil
+doesn't mind saying she's not rich, she knows it's no crime."
+
+"C'est pire qu'un crime, c'est une faute," said I.
+
+"Don't talk in that way," laughed Blanche. "That's bitter and sarcastic,
+like Sydney in his grand moods, when I'm half afraid of him. I am sure
+Cecil couldn't be nicer, if she were ever such an heiress. Mamma asked
+her for Christmas because she once knew Mr. St. Aubyn well, and Cecil is
+not happy with Mrs. Coverdale. False and true don't suit each other. I
+hope Sydney will like her--do you think he does?"
+
+That was a question I could not answer. He admired her, of course,
+because he could not well have helped it, and had done so in Canada; and
+he was talking to her now, I dare say, to force her to acknowledge that
+he _was_ more amusing than Horace Cos. But he seemed to me to weigh her
+in a criticising balance, as if he expected to find her wanting--as if
+it pleased him to provoke and correct her, as one pricks and curbs a
+beautiful two-year old, just to see its graceful impatience at the check
+and the glance of its wild eye.
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+THE CANADIAN'S COLD BATH WARMS UP THE COLONEL.
+
+
+Deerhurst was a capital house to spend a Christmas in. It was the house
+of an English gentleman, with even the dens called bachelors' rooms
+comfortable and luxurious to the last extent: a first-rate stud, a
+capital billiard table, a good sporting country, pretty girls to amuse
+one with when tired of the pink, the best Chablis and Chateau Margaux to
+be had anywhere, and a host who would have liked a hundred people at his
+dinner-table the whole year round. The snow, confound it! prevented our
+taking the hounds out for the first few days; but we were not bored as
+one might have expected, and our misery was the girls' delight, who were
+fervently hoping that the ice might come thick enough for them to skate.
+Cecil was invaluable in a country-house; her resources were as unlimited
+as Houdin's inexhaustible bottle. She played in French vaudevilles and
+Sheridan Knowles's comedies, acted charades, planned tableaux vivants,
+sang gay wild chansons peculiar to herself, that made the Screechington
+bravuras and themes more insupportable than ever; and, what was more,
+managed to infuse into everybody else some of her own energy and spirit.
+She made every one do as she liked; but she tyrannised over us so
+charmingly that we never chafed at the bit; and to the other girls she
+was so good-natured in giving them the roles they liked, in praising,
+and in aiding them, that it was difficult for feminine malice, though
+its limits are boundless, to find fault with her. Vivian, though he did
+not relax his criticism of her, was agreeable to her, as he had been in
+Canada, and as he is always to women when he is not too lazy. He
+consented to stand for Rienzi in a tableau, though he hates doing all
+those things, and played in the Proverbs with such a flashing fire of
+wit in answer to Cecil that we told him he beat Mathews.
+
+"I'm inspired," he said, with a laughing bend of his head to Cecil, when
+somebody complimented him.
+
+She gave an impatient movement--she was accustomed to have such things
+whispered in earnest, not in jest. She laughed, however. "Are you
+inspired, then, to take _Huon's_ part? All the characters are cast but
+that."
+
+"I'm afraid I can't play well enough."
+
+"Nonsense. You cannot think that. Say you would rather not at once."
+
+Vivian stroked his mustaches thoughtfully. "Well, you see, it bores me
+rather; and I'm not Christian enough to suffer ennui cheerfully to
+please other people."
+
+"Very well, then, I will give the part to Sir Horace," said Cecil,
+looking through the window at the church spire, covered with the
+confounded snow.
+
+Vivian stroked away at his mustaches rather fiercely this time. "Cos!
+he'll ruin the play. Dress him up as a lord in waiting, he'll be a
+dainty lay figure, but for anything more he's not as fit as this setter!
+Fancy that essenced, fair-haired young idiot taking _Huon_--his lisp
+would be so effective!"
+
+She looked up in his face with one of her mischievous, dangerous smiles,
+and put up her hands in an attitude of petition. "He must have the part
+if you won't. Be good, and don't spoil the play. I have set my mind on
+its being perfect, and--I will have _such_ a dress as the _Countess_ if
+you will only do as I tell you."
+
+Cecil, in her soft, childlike moods, could finish any man. Of course
+Vivian rehearsed "Love" with her that afternoon, a play that was to come
+off on the 23rd. Cos sulked slightly at being commanded by her to dress
+himself beautifully and play the _Prince of Milan_.
+
+"To be refused by you," lisped Horace. "Oh, I dare say! No! 'pon my
+life----"
+
+"My dear Cos, you'll have plenty of fellow-sufferers," whispered Syd,
+mischievously.
+
+"Do you dare to disobey me, Sir Horace?" cried Cecil. "For shame! I
+should have thought you more of a preux chevalier. If you don't order
+over from Boxwood that suit of Milan armor you say one of your ancestors
+wore at Flodden, and wear it on Tuesday, you shall never waltz with me
+again. Now what do you say?"
+
+"Nobody can rethitht you," murmured Cos. "You do anything with a fellow
+that you chooth."
+
+Vivian glanced down at him with superb scorn, and turned to me. "What a
+confounded frost this is. The weathercock sticks at the north, and old
+Ben says there's not a chance of a change till the new moon. Qui Vive
+might as well have kept at Hounslow. To waste all the season like this
+would make a parson swear! If I'd foreseen it I would have gone to
+Paris with Lovell, as he wanted me to do."
+
+I suppose the Colonel was piqued to find he was not the only one
+persuaded into his role. He bent over Laura Caldecott's chair, a pretty
+girl, but with nothing to say for herself, admired her embroidery, and
+talked with great empressement about it, till Laura, much flattered at
+such unusual attention, after lisping a good deal of nonsense, finally
+promised to embroider a note-case for him, "if you'll be good and use
+it, and not throw it away, as you naughty men always do the pretty
+things we give you," simpered Miss Laura.
+
+"Hearts included," said Syd, smiling. "I assure you if you give me
+yours, I will prize it with Turkish jealousy."
+
+The fair brodeuse gave a silly laugh; and Vivian, whose especial
+detestation is this sort of love-making nonsense, went on flirting with
+her, talking the persiflage that one whispers leaning over the back of a
+phaeton after a dinner at the Castle or a day at Ascot, but never
+expects to be called to remember the next morning, when one bows to the
+object thereof in the Ring, and the flavor of the claret-cup and the
+scent of the cigar are both fled with the moonbeams and forgotten.
+
+Cecil gave the Colonel and his flirtation a glance, and let Cossetting
+lean over the back of her chair and deliver himself of some
+lackadaisical sentiment (taken second-hand out of "Isidora" or the
+"Amant de la Lune," and diluted to be suitable for presentation to her),
+looking up at him with her large velvet eyes, or flashing on him her
+radiant smile, till Horace pulled up his little stiff collar, coaxed his
+flaxen whiskers, looked at her with his half-closed light eyes--and
+thought himself irresistible--and Miss Screechington broke the string of
+the purse she was making, and scattered all the steel beads about the
+floor in the futile hope of gaining his attention. Blanche went down on
+her knees and spent twenty minutes hunting them all up; but as I helped
+her I saw the turquoise eyes looked anything but grateful for our
+efforts, though if Blanche had done anything for me with that ready
+kindness and those soft little white hands, I should have repaid her
+very warmly. But oh, these women! these women! Do they ever love one
+another in their hearts? Does not Chloris always swear that Lelia's
+gazelle eyes have a squint in them and Delia hint that Daphne, who is
+innocent as a dove, is bad style, and horridly bold?
+
+At last Cecil got tired of Cos's drawling platitudes, and walked up to
+one of the windows. "How is the ice, will anybody tell me? I am wild to
+try it, ain't you, Blanche? If we are kept waiting much longer, we will
+have the carpets up and skate on the oak floors."
+
+I told her I thought they might try it safely. "Then let us go after
+luncheon, shall we?" said Cecil. "It is quite sunny now. You skate, of
+course, Sir Horace?"
+
+"Oh! to be sure--certainly," murmured Cos. "We'd a quadrille on the
+Serpentine last February, Talbot, and I, and some other men--lots of
+people said they never saw it better done. But it's rather cold--don't
+you think so?"
+
+"Do you expect to find ice in warm weather?" said Vivian, curtly, from
+the fire, where he was standing watching the commencement of the
+note-case.
+
+"No. But I hate cold," said Horace, looking at his snowy fingers. "One
+looks such a figure--blue, and wet, and shivering; the house is much the
+best place in a frost."
+
+"Poor fellow!" said Vivian, with a contemptuous twist of his mustaches.
+"I fear, however fete you may be in every other quarter, the seasons
+won't change to accommodate you."
+
+"Oh! you are a dreadful man," drawled Cos. "You don't a bit mind tanning
+yourself, nor getting drenched through, nor soiling your hands----"
+
+"Thank Heaven, no!" responded Syd. "I'm neither a school-girl, nor--a
+fop."
+
+"Would you believe it, Miss St. Aubyn?" said the baronet, appealingly.
+"That man'll get up before daylight and let himself be drenched to the
+skin for the chance of playing a pike; and will turn out of a
+comfortable arm-chair on a winter's night just to go after poachers and
+knock a couple of men over, and think it the primest fun in life. I
+don't understand it myself, do you?"
+
+"Yes," said Cecil, fervently. "I delight in a man's love for sport, for
+I idolise horses, and there is nothing that can beat a canter on a fine
+fresh morning over a grass country; and I believe that a man who has the
+strength, and nerve, and energy to go thoroughly into fishing, or
+shooting, or whatever it be, will carry the same will and warmth into
+the rest of his life; and the hand that is strong in the field and firm
+in righteous wrath, will be the truer in friendship and the gentler in
+pity."
+
+Cecil spoke with energetic enthusiasm. Horace stared, the Screechington
+sneered, Laura gave an affected little laugh. The Colonel swung round
+from his study of the fire, his face lighting up. I've seen Syd on
+occasion look as soft as a woman. However, he said nothing; he only took
+her in to luncheon, and was exceedingly kind to her and oblivious of
+Laura Caldecott's existence throughout that meal, which, at Deerhurst,
+was of unusual splendor and duration. And afterwards, when she had
+arrayed herself in a hat with soft curling feathers, and looped up her
+dress in some inexplicable manner that showed her dainty high heels
+artistically, he took her little skates in his hand and walked down by
+her side to the pond. It was some way to the pond--a good sized piece of
+water, that snobs would have called the Lake, by way of dignifying their
+possessions, with willows on its banks (where in summer the sentimental
+Screechington would have reclined, Tennyson _a la main_), and boats and
+punts beside it, among which was a tub, in which Blanche confessed to me
+she had paddled herself across to the saturation of a darling blue
+muslin, and the agonised feelings of her governess, only twelve months
+before.
+
+"A dreadful stiff old thing that governess was," said Blanche, looking
+affectionately at the tub. "Do you know, Captain Thornton, when she went
+away, and I saw her boxes actually on the carriage-top, I waltzed round
+the schoolroom seven times, and burnt 'Noel et Chapsal' in the fire--I
+did, indeed!"
+
+The way, as I say, was long to the pond; and as Cecil's dainty high
+heels and Syd's swinging cavalry strides kept pace over the snow
+together, they had plenty of time for conversation.
+
+"Miss Caldecott is looking for you," said Cecil, with a contemptuous
+glance at the fair Laura, who, between two young dandies, was picking
+her route over the snow holding her things very high indeed, and casting
+back looks at the Colonel.
+
+"Is she? It is very kind of her."
+
+"If you feel the kindness so deeply, you had better repay it by joining
+her."
+
+Vivian laughed. "Not just now, thank you. We are close to the
+kennels--hark at their bay! Would you like to come and see them?
+By-the-by, how is your wolf-dog--Leatherstockings, didn't you call him?"
+
+"Do you remember him?" said Cecil, her eyes beaming and her lips
+quivering. "Dear old dog, I loved him so much, and he loved me. He was
+bitten by an asp just before I left, and papa would have him shot. Good
+gracious! what is the matter?--she is actually frightened at that
+setter!"
+
+The "she" of whom Cecil so disdainfully spoke was Miss Caldecott, who,
+on seeing a large setter leap upon her with muddy paws and much sudden
+affection, began to scream, and rushed to Vivian with a beseeching cry
+of "Save me, save me!" Cecil stood and laughed, and called the setter to
+her.
+
+"Here, Don--Dash--what is your name? Come here, good dog. That poor
+young lady has nerves, and you must not try them, or you will cause her
+endless expenses in sal volatile and ether; But I have no such
+interesting weaknesses, and you may lavish any demonstrations you please
+on me!"
+
+We all laughed as she thus talked confidentially to the setter, holding
+his feathered paws against her waist; while Vivian stood by her with
+admiration in his glance. Poor Laura looked foolish, and began to caress
+a great bull-dog, who snapped at her. She hadn't Cecil's ways either
+with dogs or men.
+
+"What a delightful scene," whispered Cecil to the Colonel, as we left
+the kennels. "You were not half so touched by it as you were expected to
+be!"
+
+Vivian laughed. "Didn't you effectually destroy all romantic effect? You
+can be very mischievous to your enemies."
+
+Cecil colored. "She is no enemy of mine; I know nothing of her, but I do
+detest that mock sentimentality, that would-be fine ladyism that thinks
+it looks interesting when it pleads guilty to sal volatile, and screams
+at an honest dog's bark. Did you see how shocked she and Miss
+Screechington looked because I let the hounds leap about me?"
+
+"Of course; but though you have not lived very long, you must have
+learned that you are too dangerous to the peace of our sex to expect
+much mercy from your own."
+
+A flush came into Cecil's cheeks _not_ brought by the wind. Her feathers
+gave a little dance as she shook her head with her customary action of
+annoyance.
+
+"Ah, never compliment me, I am so tired of it."
+
+"I wish I could believe that," said Syd, in a low tone. "Your feelings
+are warm, your impulses frank and true; it were a pity to mar them by an
+undue love for the flattering voices of empty-headed fools."
+
+Tears of pleasure started into her eyes, but she would not let him see
+it. She had not forgotten the Caldecott flirtation of the morning enough
+to resist revenging it. She looked up with a merry laugh.
+
+"Je m'amuse--voila tout. There is no great harm in it."
+
+A shadow of disappointment passed over Syd's haughty face.
+
+"No, if you do not do it once too often. I _have_ known men--and women
+too--who all their lives through have been haunted by the memory of a
+slight word, a careless look, with which, unwittingly or in obstinacy,
+they shut the door of their own happiness. Have you ever heard of the
+Deerhurst ghost?"
+
+"No," said Cecil, softly. "Tell it me."
+
+"It is a short story. Do you know that picture of Muriel Vivian, the
+girl with the hawk on her wrist and long hair of your color? She lived
+in Charles's time, and was a great beauty at the court. There were many
+who would have lived and died for her, but the one who loved her best
+was her cousin Guy. The story says that she had plighted herself to him
+in these very woods; at any rate, he followed her when she went to join
+the court, and she kept him on, luring him with vague promises, and
+flirting with Goring, and Francis Egerton, and all the other gay
+gentlemen. One night his endurance broke down: he asked her whether or
+no she cared for him? He begged, as a sign, for the rosebud she had in
+her dress. She laughed at him, and--gave the flower to Harry Carrew, a
+young fellow in Lunsford's 'Babe-eaters.' Guy said no more, and left
+her. Before dawn he shot Carrew through the heart, took the rosebud from
+the boy's doublet, put it in his own breast, and fell upon his sword.
+They say Muriel lost her senses. I don't believe it: no coquette ever
+had so much feeling; but if you ask the old servants they will tell you,
+and firmly credit the story too, that hers and Guy Vivian's ghosts still
+are to be seen every midnight at Christmas-eve, the day that he fought
+and killed little Harry Carrew."
+
+He laughed, but Cecil shuddered.
+
+"What a horrible story! But do you believe that any woman ever possessed
+such power over a man?"
+
+"I believe it since I have seen it. One of my best friends is now
+hopelessly insane because a woman as worthless as this dead branch
+forsook him. Poor fellow! they set it down to a coup de soleil, but it
+was the falsehood of Emily Rushbrooke that did it. But, for myself, I
+never should lose my head for any woman. I did once when I was a boy,
+but I know better now."
+
+A wild, desperate idea came into Cecil's mind. She contrasted the
+passionless calm of his face with the tender gentleness of his tone a
+few moments ago, and she would have given her life to see him "lose his
+head for her" as he had done for that other. How she hated her, whoever
+she had been! Cecil had seen too many men not to know that Syd's cool
+exterior covered a stormy heart, and in the longing to rouse up the
+storm at her incantation she resolved to play a dangerous game. The
+ghost story did not warn her. As Mephistopheles to Faust came Horace Cos
+to aid the impulse, and Cecil turned to him with one of her radiant
+smiles. She never looked prettier than in her black hat; the wind had
+only blown a bright flush into her cheeks--though it had turned Laura
+blue and the Screechington red--and the Colonel looked up at her as he
+put her skates on with something of the look Guy might have given Muriel
+Vivian flirting gaily with the roistering cavaliers.
+
+"Now, Sir Horace, show us some of those wonderful Serpentine figures,"
+cried Cecil, balancing herself with the grace of a curlew, and whirling
+here, there, and everywhere at her will as easily as if she were on a
+chalked ball-room floor. She hadn't skated and sledged on the Ontario
+for nothing. More than one man had lost his own balance looking after
+her. Cos wasn't started yet; one pair of skates were too large, another
+pair too small; if he'd thought of it he'd have had his own sent over.
+He stood on the brink much as Winkle, of Pickwickian memory, trembled in
+Weller's grasp. Cecil looked at him with laughing eyes, a shrewd
+suspicion that he had planted her adorer, and that the quadrille on the
+Serpentine was an offspring of the Cossetting poetic fancy. Thrice did
+the luckless baronet essay the ice, and thrice did he come to grief with
+heels in the air, and his dainty apparel disordered. At last, his
+Canadian sorceress took compassion upon him, and declaring she was
+tired, asked him to drive her across the pond. Cos, with an air of
+languid martyrdom and a heavy sigh as he glanced at his Houbigants, torn
+and soiled, grasped the back of the chair, and actually contrived to
+start it. Once started, away went the chair and its Phaeton after it,
+whether he would or no, its occupant looking up and laughing in the
+dandy's heated, disconcerted, and anxious face. All at once there was a
+crash, a plunge, and a shout from Vivian, who was on the opposite bank.
+The chair had broken the ice, flung Cecil out into the water with the
+shock, while her charioteer, by a lucky jump backwards, had saved
+himself, and stood on the brink of the chasm unharmed. Cecil's crinoline
+kept her from sinking; she stretched out her little hand with a cry--it
+sounded like Vivian's name as it came to my ears on the keen north
+wind--but before Vivian, who came across the ice like a whirlwind, could
+get to her, Cos, valorously determining to wet his wristbands, stooped
+down, and, holding by the chair, which was firmly wedged in, put his arm
+round her and dragged her out. Vivian came up two seconds too late.
+
+"Are you hurt?" he said, bending towards her.
+
+"No," said Cecil, faintly, as her head drooped unconsciously on Cos's
+shoulder. She had struck her forehead on the ice, which had stunned her
+slightly. The Colonel saw the chestnut hair resting against Cos's arm;
+he dropped the hand he had taken, and turned to the shore.
+
+"Bring her to the bank," he said, briefly. "I will go home and send a
+carriage. Good Heavens! that that fool should have saved her!" I heard
+him mutter, as he brushed past me.
+
+He drove the carriage down himself, and under pretext of holding on the
+horses, did not descend from the box while Horace wrapped rugs and
+cloaks round Cecil, who, having more pluck than strength, declared she
+was quite well now, but nearly fainted when Horace lifted her out, and
+she was consigned by Mrs. Vivian to her bedroom for the rest of the day.
+
+"It is astonishing how we miss Cecil," remarked Blanche, at dinner.
+"Isn't it dull without her, Sydney?"
+
+"I didn't perceive it," said the Colonel, calmly; "but I am very sorry
+for the cause of her absence."
+
+"Well, by Jove! it sounds unfeeling; but I can't say I am," murmured
+Horace. "It's something to have saved such a deuced pretty girl as
+that."
+
+"Curse that puppy," muttered Syd to his champagne glass. "A fool that
+isn't fit for her to look at----"
+
+Syd's and my room, in the bachelors' wing, adjoin each other; and as our
+windows both possess the convenience of balconies, we generally smoke in
+them, and hold a little chat before turning in. When I stepped out into
+my balcony that night, Syd was already puffing away at his pipe. Perhaps
+his Cavendish was unusually good, for he did not seem greatly inclined
+to talk, but leant over the balcony, looking out into the clear frosty
+night, with the winter stars shining on the wide white uplands and the
+leafless glittering trees.
+
+"What's that?" said he sharply, as the notes of a cornet playing, and
+playing badly, Halevy's air, "Quand de la Nuit," struck on the night
+air.
+
+"A serenade, I suppose."
+
+"A serenade in the snow. Who is romantic idiot enough for that?" said
+Vivian contemptuously, nearly pitching himself over to see where the
+cornet came from. It came from under Cecil's windows, where a light was
+still burning. The player looked uncommonly like Cossetting wrapped up
+in a cloak with a wide-awake on, under which the moonlight showed us
+some fair hair peeping.
+
+Vivian drew back with an oath he did not mean me to hear. He laughed
+scornfully. "Milk-posset, of course! There is no other fool in the
+house. His passion must be miraculously deep to drag him out of his bed
+into the snow to play some false notes to his lady-love. It's rather
+windy, don't you think, Ned. Good night, old fellow--and, I say, don't
+turn little Blanche's head with your pretty speeches. You and I are
+bound not to flirt, since we're sworn never to marry; and I don't want
+the child played with, though possibly (being a woman) she'd very soon
+recover it."
+
+With which sarcasm on his sister and her sex, the Colonel shut down the
+window with a clang; and I remained, smoking four pipes and a half,
+meditating on his last words, for I _had_ been playing with the child,
+and felt (inhuman brute! the ladies will say) that I should be sorry if
+she _did_ recover it.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+SHOWING THAT LOVE-MAKING ON HOLY GROUND DOESN'T PROSPER.
+
+
+Cecil came down the next morning looking very pretty after her ducking.
+Vivian asked her how she was with his general air of calm courtesy,
+helped her to some cold pheasant, and applied himself to his breakfast
+and some talk with a sporting man about the chances of the frost
+breaking up.
+
+Horace, who looked upon himself as a preux chevalier, had had his left
+arm put in a sling on the strength of a bruise as big as a
+fourpenny-piece, and appeared to consider himself entitled to Cecil's
+eternal gratitude and admiration for having gone the length of wetting
+his coat sleeves for her.
+
+"Do you like music by starlight?" he whispered, with a self-conscious
+smile, after a course of delicate attentions throughout breakfast.
+
+Syd fixed his eyes on Cecil's, steadily but impassively. The color rose
+into her face, and she turned to Cos with a mischievous laugh.
+
+"Very much, if--I am not too sleepy to hear it; and it isn't a cornet
+out of tune."
+
+"How cruel!" murmured Horace, as he passed her coffee. "You shouldn't
+criticise so severely when a fellow tries to please you."
+
+"That poor dear girl really thinks I turned out into the snow last night
+to give her that serenade," observed Cos, with a languid laugh, when we
+were alone in the billiard-room. "Good, isn't it, the idea of _my_
+troubling myself?"
+
+"Whose cracked cornet was it, then, that made that confounded row last
+night?" I asked.
+
+Horace laughed again; it was rarely he was so highly amused at anything:
+"It was Cleante's, to be sure. He don't play badly when his hands are
+not numbed, poor devil! Of course he made no end of a row about going
+out into the snow, but I made him do it. I knew Cecil would think it was
+I. Women are so vain, poor things!"
+
+It was lucky I alone was the repository of his confidence, for if Vivian
+had chanced to have been in the billiard-room, it is highly probable he
+would then and there have brained his cousin with one of the cues.
+
+Happily he was out of the reach of temptation, in the stables, looking
+after Qui Vive, who had to "bide in stall," as much to that gallant
+bay's disquiet as to her owner's; for I don't know which of the two
+best loves a burst over a stiff country, or a fast twenty minutes up
+wind alone with the hounds when they throw up their heads.
+
+To the stables, by an odd coincidence, Cecil, putting the irresistible
+black hat on the top of her chestnut braids, prevailed on Blanche to
+escort her, vowing (which was nearly, but not quite, the truth) that she
+loved the sweet pets of horses better than anything on earth. Where
+Cecil went, Laura made a point of going too, to keep her enemy in sight,
+I suppose; though Cecil, liking a fast walk on the frosty roads, a game
+of battledore and shuttlecock with Blanche (when we were out of the
+house), or anything, in short, better than working with her feet on the
+fender, and the Caldecott inanities or Screechington scandals in her
+ear, often led Laura many an unwelcome dance, and brought that luckless
+young lady to try at things which did not sit well upon her as they did
+upon the St. Aubyn, who had a knack of doing, and doing charmingly, a
+thousand things no other woman could have attempted. So, as Vivian and
+I, and some of the other men, stood in the stable-doors, smoking, and
+talking over the studs accommodated in the spacious stalls, a strong
+party of four young ladies came across the yard.
+
+"I'm come to look at Qui Vive; will you show him to me?" said Cecil,
+softly. Her gentle, childlike way was the most telling of all her
+changing moods, but I must do her the justice to say that it was
+perfectly natural, she was no actress.
+
+"With great pleasure," said Syd, very courteously, if not
+over-cordially; and to Qui Vive's stall Cecil went, alone in her glory,
+for Laura was infinitely too terrified at the sight of the bay's strong
+black hind legs to risk a kick from them, even to follow Syd. Helena
+Vivian stayed with her, and Blanche came with me to visit my hunters.
+
+Cecil is a tolerable judge of a horse; she praised Qui Vive's lean head,
+full eye, and silky coat with discrimination, and Qui Vive, though not
+the best-tempered of thorough-breds, let her pat his smooth sides and
+kiss his strong neck without any hostile demonstration.
+
+Vivian watched her as if she were a spoilt child who bewitched him, but
+whom he knew to be naughty; he could not resist the fascination of her
+ways, but he never altered his calm, courteous tone to her--the tone
+Cecil longed to hear change, were it even into invectives against her,
+to testify some deeper interest.
+
+"Now show me the mount you will give me when the frost breaks up and we
+take out the hounds," said Cecil, with a farewell caress of Qui Vive.
+
+"You shall have the grey four-year-old; Billiard-ball, and he will suit
+you exactly, for he is as light as a bird, checks at nothing, and will
+take you safe over the stiffest bullfinch. I know you may trust him, for
+he has carried Blanche."
+
+Cecil threw back her head. "Oh, I would ride anything, Qui Vive himself,
+if he would bear a habit. I am not like Miss Caldecott, who, catching
+sight of his dear brown legs, vanished as rapidly as if she had seen
+Muriel's ghost on Christmas-eve."
+
+The Colonel smiled. "You are very unmerciful to poor Miss Caldecott.
+What has she done to offend you?"
+
+"Offend me! Nothing in the world. Though I heard her lament with Miss
+Screechington in the music-room, that I was 'so fast,' and 'such slang
+style;' I consider that rather a compliment, for I never knew any lady
+pull to pieces my bonnet, or my bouquet, or my hat, unless it was a
+prettier one than their own. That sounds a vain speech, but I don't mean
+it so."
+
+
+The Colonel looked down into her velvet eyes; she was most dangerous to
+him in this mood. "No," he said, briefly, "no one would accuse you of
+vanity, though they might, pardon me, of love of admiration."
+
+Cecil laughed merrily. "Yes, perhaps so; it is pleasant, you know. Yet
+sometimes I am tired of it all, and I want----"
+
+"A more difficult conquest? To find a diamond, merely, like Cleopatra,
+to show your estimate of its value by throwing it away."
+
+A flush of vexation came into her cheeks. "Do you think me utterly
+heartless?" she said impetuously. "No. I mean that I often tire of the
+fulsome compliments, the flattery, the attention, the whirl of society!
+I do like admiration. I tell you candidly what every other woman
+acknowledges to herself but denies to the world; but often it is nothing
+to me--mere Dead Sea fruit. I care nothing for the voices that whisper
+it; the eyes that express it wake no response in mine, and I would give
+it all for one word of true interest, one glance of real----"
+
+Vivian looked down on her steadily with his searching eagle eyes, out of
+which, when he chose, nothing could be read. "If I dare believe you----"
+he said, half aloud.
+
+Gentle as his tone was, the mere doubt stung Cecil to the quick.
+Something of the wild, desperate feeling of the day previous rose in her
+heart. The same feeling that makes men brave heaven and hell to win
+their desires worked up in her. If she had been one of us, just at that
+moment, she would have flinched at nothing; being a young lady, her
+hands were tied. She could only go to Cos's stalls with him (Cos knows
+as much about horseflesh as I do about the profound female mystery they
+call "shopping"), and flirt with him to desperation, while Horace got
+the steam up faster than he, with his very languid motor powers, often
+did, being accustomed to be spared the trouble and have all the love
+made to him--an indolence in which the St. Aubyn, who knows how to keep
+a man well up to hand, never indulged him.
+
+"Do have some pity on me," I heard Cos murmuring, as she stroked a great
+brute of his, with a head like a fiddle-case, and no action at all. "I
+assure you, Miss St. Aubyn, you make me wretched. I'd die for you
+to-morrow if I only saw how, and yet you take no more notice of me
+sometimes than if I were that colt."
+
+Cecil glanced at him with a smile that would have driven Cos distracted
+if he'd been in for it as deep as he pretended.
+
+"I don't see that you are much out of condition, Sir Horace, but if you
+have any particular fancy to suicide, the horse-pond will accommodate
+you at a moment's notice; only don't do it till after our play, because
+I have set my heart on that suit of Milan armor. Pray don't look so
+plaintive. If it will make you any happier, I am going for a walk, and
+you may come too. Blanche, dear, which way is it to the plantations?"
+
+Now poor Horace hated a walk on a frosty morning as cordially as
+anything, being altogether averse to any natural exercise: but he was
+sworn to the St. Aubyn, and Blanche and I, dropping behind them, he had
+a good hour of her fascinations to himself. I do not know whether he
+improved the occasion, but Cecil at luncheon looked tired and teased. I
+should think, after Syd's graphic epigrammatic talk, the baronet's
+lisped nonsense must have been rather trying, especially as Cecil has a
+strong leaning to intellect.
+
+Vivian didn't appear at luncheon; he was gone rabbit-shooting with the
+other fellows, and I should have been with them if I had not thought
+lounging in the drawing-room, reading "Clytemnestra" to Blanche, with
+many pauses, the greater fun of the two. I am keen about sport, too; but
+ever since, at the age of ten, I conceived a romantic passion for my
+mother's lady's-maid--a tall and stately young lady, who eventually
+married a retail tea-dealer--I have thought the beaux yeux the best of
+all games.
+
+"Mrs. Vivian, Blanche and Helena and I want to be very useful, if you
+will let us," said Cecil, one morning. She was always soft and playful
+with that gentlest of all women, Syd's mother. "What do you smile in
+that incredulous way for? We _can_ be extraordinarily industrious: the
+steam sewing-machine is nothing to us when we choose! What do you think
+we are going to do? We are going to decorate the church for Christmas.
+To leave it to that poor little old clerk, who would only stick two
+holly twigs in the pulpit candlesticks, and fancy he had done a work of
+high art, would be madness. And, besides, it will be such fun."
+
+"If you think it so, pray do it, dear," laughed Mrs. Vivian. "I can't
+say I should, but your tastes and mine are probably rather different.
+The servants will do as you direct them."
+
+"Oh no," said Cecil; "we mean to do it all ourselves. The gentlemen may
+help us if they like--those, at least, who prefer our society to that of
+smaller animals, with lop-ears and little bushy tails, who have a
+fascination superior sometimes to any of our attractions." She flashed a
+glance at the Colonel, who was watching her over the top of _Punch_, as,
+when I was a boy, I have watched the sun, though it pained my eyes to do
+it. "You're the grand seigneur of Deerhurst," said Cecil, turning to
+him; "will you be good, and order cart-loads of holly and evergreens
+(and plenty of the Portugal laurel, please, because it's so pretty) down
+to the church; and will you come and do all the hard work for me? The
+rabbits would _so_ enjoy a little peace to-day, poor things!"
+
+He smiled in spite of himself, and did her bidding, with a flush of
+pleasure on his face. I believe at that moment, to please her, he would
+have cut down the best timber on the estates--even the old oaks, in
+whose shadow in the midsummer of centuries before Guy Vivian and Muriel
+had plighted their troth.
+
+The way to the church was through a winding walk, between high walls of
+yew, and the sanctuary itself was a find old Norman place, whose _tout
+ensemble_ I admired, though I could not pick it to pieces
+architecturally.
+
+To the church we all went, of course, with more readiness than we
+probably ever did in our lives, regardless of the rose chains with which
+we were very likely to become entangled, while white hands weaved the
+holly wreaths.
+
+Vivian had ordered evergreens enough to decorate fifty churches, and had
+sent over to the neighboring town for no end of ribbon emblazonments and
+illuminated scrolls, on which Cecil looked with delight. She seemed to
+know by instinct it was done for _her_, and not for his sisters.
+
+"How kind that is of you," she said, softly. "That is like what you were
+in Toronto. Why are you not always the same?"
+
+For a moment she saw passion enough in his eye to satisfy her, but he
+soon mastered it, and answered her courteously:
+
+"I am very glad they please you. Shall we go to work at once, for fear
+it grow dusk before we get through with it?"
+
+"Can I do anything to help you?" murmured Cos in her ear.
+
+She did not want him, and laughed mischievously. "You can cut some holly
+if you like. Begin on those large boughs."
+
+"Better not, Cos," said the Colonel. "You will certainly soil your
+hands, and you might chance to scratch them."
+
+"And if you did you would never forgive me, so I will let you off duty.
+You may go back to the dormeuse and the 'Lys de la Vallee' if you wish,"
+laughed Cecil.
+
+Horace looked sulky, and curled his blond whiskers in dudgeon, while
+Cecil, with half a dozen satellites about her, proceeded to work with
+vigorous energy, keeping Syd, however, as her head workman; and the
+Colonel twisted pillars, nailed up crosses, hung wreaths, and put up
+illuminated texts, as if he had been a carpenter all his life, and his
+future subsistence entirely depended on his adorning Deerhurst church in
+good taste. It was amusing to me to see him, whom the highest London
+society, the gayest Paris life bored--who pronounced the most dashing
+opera supper and the most vigorous debates alike slow--taking the
+deepest interest in decorating a little village church! I question if
+Eros did not lurk under the shiny leaves and the scarlet berries of
+those holly boughs quite as dangerously as ever he did under the rose
+petals consecrated to him.
+
+I had my own affairs to attend to, sitting on the pulpit stairs at
+Blanche's feet, twisting the refractory evergreens at her direction; but
+I kept an occasional look-out at the Colonel and his dangerous Canadian
+for all that. They found time (as we did) for plenty of conversation
+over the Christmas decorations, and Cecil talked softly and earnestly
+for once without any "mischief." She talked of her father's
+embarrassments, her mother's trials, of Mrs. Coverdale, with honest
+detestation of that widow's arts and artifices, and of her own tastes,
+and ideas, and feelings, showing the Colonel (what she did not show
+generally to her numerous worshippers) her heart as well as her mind. As
+she knelt on the altar steps, twisting green leaves round the communion
+rails, Syd standing beside her, his pale bronze cheek flushed, and his
+eyes never left their study of her face as she bent over her work,
+looking up every minute to ask him for another branch, or another strip
+of blue ribbon.
+
+When it had grown dusk, and the church was finished, looking certainly
+very pretty, with the dark leaves against its white pillars, and the
+scarlet berries kissing the stained windows, Cecil went noiselessly up
+into the organ-loft, and played the Christmas anthem. Vivian followed
+her, and, leaning against the organ, watched her, shading his eyes with
+his hand. She went on playing--first a Miserere, then Mozart's Symphony
+in E, and then improvisations of her own--the sort of music that, when
+one stands calmly to listen to it, makes one feel it whether one likes
+or not. As she played, tears rose to her lashes, and she looked up at
+Vivian's face, bending over her in the gloaming. Love was in her eyes,
+and Syd knew it, but feared to trust to it. His pulses beat fast, he
+leaned towards her, till his mustaches touched her soft perfumy hair.
+Words hung on his lips. But the door of the organ-loft opened.
+
+"'Pon my life, Miss St. Aubyn, that's divine, delicious!" cried Cos. "We
+always thought that you were divine, but we never knew till now that you
+brought the angels' harmony with you to earth. For Heaven's sake, play
+that last thing again!"
+
+"I never play what I compose twice," said Cecil, hurriedly, stooping
+down for her hat.
+
+Vivian cursed him inwardly for his untimely interruption, but cooler
+thought made him doubt if he were not well saved some words, dictates of
+hasty passion, that he might have lived to repent. For Guy Vivian's fate
+warned him, and he mistrusted the love of a flirt, if flirt, as he
+feared--from her sudden caprices to him, her alternate impatience with,
+and encouragement of, his cousin--Cecil St. Aubyn would prove. He gave
+her his arm down the yew-tree walk. Neither of them spoke all the way,
+but he sent a servant on for another shawl, and wrapped it round her
+very tenderly when it came; and when he stood in the lighted hall, I saw
+by the stern, worn look of his face--the look I have seen him wear after
+a hard fight--that the fiery passions in him had been having a fierce
+battle.
+
+That evening the St. Aubyn was off her fun, said she was tired, and,
+disregarding the misery she caused to Cos and four other men, who,
+figuratively speaking, _not_ literally, for they went into the "dry" and
+comestibles fast enough, had lived on her smiles for the last month,
+excused herself to Mrs. Vivian, and departed to her dormitory. Syd gave
+her her candle, and held her little hand two seconds in his as he bid
+her softly good night at the foot of the staircase.
+
+I did not get much out of him in the balcony that night, and long after
+I had turned in, I scented his Cavendish as he smoked, Heaven knows how
+many pipes, in the chill December air. The next day, the 23rd, was the
+night of our theatricals, which went off as dashingly as if Mr. Kean,
+with his eternal "R-r-r-richard," had been there to superintend them.
+
+All the country came; dowagers and beauties, with the odor of Belgravia
+still strong about them: people not quite so high, who were not the
+rose, but living near it, toadied that flower with much amusing and
+undue worship; a detachment of Dragoons from the next town, whom the
+girls wanted to draw, and the mammas to warn off--Dragoons being
+ordinarily better waltzers than speculations; all the magnates, custos
+rotulorum, sheriff, members, and magistrates--the two latter portions of
+the constitution being chiefly remarkable for keenness about hunting and
+turnips, and an unchristian and deadly enmity against all poachers and
+vagrants; rectors, who tossed down the still Ai with Falstaff's keen
+relish; other rectors, who came against their principles, but preferred
+fashion to salvation, having daughters to marry and sons to start;
+hunting men; girls who could waltz in a nutshell; dandies of St.
+James's, and veterans of Pall-Mall, down for the Christmas; belles
+renewing their London acquaintance, and recalling that "pleasant day at
+Richmond." But, by Jove! if I describe all the different species
+presented to view in that ball-room, I might use as many words as an old
+whip giving you the genealogy of a killing pack in a flying county.
+
+Suffice it, there they all were to criticise us, and pretty sharply I
+dare say they did it, when they were out of our hearing, in their
+respective clarences, broughams, dog-carts, drags, tilburies, and
+hansoms. Before our faces, of course, they only clapped their snowy kid
+gloves, and murmured "Bravissimo!" with an occasional "Go it, Jack!" and
+"Get up the steam, old fellow!" from the young bloods in the background;
+and a shower of bouquets at Cecil and Blanche from their especial
+worshippers.
+
+Blanche made the dearest little _Catherine_ that ever dressed herself up
+in blue and silver, and when she drew her toy-rapier in the green-room,
+asked me if I could not get her a cornetcy in ours. As for Cecil, she
+played _a ravir_ as Cos, in his Milan armor, whispered with some
+difficulty, as the steel gorget pressed his throat uncomfortably.
+Vestris herself never made a more brilliant or impassioned _Countess_.
+She and Syd really acquitted themselves in a style to qualify them for
+London boards, and as she threw herself at his feet--
+
+ Huon--my husband--lord--canst thou forgive
+ The scornful maid? for the devoted wife
+ Had cleaved to thee, though ne'er she owned thee lord,
+
+I thought the St. Aubyn must be as great an actress as Rachel, if some
+of that fervor was not real.
+
+Cecil played in the afterpiece, "The wonderful Woman;" the Colonel
+didn't; and Cos being _De Frontignac_, Syd leaned against one of the
+scenes, and looked on the whole thing with calm indifference externally,
+but much disquietude and annoyance within him. He was not jealous of the
+puppy; he would as soon have thought of putting himself on a par with
+Blanche's little white terrier, but he'd come to set a price on Cecil's
+winning smiles, and to see them given pretty equally to him, and to a
+young fool, her inferior in everything save position, whom he knew in
+her inmost soul she must ridicule and despise, galled his pride, and
+steeled his heart against her. His experience in women made him know
+that it was highly probable that Cecil was playing both at once, and
+that though, as he guessed, she loved him, she would, if Cos offered
+first, accept the title, and wealth, and position his cousin, equally
+with himself, could give her; and such love as that was far from the
+Colonel's ideal.
+
+"By George! Vivian, that Canadian of yours is a perfect angel," said a
+man in the Dragoons, who had played _Ulric_. "She's such a deuced lot
+ove pluck, such eyes, such hair, such a voice! 'Pon my life, I quite
+envy you. I suppose you mean to act out the play in reality, don't you?"
+
+Vivian lying back in an arm-chair in the green-room crushed up one of
+the satin playbills in his hand, and answered simply, "You do me too
+much honor, Calvert. Miss St. Aubyn and I have no thought of each
+other."
+
+If any man had given Vivian the lie, he would have had him out and shot
+him instanter; nevertheless, he told this one with the most unhesitating
+defiance of truth. He did not see Cecil, who had just come off the
+stage, standing behind him. But she heard his words, went as white as
+Muriel's phantom, and brushed past us into her dressing room, whence she
+emerged, when her name was called, her cheeks bright with their first
+rouge, and her eyes unnaturally brilliant. _How_ she flirted with Horace
+that night, when the theatricals were over! Young ladies who wanted to
+hook the pet baronet, whispered over their bouquets, "How bold!" and
+dowagers, seeing one of their best matrimonial speculations endangered
+by the brilliant Canadian, murmured behind their fans to each other
+their wonder that Mrs. Vivian should allow any one so fast and so
+unblushing a coquette to associate with her young daughters.
+
+Vivian watched her with intense earnestness. He had given her a bouquet
+that day, and she had thanked him for it with her soft, fond eyes, and
+told him she should use it. Now, as she came into the ball-room, he
+looked at the one in her hand; it was not his, but his cousin's.
+
+He set his teeth hard; and swore a bitter oath to himself. As _Huon_, he
+was obliged to dance the first dance with the _Countess_, but he spoke
+little to her, and indeed, Cecil did not give him much opportunity, for
+she talked fast, and at random, on all sorts of indifferent subjects,
+with more than even her usual vivacity, and quite unlike the ordinary
+soft and winning way she had used of late when with him. He danced no
+more with her, but, daring the waltzes with which he was obliged to
+favor certain county beauties, and all the time he was doing the honors
+of Deerhurst, with his calm, stately, Bayard-like courtesy, his eyes
+would fasten on the St. Aubyn, driving the Dragoons to desperation,
+waltzing while Horace whispered tender speeches in her ear, or sitting
+jesting and laughing, half the men in the room gathered round her--with
+a look of passion and hopelessness, tenderness and determination,
+strangely combined.
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+THE COLONEL KILLS HIS FOX, BUT LOSES HIS HEAD AFTER OTHER GAME.
+
+
+The next day was Christmas-eve; and on the 24th of December the hounds,
+from time immemorial, had been taken out by a Vivian. For the last few
+days the frost had been gradually breaking up, thank Heaven, and we
+looked forward to a good day's sport The meet was at Deerhurst, and it
+proved a strong muster for the Harkaway; though not exactly up to the
+Northamptonshire Leicestershire mark, are a clever, steady pack. Cecil
+and Blanche were the only two women with us, for the country is cramped
+and covered with blind fences, and the fair sex seldom hunt with the
+Harkaway. But the St. Aubyn is a first-rate seat, and Blanche has, she
+tells me, ridden anything from the day she first stuck on to her
+Shetland, when she was three years old. They were both down in time.
+Indeed, I question if they went to bed at all, or did any more than
+change their ball dresses for their habits. As I lifted Blanche on to
+her pet chestnut, I heard Syd telling Cecil that Billiard-ball was
+saddled.
+
+"Thank you," said the St. Aubyn, hurriedly. "I need not trouble you.
+Sir Horace has promised to mount me."
+
+Vivian bent his head with a strange smile, and sprang on Qui Vive, while
+Cecil mounted a showy roan, thorough-bred, the only good horse Cos had
+in his stud, despite the thousands he had paid into trainers' and
+breeders' pockets.
+
+"Stole away--forward, forward!" screamed Vivian's fellow-member for
+Cacklebury; and, holding Qui Vive hard by the head, away went Syd after
+the couple or two of hounds that were leading the way over some pasture
+land, with an ox-rail at the bottom of it, all the field after him.
+Cecil's roan flew over the grass land, and rose at the ox-rail as
+steadily as Qui Vive. Blanche's chestnut let himself be kicked along at
+no end of a pace, his mistress sitting down in her stirrups as well as
+the gallant M. F. H., her father. I never _do_ think of anything but the
+hounds flying along in front of me, but I could not help turning my head
+over my shoulder to see if she was all right; and I never admired her so
+much as when she passed me with a merry laugh: "Five to one I beat you,
+monsieur!" Away we went over the dark ploughed lands, and the naked
+thorn hedges, the wide straggling briar fences, and the fields covered
+with stones and belted with black-looking plantations. Down went Cos
+with his horse wallowing helplessly in a ditch, after considerately
+throwing him unhurt on the bank. Syd set his teeth as he lifted Qui Vive
+over the prostrate baronet, to the imminent danger of that dandy
+field-sportsman's life. "Take hold of his head, Miss St. Aubyn," shouted
+the M. F. H.; but before the words had passed his lips, Cecil had landed
+gallantly a little farther down. Another ten minutes with the hounds
+streaming over the country--a ten minutes of wild delight, worth all the
+monotonous hours of every-day life--and Qui Vive was alone with the
+hounds. We could see him speeding along a quarter of a mile ahead of us,
+and Cecil's roan was but half a field behind him. She was "riding
+jealous" of one of the best riders in the Queen's; the M. F. H. just in
+front of her turned his head once, in admiration of her pluck, to see
+her lift her horse at a staken-bound fence; but the Colonel never looked
+round. Away they went--they disappeared over the brow of a hill. Blanche
+shook her reins and struck her chestnut, and I sawed my hunter's mouth
+mercilessly with the snaffle. No use--we were too late by three minutes.
+Confound it! they had just killed their fox after twenty minutes' burst
+over a stiff country, one of the fastest things I ever saw.
+
+Cecil was pale with over-excitement, and upon my word she looked more
+ready to cry than anything when the M. F. H. complimented her with his
+genial smile, and his cordial "Well done, my dear. I never saw anybody
+ride better. I used to think my little Blanche the best seat in the
+country, but she must give place to you--eh, Syd?"
+
+"Miss St. Aubyn does everything well that she attempts," answered the
+Colonel, in his calm, courteous tone, looking, nevertheless, as stern as
+if he had just slain his deadliest enemy, instead of having seen a fox
+killed.
+
+Cecil flushed scarlet, and Cos coming up at that moment, a sadly
+bespattered object for such an Adonis to present, his coat possessing
+more the appearance of a bricklayer's than any one else's, after its
+bath of white mud, she turned to him, and began to laugh and talk with
+rather wild gaiety. It so chanced that the fox was killed on Horace's
+land, and we, being not more than a mile and a half off his house, the
+gallant Cos immediately seized upon the idea of having the object of his
+idolatry up there to luncheon; and his uncle, and Cecil, and Blanche
+acquiescing in the arrangement, to his house we went, with such of the
+field as had ridden up after the finish. Cos trotted forward with the
+St. Aubyn to show us the way by a short cut through the park, and the
+echoes of Cecil's laughter rang to Vivian in the rear discussing the run
+with his father.
+
+A very slap-up place was Cos's baronial hall, for the Cossettings had
+combined blood and money far many generations; its style and
+appointments were calculated to back him powerfully in the matrimonial
+market, and that Cecil might have it all was fully apparent, as he
+devoted himself to her at the luncheon, which made its appearance at a
+minute's notice, as if Aladdin had called it up. Cecil seemed disposed
+to have it too. A deep flush had come up in her cheeks; she smiled her
+brightest smiles on Cos; she drank his Moet's, bending her graceful head
+with a laughing pledge to her host; she talked so fast, so gaily, such
+repartee, such sarcasms, such jeux de mots, that it was well no women
+were at table to sit in judgment on her afterwards. A deadly paleness
+came over Vivian's face as he listened to her--but he sat at the bottom
+of the board where Cecil could not see him. His father, the gayest and
+best-tempered of mortals, laughed and applauded her; the other men were
+charmed with a style and a wit so new to them; and Cos, of course, was
+in the seventh heaven.
+
+The horses were dead beat, and Cos's drag, with its four bays very
+fresh, for they were so little worked, was ordered to take us back to
+Deerhurst.
+
+"Who'll drive," said Horace. "Will you, Syd?"
+
+"No," said his cousin, more laconically than politely.
+
+"Let _me_," cried Cecil. "I can drive four in hand. Nothing I like
+better."
+
+"Give me the ribbons," interposed the Colonel, changing his mind, "if
+you can't drive them yourself, Cos, as you ought to do."
+
+"No, no," murmured Cos. "Mith St. Aubyn shall do everything she wishes
+in _my_ house."
+
+"Let her drive them," laughed Vivian, senior. "Blanche has tooled my
+drag often enough before now."
+
+Before he had finished, Cecil had sprung up on to the box as lightly as
+a bird; her cheeks were flushed deeper still, and her gazelle eyes
+flashed darker than ever. Cos mounted beside her. Blanche and I in the
+back seat. The M. F. H., Syd, and the two other men behind. The bays
+shook their harness and started off at a rattling pace, Cecil tooling
+them down the avenue with her little gauntleted hands as well as if she
+had been Four-in-hand Forester of the Queen's Bays, or any other crack
+whip. How she flirted, and jested, and laughed, and shook the ribbons
+till the bays tore along the stony road in the dusky winter's
+afternoon--even Blanche, though a game little lady herself, looked
+anxious.
+
+Cecil asked Horace for a cigar, and struck a fusee, and puffed away into
+the frosty air like the wildest young Cantab at Trinity. It didn't make
+her sick, for she and Blanche had had two Queens out of Vivian's case,
+and smoked them to the last ash for fun only the day before; and she
+drove us at a mad gallop into Deerhurst Park, past the dark trees and
+the gleaming water and the trooping deer, and pulled up before the hall
+door just as the moon came out on Christmas-eve.
+
+We were all rather fast at Deerhurst, so Blanche got no scolding from
+her mamma (who, like a sensible woman, never put into their heads that
+things done in the glad innocency of the heart were "wrong"); and Cecil,
+as soon as she had sprung down, snatched her hand from Cos, and went up
+to her own room.
+
+The Colonel's lips were pressed close together, and his forehead had the
+dark frown that Guy wears in his portrait.
+
+It had been done with another, so it was all wrong; but oh! Syd, my
+friend, if the "dry" that was drunk, and the drag that was tooled, and
+the weed that was smoked, had been _yours_, wouldn't it have been the
+most charming caprice of the most charming woman!
+
+That night, at dinner, a letter by the afternoon's post came to the
+Colonel. It was "On her Majesty's Service," and his mother asked him
+anxiously what it was.
+
+"Only to tell me to join soon," said he, carelessly, giving me a sign to
+keep the contents of a similar letter I had just received to myself;
+which I should have done anyhow, as I had reason to hope that the
+disclosure of them would have quenched the light in some bright eyes
+beside me.
+
+"Ordered off at last, thank God!" said Syd, handing his father the
+letter as soon as the ladies were gone. "There's a train starts at
+12.40, isn't there, for town? You and I, Ned, had better go to-night.
+You don't look so charmed, old fellow, as you did when you went out to
+Scinde. I say, don't tell my sisters; there is no need to make a row in
+the house. Governor, you'll prepare my mother; I must bid _her_
+good-by."
+
+I _did not_ view the Crimea with the unmingled, devil-me-care delight
+with which I had gone out under "fighting Napier" nine years before,
+for Blanche's sunshiny face had made life fairer to me; and to obey Syd,
+and go without a farewell of her, was really too great a sacrifice to
+friendship. But he and I went to the drawing-rooms, chatted, and took
+coffee as if nothing had chanced, till he could no longer stand seeing
+Cecil, still excited, singing chansons to Cos, who was leaning
+enraptured over the instrument, and he went off to his own room. The
+other girls and men were busy playing the Race game; Blanche and I were
+sitting in the back drawing-room beside the fire, and the words that
+decided my destiny were so few, that I cite them as a useful lesson to
+those novelists who are in the habit of making their heroes, while
+waiting breathless to hear their fate, recite off at a cool canter four
+pages of the neatest-turned sentences without a single break-down or a
+single pull-up, to see how the lady takes it.
+
+"Blanche, I must bid you good-by to-night." Blanche turned to me in
+bewildered anxiety. "I must join my troop: perhaps I may be sent to the
+Crimea. I could go happily if I thought you would regret me?"
+
+Brutally selfish that was to be sure, but she did not take it so. She
+looked as if she was going to faint, and for fear she should, trusting
+to the engrossing nature of the Race game in the further apartment, I
+drew nearer to her. "Will you promise to give yourself to nobody else
+while I am away, my darling?" Blanche's eyes did promise me through
+their tears, and this brief scene, occupying the space of two minutes,
+twisted our fates into one on that eventful Christmas-eve.
+
+While I was parting with my poor little Blanche in the library, Vivian
+was bidding his mother farewell in her dressing-room. His mother had the
+one soft place in his heart, steeled and made skeptical to all others by
+that fatal first love of which he had spoken to Cecil. Possibly some of
+her son's bitter grief was shown to her on that sad Christmas-eve; at
+all events, when he left her dressing-room, he had the tired, haggard
+look left by any conflict of passion. As he came down the stairs to come
+to the dog-cart that was to take us to the station, the door of
+Blanche's boudoir stood open, and in it he saw Cecil. The fierce tide of
+his love surged up, subduing all his pride, and he paused to take his
+last sight of the face that would haunt him in the long night watches
+and the rapid rush of many a charge. She looked up and saw him; that
+look overpowered all his calmness and resolve. He turned, and bent
+towards her, every feature quivering with the passion she had once
+longed to rouse. His hot breath scorched her cheek, and he caught her
+fiercely against his heart in an iron embrace, pressing his burning lips
+on hers. "God forgive you! I have loved you too well. Women have ever
+been fatal to my race!"
+
+He almost threw her from him in the violence of feelings roused after a
+long sleep. In another moment he was driving the dog-cart at a mad
+gallop past the old church in which we had spent such pleasant hours.
+Its clock tolled out twelve strokes as we passed it, and on the quiet
+village, and the weird-like trees, and the tall turrets of Deerhurst,
+the Christmas morning dawned.
+
+Vivian continued so utterly enfeebled and prostrate that there was but
+one chance for him--return homewards. I was going to England with
+despatches, and Syd, at his mother's entreaty, let himself be carried
+down to a transport, and shipped for England. He was utterly listless
+and strengthless, although the voyage did him a little good. He did not
+care where he went, so he stayed in town with me while I presented
+myself at the Horse Guards and war Office, and then we travelled down
+together to Deerhurst.
+
+Oddly enough it was Christmas-eve again when we drove up the old avenue.
+The snow was falling heavily, and lay deep on the road and thick on the
+hedges and trees. The meadows and woods were white against the dark,
+hushed sky, and the old church, and its churchyard cedars, were loaded
+too with the clouds' Christmas gift. To me, at least, the English scene
+was very pleasant, after the heat, and dirt, and minor worries of
+Gallipoli and Constantinople. The wide stretching country, with its
+pollards, and holly hedges, and homesteads, the cattle safe housed, the
+yule fire burning cheerily on the hearths, the cottages and farms
+nestling down among their orchards and pasture-lands, all was so
+heartily and thoroughly English. They seemed to bring back days when I
+was a boy skating and sliding on the mere at home, or riding out with
+the harriers light-hearted and devil-me-care as a boy might be, coming
+back to hear the poor governor's cheery voice tell me I was one of the
+old stock, and to toss down a bumper of Rhenish with a time-honored
+Christmas toast. The crackle of the crisp snow, the snort of the horses
+as they plunged on into the darkening night, and the red fire-light
+flickering on the lattice windows of the cottages we passed, were so
+many welcomes home, and I double-thonged the off-wheeler with a
+vengeance as I thought of soft lips that would soon touch mine, and a
+soft voice that would soon whisper my best "Io triumphe!"
+
+The lodge-gates flew open. We passed the old oaks and beeches, the deer
+trooping away over the snow as we startled them out of their rest. We
+were not expected that night, and my man rang such a peal at the bell as
+might have been heard all over the quiet park. Another minute, and
+Blanche and I were together again, and alone in the library where we had
+parted just twelve months before. Of course, for the time being, we
+neither knew nor cared what was going on in the other rooms of the
+house. The Colonel had gone to rest himself on the sofa in the
+dining-room. Half an hour had elapsed, perhaps, when a wild cry rang
+through the house, startling even us, absorbed though we were in our
+tete-a-tete. Blanche's first thought was of her brother. She ran out
+through the hall, and up the staircase, and I followed her. At the top
+of the stairs, leaning against the wall, breathing fast, and his face
+ashy white, stood Syd, and at his feet, in a dead faint, lay Cecil St.
+Aubyn. I caught hold of Blanche's arm and held her back as she was about
+to spring forward. I thought their meeting had much best be
+uninterrupted; for, if Cecil's had been mere flirtation I fancied the
+Colonel's return could scarcely have moved her like this.
+
+Vivian stood looking down on her, all the passion in him breaking
+bounds. He could not stand calmly by the woman he loved. He did not wait
+to know whether she was his or another's--whether she was worthy or
+unworthy of him--but he lifted her up and pressed her unconscious form
+against his heart, covering her lips with wild caresses. Waking from her
+trance, she opened her eyes with a terrified stare, and gazed up in his
+face; then tears came to her relief, and she sank down at his feet again
+with a pitiful cry, "Forgive me--forgive me!" Weak as Syd was, he found
+strength to raise her in his arms, and whisper, as he bent over her, "If
+you love me, I have nothing to forgive."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The snow fell softly without over the woods and fields and the winds
+roared through the old oaks and whistled among the frozen ferns, but
+Christmas-eve passed brightly enough to us at home within the strong
+walls of Deerhurst.
+
+I am sure that all Moore's pictures of Paradise seemed to me tame
+compared to that drawing-room, with its warmth, and coziness, and
+luxuries; with the waxlights shining on the silver of the English tea
+equipage (pleasant to eye and taste, let one love campaigning ever so
+well, after the roast beans of the Commissariat), and the fire-gleams
+dancing on the soft brow and shining hair of the face beside me. I doubt
+if Vivian either ever spent a happier Christmas-eve as he lay on the
+sofa in the back drawing-room, with Cecil sitting on a low seat by him,
+her hand in his, and the Canadian eyes telling him eloquently of love
+and reconciliation. They had such volumes to say! As soon as she knew
+that wild farewell of his preceded his departure to the Crimea, Cecil,
+always impulsive, had written to him on the instant, telling him how she
+loved him, detailing what she had heard in the green-room, confessing
+that, in desperation, she had done everything she could to rouse his
+jealousy, assuring him that that same evening she had refused Cos's
+proposals, and beseeching him to forgive her and come back to her. That
+letter Vivian had never had (six months from that time, by the way, it
+turned up, after a journey to India and Melbourne, following a cousin of
+his, colonel of a line regiment, she in her haste having omitted to put
+his troop on the address), and Cecil, whose feeling was too deep to let
+her mention the subject to Blanche or Helena, made up her mind that he
+would never forgive her, and being an impressionable young lady, had, on
+the anniversary of Christmas-eve, been comparing her fate with that of
+Muriel in the ghost legend, and, on seeing the Colonel's unexpected
+apparition, had fainted straight away in the over-excitement and sudden
+joy of the moment.
+
+Such was Cecil's story, and Vivian was content with it and gladly took
+occasion to practise the Christmas duties of peace, and love, and
+pardon. He had the best anodyne for his wounds now, and there was no
+danger for him, since Cecil had taken the place of the Scutari nurses.
+No "Crimean heroes," as they call us in the papers, were ever more feted
+and petted than were the Colonel and I.
+
+Christmas morning dawned, the sun shining bright on the snow-covered
+trees, and the Christmas bells chiming merrily; and as we stood on the
+terrace to see the whole village trooping up through the avenue to
+receive the gifts left to them by some old Vivian long gone to his rest
+with his forefathers under the churchyard cedars, Syd looked down with a
+smile into Cecil's eyes as she hung on his arm, and whispered,
+
+"I will double those alms, love, in memory of the priceless gift this
+Christmas has given me. Ah! Thornton and I little knew, when we came
+down for the hunting, how fast you and Blanche would capture us with
+your--HOLLY WREATHS AND ROSE CHAINS."
+
+
+
+
+SILVER CHIMES AND GOLDEN FETTERS.
+
+
+
+
+SILVER CHIMES AND GOLDEN FETTERS.
+
+
+
+
+I.
+
+WALDEMAR FALKENSTEIN AND VALERIE L'ESTRANGE.
+
+
+"A quarter to twelve! By Heaven if my luck don't change before the year
+is out, I vow I'll never touch a card in the next!" exclaimed one of
+several men playing lansquenet in Harry Godolphin's rooms at
+Knightsbridge.
+
+There were seven or eight of them, some with long rent-rolls, others
+within an ace of the Queen's Bench; the poor devils losing in the long
+run much oftener and more recklessly than the rich fellows; all of them
+playing high, as that _beau joueur_ of the Guards, Godolphin, always
+did.
+
+Luck had been dead against the man who spoke ever since they had
+deserted the mess-room for the _cartes_ in the privacy of Harry's rooms.
+If Fortune is a woman, he ought to have found favor in her eyes. His age
+was between thirty and thirty-five, his figure with grace and strength
+combined, his features nobly and delicately cut, his head, like
+Canning's, one of great intellectual beauty, and by the flash of his
+large dark eyes, and the additional paleness of his cheek, it was easy
+to see he was playing high once too often.
+
+Five minutes passed--he lost still; ten minutes' luck was yet against
+him. A little French clock began the Silver Chimes that rang out the Old
+Year; the twelfth stroke sounded, the New Year was come, and Waldemar
+Falkenstein rose and drank down some cognac--a ruined man.
+
+"A happy New Year to you, and better luck, Falkenstein," cried
+Godolphin, drinking his toast with a ringing laugh and a foaming bumper
+of Chambertin. "What shall I wish you? The richest wife in the kingdom,
+a cabal that will break all the banks, for Mistletoe to win the Oaks, or
+for your eyes to be opened to your sinful state, as the parson phrases
+it--which, eh?"
+
+"Thank you, Harry," laughed Falkenstein. (Like the old Spartans, we can
+laugh while the wolf gnaws our vitals.) "You remind me of what my
+holy-minded brother wrote to me when I broke my shoulder-bone down at
+Melton last season: 'My dear Waldemar, I am sorry to hear of your sad
+accident; but all things are ordered for the best, and I trust that in
+your present hours of solitude your thoughts may be mercifully turned to
+higher and better things.' Queer style of sympathy, wasn't it? I
+preferred yours, when you sent me 'Adelaide Meran,' and that splendid
+hock I wasn't allowed to touch."
+
+"I should say so; but catch the Pharisees giving anybody anything warmer
+than texts and counsels, that cost them nothing," said Tom Bevan of the
+Blues. "Apropos of Pharisees, have you heard that old Cash is going to
+build a chapel-of-ease in Belgravia, to endow that young owl Gus with as
+soon as he can pull himself through his 'greats?' It is thought that the
+dear Bella will be painted as St. Catherine for the altar-piece."
+
+"She'll strychnine herself if we're all so hard-hearted as to leave her
+to St. Catharine's nightcap," laughed Falkenstein.
+
+"Why don't _you_ take up with her, old fellow?" said a man in
+Godolphin's troop. "Not the sangue puro, you'd say; rather sallied with
+XXX. But what does that signify? you've quarterings enough for two."
+
+"Much good the quarterings do me. No, thank you," said Falkenstein
+bitterly. "I'm not going to sell myself, though my dear friends would
+insinuate that I was sold already to a gentleman who never quits hold of
+his bargains. I've fetters enough now too heavy by half to add
+matrimonial handcuffs to them."
+
+"Right, old boy," said Harry. "The Cashranger hops and vats, even done
+in the brightest parvenu _or_, would scarcely look well blazoned on the
+royal _gules_. Come, sit down. Where are you going?"
+
+"He's going to Eulalie Brown's, I bet," said Bevan. "Nonsense, Waldemar;
+throw her over, and stay and take your revenge--it's so early."
+
+"No, thank you," said Falkenstein briefly. "By the way, I suppose you
+all go to Cashranger's to-morrow?"
+
+"Make a point of it, answered Godolphin. I feel I'm sinning against my
+Order to visit him, but really his Lafitte's so good----I'm sorry you
+_will_ leave us, Waldemar, but I know I might as well try to move the
+Marble Arch as try to turn you."
+
+"Indeed I never set up for a Roman, Harry. The deuce take this pipe, it
+won't light. Good night to you all." And leaving them drinking hard,
+laughing loud, and telling _grivois_ tales before they sat down to play
+in all its delirious delight, he sprang into a hanson, and drove, not to
+Eulalie Brown's _petit souper_, but to his own rooms in Duke Street, St.
+James's.
+
+Falkenstein's governor, some two-score years before, had got in
+mauvaise odeur in Vienna for some youthful escapade at court; powerful
+as his princely family was, had been obliged to fly the country; and,
+coming over here, entered himself at the Bar, and, setting himself to
+work with characteristic energy, had, wonderful to relate, made a
+fortune at it. A fine, gallant, courtly _ancien noble_ was the Count,
+haughty and passionate at times, after the manner of the house; fond of
+his younger son Waldemar, who at school had tanned boys twice his size;
+rode his pony in at the finish; smoked, swam, and otherwise conducted
+himself, till all the rest of the boys worshipped him, though I believe
+the masters generally attributed to him more _diablerie_ than divinity.
+But of late, unluckily, his father had been much dominated over by
+Waldemar's three sisters, ladies of a chill and High Church turn of
+mind, and by his brother, who in early life had been a prize boy and a
+sap, and received severe buffetings from his junior at football; and
+now, being much the more conventional and unimpeachable of the two, took
+his revenge by carrying many tales to the old Count of his wilder
+son--tales to which Falkenstein gave strong foundation. For he was
+restless and reckless, strikingly original, and, above the common herd,
+too impatient to take any meddling with his affairs, and too proud to
+explain where he was misjudged; and, though he held a crack government
+place, good pay, and all but a sinecure, he often spent more than he
+had, for economy was a dead-letter to him, and if any man asked him a
+loan, he was too generous to say "No." Life in all its phases he had
+seen from the time he left school, and you know, mon ami, we cannot see
+life on a groat--at least, through the bouquet of the wines at Vefours,
+and the brilliance of the gas-light in Casinos and Redoutes. The
+fascinations of play were over him--the iron hand of debt pressed upon
+him; altogether, as he sat through the first hours of the New Year,
+smoking, and gazing on the flickering fire gleams, there was not much
+light either in his past or future!
+
+Keenly imaginative and susceptible, blase and skeptical though he was,
+the weight of the Old Year and of many gone before it, weighed heavily
+on his thoughts. Scenes and deeds of his life, that he would willingly
+have blotted out, rose before him; vague regrets, unformed desires,
+floated to him on the midnight chimes.
+
+The Old Year was drifting away on the dark clouds floating on to the
+sea, the New Year was dawning on the vast human life swarming in the
+costly palaces and crowded dens around him. The past was past,
+ineffaceable, and relentless; the future lay hid in the unborn days, and
+Falkenstein, his pipe out, his fire cold and black, took a sedative, and
+threw himself on his bed, to sleep heavily and restlessly through the
+struggling morning light of the New Year.
+
+James Cashranger, Esq., of 133, Lowndes Square, was a millionnaire, and
+the million owed its being to the sale of his entire, which was of high
+celebrity, being patronised by all the messes and clubs, shipped to all
+the colonies, blessed by all the H. E. I. C.s, shouted by all the potmen
+as "Beer-r-r-how," and consumed by all England generally. But
+Cashranger's soul soared above the snobisms of malt and jack, and a la
+Jourdain, of bourgeois celebrity, he would have let any Dorante of the
+beau monde fleece him through thick and thin, and, _en effet_, gave
+dinners and drums unnumbered to men and women, who, like Godolphin, went
+there for the sake of his Lafitte, and quizzed him mercilessly behind
+his back. The first day Harry dined there with nine other spirits worse
+than himself--Cashranger having begged him to bring some of his
+particular chums--he looked at the eleventh seat, and asked, with
+consummate impudence, who it was for?
+
+"Why, really, my dear Colonel, it is for--for myself," faltered the
+luckless brewer.
+
+"Oh?--ah?--I see," drawled Harry; "you mistook me; I said I'd dine
+_here_--I didn't say I'd dine with _you_."
+
+That, however, was four or five years before; now, Godolphin having
+proclaimed his cook and cellar worth countenancing, and his wife, the
+relict of a lieutenant in the navy, being an admirable adept in the
+snob's art of "pushing," plenty of exclusive dandies and extensive fine
+ladies crushed up the stairs on New Year's-night to one of Cashranger's
+numerous "At homes." Among them, late enough, came Falkenstein. These
+sort of crushes bored him beyond measure, but he wanted to see Godolphin
+about some intelligence he had had of an intended illegitimate use of
+the twitch to Mistletoe, that sweet little chestnut who stood favorite
+for the Oaks. He soon paid his devoir to madame, who wasn't quite
+accustomed even yet to all this grandeur after her early struggles on
+half-pay, and to her eldest daughter, the Bella aforesaid, a showy,
+flaunting girl with a peony color, and went on through the rooms seeking
+Harry, stopping, however, for a word to every pretty woman he knew; for
+though he began to find his game grow stale, he and the beau sexe have a
+mutual attraction. Little those women guessed, as they smiled in his
+handsome eyes, and laughed at his witty talk, and blushed at his soft
+voice, how heartily sick he was of their frivolities, and how often
+disappointment and sarcasm lurked in his mocking words. To be blase was
+no affectation with Falkenstein; it was a very earnest reality, as with
+most of us who have knocked about in the world, not only from the
+variety of his manifold experiences, but from the trickery, and censure,
+and cold water with which the world had treated him.
+
+"You here, old fellow?" said Bevan of the Blues, meeting him in the
+music-room, where some artistes were singing Traviata airs. "You don't
+care for this row, do you? Come along with me, and I'll show you
+something that will amuse you better."
+
+"Show me Godolphin, and I'll thank you. I didn't come to stay--did you?"
+
+"No. Horrid bore, ain't it? But since you are here, you may as well take
+a look at the dearest little actress I ever saw since I was a boy, and
+bewitched by Leontine Fay. Sit down." Bevan went on, as they entered a
+room fitted up like a theatre, "There, it's that one with blue eyes, got
+up like a Watteau's huntress; isn't she a brilliant little thing?"
+
+"Very. She plays as well as Dejazet. Who is she?"
+
+"Don't know. Can you tell us, Forester?"
+
+"She's old Cash's niece," said Forester, not taking his eyes off the
+stage. "Come as a sort of companion to the beloved Bella; dangerous
+companion, I should say, for there's no comparing the two."
+
+"What's her name?"
+
+"Viola--Violet--no, Valerie L'Estrange. L'Estrange, of the 10th, ran
+away with Cash's sister. God knows why. Horrid low connexion, and no
+money. She went speedily to glory, and he drank himself to death two
+years ago in Lahore. I remember him, a big fellow, fourteen stone,
+pounded Bully Batson once at Moseley, and there wasn't such another hard
+hitter among the fancy as Bully. When he departed this life, of course
+his daughter was left to her own devices, with scarcely a rap to buy her
+bonnets. Clever little animal she is, too; she wrote those proverbs
+they're now playing; full of dash, and spice, ain't they? especially
+when you think a girl wrote 'em."
+
+"Introduce me as soon as they're over," said Falkenstein, leaning back
+to study the young actress and author, who was an engaging study enough,
+being full of grace and vivacity, with animated features, mobile
+eyebrows, dark-blue eyes, and chestnut hair. "Anything original would be
+as great a wonder as to buy Cavendish in Regent-Street that wasn't
+bird's-eye."
+
+"Valerie's original enough for anybody's money. Hark how she's firing
+away at Egerton. Pretty little soft voice she has. I do like a pretty
+voice for a woman," said Forester, clapping softly, with many a murmured
+bravisima.
+
+"You're quite enthusiastic," smiled Falkenstein. "Pity you haven't a
+bouquet to throw at her."
+
+"Don't you poke fun at me, you cynic," growled Forester. "I've seen you
+throw bouquets at much plainer women."
+
+"And the bouquets and the women were much alike in morning light--faded
+and colorless on their artificial stalks as soon as the gas glare was
+off them."
+
+"Hold your tongue, Juvenal," laughed Forester, "or I vow I won't
+introduce you. You'll begin satirising poor little Val as soon as you've
+spoken to her."
+
+"Oh, I can be merciful to the weak; don't I let _you_ alone, Forester?"
+laughed Waldemar, as the curtain fell.
+
+The proverbs were over, and having put herself in ball-room style, the
+author came among the audience. He amused himself with watching how she
+took her numerous compliments, and was astonished to detect neither
+vanity nor shyness, and to hear her turn most of them aside with a
+laugh. She was quite as attractive off as on the stage, especially with
+the aroma of her sparkling proverbs hanging about her; and Falkenstein
+got his introduction, and consigning Godolphin and Mistletoe to
+futurity, waltzed with her, and found her dancing as full of grace and
+lightness as an Andalusian's or Arlesienne's. Falkenstein cared little
+enough for the saltatory art, but this waltz did not bore him, and when
+it was over, regardless of some dozen names written on her tablets, he
+gave her his arm, and they strolled out of the ball-room into a cooler
+atmosphere. He found plenty of fun in her, as he had expected from her
+proverbs, and sat down beside her in the conservatory to let himself be
+amused for half an hour.
+
+"Do you know many of the people here?" she asked him. "Is there anybody
+worth pointing out? There ought to be, in four or five hundred dwellers
+in the aristocratic west."
+
+"I know most of them personally or by report, but they are all of the
+same stamp, like the petals of that camellia, some larger and some
+smaller, but all cut in the same pattern. Most of them apostles of
+fashion, martyrs to debt, worshippers of the rising sun. All of them
+created by art, from the young ladies who owe their roses and lilies to
+Breidenbach, to the ci-devant jeunes hommes, who buy their figures in
+Bond Street and their faces from Isidore. All of them actors--and pretty
+good actors, too--from that pretty woman yonder, who knows her milliner
+may imprison her any day for the lace she is now drawing round her with
+a laugh, to that sleek old philanthropist playing whist through the
+doors there, whose guinea points are paid by the swindle of half
+England."
+
+She laughed.
+
+"Lend me your lorgnon. I should like to see around me as you do."
+
+"Wait twenty years, you will have it; there are two glasses to
+it--experience and observation."
+
+"But your glasses are smoked, are they not?" said Valerie, with a quick
+glance at him; "for you seem to me to see everything en noir."
+
+He smiled.
+
+"When I was a boy I had a Claude glass, but they break very soon; or
+rather, as you say, grow dark and dim with the smoke of society. But you
+ask me about these people. You know them, do you not, as they are your
+uncle's guests?"
+
+She shook her head.
+
+"I have been here but a week or two. For the last two years I have been
+vegetating among the fens, with a maiden aunt of poor papa's."
+
+"And did you like the country?"
+
+"Like it!" cried Valerie, "I was buried alive. Everything was so
+dreadfully punctual and severe in that house, that I believe the very
+cat had forgotten how to purr. Breakfast at eight, drive at two, dinner
+at five, prayers at ten. Can't you fancy the dreary diurnal round, with
+a pursy old rector or two, and three or four high-dried county
+princesses as callers once a quarter? Luckily, I can amuse myself, but
+oh, you cannot think how I sickened of the monotony, how I longed to
+_live!_ At last, I grew so naughty, I was expelled."
+
+"May I inquire your sins?" asked Falkenstein, really amused for once.
+
+She laughed at the remembrance.
+
+"I read 'Notre-Dame' against orders, and I rode the fat old mare round
+the paddock without a saddle. I saw no harm in it; as a child, I read
+and rode everything I came near, but the rough-riding was condemned as
+unfeminine, and any French book, were it even the 'Genie du
+Christianisme,' or the 'Petit Careme,' would be regarded by Aunt Agatha,
+who doesn't know a word of the language, as a powder magazine of
+immorality and infidelity."
+
+"C'est la profonde ignorance qui inspire le ton dogmatique," laughed
+Falkenstein. "But surely you have been accustomed to society."
+
+"No, never; but I am made for it, I fancy," said Valerie, with an
+unconscious compliment to herself. "When I was with the dear old Tenth,
+I used to enjoy myself, but I was a child then. The officers were very
+kind to me--gentlemen always are much more so than ladies"--("Pour
+cause," thought Waldemar, as she went on)--"but ever since then I have
+vegetated as I tell you, in much the same still life as the anemones in
+my vase."
+
+"Yet you could write those proverbs," said he, involuntarily.
+
+She laughed, and colored.
+
+"Oh, I have written ever since I could make A B C, and I have not
+forgotten all I saw with the old Tenth. But come, tell me more of these
+people; I like to hear your satire."
+
+"I am glad you do," said Falkenstein, with a smile; "for only those who
+have no foibles to hit have a relish for sarcasm. Do you think Messaline
+and Lelie had much admiration for La Bruyere's periods, however well
+turned or justly pointed? but those whom the caps did not fit probably
+enjoyed them as you and I do. All satirists, from Martial downwards,
+most likely gain an enemy for each truth they utter, for in this bal
+masque of life it is not permitted to tear the masks off our
+companions."
+
+"Do you wear one?" asked Valerie, quickly. "I fancy, like Monte Cristo,
+your pleasure is to 'usurper les vices que vous n'avez pas, et de cacher
+les vertus que vous avez.'"
+
+"Virtues? If you knew me better, you would know that I never pretend to
+any. If you compare me to Monte Cristo, say rather that I 'preche
+loyalement l'egoisme,'" laughed Falkenstein. "Upon my word, we are
+talking very seriously for a ball-room. I ought to be admiring your
+bouquet, Miss L'Estrange, or petitioning for another waltz."
+
+"Don't trouble yourself. I like this best," said Valerie, playing with
+the flowers round her. "And I ought to have my own way, for this is my
+birthday."
+
+"New Year's-day? Indeed! Then I am sure I wish you most sincerely the
+realisation of all your ideals and desires, which, to the imaginative
+author of the proverbs, will be as good as wishing her Aladdin's lamp,"
+smiled Falkenstein.
+
+She smiled too, and sighed.
+
+"And about as improbable as Aladdin's lamp. Did you see the Old Year out
+last night?"
+
+"Yes," he answered, briefly; for the remembrance of what he had lost
+watching it out was not agreeable to him.
+
+"There was a musical party here," continued Valerie, "but I got away
+from it, for I like to be alone when the past and the future meet--do
+not you?"
+
+"No; your past is pure, your future is bright. Mine are not so; I don't
+want to be stopped to contemplate them."
+
+"Nor are mine, indeed; but the death of an Old Year is sad and solemn to
+me as the death of a friend, and I like to be alone in its last hour. I
+wonder," she continued, suddenly, "what this year will bring. I wonder
+where you and I shall be next New Year's-night?"
+
+Falkenstein laughed, not merrily.
+
+"_I_ shall be in Kensal Green or the Queen's Bench, very likely. Why do
+you look astonished Miss L'Estrange; one is the destination of everybody
+in these rooms, and the other probably of one-half of them."
+
+"Don't speak so bitterly--don't give me sad thoughts on my birthday. Oh,
+how tiresome!" cried Valerie, interrupting herself, "there comes Major
+D'Orwood."
+
+"To claim you?"
+
+"Yes; I'd forgotten him entirely. I promised to waltz with him an hour
+ago."
+
+"What the devil brought you here to interrupt us?" thought Falkenstein,
+as the Guardsman lisped a reproof at Valerie's cruelty, and gave her his
+arm back to the ball-room. Waldemar stopped her, however, engaged her
+for the next, and sauntered through the room on her other side. He
+waltzed a good deal with her, paying her that sort of attention which
+Falkenstein knew how to make the softest and subtlest homage a woman
+could have. Amused himself, he amused her with his brilliant and pointed
+wit, so well, that Valerie L'Estrange told him, when he bid her good
+night, that she had never enjoyed any birthday so much.
+
+"Well," said Bevan, as they drove away from 133, Lowndes Square, "did
+you find that wonderful little L'Estrange as charming a companion as
+actress? You ought to know, for you've been after her all night, like a
+ferret after a rabbit."
+
+"Yes," said Falkenstein, taking out a little pet briarwood pipe, "I was
+very pleased with her: she's worth no more than the others, probably, au
+fond, but she's very entertaining and frank: she'll tell you anything.
+Poor child! she can't be over-comfortable in Cash's house. She's a lady
+by instinct; that odious ostentation and snobbish toadying must disgust
+her. Besides, Bella is not very likely to lead a girl a very nice life
+who is partially dependent on her father, and infinitely better style
+than herself."
+
+"The devil, no! That flaunting, flirting, over-dressed Cashranger girl
+is my detestation. She'll soon find means to worry littil Valerie. Women
+have a great spice of the mosquito in 'em, and enjoy nothing more than
+stinging each other to death."
+
+"Well, she must get Forester or D'Orwood--some man who can afford it--to
+take compassion upon her. All of them finish so when they can; the rich
+ones marry for a title, and the poor ones for a home," said the Count,
+stirring up his pipe. "Here's my number; thank you for dropping me; and
+good night, old fellow."
+
+"Good night. Pleasant dreams of your author and actress, _aux longs yeux
+bleus_."
+
+Waldemar laughed as he took out his latch-key. "I'm afraid I couldn't
+get up so much romance. You and I have done with all that, Tom. Confound
+it, I never saw Godolphin, after all. Well, I must go and breakfast with
+him to-morrow."
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+FALKENSTEIN BREAKS LANCES WITH THE "LONGS YEUX BLEUS."
+
+
+He did breakfast with Godolphin, not, however, before he had held a
+small but disagreeable levee to one or two rather impatient callers whom
+he couldn't satisfy, and a certain Amadeus Levi, who, having helped him
+to the payment of those debts of honor incurred in Harry's rooms, held
+him by Golden Fetters as hard to unclasp as the chains that bound
+Prometheus. He shook himself free of them at last, drove to
+Knightsbridge, and had a chat with Godolphin, over coffee and
+chibouques, went to his two or three hours' diplomatic work in the Deeds
+and Chronicles Office, and when he came out, instead of going to his
+club as usual, thought he might as well call on the Cashrangers, and
+turned his steps to Lowndes Square. Valerie L'Estrange was sitting at a
+Davenport, done out of her Watteau costume into very becoming English
+morning dress; he had only time to shake hands with her before Bella and
+her mamma set upon him. Miss Cashranger had a great admiration for him,
+and, though his want of money was a drawback, the royal gules of his
+blazonments, joined to his manifold attractions, fairly dazzled her, and
+she held him tight, talking over the palace concerts, till a dowager and
+her daughter, and a couple of men from Hounslow, being ushered in, he
+was at liberty, and sitting down by Valerie, gave her a book she had
+said the night before she wished to read.
+
+"'Goethe's Autobiography!' Oh, thank you--how kind you are!"
+
+"Not at all," laughed Falkenstein. "To merit such things I ought to have
+saved your life at least. What are you doing here; writing some more
+proverbs, I hope, to give me a part in one?"
+
+She shook her head. "Nothing half so agreeable. I am writing dinner
+invitations, and answering Belle's letters."
+
+"Why, can't she answer them herself?"
+
+"My motto here is 'Ich Dien,'" she answered, with a flush on her cheeks.
+
+Bella turned languidly round, and verified her words: "Val, Puppet's
+scratching at the door; let him in, will you?"
+
+Waldemar rose and opened the door for a little slate-colored greyhound,
+and while Bella lisped out her regrets for his trouble, smiled a smile
+that made Miss Cashranger color, and looked searchingly at Valerie to
+see how she took it. She turned a grateful, radiant look on him, and
+whispered, "Je m'affranchirai un jour."
+
+"Et comment?"
+
+She raised her mobile eyebrows: "Dieu sait! Comme actrice, comme
+feuilletonniste--j'ai mes reves, monsieur--mais pas comme institutrice:
+cela me tuerait bientot."
+
+"Je le crois," said Falkenstein, briefly, as he took up the
+autobiography, and began to talk on it.
+
+"I don't like Goethe for one thing," said Valerie; "he loved a dozen
+women one after the other. That I would pardon him; most men do so; but
+I don't believe he really loved any one of them."
+
+"Oh yes he did; quite enough, at least, to please himself. He wasn't so
+silly as to go in for a never-ending, heart-burning, heart-breaking,
+absorbing passion. We don't do those things."
+
+"Go in for it!" repeated Valerie, contemptuously, "I suppose if he had
+been of the nature to feel such, he couldn't have helped it."
+
+"I can help going near the fire, can't I, if I don't wish to be burnt?"
+
+"Yes; but a coal may fly out of the fire, and set you in flames, when
+you are sitting far away from it."
+
+"Then I ought to wear asbestos," said Waldemar, with a merry quizzical
+smile. "You authors, and poets, and artists think 'the world well lost,
+and all for love!' but we rational people, who know the world, find it
+quite the contrary. Those are very pretty ideas for your proverbs, but
+they don't suit real life. _We_, when we're boys, worship some parterre
+divinity, till we see her some luckless day inebriate with
+eau-de-Cologne, or more unpoetic porter, are cured and disenchanted,
+wait ten years with Christines and Minna Herzliebs in the interim, and
+wind up with a rich widow, who keeps us straight and heads our table.
+_You_, fresh from the school-room, fasten on some lachrymose curate, or
+flirting dragoon, as the object of your early romances, walk with him
+under the limes, work him a smoking-cap, and write him tender little
+notes, till mamma whispers her hope that Mr. A. or B. is serious, and
+you, balancing, like a sensible girl, A. or B.'s tangible settlements
+with the others' intangible love-speeches, forsake the limes, forswear
+the notes, and announce yourself as 'sold.' That's the love of our day,
+Miss L'Estrange, and very wise and----"
+
+"Love!" cried Valerie, with supreme scorn. "You don't know the common A
+B C of love. You might as well call gilt leather-work pure gold."
+
+Falkenstein laughed heartily. "Well, there's a good deal more
+leather-work than gold about in the world, isn't there?"
+
+"A good deal more, granted; but there is some gold to be found, I should
+hope."
+
+"Not without alloy; it can't be worked, you know."
+
+"It can't be worked for the base purposes of earth; but it may be found
+still undefiled before men's touch has soiled it. So I believe in some
+hearts, undefiled by the breath of conventionality and cant, may lie the
+true love of the poets, 'lasting, and knowing not change.'"
+
+"Ah! you're too ideal for me," cried Waldemar, smiling at her impetuous
+earnestness. "You are all enthusiasm, imagination, effervescence----"
+
+"I am not," she answered, impatiently. "I can be very practical when I
+like; I made myself the loveliest wreath yesterday; quite as pretty as
+Bella buys at Mitchell's for five times the sum mine cost me. That was
+very realistic, wasn't it?"
+
+"No. That exercised your fancy. You wouldn't do--what do you call
+it?--plain work, with half the gusto; now, would you?"
+
+Valerie made a _moue mutine_, expressive of entire repudiation of such
+employment.
+
+"I thought so," laughed Falkenstein. "You idealists are like the fire in
+the grate yonder; you flame up very hot and bright for a moment, but
+'the sparks fly upward and expire,' and if they're not fed with some
+fresh fuel they soon die out into lifeless cinders."
+
+"On the contrary," said Valerie, quickly, "we are like wood fires, and
+burn red down to the last ash."
+
+"Mr. Falkenstein, come and look at this little 'Ghirlandaio,'" said
+Bella, turning round, with an angry light in her eyes; "it is such a
+gem. Papa bought it the other day."
+
+Waldemar rose reluctantly enough to inspect the "Ghirlandaio,"
+manufactured in a back slum, and smoked into proper antiquity to pigeon,
+under the attractive title of an "Old Master," the brewer and his
+species, and found Miss Cashranger's ignorant dilettantism very tame
+after Valerie's animated arguments and gesticulation. But he was too old
+a hand at such game not to know how to take advantage of even an enemy's
+back-handed stroke, and he turned the discussion on art to an inspection
+of Valerie's portfolio, over whose croquis and pastels, and
+water-colors, he lingered as long as he could, till the clock reminded
+him that it was time to walk on into Eaton Square, where he was going to
+dine at his father's. The governor excepted, Falkenstein had little
+rapport with his family. His brother was as chilly disagreeable in
+private life as he was popularly considered irreproachable in public,
+and as pragmatical and uncharitable as your immaculate individuals
+ordinarily are. His sisters were cold, conventional women, as utterly
+incapable of appreciating him as of allowing the odor of his Latakia in
+their drawing-room, and so it chanced that Waldemar, a favorite in every
+other house he entered, received but a chill welcome at home. A prophet
+has no honor in his own country, and the hearth where a man's own kin
+are seated is too often the one to nurture the cockatrice's eggs of
+ill-nature and injustice against him. Thank Heaven there are others
+where the fire burns brighter, and the smiles are fonder for him. It
+were hard for some of us if we were dependent on the mercies of our "own
+family."
+
+The old Count gave him this night but a distant welcome, for Maximilian
+was there to "damn" his brother with "faint praise," and had been
+pouring into his father's ear tales of "poor Waldemar's losses at play."
+All that Falkenstein said, his sisters took up, contradicted, and jarred
+upon, till he, fairly out of patience, lapsed into silence, only broken
+by a sarcasm deftly flung at Maximillian to floor him completely in his
+orthodoxy or ethics. He was glad to bid the governor good night; and
+leaving them to hold a congress over his skepticism, radicalism, and
+other dangerous opinions, he walked through the streets, and swore
+slightly, with his pipe between his teeth, as he opened his own door.
+
+"Since my father prefers Max to me, let him have him," thought Waldemar,
+smoking, and undressing himself. "If people choose to dictate to me or
+misjudge me, let them go; and if they have not penetration enough to
+judge what I am, I shall not take the trouble to show them."
+
+But, nevertheless, as he thus resolved, Falkenstein smoked hard and
+fast, for he was fond of the old Count, and felt keenly his desertion;
+for, steel himself as he might, egotist as he might call himself,
+Waldemar was quick in his susceptibilities and tenacious in his
+attachments.
+
+Since Falkenstein had got intimate with Valerie L'Estrange in one ball
+you are pretty sure that week after week did not lessen their
+friendship. He was amused, and past memories of women he had wooed, and
+won, and left, certain passages in his life where such had reproached
+him, not always deservedly, never presented themselves to check him in
+his new pursuit. It is pleasant to a naturalist to study a butterfly
+pinned to the wall; the rememberance that the butterfly may die of the
+sport does not occur to him, or, at least, never troubles him.
+
+So Falkenstein called to Lowndes Square, and lent her books, and gave
+her a little Skye of his, and met her occasionally by accident on
+purpose in Kensington Gardens, where Valerie, according to Mrs.
+Cashranger's request, sometimes took one of her cousins, a headstrong
+young demon of six or seven, for an early walk, to which early walks
+Valerie made no objection, preferring them to the drawing-rooms of No.
+133, and liking them, you may guess, none the less after seeing somebody
+she knew standing by the pond throwing in sticks for his retriever, and
+Falkenstein had sat down with her under the bushes by the water, and
+talked of all the things in heaven and earth; while Julius Adolphus ran
+about and gobbled at the China geese, and wetted his silk stockings
+unreproved. He made no love to her, not a bit; he talked of it
+theoretically, but never practically. But he liked to talk to her, to
+argue with her, to see her demonstrative pleasure in his society, to
+watch her coming through the trees, and find the _longs yeux bleus_
+gleam and darken at his approach. All this amused him, pleased him as
+something original and out of the beaten track. She told him all she
+thought and felt; she pleased him, and beguiled him from his darker
+thoughts, and she began to reconcile him to human nature, which, with
+Faria, he had learnt to class into "les tigres et les crocodiles a deux
+pieds."
+
+It was well he had this amusement, for it was his only one. He was going
+to the bad, as we say; debts and entanglements imperceptibly gathered
+round him, held him tight, and only in Valerie's lively society (lively,
+for when with him she was as happy as a bird) could exercise his dark
+spirit.
+
+You remember the vow he made when the Silver Chimes rang in the New
+Year? So did not he. We cannot be always Medes and Persians, madam, to
+resist every temptation and keep unbroken every law, though you, sitting
+in your cushioned chair, in unattacked tranquillity, can tell us easily
+enough we should be. One night, when he was dining with Bevan, Tom
+produced those two little ivory fiends, whose rattle is in the ear of
+watchful deans and proctors as the singing of the rattlesnake, and whose
+witchery is more wily and irresistible than the witchery of woman. No
+beaux yeux, whether of the cassette or of one's first love, ever
+subjugate a man so completely as the fascinations of play. Once yielded
+to the charm, the Circe that clasps us will not let us go. Falkenstein,
+though in much he had the strong will of his race, had no power to
+resist the beguilements of his Omphale; he played again and again, and
+five times out of seven lost.
+
+"Well, Falkenstein," cried Godolphin, after five games of ecarte at a
+pony a side, three of which Falkenstein had lost, "I heard Max lamenting
+to old Straitlace in the lobby, the other night, that you were going to
+the devil, only the irreproachable member phrased it in more delicate
+periods."
+
+"Quite true," said Falkenstein, with a short laugh, "if for devil you
+substitute Queen's Bench."
+
+"Well, we're en route together, old fellow," interrupted Tom Bevan;
+"and, with all your sins, you're a fat lot better than that brother of
+yours, who, I believe, don't know Latakia from Maryland. Jesse Egerton
+told me the other day that his wife has an awful life of it; but who'd
+credit it of a man who patronises Exeter Hall, and gave the shoeblacks
+only yesterday such unlimited supply of weak tea, buns, and strong
+texts?"
+
+"Who indeed! Max is such a moral man," sneered Falkenstein; "though he
+has done one or two things in his life that I wouldn't have stooped to
+do. But you may sin as much as you like as long as you sin under the
+rose. John Bull takes his vices as a ten pound voter takes a bribe; he
+stretches his hand out eagerly enough, but he turns his eyes away and
+looks innocent, and is the first to point at his neighbor and cry out
+against moral corruption. Melville's quite right that there is an
+eleventh commandment--'Thou shalt not be found out'--whose transgression
+is the only one society visits with impunity."
+
+"True enough," laughed Jimmy Fitzroy. "Thank Heaven, nobody can accuse
+us of studying the law and the prophets overmuch. By the way, old
+fellow, who's that stunning little girl you were walking with by the
+Serpentine yesterday morning, when I was waiting for the Metcalfe, who
+promised to meet me at twelve, and never came till half-past one--the
+most unpunctual woman going. Any new game? She's a governess, ain't she?
+She'd some sort of brat with her; but she's deuced good style, anyhow."
+
+"That's little L'Estrange," laughed Godolphin: "the beloved Bella's
+cousin. He's met her there every day for the last three months. I don't
+know how much further the affair may have gone, or if----"
+
+"My dear Harry, your imagination is running away with you," said
+Falkenstein, impatiently. "I never made an appointment with her in my
+life; she's not the same style as Mrs. Metcalfe."
+
+Oh the jesuitism of the most candid men on occasion! He never made an
+appointment with her, because it was utterly unnecessary, he knowing
+perfectly that he should find her feeding the ducks with Julius Adolphus
+any morning he chose to look for her.
+
+"All friendship is it, then?" laughed Godolphin. "Stick to it, my boy,
+if you can. Take care what you do, though, for to carry her off to Duke
+Street would give Max such a handle as he would not let go in a hurry;
+And to marry (though that of course, will never enter your wildest
+dreams) with anybody of the Cashranger's race, were it the heiress
+instead of the companion, would be such a come-down to the princely
+house, as would infallibly strike you out of Count Ferdinand's will."
+
+Waldemar threw back his head like a thorough-bred impatient of the
+punishing. "The 'princely house,' as you call it, is not so
+extraordinarily stainless; but leave Valerie alone, she and I have
+nothing to do with other, and never shall have. I have enough on my
+hands, in all conscience, without plunging into another love affair."
+
+"I did hear," continued Godolphin, "that Forester proposed to her, but I
+don't suppose it's true; he'd scarcely be such a fool."
+
+Falkenstein looked up quickly, but did not speak.
+
+"I think it is true," said Bevan; "and, moreover, I fancy she refused
+him, for he used to cry her up to the skies, and now he's always
+snapping and sneering at her, which is beastly ungenerous, but after the
+manner of many fellows."
+
+"One would think you were an old woman, Tom, believing all the tales you
+hear," said Godolphin. "She'd better know you disclaim her, Falkenstein,
+that she mayn't waste her chances waiting for you."
+
+Waldemar cast a quick, annoyed, contemptuous glance upon him. "You are
+wonderfully careful over her interests," he said, sharply, "but I never
+heard that having her on your lips, Harry, ever did a woman much good.
+Pass me that whisky, Conrad, will you?"
+
+The next morning, however, though he "disclaimed" her, Waldemar, about
+ten, took his stick, whistled his dog, and walked down to Kensington
+Gardens. Under the beeches just budding their first leaves, he saw what
+he expected to see--Valerie L'Estrange. She turned--even at that
+distance he thought he saw the _longs yeux bleus_ flash and
+sparkle--dropped the biscuits she was giving the ducks to the tender
+mercies of Julius Adolphus, and came to meet him. Spit, the little Skye
+he had given her, welcoming him noisily.
+
+"Spit is as pleased to see you as I am," said Valerie, laughing. "We
+have both been wondering whether you would come this morning. I am so
+glad you have, for I have been reading your 'Pollnitz Memoirs,' and want
+to talk to you about them. You know I can talk to no one as I can to
+you."
+
+"You do me much honor," said Falkenstein, rather formally. He was
+wondering in his mind whether she _had_ refused Forester or not.
+
+"What a cold, distant speech! It is very unkind of you to answer me so.
+What is the matter with you, Count Waldemar?"
+
+She always called him by the title he had dropped in English society;
+she had a fervent reverence for his historic _antecedens_; and besides,
+as she told him one day, "she liked to call him something no one else
+did."
+
+"Matter with me? Nothing at all, I assure you," he answered, still
+distantly.
+
+"You are not like yourself, at all events," persisted Valerie. "You
+should be kind to me. I have so few who are."
+
+The tone touched him; he smiled, but did not speak, as he sat down by
+her poking up the turf with his stick.
+
+"Count Waldemar," said Valerie, suddenly, brushing Spit's hair off his
+bright little eyes, "do tell me; hasn't something vexed you?"
+
+"Nothing new," answered Falkenstein, with a short laugh. "The same
+entanglements and annoyances that have been netting their toils round me
+for many years--that is all. I am young enough, as time counts, yet I
+give you my word I have as little hope in my future, and I know as well
+what my life will be as if I were fourscore."
+
+"Hush, don't say so," said Valerie, with a gesture of pain. "You are so
+worthy of happiness; your nature was made to be happy; and if you are
+not, fate has misused you cruelly."
+
+"Fate? there is no such thing. I have been a fool, and my folly is now
+working itself out. I have made my own life, and I have nobody but
+myself to thank for it."
+
+"I don't know that. Circumstances, temptation, education, opportunity,
+association, often take the place of the Parcae, and gild or cut the
+threads of our destiny."
+
+"No. I don't accept that doctrine," said Falkenstein, always much
+sterner judge to himself than anybody would have been to him. "What I
+have done has been with my eyes open. I have known the price I should
+pay for my pleasures, but I never paused to count it. I never stopped
+for any obstacle, and for what I desired, I would, like the men in the
+old legends, have sold myself to the devil. Now, of course, I am
+hampered with ten thousand embarrassments. You are young; you are a
+woman; you cannot understand the reckless madness which will drink the
+wine to-day, though one's life paid for it to-morrow. Screened from
+opportunity, fenced in by education, position, and society, you cannot
+know how impossible it is to a man, whose very energies and strength
+become his tempters, to put a check upon himself in the vortex of
+pleasure round him----"
+
+"Yes," interrupted Valerie, "I can. Feeling for you, I can sympathise in
+all things with you. Had I been a man, I should have done as you have
+done, drunk the ambrosia without heeding its cost. Go on--I love to hear
+you speak of yourself; and I know your real nature, Count Waldemar, into
+whatever errors or hasty acts repented of in cooler moments the hot
+spirit of your race may have led you."
+
+Falkenstein was pleased, despite himself, half amused, half saddened. He
+turned it off with a laugh. "By Heaven, I wish they had made a brewer of
+me--I might now be as rich and free from care as your uncle."
+
+"You a brewer!" cried Valerie. Her father, a poor gentleman, had left
+her his aristocratic leanings. "What an absurd idea! All the old
+Falkensteins would come out of their crypts, and chanceries, and
+cloisters, to see the coronet surmounting the beer vats!"
+
+He smiled at her vehemence. "The coronet! I had better have full pockets
+than empty titles."
+
+"For shame!" cried Valerie. "Yes, bark at him, Spit dear; he is telling
+stories. You do not mean it; you know you are proud of your glorious
+name. Who would not rather be a Falkenstein on a hundred a year, than a
+Cashranger on a thousand?"
+
+"I wouldn't," said Waldemar, wilfully. "If I had money, I could find
+oblivion for my past, and hope for my future. If I had money, what loads
+of friends would open their purses for me to borrow the money they'd
+know I did not need. As it is, if I except poor Tom Bevan, who's as hard
+up as I am, and who's a good-hearted, single-minded fellow, and likes
+me, I believe I haven't a friend. Godolphin welcomes me as a companion,
+a bon vivant, a good card player; but if he heard I was in the Queen's
+Bench, or had shot myself, he'd say, 'Poor devil! I am not surprised,'
+as he lighted his pipe and forgot me a second after. So they would all.
+I don't blame them."
+
+"But I do," cried Valerie, her cheeks burning; "they are wicked and
+heartless, and I hate them all. Oh! Count Waldemar, I would not do so. I
+would not desert you if all the world did!"
+
+He smiled: he was accustomed to her passionate ebullitions. "Poor child,
+I believe you would be truer than the rest," he muttered, half aloud, as
+he rose hastily and took out his watch. "I must be in Downing Street by
+eleven, and it only wants ten minutes. If you will walk with me to the
+gates, I have something to tell you about your MS."
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+"SCARLET AND WHITE" MAKES A HIT, AND FALKENSTEIN FEELS THE WEIGHT OF THE
+GOLDEN FETTERS.
+
+
+"Tom, will you come to the theatre with me to-night?" said Falkenstein
+as they lounged by the rails one afternoon in May.
+
+"The theatre! What for? Who's that girl with a scarlet tie, on that roan
+there? I don't know her face. The ballet is the only thing worth
+stirring a step for in town. Which theatre is it?"
+
+"I am going to see the new piece Pomps and Vanities is bringing out, and
+I want you as a sort of claqueur."
+
+"Very well. I'll come," said Tom, who regarded Falkenstein, who had been
+his school and formfellow, still rather as a Highlandman his chief;
+"but, certainly, the first night of a play is the very last I should
+select. But if you wish it---- There's that roan coming round again!
+Good action, hasn't it?"
+
+Obedient to his chiefs orders, Bevan brushed his whiskers, settled his
+tie, or rather let his valet do it for him, and accompanied Waldemar to
+one of the crack-up theatres, where Pomps and Vanities, as the manager
+was irreverently styled by the habitues of his green-room, reigned in a
+state of scenic magnificence, very different to the days when Garrick
+played Macbeth in wig and gaiters.
+
+Bevan asked no questions; he was rather a silent man, and probably knew
+by experience that he would most likely get no answers, unless the
+information was volunteered. So settling in his own mind that it was the
+debut of some protegee of Falkenstein's, he followed him to the door of
+a private box. Waldemar opened it, and entered. In it sat two women:
+one, a middle-aged lady-like-looking person; the other a young one, in
+whom, as she turned round with a radiant smile, and gave Falkenstein her
+hand, Bevan recognised Valerie L'Estrange. "Keep up your courage,"
+whispered Waldemar, as he took the seat behind her, and leaned forward
+with a smile. Tom stared at them both. It was high Dutch to him; but
+being endowed with very little curiosity, and a lion's share of British
+immovability, he waited without any impatience for the elucidation of
+the mystery, and seeing the Count and Valerie absorbed in earnest and
+low-toned conversation, he first studied the house, and finding not a
+single decent-looking woman, he dropped his glass and studied the
+play-bill. The bill announced the new piece as "Scarlet and White."
+"Queer title," thought Bevan, a little consoled for his self-immolation
+by seeing that Rosalie Rivers, a very pretty little brunette, was to
+fill the soubrette role. The curtain drew up. Tom, looking at Valerie
+instead of the stage, fancied she looked very pale, and her eyes were
+fixed, not on the actors, but on Falkenstein. The first act passed off
+in ominous silence. An audience is often afraid to compromise itself by
+applauding a new piece too quickly. Then the story began to develop
+itself--wit and passion, badinage and pathos, were well intermingled. It
+turned on the love of a Catholic girl, a fille d'honneur to Catherine de
+Medicis, for a Huguenot, Vicomte de Valere, a friend of Conde and
+Coligny. The despairing love of the woman, the fierce struggle of her
+lover between his passion and his faith, the intrigues of the court, the
+cruelty and weakness of Charles Neuf, were all strikingly and forcibly
+written. The actors, being warmly applauded as the plot thickened and
+the audience became interested, played with energy and spirit; and when
+the curtain fell the success of "Scarlet and White" was proclaimed
+through the house.
+
+"Very good play--very good indeed," said Tom, approvingly. "I hope
+you've been pleased, Miss L'Estrange." Valerie did not hear him; she was
+trembling and breathless, her blue eyes almost black with excitement,
+while Falkenstein bent over her, his face more full of animation and
+pleasure than Bevan had seen it for many a day. "Well," thought Tom,
+"Forester _did_ say little Val was original. I should think that was a
+polite term for insane. I suppose Falkenstein's keeper."
+
+At that minute the applause redoubled. Pomps and Vanities had announced
+"Scarlet and White" for repetition, and from the pit to the gods there
+was a cry for the author. Falkenstein bent his head till his lips
+touched her hair, and whispered a few words. She looked up in his face.
+"Do you wish me?"
+
+"Certainly."
+
+His word was law. She rose and went to the front of the box, a burning
+color in her cheeks, smiles on her lips, and tears lying under her
+lashes.
+
+"The devil, Waldemar! Do you mean that--that little thing?" began Bevan.
+
+Falkenstein nodded, and Tom, for once in his life astonished, forgot to
+finish his sentence in staring at the author! Probably the audience also
+shared his surprise, in seeing her young face and girlish form, in lieu
+of the anticipated member of the Garrick or new Bourcicault, with
+inspiration drawn from Cavendish and Cognac; for there was a moment's
+silence, and then they received her with such a welcome as had not
+sounded through the house for years.
+
+She bowed two or three times to thank them; then Falkenstein, knowing
+that though she had no shyness, she was extremely excitable, drew her
+gently back to her seat behind the curtain. "Your success is too much
+for you," he said, softly.
+
+"No, no," said Valerie, passionately, utterly forgetful that any one
+else was near her; "but I am so glad that I owe it all to you. It would
+be nothing to me, as you know, unless it pleased you; and it came to me
+through your hands."
+
+Falkenstein gave a short, quick sigh, and moved restlessly.
+
+"You would like to go home now, wouldn't you?" he said after a pause.
+
+She assented, and he led her out of the box, poor victimised Tom
+following with her duenna, who was the daily governess at No. 133.
+
+As their cab drove away, Valerie leaned out of the window, and watched
+Falkenstein as long as she could see him. He waved his hand to her, and
+walked on into Regent Street in silence.
+
+"Hallo, Waldemar!" began Bevan, at length, "so your protegee's turning
+out a star. Do you mean that she really wrote that play?"
+
+Falkenstein nodded.
+
+"Well, it's more than I could do. But what the deuce have you got to do
+with it? For a man who says he won't entangle himself with another love
+affair, you seem pretty tolerably _au mieux_ with her. How did it all
+come about?"
+
+"Simply enough," answered Falkenstein. "Of course I haven't known her
+all these months without finding out her talents. She has a passion for
+writing, and writes well, as I saw at once by those New Year's Night's
+Proverbs. She has no money, as you know; she wants to turn her talents
+to account, and didn't know how to set about it. She'd several
+conversations with me on the subject, so I took her play, looked it
+over, and gave it to Pomps and Vanities. He read it to oblige me, and
+put it on the stage to oblige himself, as he wanted something new for
+the season, and was pretty sure it would make a hit."
+
+"Do the Cashrangers know of it?"
+
+"No; that is why she asked the governess to come with her to-night. That
+stingy old Pomps wouldn't pay her much, but she thinks it an El Dorado,
+and I shall take care she commands her own price next time. I count on a
+treat on enlightening Miss Bella."
+
+"Yes, she'll cut up rough. By George! I quite envy you your young
+genius."
+
+"She isn't _mine_," said Falkenstein, bitterly.
+
+"She might be if you chose."
+
+"Poor little thing!--yes. But love is too expensive a luxury for a
+ruined man, even if---- The devil take this key, why won't it unlock?
+You're off to half a dozen parties I suppose, Tom?"
+
+"And where are you going?"
+
+"Nowhere."
+
+"What! going to bed at half-past ten?"
+
+"There is no particular sin in going to bed at half-past ten, is there?"
+said Waldemar, impatiently. "I haven't the stuff in me for balls and
+such things. I'm sick of them. Good-night, old fellow."
+
+He went up-stairs to his room, threw himself on his bed, and, lighting
+his pipe, lay smoking and thinking while the Abbey clock tolled the
+hours one after another. The _longs yeux bleus_ haunted him, for
+Waldemar had already too many chains upon him not to shrink from adding
+to them the Golden Fetters of a fresh passion, and marriage, unless a
+rich one, was certain to bring about him all his entanglements. He
+resolved to seek her no more, to check the demonstrative affection
+which, like Esmeralda, "a la fois naive et passionnee," she had no
+thought of concealing from him, and which, as Falkenstein's conscience
+told him, he had done everything to foster. "What is a man worth if he
+hasn't strength of will?" he muttered, as he tossed on his bed. "And
+yet, poor little Valerie---- Pshaw! all women learn quickly enough to
+forget!"
+
+Some ten days after he was calling in Lowndes Square. True as yet to his
+resolution, he had avoided the tete-a-tete walks in the Gardens; and
+Valerie keenly felt the change in his manner, though in what he did for
+her he was as kind as ever. The successful run of "Scarlet and White,"
+the praises of its talents, its promises of future triumphs--all the
+admiration which, despite Bella's efforts to keep her back, the _yeux
+bleus_ excited--all were valueless, if, as she vaguely feared, she had
+lost "Count Waldemar." The play had made a great sensation, and the
+Cashrangers had taken a box the night before, as they made a point of
+following the lead and seeing everything, though they generally forswore
+theatres as not quite _ton_. Pah! these people, "qui se couchent
+roturiers et se levent nobles," they paint their lilies with such
+superabundant coloring, that we see, at a glance, the flowers come not
+out of a conservatory but out of an atelier.
+
+They were out, as it chanced, and Valerie was alone. She received him
+joyously, for unhappy as she was in his absence, the mere sight of his
+face recalled her old spirits, and Falkenstein, in all probability,
+never guessed a tithe she suffered, because she had always a smile for
+him.
+
+"Oh! Count Waldemar," she cried, "why have you never been to the
+Gardens this week? If you only knew how I miss you----"
+
+"I have had no time," he answered, coldly.
+
+"You could make time if you wished," said Valerie, passionately. "You
+are so cold, so unkind to me lately. Have I vexed you at all?"
+
+"Vexed me, Miss L'Estrange? Certainly not."
+
+She was silent, chilled, despite herself.
+
+"Why do you call me Miss L'Estrange?" she said, suddenly. "You know I
+cannot bear it from _you_."
+
+"What should I call you?"
+
+"Valerie," she answered, softly.
+
+He got up and walked to the hearth-rug, playing with Spit and Puppet
+with his foot, and for once hailed, as a relief, the entrance of Bella,
+in an extensive morning toilet, fresh from "shopping." She looked
+rapidly and angrily from him to Valerie, and attacked him at once.
+Seeing her cousin's vivacity told, she went in for the same stakes, with
+but slight success, being a young lady of the heavy artillery stamp,
+with no light action about her.
+
+"Oh! Mr. Falkenstein," she began, "that exquisite play--you've seen it,
+of course? Captain Boville told me I should be delighted with it, and so
+I was. Don't you think it enchanting?"
+
+"It is very clever," answered Falkenstein, gravely.
+
+"Val missed a great treat," continued Bella; "nothing would make her go
+last night; however, she never likes anything I like. I should love to
+know who wrote it; some people say a woman, but I would never believe
+it."
+
+"The witty raillery and unselfish devotion of the heroine might be
+dictated by a woman's head and heart, but the passion, and vigor, and
+knowledge of human nature indicate a masculine genius," replied
+Waldemar.
+
+Valerie gave him such a grateful, rapturous glance, that, had Bella been
+looking, might have disclosed the secret; but she was studying her
+dainty gloves, and went on:
+
+"Could it be Westland Marston--Sterling Coyne?"
+
+Falkenstein shook his head. "If it were, they would put their name on
+the play-bills."
+
+"You naughty man! I do believe you could tell me if you chose. _Are_ you
+not, now, in the author's confidence?"
+
+The corner of Falkenstein's mouth went up in an irresistible smile as he
+telegraphed a glance at "the author." "Well, perhaps I am."
+
+Bella clapped her hands with enchanting gaiety. "Then, tell me this
+moment; I am in agonies to know!"
+
+"It is no great mystery," smiled Falkenstein. "I fancy you are
+acquainted with the unknown."
+
+"You don't mean it!" cried Bella, in a state of ecstasy. "Have you
+written it, then?"
+
+"I'm afraid I can't lay claim to the honor."
+
+"Who can it be? Oh, do tell me! How enchanting!" cried Miss Cashranger;
+"I am wild to hear. Somebody I know, you say? Is it--is it Captain
+Tweed?"
+
+"No, it isn't," laughed Falkenstein. Elliot Tweed--Idiot Tweed, as they
+all call him--who was hanging after Bella, abhorred all caligraphy, and
+wrote his own name with one _e_.
+
+"Mr. Dashaway, then?"
+
+"Dash never scrawled anything but I. O. U.s."
+
+"Lord Flippertygibbett, perhaps?"
+
+"Wrong again. Flip took up a pen once too often, when he signed his
+marriage register, to have any leanings to goose quills."
+
+"Charlie Montmorency, then?"
+
+"Reads nothing but his betting-book and _Bell's Life_."
+
+"Dear me! how tiresome. Who can it be? Wait a moment. Let me see. Is it
+Major Powell?"
+
+"Guess again. He wouldn't write, save in Indian fashion, with his
+tomahawk on his enemies' scalps."
+
+"How provoking!" cried Bella, exasperated. "Stop: is it Mr. Beauchamp?"
+
+"No; he scribbles for six-and-eightpences too perseveringly to have time
+for anything, except ruining his clients."
+
+"Dr. Montressor, then?"
+
+"Try once more. His prescriptions bring him too many guineas for him to
+waste ink on any other purpose."
+
+"How stupid I am! Perhaps--perhaps---- Yet no, it can't be, because he's
+at the Cape, and most likely killed, poor fellow. Could it be Cecil
+Green?"
+
+Falkenstein laughed. "You needn't go so far as Kaffirland; try a little
+nearer home. Think over the _ladies_ you know."
+
+"The ladies! Then it _is_ a woman!" cried Bella. "Well, I should never
+have believed it. Who can she be? How I shall admire her, and envy her!
+A lady! Can it be darling Flora?"
+
+"No. If your pet friend can get through an invitation-note of four
+lines, the exertion costs her at least a dram of sal volatile."
+
+"How wicked you are," murmured Miss Cashranger, delighted, after the
+custom of women, to hear her friend pulled to pieces. "Is it Mrs.
+Lushington, then?"
+
+"Wrong again. The Lushington has so much business on hand, inditing
+rose-hued notes to twenty men at once, and wording them differently, for
+fear they may ever be compared, that she's no time for other
+composition."
+
+"Lady Mechlin, perhaps--she is a charming creature?"
+
+Falkenstein shook his head. "Never could learn the simplest rule of
+grammar. When she was engaged to Mechlin, she wrote her love-letters out
+of 'Henrietta Temple,' and flattered him immensely by their pathos."
+
+"Was there ever such a sarcastic creature!" cried Bella, reprovingly;
+her interest rather flagged, since no man was the incognito author.
+"Well, let me see: there is Rosa Temple--she is immensely intellectual."
+
+"But immensely orthodox. Every minute of her life is spent in working
+slippers and Bible markers for interesting curates. It is to be hoped
+one of them may reward her some day, though, I believe, till they _do_
+propose, she is in the habit of advocating priestly celibacy, by way of
+assertion of her disinterestedness. No! Miss Cashranger, the talented
+writer of 'Scarlet and White,' is not only of your acquaintance, but
+your family."
+
+"My family!" almost screamed Bella. "Good gracious, Mr. Falkenstein, is
+it dear papa, or--or Augustus?"
+
+The idea of the brewer, fat, and round, and innocent of literature as
+one of his own teams, or of his son just plucked for his "smalls" at
+Cambridge, for spelling Caesar, Sesar, sitting down to indite the pathos
+and poetry of "Scarlet and White," was so exquisitely absurd that
+Waldemar, forgetting courtesy, lay back in his arm-chair and laughed
+aloud. The contagion of his ringing laugh was irresistible; Valerie
+followed his example, and their united merriment rang in the astonished
+ears of Miss Cashranger, who looked from one to the other in wrathful
+surprise. As soon as he could control himself, Falkenstein turned
+towards her with his most courteous smile.
+
+"You will forgive our laughter, I am sure, when I tell you what I am
+certain _must_ give you great pleasure, that the play you so warmly and
+justly admire was written by your cousin."
+
+Bella stared at him, her face scarlet, all the envy and reasonless spite
+within her flaming up at the idea of her cousin's success.
+
+"Valerie--Valerie," she stammered, "is it true? I had no idea she ever
+thought of----"
+
+"No," said Falkenstein, roused in his protegee's defence; "I dare say
+you are astonished, as every one else would be, that any one so young,
+and, comparatively speaking, so inexperienced as your cousin, should
+have developed such extraordinary talent and power."
+
+"Oh, of course--to be sure--yes," said Bella, her lips twitching
+nervously, "mamma will be astonished to hear of these new laurels for
+the family. I congratulate you, Valerie; I never knew you dreamt of
+writing, much less of making so public a debut."
+
+"Nor should I ever have been able to do so unless my way had been
+pioneered for me," said Valerie, resting her eyes fondly on Waldemar.
+
+He stayed ten minutes longer, chatting on indifferent subjects, then
+left, making poor little Val happy with a touch of his hand, and a smile
+as "kind" as of old.
+
+"You horrid, deceitful little thing!" began Bella, bursting with fury,
+as the door closed on him, "never to mention what you were doing. I
+can't bear such sly people I hate----"
+
+"My dear Bella, don't disturb yourself," said Valerie, quietly; "if you
+had testified any interest in my doings, you might have known them; as
+it was, I was glad to find warmer and kinder friends."
+
+"In Waldemar Falkenstein, I suppose," sneered Bella, white with rage. "A
+nice friend you have, certainly; a man whom everybody knows may go to
+prison for debt any day."
+
+"Leave him alone," said Valerie haughtily; "unless you speak well of
+him, in my presence, you shall not speak at all."
+
+"Oh, indeed," laughed Bella, nervously; "how very much interested you
+are in him! more than he is in you, I'm afraid, dear. He's famed for
+loving and leaving. Pray how long has this romantic affair been on the
+tapis?"
+
+"He's met her every day in the Gardens," cried Julius Adolphus, just
+come in with that fatal apropos of "enfans terribles," much oftener the
+result of mechancete than of innocence; "he's met her every day, Bella,
+while I fed the ducks."
+
+Bella rose, inflated with fury, and summoning all her dignity:
+
+"I suppose, Valerie, you know the sort of reputation you will get
+through these morning assignations."
+
+Valerie bent over Spit with a smile.
+
+"Of course, it is nothing to _me_," continued Bella, spitefully; "but I
+shall consider it my duty to inform mamma."
+
+Valerie fairly laughed out.
+
+"Do your duty, by all means."
+
+"And," continued Bella, a third time, "I dare say she will find some
+means to put a stop to this absurd friendship with an unmarried and
+unprincipled man."
+
+Valerie was roused; she lifted her head like a little Pythoness, and her
+blue eyes flashed angry scorn.
+
+"Tell your mamma what you please, but--listen to me, Bella--if you
+venture to harm him in any way with your pitiful venom, I, girl as I am,
+will never let you go till I have revenged myself and him."
+
+Bella, like most bullies, was a terrible coward. There was an
+earnestness in Valerie's words, and a dangerous light in her eyes, that
+frightened her, and she left the room in silence, while Valerie leaned
+her forehead on Spit's silky back, and cried bitterly, tears that for
+her life she wouldn't have shed while her cousin was there.
+
+The next time Falkenstein called at Lowndes Square, the footman told
+him, "Not at home," and Waldemar swore, mentally, as he turned from the
+door, for though he could keep himself from seeking her, it was
+something new not to find her when he wished.
+
+"She's like all the rest," he thought bitterly; "She's used me, and now
+she's gone to newer friends. I was a fool to suppose any woman would do
+otherwise. They'll tell her I can't marry; of course she'll go over to
+D'Orwood, or some of those confounded fools that are dangling after
+her."
+
+So in his skeptical haste judged Falkenstein, on the strength of a
+single "Not at home," due to Cashranger malice, and the fierce throbs
+the mere suspicion gave him showed him that he loved Valerie too much to
+be able to deceive himself any longer with the assurance that his
+feelings towards his protegee was simple "friendship." He knew it, but
+he was loth to give way to it. He had long held as a doctrine that a man
+could forget if he chose. He had been wearied of so many, been
+disappointed in so much, he had had idols of the hour, in which, their
+first gloss off, he had found no beauty, he could not tell; it might not
+be the same with Valerie. Warm and passionate as a Southern, haughty and
+reserved as a Northern, he held many a bitter conflict in his solitary
+vigils at night over his pipe, after evenings spent in society which no
+longer amused him, or excitement with which he vainly sought to drown
+his cares. When he did meet Valerie out, which was rarely, as he
+refused most invitations now, his struggle against his ill-timed passion
+made his manner so cold and capricious, that Valerie, who could not
+divine the workings of his heart, began, despite her vehement faith in
+him, and conviction that he was not wholly indifferent to her, to dread
+that Bella might be right, and that as he had left others so would he
+leave her. He gave her no opportunity of questioning him as to his
+sudden change, for when he did call in Lowndes Square, Bella and her
+aunt always stationed themselves as a sort of detective police, and
+Falkenstein now never sought a tete-a-tete.
+
+One evening she met him at a dinner-party. With undisguised delight she
+watched his entrance, and Waldemar, seeing her radiant face, thought in
+his haste, "She is happy enough, what does she care for me?" If he had
+looked at her after he had shaken hands carelessly with her, and turned
+away to talk to another woman, he would have discovered his mistake. But
+when do we ever discover half our errors before it is too late? She
+signed to him to come to her under pretext of looking at some croquis,
+and whispered hurriedly,
+
+"Count Waldemar, what have I done--why do you never come to see me? You
+are so changed, so altered----"
+
+"I was not aware of it."
+
+"But I never see you in the Gardens now. You never talk to me, you never
+call on me."
+
+"I have other engagements."
+
+Valerie breathed hard between her set teeth.
+
+"That are more agreeable to you, I suppose. You should not have
+accustomed me to what you intended to withdraw when it ceased to amuse
+you. _I_ am not so capricious. Your kindness about my play----"
+
+"It was no kindness; I would have done the same for any one."
+
+She looked at him fixedly.
+
+"General kindness is no kindness," said Valerie, passionately. "If you
+would do for a mere acquaintance what you would do for your friend, what
+value attaches to your friendship?"
+
+"I attach none to it," said the Count, coldly.
+
+Valerie's little hands clenched hard. She did not speak, lest her
+self-possession should give way, and just then D'Orwood came to give her
+his arm in to dinner; and at dinner Valerie, demonstrative and candid as
+she was, was gay and animated, for she could wear a mask in the bal
+d'Opera of life as well as he; and though she could not believe the
+coldness he testified was really meant, she felt bitterly the neglect of
+his manner before others, at sight of which Bella's small eyes sparkled
+with malicious satisfaction.
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+SOME GOLDEN FETTERS ARE SHAKEN OFF AND OTHERS ARE PUT ON.
+
+
+"Mrs. Boville told me last night that Waldemar Falkenstein is so
+dreadfully in debt, that she thinks he'll have to go into court--don't
+they call it?" lisped Bella, the next morning; "be arrested, or
+bankrupt, or something dreadful. Should you think it is true?"
+
+"I know it's true," said Idiot Tweed, who was there, having a little
+music before luncheon. "He's confoundedly hard up, poor devil."
+
+"But I thought he was in such a good position--so well off?" said Bella,
+observing with secret delight that her cousin's head was raised, and
+that the pen with which she was writing had stopped in its rapid gallop.
+
+"Ah! so one thinks of a good many fellows," answered the Guardsman;
+"or, at least, you ladies do, who don't look at a man's ins and outs,
+and the fifty hundred things there are to bother him. Lots of
+people--householders, and all that sort of thing--that one would fancy
+worth no end, go smash when nobody's expecting it."
+
+"And Mr. Falkenstein really is embarrassed?"
+
+The Guardsman laughed outright. "That is a mild term, Miss Cashranger. I
+heard down at Windsor yesterday, from a man that knows his family very
+well, that if he don't pay his debts this week, Amadeus Levi will arrest
+him. I dare say he will. Jews do when they can't bleed you any longer,
+and think your family will come down handsomely. But they say the old
+Count won't give Falkenstein a rap, so most likely he'll cut the
+country."
+
+That afternoon, on his return from the Deeds and Chronicles Office,
+whose slow red-tapeism ill suited his impatient and vigorous intellect,
+Waldemar sat down deliberately to investigate his affairs. It was true
+that Amadeus Levi's patience was waning fast; his debts of honor had put
+him deep in that worthy's books, and Falkenstein, as he sat in his
+lodgings, with the August sun streaming full on the relentless figures
+that showed him, with cruel mathematical ruthlessness, that he was fast
+chained in the Golden Fetters of debt, leaned his head upon his arms
+with the bitter despair of a man whose own hand has blotted his past and
+ruined his future.
+
+The turning of the handle of his door roused him from his reverie. He
+looked up quickly.
+
+"A lady wants to speak to you, sir," said the servant who waited on him.
+
+"What name?"
+
+"She'd rather not give it, sir."
+
+"Very well," said Falkenstein, consigning all women to the devil; "show
+her up."
+
+Resigning himself to his fate, he rose, leaning his hand on the arm of
+the chair. He started involuntarily as the door opened again.
+
+"Valerie!"
+
+She looked up at him half hesitatingly. "Count Waldemar, don't be angry
+with me----"
+
+"Angry! no, Heaven knows; but----"
+
+Her face and her voice were fast thawing his chill reserve, and he
+stopped abruptly.
+
+"You wonder why I have come here," Valerie went on singularly shyly for
+her, "but--but I heard that you--you have much to trouble you just now.
+Is it true?"
+
+"True enough, Heaven knows."
+
+"Then--then," said Valerie, with all her old impetuosity, "let me do
+something for you--let me help you in some way--you who have done
+everything for me, who have been the only person kind to me on earth. Do
+let me--do not refuse me. I would die to serve you."
+
+He breathed fast as he gazed on her expressive eyes. It was a hard
+struggle to him to preserve his self-control.
+
+"No one can help me," he answered, hurriedly. "I have made my own
+fate--leave me to it."
+
+"I will not!" cried Valerie, passionately. "Do not send me away--do not
+refuse me. What happiness would there be for me so great as serving
+you--you to whom I owe all the pleasure I have known! Take them. Count
+Waldemar--pray take them; they have often told me they are worth a good
+deal, and I will thank Heaven every hour for having enabled me to aid
+you ever so little." She pressed into his hands a jewel-case.
+
+Falkenstein could not answer her. He stood looking down at her, his lips
+white as death. She mistook his silence for displeasure, and laid her
+hands on his arm.
+
+"Do not be offended--do not be annoyed with me. They are my own--an old
+heirloom of the L'Estranges that only came to me the other day. Take
+them, Count Waldemar. Do, for Heaven's sake. I spoke passionately to you
+last night; I have been unhappy ever since. If you will not take them, I
+shall think you have not yet forgiven me?"
+
+He seized her hands and drew her close to him: "Good Heavens! do you
+love me like this?"
+
+She did not answer, but she looked up at him. That look shivered to
+atoms Falkenstein's resolves, and cast his pride and prudence to the
+winds. He pressed her fiercely against his heart, he kissed her again
+and again, bitter tears rushing to his burning eyes.
+
+"Valerie! Valerie!" he whispered, wildly, "my fate is at its darkest.
+Will you share it?"
+
+She leaned her brow on his shoulder, trembling with hysterical joy.
+
+"You do care for me, then?" she murmured, at last.
+
+"Oh! thank Heaven."
+
+In the delirium of his happiness, in the vehemence of feelings touched
+to the core by sight of the intense love he had awakened, Falkenstein
+poured out on her all the passion of his impetuous and reserved nature,
+and in the paradise of the moment forgot every cloud that hung on his
+horizon.
+
+"Valerie!" he whispered, at length, "I have now nothing to offer you. I
+can give you none of the riches, and power, and position that other men
+can----"
+
+She stopped him, putting her hands on his lips. "Hush! I shall have
+everything that life can give me in having your love."
+
+"My darling, Heaven bless you!" cried Falkenstein, passionately; "but
+think twice, Valerie--pause before you decide. I am a ruined
+man--embarrassments fetter me on every side. To-morrow, for aught I
+know, I may be arrested for debt. I would not lead you into what, in
+older years, you may regret."
+
+"Regret!" cried Valerie, clinging to him. "How can I ever regret that I
+have won the one heaven I crave. If you love me, life will always be
+beautiful in my eyes; and, Count Waldemar, I can work for you--I can
+help you, be it ever so little. I cannot make much money now, but you
+have said that I shall gain more year after year. Only let me be with
+you; let me know your sorrows and lighten them if I can, and I could ask
+no greater happiness----"
+
+Falkenstein bent over her, and covered with caresses the lips that to
+him seemed so eloquent; he had no words to thank her for a love that, to
+his warm and solitary heart, came like water in the wilderness. The
+sound of voices gay and laughing, on the stairs, startled him.
+
+"That is Bevan and Godolphin; I forgot they were coming for me to go
+down to the Castle. Good Heavens! they mustn't see you here, love, to
+jest about you over their mess-tables. Stay," said Falkenstein, hastily,
+as the men entered the front room, "wait here a moment; they cannot see
+you in this window, and I will come to you again. Hallo! old fellows!"
+said he, passing through the folding-doors. "You're wonderfully
+punctual, Tom. I always give you half an hour's grace; but I suppose
+Harry's such an awful martinet, that he kept you up to time for once."
+
+"All the credit's due to my mare," laughed Godolphin. "She did the
+distance from Knightsbridge in four minutes, and I don't think Musjid
+himself could beat that. Are you ready, I say? because we're to be at
+the Castle by six, and Fitz don't like waiting for his turbot."
+
+"Give me a brace of seconds, and I shall be with you," said Waldemar.
+
+"Make haste, there's a good fellow. By George!" said Harry, catching
+sight of the jewel-case, "for a fellow who's so deucedly hard up, you've
+been pretty extravagant in getting those diamonds, Waldemar. Who are
+they for--Rosalie Rivers, or the Deloraine; or that last love of yours,
+that wonderful little L'Estrange?"
+
+Falkenstein's brow grew dark; he snatched the case from the table, with
+a suppressed oath, and went back to the inner room, slamming the
+folding-doors after him. Godolphin lounged to the window looking on the
+street, where he stood for five minutes, whistling A te, o cara. "The
+devil! what's that fellow about?" he said, yawning. "How impatient
+Bonbon's growing! Why don't that fool Roberts drive her up and down? By
+Jove! come here, Tom. Who's that girl Falkenstein's now putting into a
+cab? That's what he wanted his brace of seconds for! Confound that
+portico! I can't see her face, and women dress so much alike now,
+there's no telling one from another. What an infernal while he is
+bidding her good-by. I shall know another time what his two seconds
+mean. There, the cab's off at last, thank Heaven!--Very pretty,
+Falkenstein," he began, as the Count entered. "That's your game, is it?
+I think you might have confided in your bosom friend. Who is the fair
+one? Come, make a clean breast of it."
+
+Falkenstein shook his head. "My dear Harry, spare your words. Don't you
+know of old that you never get anything out of me unless I choose?"
+
+"Oh yes, confound you, I know that pretty well. One question,
+though--was she pretty?"
+
+"Do you suppose I entertain plain women?"
+
+"No; never was such a man for the beaux yeux. It looked uncommonly like
+little L'Estrange; but I don't suppose she could get out of the durance
+vile of Lowndes Square, to come and pay you a tete-a-tete call. Well,
+are you ready now? because Bonbon's tired of waiting, and so are we. A
+man in love makes an abominable friend."
+
+"A man in love with himself makes a worse one," said Waldemar; which hit
+Harry in a vulnerable spot, Godolphin being generally chaffed about the
+affection he bore his own person.
+
+"That _was_ the little L'Estrange, wasn't it?" asked Godolphin, as they
+leaned out of the window after dinner, apart from the others.
+
+"Yes," said Waldemar, curtly; "but I beg you to keep silence on it to
+every one."
+
+"To be sure; I've kept plenty of your confidences. I had no idea you'd
+push it so far. Of course you won't be fool enough to marry her?"
+
+Falkenstein's dark eyes flashed fire. "I shall not be fool enough to
+consult or confide in any man upon my private affairs."
+
+Godolphin shrugged his shoulders with commiseration, and left Waldemar
+alone in his window.
+
+Falkenstein called in Lowndes Square the morning after and had an
+interview with old Cash in the library of gaudy books that were never
+opened, and told him concisely that he loved his niece, and--that ever I
+should live to record it!--that little snob, with not two ideas in his
+head, who couldn't, if put to it, tell you who his own grandfather was,
+and who owed his tolerance in society to his banking account, refused an
+alliance with the refined intellect and the blue blood of one of the
+proud, courtly, historic Falkensteins! He'd been tutored by his wife,
+and said his lesson properly, refusing to sanction "any such connexion;"
+of course his niece must act for herself.
+
+Waldemar bowed himself out with all his haughtiest high-breeding; he
+knew Valerie _would_ act for herself, but the insult cut him to the
+quick. He threw himself into the train, and went down to Fairlie, his
+governor's place in Devonshire, determining to sacrifice his pride, and
+ask his father to aid him in his effort for freedom. In the drawing-room
+he found his sister Virginia, a cold, proud woman of the world. She
+scarcely let him sit down and inquire for the governor, before she
+pounced on him.
+
+"Waldemar, I have heard the most absurd report about you."
+
+"Most reports are absurd."
+
+"Yes, of course; but this is too ridiculous. What do you think it is?"
+
+"I am sure I can't say."
+
+"That you are going to marry."
+
+"Well?"
+
+"Well! You take it very quietly. If you were going to make a good match
+I should be the first to rejoice; but they say that you are engaged to
+some niece of that odious, vulgar parvenu, Cashranger, the brewer; that
+little bold thing who wrote that play that made a noise a little while
+ago. Pray set me at rest at once, and say it is not true."
+
+"I should be very sorry if it were not."
+
+His sister looked at him in haughty horror. "Waldemar! you must be mad.
+If you were rich, it would be intolerable to stoop to such a connexion;
+but, laden with debts as you are, to disgrace the family with such----"
+
+"Disgrace?" repeated Falkenstein, scornfully. "She would honor any
+family she entered."
+
+"You talk like a boy of twenty," said Virginia, impatiently. "To load
+yourself with a penniless wife when you are on the brink of ruin--to
+introduce to _us_ the niece of a low-bred, pushing plebeian--to give
+your name to a bold manoeuvring girl, who has the impudence to take her
+stand before a crowded theatre----"
+
+"Hold!" broke out Waldemar, fiercely: "you might thank Heaven, Virginia,
+if you were as frank-hearted and as free from guile as she is. She
+thinks no ill, and therefore she is not, like you fine ladies, on the
+constant qui vive lest it should be attributed to her. I have found at
+last a woman too generous to be mistrustful, too fond to wait for the
+world's advantages, and, moreover, untainted by the breath of your
+conventionalities, and pride, and cant."
+
+Virginia threw back her head with a curl on her lip. "You are mad, as I
+said before. I suppose you do not expect me to countenance your
+infatuation?"
+
+He shrugged his shoulder. "Really, whether you do or not is perfectly
+immaterial to me."
+
+Virginia was silent, pale with anger, for they were all (pardonably
+enough) proud. She turned with a sneer to Josephine, a younger and less
+decided woman, just entering. "Josephine, you are come in time to be
+congratulated on your sister-in-law."
+
+"Is it true?" murmured Josephine, aghast. "Oh! my dear Waldemar, pause;
+consider how dreadful for us--a person who is so horribly connected;
+the man's beer wagon is now standing at the door. Oh, do reflect--a
+girl, whose name is before the public----"
+
+"By talent that would grace a queen!" interrupted Waldemar, rising
+impatiently. "You waste your words; you might know that I am not so weak
+as to give up my sole chance of happiness to please your pitiful
+prejudices."
+
+"Very well. _I_ shall never speak to her," said Virginia, between her
+teeth.
+
+"That you will do as you please; you will be the loser."
+
+"But, Waldemar, do consider," began Josephine.
+
+"Your women's tongues would drive a man mad," muttered Falkenstein.
+"Tell me where my father is."
+
+"In his study," answered Virginia briefly. And in his study Falkenstein
+found him. He saw at once that something was wrong by his reception; but
+he plunged at once into his affairs, showing him plainly his position,
+and asking him frankly for help to discharge his debts.
+
+Count Ferdinand heard him in silence. "Waldemar," he answered, after a
+long pause, "you shall have all you wish. I will sign you a check for
+the amount this instant if you give me your word to break off this
+miserable affair."
+
+Falkenstein's cheek flushed with annoyance; he had expected sympathy
+from his father, or at least toleration. "That is impossible. You ask me
+to give up the one thing that binds me to life--the one love I have
+given me--the one chance of redeeming the future, that lies in my grasp.
+I am not a boy led away by a passing caprice. I have known and tried
+everything, and I can judge what will make my happiness. What
+unfortunate prejudice have you all formed against my poor little
+Valerie----"
+
+"Enough" said his father, sternly. "I address you as a man of the world,
+and a man of sense; you answer me with infatuated folly. I give you your
+choice: my aid and esteem, in everything you can desire, or the madman's
+gratification of the ill-placed caprice of the hour."
+
+Falkenstein rose as haughtily as the Count.
+
+"Virtually, then, you give me no choice. I am sorry I troubled you with
+my concerns. I know whose interference I have to thank for it, and am
+only astonished you are so easily influenced," said Falkenstein, setting
+his teeth hard as he closed the door; for his father's easy desertion of
+him hit him hard, and he attributed it, rightly enough, to Maximilian,
+who, industriously gathering every grain of evil report against his
+brother, had taken such a character of Valerie--whom, unluckily, he had
+seen coming out of Duke street--down to Fairlee, that his father vowed
+to disinherit him, and his sisters never to speak to him. The doors both
+of his own home and Lowndes Square were closed to him; and in his
+adversity the only one that clung to him was Valerie.
+
+If he had been willing to ask them, none of his friends could have
+helped him. Godolphin, with 20,000_l_. a year, spent every shilling on
+himself; Tom Bevan, but that he stood for a pocket borough of his
+governor's, would have been in quod long ago; and for the others, men
+very willing to take your money at ecarte are not very willing to lend
+you theirs when you can play ecarte no longer. Amadeus Levi grew more
+and more importunate; down on him at once, as Falkenstein knew, would
+come the Jew's _griffes_ if he took any such unprofitable step as a
+marriage for love; and with all the passion in the world,
+mesdemoiselles, a man thinks twice before he throws himself into the
+Insolvent Court.
+
+One night, _nolens volens_, decision was forced on him. He had seen
+Valerie that morning in the Pantheon, and they had parted to meet again
+at a ball, one of the lingering stragglers of the past season. About
+twelve he dressed and walked down Duke Street, looking for a cab to take
+him to Park Lane. Under a lamp at the corner, standing reading, he saw a
+man whom he knew by sight, and whose errand he guessed without
+hesitation. He paused unnoticed close beside him; he stood a moment and
+glanced over his shoulder; he saw a warrant for his own apprehension at
+Levi's suit. The man looking, to make sure of the dress, never raised
+his eyes. Falkenstein walked on, hailed a hansom in Regent street, and
+in a quarter of an hour was chatting with his hostess.
+
+"Where is Miss L'Estrange?" he asked, carelessly.
+
+"She was waltzing with Tom a moment ago," answered Mrs. Eden. "If you
+run after her so, I shall believe report. But is anything the matter,
+Falkenstein? How ill you look!"
+
+"Too much champagne," laughed Waldemar. "I've been dining with Gourmet,
+and all the Falkensteins inherit the desire of obtaining that
+gentlemanlike curse, the gout."
+
+"It's not the gout, mon ami," smiled Mrs. Eden.
+
+"Break your engagement and waltz with me," he whispered, ten minutes
+after, to Valerie.
+
+"I have none. I kept them all free for you!"
+
+He put his arm round her and whirled her into the circle.
+
+"Count Waldemar, you are not well. Has anything fresh occurred?" she
+asked anxiously, as she felt the quick throbs of his heart, and saw the
+dark circles of his eyes and the deepened lines round his haughty mouth.
+
+"Not much, dearest. I will tell you in a moment."
+
+She was silent, and he led her through the different rooms into Mrs.
+Eden's boudoir, which he knew was generally deserted; and there, holding
+her close to him, but not looking into her eyes lest his strength should
+fail him, he told her that he must leave England, and asked her if he
+should go alone.
+
+She caught both his hands and kissed them passionately. "No, no; do not
+leave me--take me with you, wherever it be. Oh, that I were rich for
+your sake! I, who would die for you, can do nothing to help you--"
+
+He pressed her fiercely to him. "Oh, Valerie! Heaven bless you for your
+love, that renders the darkest hour of my life the brightest. But weigh
+well what you do, my darling. I am utterly ruined. I cannot insure you
+from privation in the future, perhaps not from absolute want; if I make
+money, much must go in honor year by year to the payment of my debts, by
+instalments. I shall take you from all the luxuries and the society that
+you are formed for; do not sacrifice yourself blindly----"
+
+"Sacrifice myself!" interrupted Valerie. "Oh! Waldemar, if it is no
+sacrifice to _you_, let me be with you wherever it be; and if you have
+cares, and toil, and sorrow, let me share them. I will write for you,
+work for you, do anything for you, only let me be with you----"
+
+He pressed his lips to hers, silent with the tumult of passion,
+happiness, delirious joy, regret, remorse, that arose in him at her
+words.
+
+"My guardian angel, be it as you will!" he said, at length. "I must be
+out of England to-morrow, Valerie. Will you come with me as my wife?"
+
+Early on Sunday morning Falkenstein was married, and out of his host of
+friends, and relatives, and acquaintance, honest Tom Bevan was the only
+man who turned him off, as Tom phrased it, and bid him good bye, with
+few words but much regret, concealed, after the manner of Britons, for
+the loss of his old chum. Tom's congratulations were the only ones that
+fell on Valerie's ear in the empty church that morning; but I question
+if Valerie ever noticed the absence of the marriage paraphernalia, so
+entirely were her heart, and eyes, and mind, fixed on the one whom she
+followed into exile. They were out of London before their part of it had
+begun to lounge down to their late breakfasts; and as they crossed the
+Channel, and the noon sun streamed on the white line of cliffs,
+Falkenstein, holding her hands in his and looking down into her eyes,
+forgot the follies of his past, the insecurity of his future, the tale
+of his ruin and his flight, that would be on the tongues of his friends
+on the morrow, and only remembered the love that came to him when all
+others forsook him.
+
+
+
+
+V.
+
+THE SILVER CHIMES RING IN A HAPPY NEW YEAR.
+
+
+One December evening Falkenstein sat in his lodgings in Vienna; the wood
+fire burnt brightly, and if its flames lighted up a room whose
+_appanages_ were rather different to the palace his grandfather had
+owned in the imperial city, they at least shone on waving hair and
+violet eyes that were very dear to him, and helped to teach him to
+forget much that he had forfeited. From England he had come to Vienna,
+where, as he had projected, his uncle, one of the cabinet, had been able
+to help him to a diplomatic situation, for which his keen judgment and
+varied information fitted him; and in Austria his name gave him at once
+a brevet of the highest nobility. Of course the knowledge that he was
+virtually outlawed, and that he was deep in the debt of such sharps as
+Amadeus Levi, often galled his proud and sensitive nature; but Valerie
+knew how to soften and to soothe him, and, under her caressing affection
+or her ready vivacity, the dark hours passed away.
+
+He was smoking his favorite briar-wood pipe, with Valerie sitting at his
+feet, reading him some copy just going to her publishers in England, and
+little Spit, not forgotten in their flight, lying on the hearth, when a
+deep English voice startled them, singing out, "Here you are at last! I
+give you my word, I've been driving over this blessed city two hours to
+find you!"
+
+"Tom!" cried Falkenstein.
+
+"Captain Bevan!" echoed Valerie, springing to her feet, while Spit began
+barking furiously.
+
+Bevan shook hands with them; heartily glad to see his friend again,
+though, of course he grumbled more about the snow and the stupidity of
+the Viennese than anything else. "Very jolly rooms you've got," said he
+at last; "and, 'pon my life, you look better than I've seen you do a
+long time, Waldemar. Madame has done wonders for you."
+
+"Madame" laughed, and glanced up at Falkenstein, who smiled half sadly.
+
+"She has taught me how to find happiness, Tom. I wish you may get such a
+teacher."
+
+"Thank you, so do I, if my time ever comes; but geniuses _aux longs yeux
+bleus_ are rare in the world. But you're wondering why I'm here, ain't
+you?"
+
+"I was flattering myself you were here to see us."
+
+"Well, of course and very glad to see you, too; but I'm come in part as
+your governor's messenger."
+
+Valerie saw him look up quickly, a flush on his face. "My father?"
+
+"Yes, that rascal--(you know I always said he was good for nothing, a
+fool that couldn't smoke a Queen without being sick)--I mean, your
+brother Maximillian--was at the bottom of the Count's row with you. Last
+week I was dining at old Fitz's, and your father and sisters were there,
+and when the women were gone I asked him when he'd last heard of you; of
+course he looked tempestuous, and said, 'Never.' Happily, I'm not easily
+shut up, so I told him it was a pity, then, for if he did he'd hear you
+were jollier than ever, and I said your wife was---- Well, I won't say
+what, for fear we spoil this young lady, and make her vain of herself.
+The old boy turned pale, and said nothing; but two days after I got a
+line from him, saying he wasn't quite well; would I go down and speak to
+him. I found him chained with the gout, and he began to talk about you.
+I like that old man, Waldemar, I do, uncommonly. He said he'd been too
+hasty, but that it was a family failing, and that Max had brought him
+such--well, such confounded lies--about Valerie, that he would have shot
+you rather than see you give her your name; now he wants to have you
+back. I'd nothing to do, so I said I'd come and ask you to forgive the
+poor old boy, and come and see him, for he isn't well. I know you will,
+Falkenstein, because you never _did_ bear malice."
+
+"Oh yes, he will," murmured Valerie, tears in her eyes. "I separated
+you, Waldemar; you will let me see you reconciled?"
+
+"My darling, yes! Poor old governor!" And Falkenstein stopped and
+smoked vigorously, for kindness always touched him to the heart.
+
+Bevan looked at him and was silent. "I say," he whispered, when he was a
+moment alone with Valerie. "I didn't tell Waldemar, because I thought
+you'd break it to him less blunderingly than I should, but the old
+Count's breaking fast. I doubt if he'll live another week."
+
+Bevan was right. In another week Falkenstein stood by the death-bed of
+his father. He had a long interview with him alone, in which the old
+Count detailed to him the fabricated slanders with which his brother had
+blackened Valerie's name. With all his old passion he disowned the son
+capable of such baseness, and constituted Waldemar his sole heir, save
+the legacies left his daughters. He died in Waldemar's arms the night
+they arrived in England, with his last word to him and Valerie, whom,
+despite Virginia's opposition, he insisted on seeing. Falkenstein's
+sorrow for his father was deep and unfeigned, like his character; but
+his guardian angel, as he used to call her, was there to console him,
+and, under the light of her smile, sorrow could not long pursue him.
+
+On his brother, always his own enemy, and now the traducer of the woman
+he loved, Waldemar's wrath fell heavily, and would, to a certainty, have
+found some means of wreaking itself, but for the last wishes of his
+father. As it was, he took a nobler, yet a more complete revenge. The
+day of the funeral, when they were assembled for the reading of the
+will, Maximilian, unconscious of his doom, came with his gentle face,
+and tender melancholy air, to inherit, as he believed, Fairlie, and all
+the personal property.
+
+Stunned as by a spent ball, horror-struck, disbelieving his senses, he
+heard his younger brother proclaimed the heir. It was a serious thing
+to him, moreover, for--for a man of large expenses and great
+ostentation--his own means were small. To secure every shilling he had
+schemed, and planned, and lied; and now every shilling was taken from
+him. Like the dog of AEsopian memory, trying to catch two pieces of meat,
+he had lost his own!
+
+After the last words were read, Waldemar stood a moment irresolute; then
+he lifted his head, his dark eyes bright and clear, his mouth fixed and
+firm, a proud calm displacing his old look of passion and of care.
+
+He went up to his brother with a generous impulse, and held out his
+hand.
+
+"Maximilian, from our boyhood you never liked me, and of late you have
+done me a great wrong; but I am willing to believe that you did it from
+a mistaken motive, and by me, at least, it shall never be recalled. My
+father, in his wish to make amends for the one harsh act of his life to
+me, has made a will which I know you consider unjust. I cannot dispute
+his last desire that I should inherit Fairlie, but I can do what I know
+he would sanction--divide with you the wealth his energy collected. Take
+the half of the property, as if he had left it to you, and over his
+grave let us forget the past!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the last day of the year, so eventful to them both, Falkenstein and
+Valerie drove through the park at Fairlie. The role of a country
+gentleman would have been the last into which Waldemar, with his
+independent opinions and fastidious intellect, would have sunk; but he
+was fond of the place from early associations, and he came down to take
+possession. The tenantry and servants welcomed him heartily, for they
+had often used to wish that the wild high-spirited child, who rode his
+Shetland over the country at a headlong pace, and if he sometimes
+teased their lives out, always gave them a kind word and merry laugh,
+had been the heir instead of the one to whom they applied the old
+proverb "still and ill."
+
+The tenantry had been dismissed, the dinner finished, even the briarwood
+pipe smoked out, and in the wide Elizabethan window of the library
+Falkenstein stood, looking on the clear bright night, and watching the
+Old Year out.
+
+"You sent the deed of gift to-day to Maximilian?" said Valerie, clasping
+both her hands on his arm.
+
+"Yes. He does not take it very graciously; but perhaps we can hardly
+expect that from a man who has been disinherited. I question if I should
+accept it at all."
+
+"But you could never have wronged another as he wronged you," cried
+Valerie. "Oh, Waldemar! I think I never realised fully, till the day you
+took your generous revenge, how noble, how good, how above all others
+you are."
+
+He smiled, and put his hand on her lips.
+
+"Good, noble, silly child! those words may do for some spotless Gahlahad
+or Folko, not for me, who, a month ago, was in debt to some of the
+greatest blackguards in town, who have yielded to every temptation,
+given way to every weakness; not with the excuse of a boy new to life,
+but willfully and recklessly, knowing both the pleasures and their
+price--I, who but for your love and my father's, should now be a
+solitary exile, paying for my past follies with----"
+
+"Be quiet," interrupted Valerie, with her passionate vivacity. "As
+different as was 'Mirabeau juge par sa famille et Mirabeau juge par le
+peuple,' are you judged by your enemies, and judged by those who love
+you. Granted you have had temptations, follies, errors; so has every
+man of high spirit and generous temper, and I value you far more coming
+out of a fiery furnace with so much of pure gold that the flames could
+not destroy, than if you were some ascetic Pharisee, who has never
+succumbed because he has never been tempted, and, born with no
+weaknesses, is born with no warmer virtues either!"
+
+Falkenstein laughed, as he looked down at her.
+
+"You little goose! Well, at least you have eloquence, Valerie, if not
+truth, on your side; and your sophistry is dear to me, as it springs out
+of your love."
+
+"But it is not sophistry," she cried, with an energetic stamp of her
+foot. "If you will not listen to philosophy, concede, at least, to fact.
+Which is most worthy of my epithets--'noble and good'--Waldemar
+Falkenstein, or Maximillian? And yet Maximillian has been quiet and
+virtuous from his youth upwards, and always wins white balls from the
+ballot of society."
+
+"Well, you shall have the privilege of your sex--the last word," smiled
+Waldemar, "more especially as the last word is on my side."
+
+"Hark!" interrupted Valerie, quiet and subdued in a second, "the clock
+is striking twelve."
+
+Silently, with her arms round his neck, they listened to the parting
+knell of the Old Year, stealing quietly away from its place among men.
+From the church towers through England tolled the twelve strokes, with a
+melancholy echo, telling a world that its dead past was laid in a sealed
+grave, and the stone of Never More was rolled to the door of the
+sepulchre. The Old Year was gone, with all its sins and errors, its
+golden gleams and midnight storms, its midsummer days of sunshine for
+some, its winter nights of starless gloom for others. Its last knell
+echoed; and then, from the old grey belfries in villages and towns, over
+the stirring cities and the sleeping hamlets, over the quiet meadows and
+stretching woodlands and grand old forest trees, rang the Silver Chimes
+of the New Year.
+
+"It shall be a happy New Year to you, my darling, if my love can make it
+so," whispered Waldemar, as the musical bells clashed out in wild
+harmony under the winter stars.
+
+She looked up into his eyes. "I _must_ be happy, since it will be passed
+with you. Do you remember, Waldemar, the night I saw you first, my
+telling you New Year's-day was my birthday, and wondering where you and
+I should spend the next? I liked you strangely from the first, but how
+little I foresaw that my whole life was to hang on yours!"
+
+"As little as I foresaw when, after heavy losses at Godolphin's, I
+watched the Old Year out in my chambers, a tired, ruined, hopeless,
+aimless man, with not one on whom I could rely for help or sympathy in
+my need, that I should stand here now, free, clear from debt, with all
+my old entanglements shaken off, my old scores wiped out, my darker
+errors forgotten, my worst enemy humbled, and my own future bright. Oh!
+Valerie! Heaven bless you for the love that followed me into exile!"
+
+He drew her closer to him as he spoke, and as he felt the beating of the
+heart that was always true to him, and the soft caress of the lips that
+had always a smile for him, Falkenstein looked out over the wide
+woodland that called him master, glistening in the clear starlight, and
+as he listened to the SILVER CHIMES--joyous herald of the New-born
+Year--he blessed in his inmost heart the GOLDEN FETTERS OF LOVE.
+
+
+
+
+SLANDER AND SILLERY.
+
+
+
+
+SLANDER AND SILLERY.
+
+
+
+
+I.
+
+THE LION OF THE CHAUSSEE D'ANTIN.
+
+ Ma mere est a Paris,
+ Mon pere est a Versailles.
+ Et moi je suis ici.
+ Pour chanter sur la paille,
+ L'amour! L'amour!
+ La nuit comme le jour.
+
+
+Humming this popular if not over-recherche ditty, a man sat sketching in
+pastels, one morning, in his rooms at Numero 10, Rue des Mauvais Sujets,
+Chaussee d' Antin, Paris.
+
+The band of the national guard, the marchands crying "Coco!" the
+charlatans puffing everything from elixirs to lead-pencils, the Empress
+and Mme. d'Alve passing in their carriage, the tramp of some Zouaves
+just returned from Algeria--nothing in the street below disturbed him;
+he went sketching on as if his life depended on the completion of the
+picture. He was a man about thirty-three, middle height, and eminently
+graceful. He was half Bohemian, half English, and the animation of the
+one nation and the hauteur of the other were by turns expressed on his
+chiselled features as his thoughts moved with his pencil. The stamp of
+his good blood was on him; his face would have attracted and interested
+in ever so large a crowd. He was very pale, and there was a tired look
+on his wide, powerful forehead and in his long dark eyes, and a weary
+line or two about his handsome mouth, as if he had exhausted his youth
+very quickly; and, indeed, to see life as he had seen it _is_ somewhat a
+fatiguing process, and apt to make one blase before one's time.
+
+The rooms in which he sat were intensely comfortable, and very
+provocative to a quiet pipe and idleness. To be sure, if one judged his
+tastes by them, they were not probably, to use the popular jargon,
+"healthy," for they had nothing very domestic or John Halifaxish about
+them, and were certainly not calculated to gratify the eyes of maiden
+aunts and spinster sisters.
+
+There were fencing-foils, pistols, tobacco-boxes of every style and
+order, from ballet-girls to terriers' heads. There were three or four
+cockatoos and parrots on stands chattering bits of Quartier Latin songs,
+or imitating the cries in the street below. There were cards,
+dice-boxes, albums a rire, meerschaums, lorgnons, pink notes, no end of
+De Kock's and Lebrun's books, and all the etcaeteras of chambres de
+garcon strewed about: and there were things, too--pictures, statuettes,
+fauteuils, and a breakfast-service of Sevres and silver--that Du Barry
+need not have scrupled to put in her "petite bon-bonniere" at Luciennes.
+
+So busy was he sketching and singing
+
+ "Messieurs les etudiens
+ Montez a la Chaumiere!"
+
+that he never heard a knock at his door, and he looked up with an
+impatient frown on his white, broad forehead as a man entered _sans
+ceremonie_.
+
+"Mon Dieu! Ernest," cried his friend, "what the devil are you doing here
+with your pipe and your pastels, when I've been waiting at Tortoni's a
+good half-hour, and at last, out of patience, drove here to see what on
+earth had become of you?"
+
+"My dear fellow, I beg you a thousand pardons," said Vaughan, lazily. "I
+was sketching this, and you and your horses went clean out of my head, I
+honestly confess."
+
+"And your breakfast too, it seems," said De Concressault, glancing at
+the table. "Is it Madame de Melusine or the little Bluette whose
+portrait absorbs you so much? No, by Jove! it's a prettier woman than
+either of 'em. If she's like that, take me to see her this instant. What
+glorious gold hair! I adore your countrywomen when they've hair that
+color. Where did you get that face? Is she a duchess, or a danseuse, a
+little actress you're going to patronise, or a millionnaire you're going
+to marry?"
+
+"I can't tell you," laughed Vaughan. "I've not an idea who she may be. I
+saw her last evening coming out of the Francais, and picked up her
+bouquet for her as she was getting into her carriage. The face was
+young, the smile very pretty and bright, and, as they daguerreotyped
+themselves in my mind, I thought I might as well transfer them to paper
+before newer beauties chased them out of it."
+
+"Diable! and you don't know who she is? However, we'll soon find out.
+That gold hair mustn't be lost. But get your breakfast, pray, Ernest,
+and let us be off to poor Armand's sale."
+
+"That's the way we mourn our dead friends," said Vaughan, with a sneer,
+pouring out his coffee. "Armand is jesting, laughing, and smoking with
+us one day, the next he's pitched out of his carriage going down to
+Asnieres, and all we think of is--that his horses are for sale. If I
+were found in the Morgue to-morrow, your first emotion, Emile, would be,
+'Vaughan's De l'Orme will be sold. I must go and bid for it directly.'"
+
+De Concressault laughed as he looked up at a miniature of Marion de
+l'Orme, once taken for the Marquis of Gordon. "I fancy, mon garcon,
+there'll be too many sharks after all your possessions for me to stand
+any chance."
+
+"True enough," said Vaughan; "and I question if they'll wait till my
+death before they come down on 'em. But I don't look forward. I take
+life as it comes. Vogue la galere! At least, I've _lived_, not
+vegetated." And humming his refrain,
+
+ "L'amour! l'amour!
+ La nuit comme le jour!"
+
+he lounged down the stairs and drove to a sale in the Faubourg St.
+Germain, where one of his Paris chums, a virtuoso and connoisseur, had
+left endless _meubles_ to be sold by his duns and knocked down to his
+friends.
+
+Vaughan was quite right; he _had_ lived, and at a pretty good pace, too.
+When he came of age a tolerably good fortune awaited him, but it had not
+been long in his hands before he contrived to let it slip through them.
+He'd been brought up at Sainte Barbe, after being expelled from Rugby,
+knew all the best of the "jeunesse doree," and could not endure any
+place after Paris, where his life was as sparkling and brilliant as the
+foam off a glass of champagne. Wild and careless, high spirited, and
+lavish in his Opera suppers, his _cabaret_ dinners, his Trois Freres
+banquets, his lansquenet parties, his bouquets for baronnes, and his
+bracelets for ballerinas, Ernest gained his reputation as a _Lion_,
+and--ruined himself, too, poor old fellow!
+
+His place down in Surrey had mortgages thick on every inch of its lands,
+and the money that kept him going was borrowed from those modern Satans,
+money lenders, at the usually ruinous interest. "But still," Ernest was
+wont to say, with great philosophy, "I've had ten years' swing of
+pleasure. Does every man get as much as that? And should I have been any
+happier if I'd been a good boy, and a country squire, sat on the bench,
+amused my mind with turnips, and married some bishop's daughter, who'd
+have marched me to church, forbidden cigars, and buried me in family
+boots?"
+
+Certainly that would _not_ have been his line, and so, in natural horror
+at it, he dashed into a diametrically opposite one, and after the favor
+he had shown him from every handsome woman that drove through Longchamp,
+wore diamonds at the Tuileries, and supped with dominos noirs at bals
+d'Opera, and the favor he showed to cards, the _courses_, and the
+_coulisses_, few bishops would have imperilled their daughters' souls by
+setting them to hunt down this wicked _Lion_, especially as the poor
+_Lion_ now wasn't worth the trapping. If he had been, there would have
+been hue and cry enough after him I don't doubt; but the Gordon Cummings
+of the beau sexe rarely hunt unless it's worth their while, and they can
+bring home splendid spoils to make their bosom friends mad with envy;
+and Ernest, despite his handsome face, his fashionable reputation, and
+the aroma of conquest that hung about him (they used to say he never
+wooed ever so negligently but he won), was assuredly neither an
+"eligible speculation" nor a "marrying man," and was an object rather
+of terror to English mammas steering budding young ladies through the
+dangerous vortex of French society with a fierce chevaux de frise of
+British prejudices and a keen British eye to business. If Ernest was of
+no other use, however, he was invaluable to his uncles, aunts, and male
+cousins, as a sort of scapegoat and _epouvantail_, to be held up on high
+to show the unwary what they would come to if they followed his steps.
+It was so pleasant to them to exult over his backslidings, and, cutting
+him mercilessly up into little bits, hold condemnatory sermons over
+every one of the pieces. "Dans l'adversite de nos meilleurs amis, nous
+trouvons toujours quelque chose qui ne nous deplait pas;" and Vaughan's
+friends, like the rest of us pharisees, dearly loved to glance at the
+publican (especially if he was handsomer, cleverer, or any way better
+than themselves), and thank God loudly that they were not such men as
+he. Ernest was a hardened sinner, however; he laughed, put the Channel
+between him and them, and went on his ways without thinking or caring
+for their animadversions.
+
+"By Jove! Emile," said he as they sat dining together at Leiter's, "I
+should like to find out my golden-haired sylphide. She was English, by
+her fair skin, and though I'm not very fond of my compatriotes,
+especially when they're abroad (I think touring John Bull detestable
+wrapped up in his treble plaid of reserve), still I should like to find
+her out just for simple curiosity. I assure you she'd the prettiest foot
+and ankle I ever saw, not excepting even Bluette's."
+
+"Ma foi! that's a good deal from _you_. She must be found, then. Voyons!
+shall we advertise in the _Moniteur_, employ the secret police, or call
+at all the hotels in person to say that you're quite ready to act out
+Soulie's 'Lion Amoureux,' if you can only discover the petite
+bourgeoise to play it with you?"
+
+Vaughan laughed as he drank his demi-tasse.
+
+"Lion amoureux! that's an anomaly; we're only in love just enough pour
+nous amuser; and of us Albin says, very rightly,
+
+ Si vous connaissiez quelques meilleurs,
+ Vous porteriez bientot cette ame ailleurs."
+
+"Very well, then: if you don't know of anything better, let's hunt up
+this incognita. If she went to the Francais, she's most likely at the
+Odeon to-night," said De Concressault. "Shall we try?"
+
+"Allons!" said Vaughan, rising indolently, as he did most things. "But
+it's rather silly, I think; there are bright smiles and pretty feet
+enough in Paris without one's setting off on a wild-goose chase after
+them."
+
+They were playing the last act of "La Calomnie," as Vaughan and De
+Concressault took their places, put up their lorgnons, and looked round
+the house. He swore a few mental "Diables!" and "Sacres!" as his gaze
+fell on faces old or ugly, or too brunes or too blondes, or anything but
+what he wanted. At last, without moving his glass, he touched De
+Concressault's arm.
+
+"There she is, Emile, in the fourth from the centre, in a white opera
+cloak, with pink flowers in her hair."
+
+"I see her, mon ami," said Emile. "I found her out two seconds ago (see
+how well you sketch!) but I wouldn't spoil your pleasure in discovering
+her. Mon Dieu! Ernest, she's looking at you, and smiles as if she
+recognised you. Was there ever so lucky a Lauzun?"
+
+Vaughan could have laughed outright to see by the brightness of the
+girl's expression that she knew the saviour of her bouquet again, for
+though he was accustomed to easy conquests, such naive interest in him
+at such short notice was something new to him.
+
+He didn't take his lorgnon off her again, and she was certainly worth
+the honor, with her soft, lustrous gold hair, the eyes that defy
+definition--black in some lights, violet in others--a wide-arched
+forehead, promising plenty of brains, and a rayonnante, animated, joyous
+expression, quite refreshing to anybody as bored and blase as Vaughan
+and De Concressault. As soon as the last piece was over Vaughan slipped
+out of his loge, and took up his station at the entrance.
+
+He didn't wait in vain: the golden hair soon came, on the arm of a
+gentleman--middle aged, as Vaughan noticed with a sensation of
+satisfaction. She glanced up at him as she passed: he looked very
+handsome in the gas glare. Vaughan perhaps was too sensible a fellow to
+think of his pose, but even _we_ have our weaknesses under certain
+circumstances, as well as the crinolines. Luckily for him, he chanced to
+have in his pocket a gold serpent bracelet he had bought that morning
+for some fair dame or demoiselle. He stopped her, and held it out to
+her.
+
+"I beg your pardon, mademoiselle," he said in French, "but I think you
+dropped this?"
+
+She looked up at him with the sunniest of smiles as she answered, in a
+pure accent, "No monsieur, thank you, it does not belong to me."
+
+The middle-aged man glanced sideways at him with true British
+suspicion--I dare say a pickpocket, a Rouge, and Fieschi, were all mixed
+up in his mind as embodied in the graceful figure and bold glance of the
+_Lion_. He drew the girl on, looking much like a heavy cloud with a
+bright sun ray after it; but she half turned her head over her shoulder
+to give him a farewell smile, which Ernest returned with ten per cent.
+interest.
+
+"Anglais," said Emile, concisely.
+
+"Malheureusement," said Ernest as briefly, as he pushed his way into the
+air, and saw the gold hair vanish into her carriage. He went quickly up
+to the cocher.
+
+"Ou demeurent-ils, mon ami?" he whispered, slipping a five-franc piece
+into his hand.
+
+The man smiled. "A l'Hotel de Londres, monsieur; No. 6, au premier."
+
+"The devil! pourquoir ne allez pas?" said an unmistakably English voice
+from the interior of the voiture. The man set off at a trot; Ernest
+sprang into his own trap.
+
+"Au Chateau Rouge! May as well go there, eh, Emile? What a deuced pity
+la chevelure doree is English!"
+
+"I wish she were a danseuse, an actress, a fleuriste--anything one could
+make his own introduction to. Confound it there's the 'heavy father,'
+I'm afraid, in the case, and some rigorous mamma, or vigilant _beguine_
+of a governess: but, to judge by the young lady's smiles, she'll be easy
+game unless she's tremendously fenced in."
+
+With which consolatory reflection Vaughan leaned back and lighted a
+cheroot, _en route_ to spend the night as he had spent most of them for
+the last ten years, till the fan had begun to be more bore than
+pleasure.
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+NINA GORDON.
+
+
+"Have you been to the Hotel de Londres, Ernest?" said De Concressault,
+as Vaughan lounged into Tortoni's next day, where Emile and three or
+four other men were drinking Seltzer and talking of how Cerisette had
+beaten Vivandiere by a neck at Chantilly, or (the sport to which a
+Frenchman takes much more naturally) of how well Riviere played in the
+"Prix d'un Bouquet;" what a _belle taille_ la De Servans had; and what a
+fool Senecterre had made of himself in the duel about Madame Viardot.
+
+"Of course I have," said Vaughan. "The name is Gordon--general name
+enough in England. They were gone to the Expiatoire, the portiere told
+me. There _is_ the heavy father, as I feared, and a quasi-governess
+acting duenna; they're travelling with another family, whose name I
+could not hear: the woman said 'C'etait beaucoup trop dur pour les
+levres.' I dare say they're some Brummagem people--some Fudge family or
+other--on their travels. Confound it!"
+
+"Poor Ernest," laughed De Concressault. "Some gold hair has bewitched
+him, and instead of finding it belongs to a danseuse, or a married
+woman, or a fleuriste of the Palais Royal, or something attainable, he
+finds it turn into an unapproachable English girl, with no end of
+outlying sentries round her, who'll fire at the first familiar
+approach."
+
+"It is a hard case," said De Kerroualle, a dashing fellow in one of the
+"Regiments de famille." "Never mind, mon ami; 'contre fortune bon
+coeur,' you know: it'll be more fun to devastate one of our countrymen's
+inviolate strongholds than to conquer where the white flag's already
+held out. Halloa! here's a compatriot of yours, I'd bet; look at his
+sanctified visage and stiff choker--a Church of England man, eh?"
+
+"The devil!" muttered Vaughan, turning round; "deuce take him, it's my
+cousin Ruskinstone! What in the world does _he_ do in Paris?"
+
+The man he spoke of was the Rev. Eusebius Ruskinstone, the Dean's
+Warden of the cathedral of Faithandgrace, a tall, thin young clerical of
+eight or nine-and-twenty, with goodness enough (it was generally
+supposed) in his little finger to make up for all Ernest's sins, scarlet
+though they were. He had just sat down and taken up the carte to blunder
+through "Potage au Duc de Malakoff," "Fricassee de volaille a la
+Princesse Mathilde," and all the rest of it, when his eye lit on his
+graceless cousin, and a vinegar asperity spread over his bland visage.
+Vaughan rose with a lazy grace, immensely bored within him: "My dear
+Ruskinstone, what an unanticipated pleasure. I never hoped Vanity Fair
+would have had power to lure _you_ into its naughty peep-shows and
+roundabouts."
+
+The Rev. Eusebius reddened slightly; he had once stated strongly his
+opinion that poor Paris was Pandemonium. "How do you do?" he said,
+giving his cousin two fingers; "it is a long time since we saw you in
+England."
+
+"England doesn't want me," said Ernest, dryly. "I don't fancy I should
+be very welcome at Faithandgrace, should I? The dear Chapter would
+probably consign me to starvation for my skeptical notions, as Calvin
+did Castellio. But what _has_ brought you to Paris? Are you come to
+fight the Jesuits in a conference, or to abjure the Wardenship and turn
+over to them?"
+
+Eusebius was shocked at the irreverent tone, but there was a satirical
+smile on his cousin's lips that he didn't care to provoke. "I am come,"
+he said, stiffly, "partly for health, partly to collect materials for a
+work on the 'Gurgoyles and Rose Mouldings of Mediaeval Architecture,' and
+partly to oblige some friends of mine. Pardon me, here they come."
+
+Vaughan lifted his eyes, expecting nothing very delectable in
+Ruskinstone's friends; to his astonishment they fell on his beauty of
+the Francais! with the outlying sentries of father, governess, and two
+other women, the Warden's maiden sisters, stiff, manierees, and prudish,
+like too many Englishwomen. The young lady of the Francais was a curious
+contrast to them: she started a little as she saw Vaughan, and smiled
+brilliantly. On the spur of that smile Ernest greeted his cousins with a
+degree of _empressement_ that they certainly wouldn't have been honored
+by without it. They were rather frightened at coming in actual contact
+with such a monster of iniquity as a Paris _Lion_, who, they'd heard,
+had out-Juan'd Don Juan, and gave him but a frigid welcome. Mr. Gordon
+had doubtless heard, too, of Vaughan's misdemeanors, for he looked
+stoical and acidulated as he bowed. But the young girl's eyes reconciled
+Ernest to all the rest, as she frankly returned a look with which he was
+wont to win his way through women's hearts, 'midst the hum of ball
+rooms, in the soft tete-a-tete in boudoirs, and over the sparkling
+Sillery of _petits soupers_. So, for the sake of his new quarry, he
+disregarded the cold looks of the others, and made himself so charming,
+that nobody could withstand the fascination of his manner till their
+dinner was served, and then, telling his cousins he would do himself the
+pleasure of calling on them the next day, he left the cafe to drive over
+to Gentilly, to inspect a grey colt of De Kerroualle's.
+
+"La chevelure doree is quite as pretty by daylight, Ernest," said De
+Concressault. "Bon dieu! it is such a relief to see eyes that are not
+tinted, and a skin whose pink and white is not born from the mysterious
+rites of the toilet."
+
+Vaughan nodded, with his Manilla between his teeth.
+
+"That cousin of yours is queer style, mon garcon," said Kerroualle.
+"How some of those islanders contrive to iron themselves into the
+stiffness and flatness they do, is to me the profoundest enigma. But
+what Church of England meaning lies hid in his coat-tails? They are, for
+all the world, like our reverends peres! What is it for?"
+
+"High Church. Next door shop to yours, you know. Our ecclesiastics are
+given to balancing themselves on a tight rope between their 'mother' and
+their 'sister,' till they tumble over into their sister's open arms--the
+Catholics say into salvation, the Protestants into damnation; into
+neither, I myself opine, poor simpletons. Ruskinstone is fearfully
+architectural. The sole things he'll see here will be facades,
+gurgoyles, and clerestories, and his soul knows no warmer loves than
+'stone dolls,' as Newton calls them. I say, Gaston, what do you think of
+_my_ love of the Francais; isn't she _chic_, isn't she mignonne, isn't
+she spirituelle?"
+
+"Yes," assented De Kerroualle, "prettier than either Bluette or Madame
+de Melusine would allow, or--relish."
+
+Ernest frowned. "I've done with Bluette; she's a pretty face, but--ah,
+bah! one can't amuse oneself always with a little paysanne, for she's
+nothing better, after all; and I'm half afraid the Melusine begins to
+bore me."
+
+"Better not tell her so, mon ami," said De Kerroualle; "she'd be a nasty
+enemy."
+
+"Pooh! a woman like that loves and forgets."
+
+"Sans doute; but they also sometimes revenge. Poor little Bluette you
+may safely turn over; but Madame la Baronne won't so easily be jilted."
+
+Vaughan laughed. "Oh, I'm not going to break her heart. Don't you know,
+Gaston, 'on a bien de la peine a rompre, meme quand on ne s'aime plus."
+
+"I shouldn't have said you found it so," smiled De Concressault, "for
+you change your loves as you change your gloves. La chevelure doree will
+be the next, eh?"
+
+"Poor little thing!" said Ernest, bitterly. "I wish her a better fate."
+
+He went to call on la chevelure doree, nevertheless, the morning after,
+and found her in the salon alone, greatly to his surprise and pleasure.
+Nina Gordon _was_ pretty _even_ in the morning--as Byron says--and she
+was much more, she was fascinating, and as perfectly demonstrative and
+natural as any peasant girl out of the meadows of Arles, ignorant of the
+magic words toilette, cosmetique, and crinoline.
+
+She received him with evident pleasure and perfect unreserve, which even
+this daring and skeptical _Lion_ could not twist or contort into
+boldness, and began to talk fast and gaily.
+
+"Do I like Paris?" she said, in answer to his question. "Oh yes; or at
+least I should, if I could see it differently. I detest sight-seeing,
+crowding one's brains with pictures, statues, palaces, Holy Families
+jostling Polinchinelle, races, mixing up with grand masses, Versailles,
+clouding St. Cloud--the Trianon rattled through in five minutes--all in
+inextricable muddle. _I_ should like to see Paris at leisure, with some
+one with whom I had a 'rapport,' my thoughts undisturbed, and my
+historical associations fresh and fervent."
+
+"I wish I were honored with the office of your guide," said Ernest,
+smiling. "Do you think you would have a 'rapport' with me?"
+
+She smiled in return. "Yes, I think I should. I cannot tell why. But as
+it is, my warmest souvenir of Conde is chilled by the offer of an ice,
+and my tenderest thought of Louise de la Valliere is shivered with the
+suggestion of dinner."
+
+Vaughan laughed. "Bravo!" thought he. "Thank God this is no tame English
+icicle. I would give much," he said, "to be able to take my cousin's
+place, and show you Paris. We would have no such vulgar gastronomical
+interruptions; we would go through it all perfectly. I would make you
+hear the very whispers with which La Valliere, under the old oaks of St.
+Germain, unknowingly, told her love to Louis. In the forest glades of
+St. Cloud you should see Cinq-Mars and the Royal Hunt riding out in the
+_chasse de nuit_; in the gloomy walls of the prisons you should hear
+Andre Chenier reciting his last verses, and see Egalite completing his
+last toilet. The glittering 'Cotillons' on the terraces of Versailles,
+the fierce canaille surging through the salons of the Tuileries, the
+Templars dying in the green meadows at the back of St. Antoine--they
+should all rise up for you under my incantations."
+
+Positively Ernest, bored and blase, accustomed to look at Paris through
+the gas-lights of his _Lion's_ life, warmed into romance to please the
+eyes that now beamed upon him.
+
+"Ah! that would be delightful," said the girl, her eyes sparkling. "Mr.
+Ruskinstone, you know, is terrible to me, for he goes about with
+'Ruskin' in one hand, 'Murray' in the other, and a Phrase-book or two in
+his pocket (of course he wants it, as he's a 'classical scholar'), and
+no matter whatever associations cling around a place, only looks at it
+in regard to its architectural points. I beg your pardon," she said,
+interrupting herself with a blush, "I forgot he was your cousin; but
+really that constant cold stone does tease me so."
+
+At that moment the heavy father, as Ernest irreverently styled the tall,
+pompous head of one of the first banks in London, who was worth a
+million if he was worth a sou, entered, and the Rev. Eusebius after
+him, who had been spending a lively morning taking notes among the
+catacombs. He was prepared to be as cold as a refrigerator, and the
+banker to follow his example, at finding this _bete noire_ of the
+Chaussee d'Antin tete-a-tete with Nina. But Ernest had a sort of haughty
+high breeding and careless dignity which warned people off from any
+liberties with him; and Gordon remembered that he knew Paris and its
+_haute volee_ so well that he might be a useful acquaintance if kept at
+arm's length from Nina, and afterwards dropped. Unlucky man! he actually
+thought his weak muscles were strong enough to cope with a _Lion's_!
+
+Vaughan took his leave, after offering his box at the Opera-Comique to
+Mr. Gordon, and drove to the Jockey Club, pondering much on this new
+species of the _beau sexe_. He was too used to women not to know at a
+glance that she had nothing bold about her, and yet he was too skeptical
+to credit that a girl could possibly exist who was neither a coquette
+nor a prude. As soon as the door closed on him his friends began to open
+their batteries of scandal.
+
+"How sad it is to see life wasted as my cousin wastes his," said the
+Warden, balancing a paper-knife thoughtfully, with a depressed air;
+"frittered away on mere trifles, as valuless and empty as soap-bubbles,
+but not, alas! so innocent."
+
+"What do you mean?" Nina asked, quickly.
+
+"What do I mean, Miss Gordon?" repeated Eusebius, reproachfully; "what
+can I mean but the idle whirl of gaiety, the vitiating pleasures, the
+debts and the vices which are to be laid at poor Ernest's door. Ever
+since we were boys together, and he was expelled from Rugby for going
+to Coventry fair and staying there all night, he has been going rapidly
+down the road to ruin."
+
+"He looks very comfortable in his descent," smiled the young lady. "Pray
+why, after all, shouldn't horses, operas, and Manillas, be as legitimate
+objects to set one's affections upon as Norman arches and Gregorian
+chants? He has his dissipations, you have yours. Chacun a son gout!"
+
+The Warden had his reasons for conciliating the young heiress, so he
+made a feeble effort to smile. "You know as well as I that you do not
+think what you say, Miss Gordon. Were it merely Vaughan's tastes that
+were in fault it would not be of such fearful consequence, but
+unfortunately it is his principles."
+
+"He is utterly without any," said Miss Selina Ruskinstone, who, ten
+years before, had been deeply and hopelessly in love with Ernest, and
+never forgave him for not reciprocating the passion.
+
+"He is a skeptic, a gambler, a spendthrift; and a more heartlessless
+flirt never lived," averred Miss Augusta, who hated the whole of
+Ernest's sex--even the Chapter--_pour cause_.
+
+"Gentlemen can't help seeming flirts sometimes, some women pay such
+attention to them," said Nina, with a mischievous laugh. "Poor Mr.
+Vaughn! I hope he's not as black as he is painted. His physiognomy tells
+a different tale; he is just my ideal of 'Ernest Maltravers.' How kind
+his eyes are; have you ever looked into them, Selina?"
+
+Miss Ruskinstone gave an angry sneer, vouchsafing no other response.
+
+"My dear Nina, how foolishly you talk, about looking into a young man's
+eyes," frowned her father. "I am surprised to hear you."
+
+Her own eyes opened in astonishment. "Why mayn't I look at them? It is
+by the eyes that, like a dog, I know whom to like and whom to avoid."
+
+"And pray does your prescience guide you to see a saint in a ruined
+_Lion_ of the Chaussee d'Antin?" sneered Selina, with another
+contemptuous sniff.
+
+"Not a saint. I'm not good enough to appreciate the race," laughed Nina.
+"But I do not believe your cousin to be all you paint him; or, at least,
+if circumstances have led him into extravagance, I have a conviction
+that he has a warm heart and a noble character au fond."
+
+"We will hope so," said the Warden, meekly, with an expression which
+plainly said how vain a hope it was.
+
+"I think we have wasted a great deal too much conversation on a
+thankless subject," said Selina, with asperity. "Don't you think it
+time, Mr. Gordon, for us to go to the Louvre?"
+
+That day, as they were driving along the Boulevards, they passed Ernest
+with Bluette in his carriage going to the Pre Catalan: they all knew
+her, from having seen her play at the Odeon. Selina and Augusta turned
+down their mouths, and turned up their eyes. Gordon pulled up his
+collar, and looked a Brutus in spectacles. Nina colored, and looked
+vexed. Triumph glittered in Eusebius's meek eyes, but he sighed a
+pastor's sigh over a lost soul.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+"LE LION AMOUREUX."
+
+
+The morning after, as they were going into the Exposition des Beaux
+Arts, they met Vaughan; and no ghost would have been more unwelcome to
+the Warden than the distingue figure of his fashionable cousin. Nina was
+the only one who looked pleased to recognise him, and she, as she
+returned his smile, forgot that the evening before it had been given to
+Bluette.
+
+"Are you coming in too?" she asked.
+
+"I was not, but I will with pleasure," said Ernest. And into the
+Exhibition with them he went, to Ruskinstone's wrath and Gordon's
+annoyance.
+
+Vaughan was a connoisseur in art. The Warden knew no more than what he
+took verbatim from the god of his idolatry, Mr. John Ruskin. It was very
+natural that Nina should listen to the friend of Ingres and Vernet
+instead of to the second-hand worshipper of Turner. Vaughan, by
+instinct, dropped his customary tone of compliment--compliment he never
+used to women he delighted to honor--and talked so charmingly, that Nina
+utterly forgot the luckless Eusebius, and started when a low, sweet
+voice said, close beside her, "What, Ernest, you here?"
+
+She turned, and saw a woman about eight-and-twenty, dressed in
+perfection of taste, with an exquisite figure, and a face of brunette
+beauty; the rouge most undiscoverable, and the eyes artistically tinted
+to make them look larger, which, Heaven knows, was needless. She darted
+a quick look at Vaughan's companion, which Nina gave back with a dash of
+hauteur. A shade came over his face as he answered her greeting.
+
+"Will you not introduce me to your friend?" said the new comer. "She is
+of your nation, I fancy, and you know I am entetee of everything
+English."
+
+Ernest looked rather gloomy at the compliment, but turning to Nina,
+begged to introduce her to Madame de Melusine. The gay, handsome
+baronne, taking in all the English girl's points as rapidly as a groom
+at Tattersall's does a two-year-old's, was chatting volubly to Nina,
+when the others came up. Gordon, though wont to boast that he belonged
+to the aristocracy of money, was always ready to fall in the dust before
+the noblesse of blood, and was gratified at the introduction,
+remembering to have read in the _Moniteur_ the name of De Melusine at
+the ball at the Tuileries. And the widow was very charming even to the
+professedly stoical eyes of a Brutus of sixty-two. She soon floated off,
+however, with her party, giving Vaughan a gay "A ce soir!" and
+requesting to be allowed the honor of calling on the Gordons.
+
+"Is she a great friend of yours?" asked Nina, when she and he were a
+little in advance of the others.
+
+"I have known her some time."
+
+"And you are very intimate, I suppose, as she called you by your
+Christian name?"
+
+He smiled a smile that puzzled Nina. "Oh! we soon get familiar here!"
+
+"Where are you going to see her again this evening?" she persevered,
+playing with her parasol fringe.
+
+"At her own house--a house that will charm you. By the way, it once
+belonged to Bussy Rabutin, and it has all Louis Quatorze furniture."
+
+"Is it a dinner?--a ball?"
+
+"No, an Opera supper--she is famed for her Sillery and her mots. Ten to
+one I shall not go; what amuses one once palls with repetition."
+
+"I don't understand that," said Nina, quickly; "what I like, I like pour
+toujours."
+
+"Pauvre enfant! you little know life," muttered Ernest. "Ah! Miss
+Gordon, you are at the happy age when one can believe in the feelings
+and friendships, and all the charming little romances of existence. But
+I have passed it, and so that I am amused for a moment, so that
+something takes time off my hands, I look no further, and expect no
+more. I know well enough the champagne will cease to sparkle, but I
+drink it while it foams, and don't trouble myself to lament over it.
+Qu'importe? when one bottle's empty, there is another!"
+
+"Ah! it is such women as Madame de Melusine who have taught you that
+doctrine," cried Nina, with an energy that rather startled Ernest,
+though his nerves were as strong as any man's in Paris. "My romances, as
+you term them, still I believe sleep in your heart, but the world you
+live in has stifled them. Do you think amusement will always be enough
+for you?--do you think you will never want something better than your
+empty champagne foam?"
+
+"I hope I shall not, mademoiselle," said Vaughan, bitterly, "for I am
+certain I do not believe in it, and am quite sure I should never get it.
+Leave me to the roses of my Tritericae; they are all I shall ever enjoy,
+and they, at the best, are withered."
+
+"Nina, love," interrupted Selina, coming up with much amiability, "I was
+_obliged_ to come and tell you not to be _quite_ so energetic. All the
+people in the room are looking at you."
+
+"I dare say they are," said Vaughan, calmly. "It is not often the
+Parisians have the pleasure of seeing beauty unaffected, and
+fascinations careless of their own charms. Nature, Selina, is unhappily
+as rare one side the Channel as the other, and we men appreciate it when
+we do see it."
+
+When Vaughan parted from them soon after, he swore at himself for three
+things. First, for having driven Bluette, en plein jour, through the
+Boulevards, though he had driven Bluette, and such as Bluette, a
+thousand times before; secondly, for having been so weak as to
+introduce Madame de Melusine to the Gordons; and, thirdly, for
+having--he the thorough-paced _Lion_, whose manual was Rochefoucauld,
+and tutor in love, De Kock--actually talked romance as if he were Werter
+or Paul Flemming, or some other sentimental simpleton.
+
+Vaughan, to his great disgust, felt a fit of blue devils stealing on
+him, hurled one or two rose notes waiting for him into the fire with an
+oath, smoked half a dozen Manillas fiercely, and then, to get
+excitement, went to a dinner at the Rocher de Cancale, played ecarte
+with a beau joueur, went to an Opera supper--_not_ to the De
+Melusine's--then to Mabille and came home at seven in the morning after
+a night such as would have raised every hair off Brutus's head, given a
+triumphant glitter to the Warden's small blue eyes, and possibly even
+staggered the hot faith of his young champion. Pauline de Melusine was
+as good as her word--she did call on the Gordons--and Brutus, stoic
+though he was, was well pleased; for the baronne, though her nobility
+only dated from the Restoration, and was not received by the exclusive
+Legitimists of the old Faubourg St. Germain, had a very pleasant set of
+her own, and figured among the nouvelle noblesse and bourgeois decores
+who fill the vacant places of the De Rochefoucauld, the De Rohan, and
+the Montmorency, in the "imperial" salons of the Tuileries, where once
+the noblest blood in Europe was gathered.
+
+"It is painful to me to frequent Ernest's society," the Warden was wont
+to say, "for every word he utters impresses me but more sadly with the
+conviction of his lost state. But we are commanded to be in the world
+though not of it, and, if I shun him, how can I hope to benefit him?"
+
+"True; and, as your cousin, it would scarcely be charitable to avoid
+him entirely, terrible as we know his habits to be. But there is no
+necessity to be too intimate, and I do not wish Nina to be too much with
+him," the banker was accustomed to answer.
+
+"_Anglice_, Vaughan gets us good introductions, and makes Paris pleasant
+to us; we'll use him while we want him: when we don't, we will give him
+his conge."
+
+That's the reading of most of our dear friends' compliments and
+caresses, isn't it?
+
+Vaughan knew perfectly well that they would like to make a cat's-paw of
+him, and was the last man likely to play that simple and certainly not
+agreeable role unless it suited him. But he had reasons of his own for
+forcing Gordon to be civil and obliged to him, despite the prejudices of
+that English, and therefore, of course, opinionated gentleman. It amused
+him to mortify Eusebius, whom he saw at a glance was bewitched with the
+prospect of Nina's _dot_, and it amused him very much to see Nina's
+joyous laughter as he leaned over her chair at the Opera Comique, to
+hear her animated satire on Madame de Melusine, for whom, knowing
+nothing of her, the young lady had conceived hot aversion, and to listen
+to her enthusiasm when she poured out to him her vivid imaginings.
+
+Gradually the cafes, and the Boulevards, and the boudoirs missed Ernest
+while he accompanied Nina through the glades of St. Cloud, or down the
+Seine to Asnieres, or up the slopes of Pere la Chaise, in his new
+pursuit; and often at night he would leave the coulisses, or a
+lansquenet, or the gas-lights of the Maison Doree, and the Closerie des
+Lilas, to watch her thorough enjoyment of a vaudeville, her fervent
+feeling in an opera, or to waltz with her at a ball, and note her glad
+recognition of him.
+
+To this girl, Ernest opened his heart and mind as he--being a reserved,
+proud, and skeptical man--had never done to any one; there was a
+sympathy and confidence between them, and she learned much of his inner
+nature as she talked to him soft and low under the forest trees of
+Fontainebleau, such talk as could not be heard in Bluette's boudoir,
+under the wax-lights of the Quartier Breda, or in the flow of the
+Sillery at la Melusine's soupers. All this was new to the tired _Lion_,
+and amused him immensely. La chevelure doree was twisting the golden
+meshes of its net round him, as De Concressault told him one day.
+
+"Nonsense," said Ernest; "have I not two loves already on my hands more
+than I want?"
+
+"Dethrone them, and promote la petite."
+
+Vaughan turned on his friend with his eyes flashing.
+
+"Bon Dieu! do you take her for a ballet-girl or a grisette?"
+
+"Well, if you don't like that, marry her then, mon cher. You will
+satisfy your fancy, and get cinquante mille francs de rente--at a
+sacrifice, of course; but, que veux-tu? There is no medal without its
+reverse, though a 'lion marie' is certainly an anomaly, an absurdity,
+and an intense pity."
+
+"Tais-toi," said Ernest, impatiently; "tu es fou! Caught in the toils of
+a wretched intrigante, in the power of any tailor in the Rue Vivienne,
+any jeweller in the Palais Royal, my money spent on follies, my life
+wasted in play, the turf, and worthless women, I have much indeed to
+offer to a young girl who has wealth, beauty, genius, and heart!"
+
+"All the more reason why you should make a good coup," said Emile,
+calmly, after listening with pitying surprise to his friend in his new
+mood. "You have a handsome face, a fashionable reputation, and a good
+name. Bah! you can do anything. As for your life, all women like a
+mauvais sujet, and unless the De Melusine turn out a Brinvilliers, I
+don't see what you have to fear."
+
+"When I want your counsel, Emile, I will ask it," said Vaughan, shortly;
+"but, as I have no intention of going in for the prize, there is no need
+for you to bet on the chance of the throw."
+
+"Comme tu veux!" said the Parisian, shrugging his shoulders. "That homme
+de paille, your priestly cousin, will take her back to the English fogs,
+and make her a much better husband than you'd ever be, mon garcon."
+
+Vaughan moved restlessly.
+
+"The idiot! if I thought so---- The devil take you, Emile! why do you
+talk of such things?"
+
+At that minute Nina was sitting by one of the windows of their hotel,
+watching for Ernest, with a bouquet he had sent her on a table by her
+side; and the Rev. Eusebius was talking in a very low tone to her
+father. She caught a few words. "Last night--Vaughan at the Freres
+Provencaux--a souper au cabinet--Mademoiselle Celine, premiere
+danseuse--quite terrible," &c., &c.
+
+Nina flushed scarlet, and turned round. "If you blame your cousin, Mr.
+Ruskinstone, why were you there yourself?"
+
+The Warden colored too. With him, as with a good many, foreign air
+relaxed the severity of the Decalogue, and what was sin at home, where
+everybody knew it, was none at all abroad--under the rose. Some dear
+pharisees will not endanger their souls by a carpet-dance in England,
+but if a little bird followed them in their holiday across the Channel,
+it might chance to see them disporting under a domino noir.
+
+"I had been," he stammered, "to see, as you know, a beautiful specimen
+of the arcboutant in a ruined chapel of the Carmelites, some miles down
+the Seine. It was very late, and I was very tired, so turned into the
+Freres Provencaux to take some little refreshment, and I there saw my
+unhappy cousin in society which _ought_, Miss Gordon, to disqualify him
+for yours. It is very painful to me to mention such things to you. I
+never thought you overheard----"
+
+"Then, if it is very painful to you," Nina burst in, impetuously, her
+_bouche de rose_, as De Kerroualle called it, curving haughtily, "why
+are you ceaselessly raking up every possible bit of scandal that you can
+against your cousin? His life does not clash with yours, his acts do not
+matter to you, his extravagance does not rob you. I used to fancy
+charity should cover a multitude of sins, but it seems to me that,
+now-a-days, clergymen, like Dr. Watt's naughty dogs, only delight to
+bark and bite."
+
+"You are cruelly unjust," answered the Warden, in those smooth tones
+that irritate one much more than "hard swearing." "I have no other wish
+than Christian kindness to poor Ernest. If, in my place as pastor, I
+justly condemn his errors and vices, it is only through a loving desire
+to wean him from his downward course."
+
+"Your love is singularly vindictive," said his vehement young opponent,
+her cheeks hot and her eyes bright. "No good was ever yet done to a man
+by proclaiming his faults right and left. _I_ should like you much
+better, Mr. Ruskinstone, if you said, candidly, I don't like my cousin,
+and I have never forgiven him for thrashing me at Rugby, and playing
+football better than I did."
+
+Eusebius winced at this little touch up of his bygone years, but he
+smiled a benign, superior, pitying smile. "Such petitesses, I thank
+Heaven, are utterly beneath me, and I should have fancied Miss Gordon
+was too generous to suppose them. God forbid that I should envy poor
+Vaughan his dazzling qualities. I sorrow over him as a relative and a
+precious human soul, but as a minister of our holy Church I neither can,
+nor will, countenance his gross violations of all her divinest laws."
+With which peroration the Warden, with a sigh, took up a work on "The
+Early English Piscini and Aspersoria," and became immersed therein.
+
+"Poor Mr. Vaughan!" cried Nina, impatiently. "Probably he is too wise to
+concern himself about what people buzz in his absence, or else he need
+be cased in mail to avoid being stung to death with the musquito bites
+of scandal."
+
+Gordon came down on her with his heavy artillery. "Silence, Nina! you do
+not know what you are defending. I fear that no slander can darken Mr.
+Vaughan's character more than he merits."
+
+"A gambler--a roue--a lover of married woman, of dancing-girls,"
+murmured Eusebius, in an aside, meant, like those on the stage, to tell
+killingly with the audience.
+
+Nina flushed as scarlet as the camellias in her bouquet, and put up her
+head with a haughty gesture. "Here comes the subject of your
+vituperation, Mr. Ruskinstone, so you can repeat your denunciations, and
+favor him with a sermon in person--unless, indeed, the secular
+recollections of Rugby intimidate the religious arm."
+
+I fear something as irreverent as "Little devil!" rose to the Warden's
+pious lips as he flashed a fierce glance at her from his pale-blue eyes,
+for he loved not her, but the splendid _dot_ which the banker was sure
+to pay down if his son-in-law were to his taste. He caught his cousin's
+glance as he came into the salons, and in the superb scorn gleaming in
+Ernest's dark eyes, Eusebius saw that they were not merely enemies,
+but--rivals: a Warden with Church principles, all the cardinal virtues,
+strict morality, and money; and a _Lion_ with Paris principles (if any),
+great fascinations, debts, entanglements, and an empty purse. Which will
+win, with Nina for the cup and Gordon for the umpire?
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+MISCHIEF.
+
+
+"Qui cherchez-vous, petite?"
+
+The speaker was la Melusine, and the hearer was Nina who considerably
+resented the half-patronising, half mocking, yet intensely amiable
+manner the widow chose to assume towards her. Gordon was stricken with
+warm admiration of madame, and never inquired into _her_ morality, only
+too pleased when she condescended to talk to or invite him. They had met
+at a soiree at some intimate friends of Vaughan's in the Champs Elysees.
+(Ernest was a favorite wherever he went, and the good-natured French
+people at once took up his relatives to please him.) He was not there
+himself, but the baronne's quick eyes soon caught and construed her
+restless glances through the crowded rooms.
+
+"Je ne cherche personne, madame," said Nina, haughtily. Dressed simply
+in white tulle, with the most exquisite flowers to be had out of the
+Palais Royal in the famous golden hair, which gleamed in the gaslight
+like sunshine, she aroused the serpent which lay hid in the roses of
+madame's smiles.
+
+Pauline laughed softly, and flirted her fan. "Nay, nay, mignonne, those
+soft eyes are seeking some one. Who is it? Ah! it is that mechant
+Monsieur Vaughan n'est-ce pas? He is very handsome, certainly, but
+
+ On dit an village
+ Qu'Argire est volage."
+
+"Madame's own thoughts possibly suggest the supposition of mine," said
+Nina, coldly.
+
+"Comme ces Anglaises sont impolies," thought the baronne. "No, indeed,"
+she said, laughing carelessly, "I know Ernest too well to let my
+thoughts dwell on him. He is charming to talk to, to waltz with, to
+flirt with, but from anything further Dieu nous garde! Lauzun himself
+were not more dangerous or more unstable."
+
+"You speak as bitterly, madame, as if you had suffered from the
+fickleness," said Nina, with a contemptuous curl of her soft lips. Sweet
+temper as she was, she could thrust a spear in her enemy's side when she
+liked.
+
+Madame's eyes glittered like a rattlesnake's. Nina's chance ball shot
+home. But madame was a woman of the world, and could mask her batteries
+with a skill of which Nina, with her impetuous _abandon_, was incapable.
+She smiled very sweetly, as she answered, "No, petite I have unhappily
+seen too much of the world not to know that we must never put our trust
+in those charming mauvais sujets. At your age, I dare say I should not
+have been proof against your countryman's fascinations, but now, I know
+just how much his fondest vows are worth, and I have been deaf to them
+all, for I would not let my heart mislead me against my reason and my
+conscience. Ah, petite! you little guess what the traitor word 'love'
+means here, in Paris. We women grow accustomed to our fate, but the
+lesson is hard sometimes."
+
+"You have been reading 'Mes Confidences,' lately?" asked Nina, with a
+sarcastic flash of her brilliant eyes.
+
+"How cruel! Do you suppose I can have no _emotions_ except I learn them
+second-hand through Lamartine or Delphine Gay? You are very satirical,
+Miss Gordon----How strange!" said the baronne, interrupting herself;
+"your bouquet is the fac-simile of mine! Look! De Kerroualle sent you
+that I fancy? You know he raffoles of you. I was very silly to use mine,
+but Mr. Vaughan sent me such a pretty note with it, that I had not the
+resolution to disappoint him. Poor Ernest!" And Madame sighed softly, as
+if bewailing in her tender heart the woes her obduracy caused. The blood
+flamed up in Nina's cheeks, and her hand clenched hard on Ernest's
+flowers: they _were_ the fac-similes of the widow's; delicate pink
+blossoms, mixed with white azalias. "Is he here to-night, do you know?"
+madame continued. "I dare say not; he is behind the coulisses, most
+likely. Celine, the new danseuse from the Fenice, makes her debut
+to-night. Here comes poor Gaston to petition for a valse. Be kind to
+him, pray."
+
+She herself went off to the ball-room, and the effect of her exordium
+was to make Nina very disagreeable to poor De Kerroualle, whom she
+really liked, and who was _entete_ about her. Not long afterwards, Nina
+saw in the distance Vaughan's haughty head and powerful brow, and her
+silly little heart beat as quick as a pigeon's just caught in the trap:
+he was talking to the widow.
+
+"Look at our young English friend," Pauline was saying, "how she is
+flirting with Gaston, and De Lafitolle, and De Concressault. Certainly,
+when your Englishwomen do coquet, they go further than any of us."
+
+"Est-ce possible?" said Ernest, raising his eyebrows.
+
+"Mechant!" cried madame, with a chastising blow of her fan. "But, do you
+know, I admire the petite very much. I believe all really beautiful
+women had that rare golden hair of hers--Lucrezia Borgia (I could never
+bear Grisi as _Lucrezia_, for that very reason). La Cenci, the Duchess
+of Portsmouth, AEnone--and Helen, I am sure, netted Paris with those gold
+threads. Don't you think it is very lovely?"
+
+"I do, indeed," said Vaughan, with unconscious warmth.
+
+Madame laughed gaily, but there was a disagreeable glitter in her eye.
+"What, fickle already? Ah well, I give you full leave."
+
+"And example, madame," said Ernest, as he bowed and left her side, glad
+to have struck the first blow of his freedom from this handsome tyrant,
+who was as capricious and exacting as she was clever and captivating.
+But fetters made of fairer roses were over Ernest now, and he never
+bethought himself of the probable vengeance of that bitterest foe, a
+woman who is piqued.
+
+"Tout beau!" thought Pauline, as she saw him waltzing with Nina. "Mais
+je vous donnerai encore l'echec et mat, mon brave joueur."
+
+"Did you give Madame de Melusine the bouquet she carries this evening?"
+asked Nina, as he whirled her round.
+
+"No," said Ernest, astonished. "Why do you ask?"
+
+"Because she said you did," answered Nina, never accustomed to conceal
+anything; "and, besides, it is exactly like mine."
+
+"Infernal woman!" muttered Ernest. "How could you for a moment believe
+that I would have so insulted you?"
+
+"I didn't believe it," said Nina, lifting her frank eyes to his. "But
+how very late you are; have you been at the ballet?"
+
+His face grew stern. "Did she tell you that?"
+
+"Yes. But why did you go there, instead of coming to dance with me? Do
+you like those danseuses better than you do me? What was Celine's or
+anybody's debut, to you?"
+
+Ernest smiled at the native indignation of the question. "Never think
+that I do not wish to be with you; but--I wanted oblivion, and one
+cannot shake off old habits. Did you miss me among all those other men
+that you have always round you?"
+
+"How unkind that is!" whispered Nina, indignantly. "You know I always
+do."
+
+He held her closer to him in the waltz, and she felt his heart beat
+quicker, but she got no other answer.
+
+That night Nina stood before her toilette-table, putting her flowers in
+water, and some hot tears fell on the azalias.
+
+"I will have faith in him," she cried, passionately; "though all the
+world be witness against him, I will believe in him. Whatever his life
+may have been, his heart is warm and true; they shall never make me
+doubt it."
+
+Her last thoughts were of him, and when she slept his face was in her
+dreams, while Ernest, with some of the wildest men of his set, smoked
+hard and drank deep in his chambers to drive away, if he could, the
+fiends of Regret and Passion and the memory of a young, radiant,
+impassioned face, which lured him to an unattainable future.
+
+"Nina dearest," said Selina Ruskinstone, affectionately, the morning
+after, "I hope you will not think me unkind--you know I have no wish
+but for your good--but _don't_ you think it would be better to be a
+little more--more reserved, a little less free, with Mr. Vaughan?"
+
+"Explain yourself more clearly," said Nina, tranquilly. "Do you wish me
+to send to Turkey for a veil and a guard of Bashi-Bazouks, or do you
+mean that Mr. Vaughan is so attractive that he is better avoided, like a
+mantrap or a Maelstrom?"
+
+"Don't be ridiculous," retorted Augusta; "you know well enough what we
+mean, and certainly you do run after him a great deal too much."
+
+"You are so _very_ demonstrative," sighed Selina, "and it is so easily
+misconstrued. It is not feminine to court any man so unblushingly."
+
+Nina's eyes flashed, and the blood colored her brow. "I am not afraid of
+being misconstrued by Mr. Vaughan," she said, haughtily; "gentlemen are
+kinder and wiser judges in those things than our sex."
+
+"I wouldn't advise you to trust to Ernest's tender mercies," sneered
+Augusta.
+
+"My dear child, remember his principles," sighed Selina; "his life--his
+reputation----"
+
+"Leave both him and me alone," retorted Nina, passionately. "I will not
+stand calmly by to hear him slandered with your vague calumnies. You
+preach religion often enough; practice it now, and show more common
+kindness to your cousin: I do not say charity, for I am sick of the cant
+word, and he is above your pity. You think me utterly lost because I
+dance, and laugh, and enjoy my life, but, bad as _my_ principles are, I
+should be shocked--yes, Selina, and I should think I merited little
+mercy myself, were I as harsh and bitter upon any one as you are upon
+him. How can _you_ judge him?--how can you say what nobility, and truth,
+and affection--that will shame your own cold pharisaism--may lie in his
+heart unrevealed?--how can you dare to censure _him_?"
+
+In the door of the salon, listening to the lecture his young champion
+was giving these two blue, opinionated, and strongly pious ladies, stood
+Ernest, his face even paler than usual, and his eyes with a strange
+mixture of joy and pain in them. Nina colored scarlet, but went forward
+to meet him with undisguised pleasure, utterly regardless of the
+sneering lips and averted eyes of the Miss Ruskinstones. He had come to
+go with them to St. Germain, and, with a dexterous manoeuvre, took the
+very seat in the carriage opposite Nina that Eusebius had planned for
+himself. But the Warden was no match for the _Lion_ in such affairs,
+and, being exiled to the barouche with Gordon and Augusta, took from
+under the seat a folio of the "Stones of Venice," and read sulkily all
+the way.
+
+"My dear fellow," said Vaughan, when they reached St. Germain, "don't
+you think you would prefer to sit in the carriage, and finish that
+delightful work, to coming to see some simple woods and terraces? If you
+would, pray don't hesitate to say so; I am sure Miss Gordon will excuse
+your absence."
+
+The solicitous courtesy of Ernest's manner was boiling oil to the fire
+raging in the Warden's gentle breast, and Eusebius, besides, was not
+quick at retorts. "I am not guilty of any such bad taste," he said,
+stiffly, "though I do discover a charm in severe studies, which I
+believe you never did."
+
+"No, never," said Ernest, laughing; "my genius does not lie that way;
+and I've no vacant bishopric in my mind's eye to make such studies
+profitable. Even you, you know, light of the Church as you are, want
+recreation sometimes. Confess now, the chansons a boire last night
+sounded pleasant after long months of Faithandgrace services!"
+
+Eusebius looked much as I have seen a sleek tom-cat, who bears a
+respectable character generally, surprised in surreptitiously licking
+out of the cream-jug. He had the night before (when he was popularly
+supposed to be sitting under Adolphe Monod) tasted rather too many
+petits verres up at the Pre Catalan, utterly unconscious of his cousin's
+proximity. The pure-minded soul thus cruelly caught looked prayers of
+piteous entreaty to Vaughan not to damage his milk-white reputation by
+further revelation of this unlucky detour into the Broad Road; and
+Ernest, who, always kind-hearted, never hit a man when he was down,
+contented himself with saying:
+
+"Ah! well, we are none of us pure alabaster, though some of the
+sepulchres _do_ contrive to whiten themselves up astonishingly. My
+father, poor man, once wished to put me in the Church. Do you think I
+should have graced it, Selina?"
+
+"I can't say I do," sneered Selina.
+
+"You think I should _disgrace_ it? Very probably. I am not good at
+'canting.'" And giving Nina his arm, the Warden being much too confused
+to forestall him, he whispered: "when is that atrocious saint going to
+take himself over the water? Couldn't we bribe his diocesan to call him
+before the Arches Court? Surely those long coats, so like the little
+wooden men in Noah's Ark, and that straightened hair, so mathematically
+parted down the centre, look 'perverted' enough to warrant it."
+
+Nina shook her head. "Unhappily, he is here for six months for ill
+health!--the sick-leave of clergymen who wish for a holiday, and are too
+holy to leave their flock without an excuse to society."
+
+Vaughan laughed, then sighed. "Six months--and you have been here four
+already! Eusebius hates me cordially--all my English relatives do, I
+believe; we do not get on together. They are too cold and conventional
+for me. I have some of the warm Bohemian blood, though God knows I've
+seen enough to chill it to ice by this time; but it is _not_ chilled--so
+much the worse for me," muttered Ernest "Tell me," he said,
+abruptly--"tell me why you took the trouble to defend me so generously
+this morning?"
+
+She looked up at him with her frank, beaming regard. "Because they dare
+to misjudge you, and they know nothing, and are not worthy to know
+anything of your real self."
+
+He pressed his lips together as if in bodily pain. "And what do you
+know?"
+
+"Have you not yourself said that you talk to me as you talk to no one
+else?" answered Nina, impetuously; "besides--I cannot tell why, but the
+first day I met you I seemed to find some friend that I had lost before.
+I was certain that you would never misconstrue anything I said, and I
+felt that I saw further into your heart and mind than any one else could
+do. Was it not very strange?" She stopped, and looked up at him. Ernest
+bent his eyes on the ground, and breathed fast.
+
+"No, no," he said at last; "yours is only an ideal of me. If you knew me
+as I really am, you would cease to feel the--the interest that you
+say----"
+
+He stopped abruptly; facile as he was at pretty compliments, and versed
+in tender scenes as he had been from his school-days, the longing to
+make this girl love him, and his struggle not to breathe love to her,
+deprived him of his customary strength and nonchalance.
+
+"I do not fear to know you as you are," said Nina, gently. "I do not
+think you yourself allow all the better things that there are in you.
+People have not judged you rightly, and you have been too proud to prove
+their error to them. You have found pleasure in running counter to the
+prudish and illiberal bigots who presumed to judge you; and to a world
+you have found heartless and false you have not cared to lift the domino
+and mask you wore."
+
+Vaughan sighed from the bottom of his heart, and walked on in silence
+for a good five minutes. "Promise me, Nina," he said at length with an
+effort, "that no matter what you hear against me, you will not condemn
+me unheard."
+
+"I promise," she answered, raising her eyes to his, brighter still for
+the color in her checks. It was the first time he had called her Nina.
+
+"Miss Gordon," said Eusebius, hurriedly overtaking them, "pray come with
+me a moment: there is the most exquisite specimen of the Flamboyant
+style in an archway----"
+
+"Thank you for your good intentions," said Nina, pettishly, "but really,
+as you might know by this time, I never can see any attractions in your
+prosaic and matter-of-fact-fact study."
+
+"It might be more profitable than----"
+
+"Than thinking of La Valliere and poor Bragelonne, and all the gay
+glories of the exiled Bourbons?" laughed Nina. "Very likely; but romance
+is more to my taste than granite. You would never have killed yourself,
+like Bragelonne, for the beaux yeux of Louise de la Beaume-sur-Blanc,
+would you?"
+
+"I trust," said Eusebius, stiffly, "that I should have had a deeper
+sense of the important responsibilities of the gift of life than to
+throw it away because a silly girl preferred another."
+
+"You are very impolitic," said Ernest, with a satirical smile. "No lady
+could feel remorse at forsaking you, if you could get over it so
+easily."
+
+"He _would_ get over it easily," laughed Nina. "You would call her
+Delilah, and all the Scripture bad names, order Mr. Ruskin's new work,
+turn your desires to a deanship, marry some bishop's daughter with high
+ecclesiastical interest, and console yourself in the bosom of your
+Mother Church--eh, Mr. Ruskinstone?"
+
+"You are cruelly unjust," sighed Eusebius. "You little know----"
+
+"The charms of architecture? No; and I never shall," answered his
+tormentor, humming the "Queen of the Roses," and waltzing down the
+forest glade, where they were walking. "How severe you look!" she said
+as she waltzed back. "Is _that_ wrong, too? Miriam danced before the ark
+and Jephtha's daughter."
+
+The Warden appeared not to hear. Certainly his mode of courtship was
+singular.
+
+"Ernest," he said, turning to his cousin as the rest of the party came
+up, "I had no idea your sister was in Paris. I have not seen her since
+she was fourteen. I should not have known her in the least."
+
+"Margaret is in India with her husband," answered Vaughan. "What are you
+dreaming of? Where have you seen her?"
+
+"I saw her in your chambers," answered the Warden, slowly. "I passed
+three times yesterday, and she was sitting in the centre window each
+time."
+
+"Pshaw! You dreamt it in your sleep last night. Margaret's in Vellore, I
+assure you."
+
+"I saw her," said the Warden, softly; "or, at least, I saw some lady,
+whom I naturally presumed to be your sister."
+
+Ernest, who had not colored for fifteen years, and would have defied man
+or woman to confuse him, flushed to his very temples.
+
+"You are mistaken," he said, decidedly. "There is no woman in my rooms."
+
+Eusebius raised his eyebrows, bent his head, smiled and sighed. More
+polite disbelief was never expressed. The Miss Ruskinstones would have
+blushed if they could; as they could not, they drew themselves bolt
+upright, and put their parasols between them and the reprobate. Nina,
+whose hand was still in Vaughan's arm, turned white, and flashed a
+quick, upward look at him; then, with a glance at Eusebius, as fiery as
+the eternal wrath that that dear divine was accustomed to deal out so
+largely to other people, she led Ernest up to her father, who being
+providentially somewhat deaf, had not heard this by-play, and said, to
+her cousin's horror, "Papa, dear, Mr. Vaughan wants you to dine with him
+at Tortoni's to-night, to meet M. de Vendanges. You will be very happy,
+won't you?"
+
+Ernest pressed her little hand against his side, and thanked her with
+his eyes.
+
+Gordon was propitiated for that day; he was not likely to quarrel with a
+man who could introduce him to "Son Altesse Monseigneur le Duc de
+Vendanges."
+
+
+
+
+V.
+
+MORE MISCHIEF--AND AN END.
+
+
+In a little cabinet de peinture, in a house in the Place Vendome, apart
+from all the other people, who having come to a dejeuner were now
+dispersed in the music rooms, boudoirs, and conservatories, sat Madame
+de Melusine, talking to Gordon, flatteringly, beguilingly,
+bewitchingly, as that accomplished widow could. The banker found her
+charming, and really, under her blandishments, began to believe, poor
+old fellow, that she was in love with him!
+
+"Ah! by-the-by, cher monsieur," began madame, when she had soft-soaped
+him into a proper frame of mind, "I want to speak to you about that
+mignonne Nina. You cannot tell, you cannot imagine, what interest I take
+in her."
+
+"You do her much honor, madame," replied her bourgeois gentilhomme,
+always stiff, however enraptured he might feel internally.
+
+"The honor is mine," smiled Pauline. "Yes, I do feel much interest in
+her; there is a sympathy in our natures, I am certain, and--and,
+Monsieur Gordon, I cannot see that darling girl on the brink of a
+precipice without stretching out a hand to snatch her from the abyss."
+
+"Precipice--abyss--Nina! Good Heavens! my dear madame, what do you
+mean?" cried Gordon--a fire, an elopement, and the small-pox, all
+presenting themselves to his mind.
+
+"No, no," repeated madame, with increasing vehemence, "I will not permit
+any private feelings, I will not allow my own weakness to prevent me
+from saving her. It would be a crime, a cruelty, to let your innocent
+child be deceived, and rendered miserable for all time, because I lack
+the moral courage to preserve her. Monsieur, I speak to you, as I am
+sure I may, as one friend to another, and I am perfectly certain that
+you will not misjudge me. Answer me one thing; no impertinent curiosity
+dictates the question. Do you wish your daughter married to Mr.
+Vaughan?"
+
+"Married to Vaughan!" exclaimed the startled banker; "I'd sooner see her
+married to a crossing sweeper. She never thought of such a thing.
+Impossible! absurd! she'll marry my friend Ruskinstone as soon as she
+comes of age. Marry Vaughan! a fellow without a penny----"
+
+Pauline laid her soft, jewelled hand on his arm:
+
+"My dear friend, _he_ thinks of it if you do not, and I am much mistaken
+if dear Nina is not already dazzled by his brilliant qualities. Your
+countryman is a charming companion, no one can gainsay that; but, alas!
+he is a roue, a gambler, an adventurer, who, while winning her young
+girl's affections, has only in view the wealth which he hopes he will
+gain with her. It is painful to me to say this" (and tears stood in
+madame's long, velvet eyes). "We were good friends before he wanted more
+than friendship, while poor De Melusine was still living, and his true
+character was revealed to me. It would be false delicacy to allow your
+darling Nina to become his victim for want of a few words from me,
+though I know, if he were aware of my interference, the inference he
+would basely insinuate from it. But you," whispered madame, brushing the
+tears from her eyes, and giving him an angelic smile, "I need not fear
+that you would ever misjudge me?"
+
+"Never, I swear, most generous of women!" said the banker, kissing the
+snow-white hand, very clumsily, too. "I'll tell the fellow my mind
+directly--an unprincipled, gambling----"
+
+"Non, non, je vous en prie, monsieur!" cried the widow, really
+frightened, for this would not have suited her plans at all. "You would
+put me in the power of that unscrupulous man. He would destroy my
+reputation at once in his revenge."
+
+"But what am I to do?" said the poor gulled banker. "Nina's a will of
+her own, and if she take a fancy to this confounded----"
+
+"Leave that to me," said la baronne, softly. "I have proofs which will
+stagger her most obstinate faith in her lover. Meanwhile give him no
+suspicion, go to his supper on Tuesday, and--you are asked to Vauvenay,
+accept the invitation--and conclude the fiancailles with Monsieur le
+Ministre as soon as you can."
+
+"But--but, madame," stammered this new Jourdain to his enchanting
+Dorimene, "Vauvenay is an exile. I shall not see you there?"
+
+"Ah, silly man," laughed the widow, "I shall be only two miles off. I am
+going to stay with the Salvador; they leave Paris in three weeks.
+Listen--your daughter is singing 'The Swallows.' Her voice is quite as
+good as Ristori's."
+
+Three hours after, madame held another tete-a-tete in that boudoir. This
+time the favored mortal was Vaughan. They had had a pathetic interview,
+of which the pathos hardly moved Ernest as much as the widow desired.
+
+"You love me no longer, Ernest," she murmured, the tears falling down
+her cheeks--her rouge was the product of high art, and never washed
+off--"I see it, I feel it; your heart is given to that English girl. I
+have tried to jest about it; I have tried to affect indifference, but I
+cannot. The love you once won will be yours to the grave."
+
+Ernest listened, a satirical smile on his lips.
+
+"I should feel more grateful," he said, calmly, "if the gift had not
+been given to so many; it will be a great deal of trouble to you to
+love us all to our graves. And your new friend Gordon, do you intend
+cherishing his grey hairs, too, till the gout puts them under the sod?"
+
+She fell back sobbing with exquisite _abandon_. No deserted Calypso's
+_pose_ was ever more effective.
+
+"Ernest, Ernest! that I should live to be so insulted, and by you!"
+
+"Nay, madame, end this vaudeville," said he bitterly. "I know well
+enough that you hate me, or why have you troubled yourself to coin the
+untruths about me that you whispered to Miss Gordon?"
+
+"Ah! have you no pity for the first mad vengeance dictated by jealousy
+and despair?" murmured Pauline. "Once there was attraction in this face
+for you, Ernest; have some compassion, some sympathy----"
+
+Well as he knew the worth of madame's tears, Ernest, chivalric and
+generous at heart, was touched.
+
+"Forgive me," he said, gently, "and let us part. You know now, Pauline,
+that she has my deepest, my latest love. It were disloyalty to both did
+we meet again save in society."
+
+"Farewell, then," murmured Pauline. "Think gently of me, Ernest, for I
+_have_ loved you more than you will ever know now."
+
+She rose, and, as he bent towards her, kissed his forehead. Then,
+floating from the room, passed the Reverend Eusebius, standing in the
+doorway, looking in on this parting scene. The widow looked at herself
+in her mirror that night with a smile of satisfaction.
+
+"C'est bien en train," she said, half aloud. "Le fou! de penser qu'il
+puisse me braver. Je ne l'aime plus, c'est vrai, mais je ne veux pas
+qu'elle reussisse."
+
+Nina went to bed very happy. Ernest had sat next her at the dejeuner;
+and afterwards at a ball had waltzed often with her and with nobody
+else; and his eyes had talked love in the waltzes though his tongue
+never had.
+
+Ernest went to his chambers, smoked hard, half mad with the battle
+within him, and took three grains of opium, which gave him forgetfulness
+and sleep. He woke, tired and depressed, to hear the gay hum of life in
+the street below, and to remember he had promised Nina to meet them at
+Versailles.
+
+It was Sunday morning. In England, of course, Gordon would have gone up
+to the sanctuary, listened to Mr. Bellew, frowned severely on the cheap
+trains, and, after his claret, read edifying sermons to his household;
+but in Paris there would be nobody to admire the piety, and the "grandes
+eaux" only play once a week, you know--on Sundays. So his Sabbath
+severity was relaxed, and down to Versailles he journied. There must be
+something peculiar in continental air, for it certainly stretches our
+countrymen's morality and religion uncommonly: it is only up at
+Jerusalem that our pharisees worship. Eusebius dare not go--he'd be sure
+to meet a brother-clerical, who might have reported the dereliction at
+home--so that Vaughan, despite Gordon's cold looks, kept by Nina's side
+though he wasn't alone with her, and when they came back in the _wagon_
+the banker slept and the duenna dozed, and he talked softly and low to
+her--not quite love, but something very like it--and as they neared
+Paris he took the little hand with its delicate Jouvin glove in his, and
+whispered,
+
+"Remember your promise: I can brave, and have braved most things, but I
+could not bear your scorn. _That_ would make me a worse man than I have
+been, if, as some folks would tell you, such a thing be possible."
+
+It was dark, but I dare say the moonbeams shining on the chevelure doree
+showed him a pair of truthful, trusting eyes that promised never to
+desert him.
+
+The day after he had, by dint of tact and strategy, planned to spend
+entirely with Nina. He was going with them to the races at Chantilly,
+then to the Gaite to see the first representation of a vaudeville of a
+friend of his, and afterwards he had persuaded Gordon to enter the
+Lion's den, and let Nina grace a petit souper at No. 10, Rue des Mauvais
+Sujets, Chaussee d'Antin.
+
+The weather was delicious, the race-ground full, if not quite so
+crowded as the Downs on Derby Day. Ernest cast away his depression, he
+gave himself up to the joy of being loved, his wit had never rung finer
+nor his laugh clearer than as he drove back to Paris opposite Nina. He
+had never felt in higher spirits than, after having given carte blanche
+to a cordon bleu for the entertainment, he looked round his salons,
+luxurious as Eugene Sue's, and perfumed with exotics from the Palais
+Royal, and thought of one rather different in style to the women that
+had been wont to drink his Sillery and grace his symposia.
+
+He knew well enough she loved him, and his heart beat high as he put a
+bouquet of white flowers into a gold bouquetiere to take to her.
+
+On his lover-like thoughts the voice of one of his parrots--Ernest had
+almost as many pets as there are in the Jardin des Plantes--broke in,
+screaming "Bluette! Bluette! Sacre bleu, elle est jolie! Bluette!
+Bluette!"
+
+The recollection was unwelcome. Vaughan swore a "sacre bleu!" too.
+"Diable! she mustn't hear that Francois, put that bird out of the way.
+He makes a such a confounded row."
+
+The parrot, fond of him, as all things were that knew him, sidled up,
+arching its neck, and repeating what De Concressault had taught it: "Fi
+donc, Ernest! Tu es volage! Tu ne m'aimes plus! Tu aimes Pauline!"
+
+"Devil take the bird!" thought its master; "even he'll be witness
+against me." And as he went down stairs to his cab, a chorus of birds
+shouting "Tu aimes Pauline!" followed him, and while he laughed, he
+sighed to think that even these unconscious things could tell her how
+little his love was worth. He forgot all but his love, however, when he
+leaned over her chair in the Gaites and saw that, strenuously as De
+Concressault and De Kerroualle sought to distract her attention, and
+many as were the lorgnons levelled at the chevelure doree, all her
+thoughts and smiles were given to him.
+
+Ernest had never, even in his careless boyhood, felt so happy as he did
+that night as he handed her into Gordon's carriage, and drove to the
+Chaussee d'Antin; and though Gordon sat there heavy and solemn, looming
+like an iceberg on Ernest's golden future, Vaughan forgot him utterly,
+and only looked at the sunshine beaming on him from radiant eyes that,
+skeptic in her sex as he was from experience, he felt would always be
+true to him. The carriage stopped at No. 10, Rue des Mauvais Sujets. He
+had given her one or two dinners with the Senecterre, the De Salvador,
+and other fine ladies--grand affairs at the Freres Provencaux that would
+have satisfied Brillat-Savarin--but she had never been to his rooms
+before, and she smiled joyously in his face as he lifted her out--the
+smile that had first charmed him at the Francais. He gave her his arm,
+and led her across the salle, bending his head down to whisper a
+welcome. Gordon and Selina and several men followed. Selina felt that it
+was perdition to enter the _Lion's_ den, but a fat old vicomte, on whom
+she'd fixed her eye, was going, and the "femmes de trente ans" that
+Balzac champions risk their souls rather than risk their chances when
+the day is far spent, and good offers grow rare.
+
+Ernest's Abyssinian, mute, subordinate to that grand gentleman, M.
+Francois, ushered them up the stairs, making furtive signs to his
+master, which Vaughan was too much absorbed to notice. Francois, in all
+his glory, flung open the door of the salon. In the salon a sight met
+Ernest's eyes which froze his blood more than if all the dead had arisen
+out of their graves on the slopes of Pere la Chaise.
+
+The myriad of wax-lights shone on the rooms, fragrant with the perfume
+of exotics, gleamed on the supper-table, gorgeous with its gold plate
+and its flowers, lighted up the aviary with its brilliant hues of
+plumage, and showed to full perfection the snowy shoulders, raven hair,
+and rose-hued dress of a woman lying back in a fauteuil, laughing, as De
+Cheffontaine, a man but slightly known to Ernest, leaned over her,
+fanning her. On a sofa in an alcove reclined another girl, young, fair,
+and pretty, the amber mouthpiece of a hookah between her lips, and a
+couple of young fellows at her feet.
+
+The brunette was Bluette, who played the soubrette roles at the Odeon;
+the blonde was Celine Gamelle, the new premiere danseuse. Bluette rose
+from the depths of her amber satin fauteuil, with her little _petillant_
+eyes laughing, and her small plump hands stretched out in gesticulation.
+"Mechant! Comme tu es tard, Ernest. Nous avons ete ici si longtemps--dix
+minutes au moins! And dis is you leetler new Ingleesh friend. How do you
+do, my dear?"
+
+Nina, white as death, shrank from her, clinging with both hands to
+Ernest's arms. As pale as she, Vaughan stood staring at the actress, his
+lips pressed convulsively together, the veins standing out on his broad,
+high forehead. The bold _Lion_ hunted into his lair, for once lost all
+power, all strength.
+
+Gordon looked over Nina's shoulder into the room. He recognized the
+women at a glance, and, with his heavy brow dark as night, he glared on
+Ernest in a silence more ominous than words or oaths, and snatching
+Nina's arm from his, he drew her hand within his own, and dragged her
+from the room.
+
+Ernest sprang after him. "Good God! you do not suppose me capable of
+this. Stay one instant. Hear me----"
+
+"Let us pass, sir," thundered Gordon, "or by Heaven this insult shall
+not go unavenged."
+
+"Nina, Nina!" cried Ernest, passionately, "do you at least listen!--you
+at least will not condemn----"
+
+Nina wrenched her hands from her father, and turned to him, a passion of
+tears falling down her face. "No, no! have I not promised you?"
+
+With a violent oath Gordon carried her to her carriage. It drove away,
+and Ernest, his lips set, his face white, and a fierce glare in his dark
+eyes that made Bluette and Celine tremble, entered his salons a second
+time, so bitter an anguish, so deadly a wrath marked in his expressive
+countenance, that even the Frenchmen hushed their jests, and the women
+shrunk away, awed at a depth of feeling they could not fathom or brave.
+
+The fierce anathemas of Gordon, the "Christian" lamentations of
+Eusebius, the sneers of Selina, the triumphs of Augusta, all these vials
+of wrath were poured forth on Ernest, in poor little Nina's ears, the
+whole of the next day. She had but one voice among many to raise in his
+defence, and she had no armor but her faith in him. Gordon vowed with
+the same breath that she should never see Vaughan again, and that she
+should engage herself to Ruskinstone forthwith. Eusebius poured in at
+one ear his mild milk-and-water attachment, and, in the other, details
+of Ernest's scene in the boudoir with Madame de Melusine, or, at least,
+what he had seen of it, _i. e._ her parting caress. Selina rang the
+changes on her immodesty in loving a man who had never proposed to her;
+and Augusta drew lively pictures of the eternal fires which were already
+being kept up below, ready for the _Lion's_ reception. Against all these
+furious batteries Nina stood firm. All their sneers and arguments could
+not shake her belief, all her father's commands--and, when he was
+roused, the old banker was very fierce--could not move her to promise
+not to see Ernest again, or alter her firm repudiation of the warden's
+proposals. The thunder rolled, the lightning flamed, the winds screamed
+all to no purpose, the little reed that one might have fancied would
+break, stood steady.
+
+The day passed, and the next passed, and there were no tidings of
+Ernest. Nina's little loyal heart, despite its unhesitating faith, began
+to tremble lest it should have wrecked itself: but then, she thought of
+his eyes, and she felt that all the world would never make her mistrust
+him.
+
+On the _surlendemain_ the De Melusine called. Gordon and Eusebius were
+out, and Nina wished her to be shown up. Ill as the girl felt, she rose
+haughtily and self-possessed to greet madame, as, announced by her tall
+chasseur, with his green plume, the widow glided into the room.
+
+Pauline kissed her lightly (there are no end of Judases among the dear
+sex), and, though something in Nina's eye startled her, she sat down
+beside her, and began to talk most kindly, most sympathisingly. She was
+_chagrinee, desolee_ that her _chere_ Nina should have been so insulted;
+every one knew M. Vaughan was quite _entete_ with that little, horrid,
+coarse thing, Bluette; but it was certainly very shocking; men were such
+_demons_. The affair was already _repandue_ in Paris; everybody was
+talking of it. Ernest was unfortunately so well known; he could not be
+in his senses; she almost wished he _was_ mad, it would be the only
+excuse for him; wild as he was, she should scarcely have thought, &c.,
+&c., &c. "Ah! chere enfant," madame went on at the finish, "you do not
+know these men--I do. I fear you have been dazzled by this naughty
+fellow; he _is_ very attractive, certainly: if so, though it will be a
+sharp pang, it will be better to know his real character at once. Voyez
+donc! he has been persuading you that you were all the world to him,
+while at the same time, he has been trying to make me believe the same.
+See, only two days ago he sent me this."
+
+She held out a miniature. Nina, who hitherto had listened in haughty
+silence, gave a sharp cry of pain as she saw Vaughan's graceful figure,
+stately head, and statue-like features. But, before the widow could
+pursue her advantage, Nina rallied, threw back her head, and said, her
+soft lips set sternly:
+
+"If you repulsed his love, why was he obliged to repulse yours? Why did
+you tell him on Saturday night that 'you had loved him more than he
+would ever know now?'"
+
+The shot Eusebius had unconsciously provided, struck home. Madame was
+baffled. Her eyes sank under Nina's, and she colored through her rouge.
+
+"You have played two roles, madame," said Nina, rising, "and not played
+them with you usual skill. Excuse my English ill-breeding, if I ask you
+to do me the favor of ending this comedy."
+
+"Certainly, mademoiselle, if it is your wish," answered the widow, now
+smiling blandly. "If it please you to be blind, I have no desire to
+remove the bandage from your eyes. Seulement, je vous prie de me
+pardonner mon indiscretion, et j'ai l'honneur, mademoiselle, de vous
+dire adieu!"
+
+With the lowest of _reverences_ madame glided from the room, and, as the
+door closed, Nina bowed her head on the miniature left behind in the
+_deroute_, and burst into tears.
+
+Scarcely had la Melusine's barouche rolled away, when another visitor
+was shown in, and Nina, brushing the tears from her cheeks, looked up
+hurriedly, and saw a small woman, finely dressed, with a Shetland veil
+on, through which her small black eyes roved listlessly.
+
+"Mademoiselle," she said, in very quick but very bad English, "I is
+come to warn you against dat ver wrong man, Mr. Vaughan. I have like
+him, helas! I have like him too vell, but I do not vish you to suffer
+too."
+
+Nina knew the voice in a moment, and rose like a little empress, though
+she was flushed and trembling. "I wish to hear nothing of Mr. Vaughan.
+If this is the sole purport of your visit, I shall be obliged by your
+leaving me."
+
+"But mademoiselle----"
+
+"I have told you I wish to hear nothing," interposed Nina, quietly.
+
+"Ver vell, ma'amselle; den read dat. It is a copy, and I got de
+original."
+
+She laid a letter on the sofa beside Nina. Two minutes after, Bluette
+joined her friend Celine Gamelle in a fiacre, and laughed heartily,
+clapping her little plump hands. "Ah, mon Dieu! Celine, comme elle est
+fiere, la petite! Je ne lui ai pas dit un seul mot--elle m'a arretee si
+vite, si vite! Mais la lettre fera notre affaire n'est pas? Oui, oui!"
+
+The letter unfolded in Nina's hand. It was a promise of marriage from
+Ernest Vaughan to Bluette Lemaire. Voiceless and tearless, Nina sat
+gazing on the paper: first she rose, gasping for breath; then she threw
+herself down, sobbing convulsively, till she heard a step, caught up the
+miniature and letter, dreading to see her father, and, instead, saw
+Ernest, pale, worn, deep lines round his mouth and eyes, standing in the
+doorway. Involuntarily she sprang towards him. Ernest pressed her to
+heart, and his hot tears fell on the chevelure doree, as he bent over
+her, murmuring, "_You_ have not deserted me. God bless you for your
+noble faith." At last he put her gently from him, and, leaning against
+the mantelpiece, said, with an effort, between his teeth, "Nina, I came
+to bid you farewell, and to ask your forgiveness for the wrong I have
+done you."
+
+Nina caught hold of him, much as Malibran seized hold of _Elvino_:
+"Leave me! leave me! No, no; you cannot mean it!"
+
+"I have no strength for it now I see you," said Ernest, looking down
+into her eyes; and the bold, reckless _Lion_ shivered under the clinging
+clasp of her little hands. "I need not say I was not the cause of the
+insult you received the other night. Pauline de Melusine was the agent,
+women willing to injure me the actors in it. But there is still much for
+you to forgive. Tell me, at once, what have you heard of me?"
+
+She silently put the miniature and letter in his hand. The blood rushed
+to his very temples, and, sinking his head on his arms, his chest rose
+and fell with uncontrollable sobs. All the pent-up feelings of his
+vehement and affectionate nature poured out at last.
+
+"And you have not condemned me even on these?" he said at length, in a
+hoarse whisper.
+
+"Did I not promise?" she murmured.
+
+"But if I told you they were true?"
+
+She looked at him through her tears, and put her hand in his. "Tell me
+nothing of your past; it can make no difference to my love. Let the
+world judge you as it may, it cannot alter me."
+
+Ernest strained her to him, kissing her wildly. "God bless you for your
+trust! would to God I were more worthy of it! I have nothing to give you
+but a love such as I have never before known; but most would tell you
+all _my_ love is worthless, and my life has been one of reckless
+dissipation and of darker errors still, until you awoke me to a deeper
+love--to thoughts and aspirations that I thought had died out for ever.
+Painful as it is to confess----"
+
+"Hush!" interrupted Nina, gently. "Confess nothing; with your past life
+I can have nothing to do, and I wish never to hear anything that it
+gives you pain to tell. You say that you love me now, and will never
+love another--that is enough for me."
+
+Ernest kissed the flushed cheeks and eloquent lips, and thanked her with
+all the fiery passion that was in him; and his heart throbbed fiercely
+as he put her promise to the test.
+
+"No, my darling! Priceless as your love is to me I will not buy it by
+concealment. I will not sully your ears with the details of my life. God
+forbid I should! but it is only due to you to know that I did give both
+these women the love-tokens they brought you. Love! It is desecration of
+the name, but I knew none better then! Three years ago, Bluette Lemaire
+first appeared at the Odeon. She is illiterate, coarse, heartless, but
+she was handsome, and she drew me to the coulisses. I was infatuated
+with her, though her ignorance and vulgarity constantly grated against
+all my tastes. One night at her petit souper I drank more Sillery than
+was wise. I have a stronger head than most men: perhaps there was some
+other stimulant in it; at any rate, she who was then poor, and is always
+avaricious, got from me a promise to marry her, or to pay twenty
+thousand francs. Three months after I gave it I cared no more for her
+than for my old glove. France is too wise to have Breach of Promise
+cases, and give money to coarse and vengeful women for their pretended
+broken hearts; but I had no incentive to create a scene by breaking with
+her, and so she kept the promise in her hands. What Pauline de Melusine
+is, you can judge. Twelve months ago I met her at Vichy; the love she
+gave me, and the love I vowed her, were of equal value--the love of
+Paris boudoirs. That I sent her that picture only two days ago, is, of
+course, false. On my word, as a man of honor, since the moment I felt
+your influence upon me I have shunned her. Now, my own love, you know
+the truth. Will you send me from you, or will you still love and still
+forgive?"
+
+In an agony of suspense he bent his head to listen for her answer. Tears
+rained down her cheeks as she put her arms round his neck, and
+whispered:
+
+"Why ask? Are you not all the world to me? I should love you little if I
+condemned you for any errors of your past. I know your warm and noble
+heart, and I trust to it without a fear. There is no doubt between us
+now!"
+
+Oh, my prudent and conventional young ladies, standing ready to accuse
+my poor little Nina, are you any wiser in your generation? You who have
+had all nature taken out of you by "finishing," whose heads are crammed
+with "society's" laws, and whose affections are measured out by rule,
+who would have been cold, and dignified, and read Ernest a severe
+lesson, and sent him back hopeless and hardened to go ten times worse
+than he had gone before--believe me, that impulse points truer than "the
+world," and that the dictates of the heart are better than the
+regulations of society. Take my word for it, that love will do more for
+a man than lectures; and faith in him be more likely to keep him
+straight than all your moralising; and before you judge him severely for
+having drunk a little too deep of the Sillery of life, remember that his
+temptations are not your temptations, nor his ways your ways, and be
+gentle to dangers which society and custom keep out of your own path.
+The stern thorn crows you offer to us when we are inclined to ask your
+absolution, are not the right means to win us from the rose wreaths of
+our bacchanalia.
+
+Nina, as you see, loved her _Lion_ too well to remember dignity, or
+take her stand on principle; and gallantly did the young lady stand the
+bombardment from all sides that sought to break her resolutions and
+crush her "misplaced affections." Gordon chanced to come in that day and
+light upon Ernest, and the fury into which he worked himself ill
+beseemed so respectable a pharisee. Vaughan kept tranquilly haughty, and
+told the banker, calmly, that he "thanked God he had his daughter's
+love, and his money he would never have stooped to accept." Gordon
+forbade him the house, and carried Nina back to England; but before she
+went they had a parting interview, in which Ernest offered to leave her
+free. But such freedom would have been worse than death to Nina, and,
+before they separated, she told him that in three months more she should
+be of age, and then, come what might, she would be his if he would take
+her without wealth. Take her he would have done from the arms of Satanus
+himself, but to disentangle himself from all his difficulties was a task
+that beat the Augean stables hollow. The three months of his probation
+he worked hard; he sold off all his pictures, his stud, and his
+_meubles_; he sold, what cost him a more bitter pang, his encumbered
+estates in Surrey; he paid off all his debts, Bluette's twenty thousand
+francs included; and shaking himself free of the accumulated
+embarrassments of fifteen years, he crossed the water to claim his last
+love. No poor little Huguenot was ever persecuted for her faith more
+than poor little Nina for her engagement. Every relative she had thought
+it his duty to write admonitory letters, plentifully interspersed with
+texts. Eusebius and his 4000_l._ a year, and his perspective bishopric,
+were held up before her from morning to night; the banker, whose
+deception in the Melusine had turned him into sharper vinegar than
+before, told her with chill stoicism that she must of course choose her
+own path in life, but that if that path led her into the Chaussee
+d'Antin, she need never expect a sou from him, for all his property
+would be divided between her two brothers. But Nina was neither to be
+frightened nor bribed. She kept true to her lover, and disinherited
+herself.
+
+They were married a week or two after Nina's majority; and Gordon knew
+it, though he could not prevent it. They did not miss the absence of
+bridesmaids, bishop, dejeuner, and the usual fashionable crowd. It was a
+marriage of the heart, you see, and did not want the trappings with
+which they gild that bitter pill so often swallowed now-a-days--a
+"mariage de convenance." Nina, as she saw further still into the wealth
+of deep feeling and strong affection which, at her touch, she had awoke
+in his heart, felt that money, and friends, and the world's smile were
+well lost since she had won him. And Ernest--Ernest's sacrifice was
+greater; for it is not a little thing, young ladies, for a man to give
+up his accustomed freedom, and luxuries, and careless vie de garcon, and
+to have to think and work for another, even though dearer than himself.
+But he had long since seen so much of life, had exhausted all its
+pleasures so rapidly, that they palled upon him, and for some time he
+had vaguely wanted something of deeper interest, of warmer sympathy.
+Unknown to himself, he had felt the "besoin d'etre aime"--a want the
+trash offered him by the women of his acquaintance could never
+satisfy--and his warm, passionate nature found rest in a love which,
+though the strongest of his life, was still returned to him fourfold.
+
+After some months of delicious _far niente_ in the south of France, they
+came back to Paris. Though anything but rich, he was not absolutely
+poor, after he had paid his debts, and the necessity to exertion rousing
+his dormant talents, the _Lion_ turned _litterateur_. He was too
+popular with men to be dropped because he had sold his stud or given up
+his petits soupers. The romance of their story charmed the Parisians,
+and, though (behind his back) they sometimes jested about the "Lion
+amoureux," there were not a few who envied him his young love, and the
+sunshine that shone round them in his inexpensive appartement garni.
+
+Ernest _was_ singularly happy--and suddenly he became the star of the
+literary, as he had been of the fashionable world. His mots were
+repeated, his vaudevilles applauded, his feuilletons adored. The world
+smiled on Nina and her _Lion_; it made little difference to them--they
+had been as contented when it frowned.
+
+But it made a good deal of difference across the Channel. Gordon began
+to repent. Ernest's family was high, his Austrian connexions very
+aristocratic: there would be something after all in belonging to a man
+so well known. (Be successful, ami lecteur, and all your relatives will
+love you.) Besides, he had found out that it is no use to put your faith
+in princes, or clergymen. Eusebius had treated him very badly when he
+found he could not get Nina and her money, and spoke against the poor
+banker everywhere, calling him, with tender pastoral regret, a "worldly
+Egyptian," a "Dives," a "whitened sepulchre," and all the rest of it.
+
+Probably, too, stoic though he was, he missed the chevelure doree; at
+any rate, he wrote to her stiffly, but kindly, and settled two thousand
+a year upon her. Vaughan was very willing she should be friends with her
+father, but nothing would make him draw a sou of the money. So Nina--the
+only sly thing she ever did in her life--after a while contrived to buy
+back the Surrey estate, and gave it to him, with no end of prayers and
+caresses, on the Jour de l'An.
+
+"And you do not regret, my darling," smiled Ernest, after wishing her
+the new year's wishes, "having forgiven me for once drinking too much
+Sillery, and all the other naughty things of my vie de garcon?"
+
+"Regret!" interrupted Nina, vehemently--"regret that I have won your
+love, live your life, share your cares and joys, regret that my
+existence is one long day of sunshine? Oh, why ask! you know I can never
+repay you for the happiness of my life."
+
+"Rather can I never repay you," said Vaughan, looking down into her
+eyes, "for the faith that made you brave calumny and opposition, and
+cling to my side despite all. I was heart-sick of the world, and you
+called me back to life. I was weary of the fools who misjudged me, and I
+let them think me what they might."
+
+"Ah, how happy you make me!" cried Nina. "I should have been little
+worthy of your love if I had suffered slander to warp me against you, or
+if any revelations you cared enough for me to make of your past life,
+had parted us:
+
+ Love is not love
+ That alters where it alteration finds,
+ Or bends with the remover to remove.
+
+There, monsieur!" she said, throwing her arms round him with a laugh,
+while happy tears stood in her eyes--"there is a grand quotation for
+you. Mind and take care, Ernest, that you never realise the Ruskinstone
+predictions, and make me repent having caught and caged such a terrible
+thing as a hunted PARIS LION!"
+
+
+
+
+SIR GALAHAD'S RAID.
+
+
+
+
+SIR GALAHAD'S RAID.
+
+AN ADVENTURE ON THE SWEET WATERS.
+
+
+For the punishment of my sins may the gods never again send me to Pera!
+That I might have plenty on my shoulders I am frankly willing to
+concede; all I protest is, that when one submissively acknowledges the
+justice of ones future terminating in Tophet, it comes a little hard to
+get purgatory in this world into the bargain. Purgatory lies _perdu_ for
+one all over the earth. I have had fifty times more than my share
+already, and the gout still remains an untried experience, a Gehenna
+grimly waiting to avenge every morsel of white truffle and every glass
+of comet claret with which I innocently solace my frail mortality.
+Purgatory!--I have been chained in it fifty times; _et vous_?
+
+When you rush to a Chancellerie, with the English Arms gorgeous above
+its doorway, on the spur of a frightfully mysterious and autocratic
+telegram, that makes it life or death to catch the train for England in
+ten minutes, and have time enough to smoke about two dozen very big
+cheroots, cooling your heels in the bureau, and then hear (when properly
+tortured into the due amount of frantic agony for the intelligence to be
+fully appreciated) that his Excellency is gone snipe-shooting to ----,
+and that the First Secretary is in his bath, and has given orders not to
+be disturbed; your informant languidly pricking his cigar with his
+toothpick, and politely intimating, by his eyebrows, that you and your
+necessities may go to the deuce--what's _that_? When you are doing the
+sanitary at Weedon, by some hideous conjunction of evil destinies, in
+the very Ducal week itself, and thinking of the rush with which Tom
+Alcroft will land the filly, or the close finish with which Fordham will
+get the cup, while you are not there to see, are sorely tempted to
+realize the Parisian vision of Anglo suicide, and load the apple-trees
+with suspended human fruit;--what's _that_? When, having got leave, and
+established yourself in cosy hunting-quarters, with some cattle not to
+be beat in stay, blood, and pace, close to a killing pack that never
+score a blank day, there falls a bitter, black frost, locking the
+country up in iron bonds, and making every bit of ridge and furrow like
+a sheet of glass--what's _that_?
+
+Bah! I could go on ad infinitum, and cite "circles of purgatory" in
+which mortal man is doomed to pass his time, beside which Dante's Caina,
+Antenora, and Ptolomea sink into insignificance. But of all Purgatories,
+chiefest in my memory, is----Pera. Pera in the old Crimean time--Pera
+the "beautiful suburb" of fond "fiction"--Pera, with the dirt, the
+fleas, the murders, the mosquitoes, the crooked streets, the lying
+Greeks, the stench, the hubbub, the dulness, and the everlasting "Bono
+Johnny."
+
+"Call a dog Hervey, and I shall love him," said Johnson, so dear was his
+friend to him:--"call a dog Johnny, and I shall kick him," so abominable
+grew that word in the eternal Turkish jabber! Tell me, O prettiest,
+softest-voiced, most beguiling, feminine AEothen, in as romantic periods
+as you will, of bird-like feluccas darting over the Bosphorus, of curled
+caiques gliding through fragrant water-weeds; of Arabian Nights
+reproduced, when up through the darkness peals the roll of the drums
+calling the Faithful to prayers; of the nights of Ramadan, with the
+starry clusters of light gleaming all down Stamboul, and flashing,
+firefly-like, through the dark citron groves;--tell me of it as you
+will, I don't care; you may think me a Goth, _ce m'est bien egal_, and
+_you_ were not in cavalry quarters at Pera. I wasn't exacting; I did not
+mind having ants in my jam, nor centipedes in my boots, nor a shirt in
+six months, nor bacon for a luxury that strongly resembled an old file
+rusted by sea-water, nor any little trifle of that sort up in the front;
+all that is in the fortune of war: but I confess that Pera put me fairly
+out of patience, specially when a certain trusty friend of mine, who has
+no earthly fault, that I wot of, except that of perpetually looking at
+life through a Claude glass (which is the most aggravating opticism to a
+dispassionate and unblinded mind that the world holds), _would_ poetize
+upon it, or at least on the East in general, which came pretty much to
+the same thing.
+
+The sun poured down on me till (conscience, probably) I remembered the
+scriptural threat to the wicked, "their brains shall boil in their
+skulls like pots;"--Sir Galahad, as I will call him, would murmur to
+himself, with his cheroot in his teeth, Manfred's _salut_ to the sun,
+looking as lovingly at it as any eagle. Mosquitoes reduced me to the
+very borders of madness,--Sir Galahad would placidly remark, how
+Buckland would revel here in all those gorgeous beetles. A Greek told
+crackers till I had to double-thong him like a puppy,--Sir Galahad would
+shout to me to let the fellow alone, he looked so deuced picturesque, he
+must have him for a study. I made myself wretched in a ticklish caique,
+the size of a cockle-shell, where, when one was going full harness to
+the Great Effendi's, it was a moral impossibility to be doubled without
+one's sash swinging into the water, one's sword sticking over the side,
+and the liveliest sensation of cramp pervading one's body,--Sir Galahad,
+blandly indifferent, would discourse, with superb Ruskin obscurity, of
+"tone," and "coloring," and "harmonized light," while he looked down the
+Golden Horn, for he was a little Art-mad, and painted so well that if
+he had been a professional, the hanging committee would have shut him
+out to a certainty.
+
+Now he was a good fellow, a _beau sabreur_, who had fetched some superb
+back strokes in the battery at Balaclava, who could send a line
+spinning, and land his horse in a gentleman riders' race, and pot the
+big game, and lead the first flight over Northamptonshire doubles at
+home, as well as a man wants to do; but I put it to any dispassionate
+person, whether this persistent poetism of his, flying in the face of
+facts and of fleas, was not enough to make anybody swear in that
+mosquito-purgatorio of Pera?
+
+Sir Galahad was a capital fellow, and the men would have gone after him
+to the death; the fair, frank, handsome face, a little womanish perhaps,
+was very pleasant to look at, and he got the Victoria not long ago for a
+deed that would suit Arthur's Table; but in Pera, I avow, he made me
+swear hard, and if he would just have set his heel on his Claude glass,
+cursed the Turks, and growled refreshingly, I should have loved him
+better. He was philosophic and he was poetic; and the combination of
+temperaments lifted him in a mortifying altitude above ordinary
+humanity, that was baked, broiled, grumbling, savage, bitten, fleeced,
+and holding its own against miserable rats, Greeks, and Bono Johnnies,
+with an Aristides thieving its last shirt, and a Pisistratus getting
+drunk at its case-bottle! That sublime serenity of his in Pera ended in
+making me unholy and ungenerous; if he would but have sworn once at the
+confounded country, I should have borne it, but he never did, and I
+longed to see him out of temper, I pined and thirsted to get him
+disenchanted. "_Tout vient a point, a qui sait attendre_," they say; a
+motto, by the way, that might be written over the Horse Guards for the
+comfort of gloomy souls, when, in the words of the Psalmist, "Promotion
+cometh neither from the south, nor from the east, nor from the
+west"--by which lament one might conclude David of Israel to have been a
+sufferer by the Purchase-system!
+
+"Delicious!" said Sir Galahad, sending a whiff of Turkish tobacco into
+the air one morning after exercise, when he and I, having ridden out a
+good many miles along the Sweet Waters, turned the horses loose, bought
+some grapes and figs of an old Turk, dispossessed him of his bit of
+cocoa-matting, and flung ourselves under a plane-tree. And the fellow
+looked round him through his race-glass at the cypress woods, the
+mosques and minarets, the almond thickets, the "soft creamy distance,"
+as he called it in his _argot d'atelier_, and the Greek fishermen near,
+drawing up a net full of silvery prismatic fishes, with a relish
+absolutely exasperating. Exasperating--when the sun was broiling one's
+brain through the linen, and there wasn't a drop of Bass or soda and B
+to be got for love or money, and one thought thirstily of days at home
+in England, with the birds whirring up from the stubble in the cool
+morning, and the cold punch uncorked for luncheon, under the home woods
+fringing the open.
+
+"One wants Hunt to catch that bit of color," murmured Sir Galahad,
+luxuriously eying a mutilated Janissary's tomb covered with scarlet
+creepers.
+
+"Hunt be hanged!" said I (meaning no disrespect to that eminent
+Pre-Raphaelite, whose "Light of the World" I took at first sight to be a
+policeman going his night rounds, and come out in his shirt by mistake;
+by the way, it is a droll idea to symbolize the "light of the world" by
+a watchman with a dark lantern, _lux in tenebras_ with a vengeance!).
+"Give me the sweet shady side of Pall Mall, and the devil may take the
+Sweet Waters. What's the Feast of Bairam beside the Derby-day, or your
+confounded coloring beside a well-done cutlet? What's lemonade by
+Brighton Tipper, and a veiled bundle by a pretty blonde, and an eternity
+of Stamboul by an hour of Piccadilly?"
+
+Sir Galahad smiled superior, and shied a date at me.
+
+"Goth! can't you be content to feed like the Patriarchs and live an
+idyl?"
+
+"No! I'd rather feed like a Parisian and live an idler! Eat grapes if
+you choose; I agree with Brillat-Savarin, and don't like my wine in
+pills."
+
+"My good fellow, you're all prose."
+
+"And you're all poetry. You're as bad as that pretty little commissariat
+girl who lisped me to death last night at the Embassy with platitudes of
+bosh about the 'poetry of marriage.'"
+
+"The deuce!" said Sir Galahad, with a whistle, "that must be like most
+other poetry nowadays--uncommon dull prose, sliced up in uneven lengths!
+Didn't you tell her so?"
+
+"Couldn't; I should have pulled the string for a shower-bath of
+sentiment! When a woman's bolted on romance you only make the pace worse
+if you gall her with the curb of common sense. When romance is in,
+reason's out,--excuse the personality!"
+
+He didn't hear me; he was up like a retriever who scents a wild duck or
+a water-rat among the sedges, for sweeping near us with soft gliding
+motion, as pretty as a toy and as graceful as a swan, came a caique,
+with the wife of a Pacha of at least a hundred tails in it, to judge by
+the costliness of her exquisite attire. Now, women were not rare, but
+then they were always veiled, which is like giving a man a nugget he
+mustn't take out of the quartz, a case of champagne he mustn't undo, a
+cover-side he is never to beat, a trout stream in which he must never
+fling a fly; and Sir Galahad, whose loves were not, I admit, quite so
+saintly as Arthur's code exacted, lost his head in a second as the
+caique drifted past us, and, raising herself on her cushions, the Leilah
+Duda, or Salya within it, glanced toward the myrtle screen that half hid
+us, with the divinest antelope eyes in the world, and letting the
+silver gauze folds of her veil float half aside, showed us the beautiful
+warm bloom, the proud lips, and the chestnut tresses braided with pearls
+and threaded with gold, of your genuine Circassian beauty. Shade of Don
+Juan! what a face it was!
+
+A yataghan might have been at his throat, a bowstring at his neck,
+eunuchs might have slaughtered, and pachas have impaled him, Galahad
+would have seen more of that loveliness: headlong he plunged down the
+slope, crushing through the almond thickets and scattering the green
+tree-frogs right and left; the caique was just rounding past as he
+reached the water's edge, and the beauty's veil was drawn in terror of
+her guard. But as the little cockle-shell, pretty and ticklish as a
+nautilus, was moored to a broad flight of marble stairs, the Circassian
+turned her head towards the place where the Unbeliever stood in the
+sunlight--her eyes were left her, and with them women speak in a
+universal tongue. Then the green lattice gate shut, the white
+impenetrable walls hid her from sight, and Sir Galahad stood looking
+down the Sweet Waters in a sort of beatific vision, in love for the
+1360th time in his life. And certainly he had never been in love with
+better reason; for is there anything on earth so divine as your
+antelope-eyed and gold-haired Circassian?
+
+"I shall be inside those walls or know the reason why," said he, whom
+two gazelle eyes had fired and captured, there by the side of the sunny
+Sweet Waters, where the lazy air was full of syringa and rose odors, and
+there was no sound but the indolent beating of the tired oars on the
+ripples.
+
+"Which reason you will rapidly find," I suggested, "in a knock on the
+head from the Faithful!"
+
+"Well! a very picturesque way of coming to grief; to go off the scene in
+the sick-wards, from raki and fruit, would be commonplace and
+humiliating, but to die in a serail, stabbed through and through by
+green-eyed jealousy, would be piquant and refreshing to the last degree;
+do you really think there's a chance of it?" said Galahad, rather
+anxiously--the eager wistful anxiety of a man who, athirst for the
+forest, hears of the rumored slot of an outlying deer--while he shouted
+the Greek fishermen to him, and learned after sore travail through a
+slough of mixed Italian, Turkish, and Albanian, that the white palace,
+with its green lattice and its hanging gardens, belonged to a rich
+merchant of Constantinople, and that this veiled angel was the favorite
+of his harem, Leilah Derran, a recent purchase in Circassia, and the
+queen of the Anderun.
+
+"The old rascal!" swore Galahad, in his wrath, which was not, however, I
+think, caused by any particular Christian disgust at polygamy. "A fat
+old sinner, I'll be bound, who sits on his divan puffing his chibouque
+and stuffing his sweetmeats, as yellow as Beppo, and as round as a ball.
+Bah! what pearls before swine! It's enough to make a saint swear. Those
+heavenly eyes!..." And Galahad went into a somewhat earthly reverie,
+colored with a thirsty jealousy of the purchaser and the possessor of
+this Circassian gazelle, as he rode reluctantly back towards Pera.
+
+The Circassian was in his head, and did not get out again. He let
+himself be bewitched by that lovely face which had flashed on him for a
+second, and began to feel himself as aggrieved by that innocent and
+unoffending Turkish lord of hers, as if the unlucky gentleman had stolen
+his own property! The antelope eyes had looked softly and hauntingly
+sad, moreover: I demonstrated to him that it was nothing more than the
+way that the eyelashes drooped, but nobody in love (very few people out
+of it) have any taste for logic; he was simply disgusted with my
+realism, and saw an instant vision for himself of this loveliest of
+slaves, captive in a bazaar and sold into the splendid bondage of the
+harem as into an inevitable fate, mournful in her royalty as a
+nightingale in a cage stifled with roses, and as little able to escape
+as the bird. A vision which intoxicated and enraptured Sir Galahad, who,
+in the teeth of every abomination of Pera, had been content to see only
+what he wished to see, and had maintained that the execrable East, to
+make it the East of Hafiz and all the poets, only wanted--available
+Haidees!
+
+"Hang it! I think it's nothing _but_ Hades," said an Aide, overhearing
+that statement one night, as we stumbled out of a half-cafe,
+half-gambling-booth pandemonium into the crooked, narrow, pitch-dark
+street, where dogs were snarling over offal, jackals screaming, Turkish
+bands shrieking, cannon booming out the hour of prayer, women yelling
+alarms of fire, a Zouave was spitting a Greek by way of practice, and an
+Irishman had just potted a Dalmatian, in as brawling, rowing,
+pestiferous, unodorous an earthly Gehenna as men ever succeeded in
+making.
+
+Sir Galahad was the least vain of mortals; nevertheless, being as
+well-beloved by the "maidens and young widows," for his fair handsome
+face, as Harold the Gold-haired, he would have been more than mortal if
+he had not been tolerably confident of "killing," and luxuriously
+practised in that pleasant pastime. That if he could once get the
+antelope eyes to look at him, they would look lovingly before long, he
+was in comfortable security; but how to get into a presence, which it
+was death for an unbeliever and a male creature to approach, was a
+knottier question, and the difficulty absorbed him. There were several
+rather telling Englishwomen out there, with whom he had flirted _faute
+de mieux_, at the cavalry balls we managed to get up in Pera, at the
+Embassy costume-ball, on board yacht-decks in the harbor, and in picnics
+to Therapia or the Monastery. But they became as flavorless as
+twice-told tales, and twice-warmed entremets, beside the new piquance,
+the delicious loveliness, the divine difficulty of this captive
+Circassian. That he had no more earthly business to covet her than he
+had to covet the unlucky Turkish trader's lumps of lapis-lazuli and
+agate, never occurred to him; the stones didn't tempt him, you see, but
+the beauty did. That those rich, soft, unrivalled Eastern charms,
+"merely born to bloom and drop," should be caged from the world and only
+rejoice the eyes of a fat old opium-soddened Stamboul merchant, seemed a
+downright reversal of all the laws of nature, a tampering with the
+balance of just apportionment that clamored for redress; but, like most
+other crying injustice, the remedy was hard to compass.
+
+Day after day he rode down to the same place on the Sweet Waters on the
+chance of the caique's passing; and, sure enough, the caique did pass
+nine times out of ten, and, when opportunity served for such a hideous
+Oriental crime not to be too perilous, the silver gauze floated aside
+unveiling a face as fair as the morning, or, when that was impossible,
+the eyes turned on him shyly and sadly in their lustrous appeal, as
+though mutely bewailing such cruel captivity. Those eyes said as plainly
+as language could speak that the lovely Favorite plaintively resisted
+her bondage, and thought the Frank with his long fair beard, and his six
+feet of height, little short of an angel of light, though he might be an
+infidel.
+
+Given--hot languid days, nothing to do, sultry air heavy with orange and
+rose odors, and those "silent passages," repeating themselves every time
+that Leilah Derran's caique glided past the myrtle screen, where her
+Giaour lay _perdu_, the result is conjectural: though they had never
+spoken a word, they had both fallen in love. Voiceless _amourettes_ have
+their advantages:--when a woman speaks, how often she snaps her spell!
+For instance, when the lips are divine but the utterance is slangy, when
+the mouth is adorably rosebud but what it says is most horrible horsy!
+
+A tender pity, too, gave its spur to his passion; he saw that, all Queen
+of the Serail though she might be, this fettered gazelle was not happy
+in her rose-chains, and to Galahad, who had a wonderful twist of the
+knight-errant and lived decidedly some eight centuries too late, no
+wiliest temptation would have been so fatal as this.
+
+He swore to get inside those white inexorable walls, and he kept his
+oath: one morning the latticed door stood ajar, with the pomegranates
+and the citrons nodding through the opening; he flung prudence to the
+winds and peril to the devil, and entered the forbidden ground where it
+was death for any man, save the fat Omar himself, to be found. The
+fountains were falling into marble basins, the sun was tempered by the
+screen of leaves, the lories and humming-birds were flying among the
+trumpet-flowers, altogether a most poetic and pleasant place for an
+erratic adventure; more so still when, as he went farther, he saw
+reclining alone by the mosaic edge of a fountain his lovely Circassian
+unveiled. With a cry of terror she sprang to her feet, graceful as a
+startled antelope, and casting the silver shroud about her head, would
+have fled; but the scream was not loud enough to give the alarm--perhaps
+she attuned it so--and flight he prevented. Such Turkish as he had he
+poured out in passionate eloquence, his love declaration only made the
+more piquant by the knowledge that in a trice the gardens might swarm
+with the Mussulman's guards and a scimitar smite his head into the
+fountain. But the danger he disdained, _la belle_ Leilah remembered;
+rebuke him she did not, nor yet call her eunuchs to rid her of this
+terrible Giaour, but the antelope eyes filled with piteous tears and she
+prayed him begone--if he were seen here, in the gardens of the women, it
+were his death, it were hers! Her terror at the infidel was outweighed
+by her fear for his peril; how handsome he was with his blue eyes and
+fair locks, after the bald, black-browed, yellow, obese little Omar!
+
+"Let me see again the face that is the light of my soul and I will obey
+thee; thou shalt do with thy slave as thou wilt!" whispered Galahad in
+the most impassioned and poetical Turkish he could muster, thinking the
+style of Hafiz understood better here than the style of Belgravia, while
+the almond-eyed Leilah trembled like a netted bird under his look and
+his touch, conscious, pretty creature, that were it once known that a
+Giaour had looked on her, poison in her coffee, or a sullen plunge by
+night into the Bosphorus, would expiate the insult to the honor of Omar,
+a master whom she piteously hated. She let her veil float aside,
+nevertheless, blushing like a sea-shell under the shame of an
+unbeliever's gaze--a genuine blush that is banished from Europe--his
+eyes rested on the lovely youth of her face, his cheek brushed the
+
+ Loose train of her amber dropping hair,
+
+his lips met her own; then, with a startled stifled cry, his coy gazelle
+sprang away, lost in the aisles of the roses, and Galahad quitted the
+dangerous precincts, in safety so far, not quite clear whether he had
+been drinking or dreaming, and of conviction that Pera had changed into
+Paradise. For he was in love with two things at once, a romance and a
+woman; and an anchorite would fairly have lost his head after the divine
+dawn of beauty in Leilah Derran.
+
+The morrow, of course, found him at the same place, at the same hour,
+hoping for a similar fortune, but the lattice door was shut, and defied
+all force; he was just about to try scaling the high slippery walls by
+the fibres of a clinging fig-tree, when a negress, the sole living thing
+in sight, beckoned him, a hideous Abyssinian enough for a messenger of
+Eros; a grinning good-natured black, who had been bought in the same
+bazaar and of the same owner as the lovely Circassian, to whose service
+she was sworn. She told him by scraps of Turkish, and signs, that Leilah
+had bidden her watch for and warn him, that it were as much as both
+their lives were worth for him to be seen again in the women's gardens,
+or anywhere near her presence; that the merchant Omar was a monster of
+jealousy, and that the rest of the harem, jealous of her supremacy and
+of the unusual liberty her ascendancy procured her, would love nothing
+so well as to compass her destruction. Further meeting with her infidel
+lover she pronounced impossible, unless he would see her consigned to
+the Bosphorus; an ice avalanche of intelligence, which, falling on the
+tropical Eden of his passion, had the effect, as it was probably meant
+that it should have, of drowning the lingering remnant of prudence and
+sanity that had remained to him after his lips had once touched the
+exquisite Eastern's.
+
+Under the circumstances the negress was his sole hope and chance; he
+pressed her into his service and made her Mercury and mediatrix in one.
+She took his messages, sent in the only alphabet the pretty gazelle
+could read, i. e. flowers, plotted against her owner with true Eastern
+finesse, wrought on the Circassian's tenderness for the Giaour, and her
+terrified hatred of her grim lord Omar, and threw herself into the
+intrigue with the avidity of all womanhood, be it black or be it white,
+for anything on the face of the earth that has the charm of being
+forbidden. The affair was admirably _en train_, and Galahad was
+profoundly happy; he was deliciously in love,--a pleasant spice as
+difficult to find in its full flavor as it is to bag a sand grouse;--and
+had an adventure to amuse him that might very likely cost him his head,
+and might fairly claim to rise into the poetic. The only reward he
+received (or ever got, for that matter) for the Balaclava brush, where
+he cut down three gunners, and had a ball put in his hip, had been a
+cavil raised by a critic, not there, of doubt whether he had ever
+ridden inside the lines at all; but his Circassian would have
+recompensed him at once for a score of years of Chersonnesus
+campaigning, and unprofessional chroniclers: he was perfectly happy, and
+his soft, careless, _couleur de rose_ enjoyment of the paradise was
+aggravating to behold,--when one was in Pera, and the heat broiled alive
+every mortal thing that wasn't a negro, and Bass was limited, and there
+were no Dailies, and one thought even lovingly and regretfully of the
+old "beastly shells," that had at least this merit, that they scattered
+bores when they burst!
+
+"Old fellow!--want something to do?" he asked me one day. I nodded,
+being silent and savage from having had to dance attendance on the
+Sultan at an Embassy reception. Peace to his _manes_ now! but I know I
+wished him heartily in Eblis at that time.
+
+"Come with me to-night then, if you don't mind a probability of being
+potted by a True Believer," went on Leilah Derran's lover, going into
+some golden water Soyer had sent me.
+
+"For the big game? Like it of all things; but you know I'm tied by the
+leg here."
+
+Galahad laughed. "Oh, I only want you an hour or two. I've got six days'
+leave for the pigs and the deer: but the hills won't see much of me, I'm
+going to make a raid in the rose-gardens. It may be hot work, so I
+thought you would like it."
+
+Of course I did, and asked the programme which Sir Galahad, as lucidly
+as a man utterly in love can tell anything, unfolded to me. Fortune
+favored him; it was the night of the Feast of Bairam, when all the world
+of Turkey lights its lamps and turns out; he had got leave under pretext
+of a shooting trip into Roumelia, but the game he was intent on was the
+captive Circassian, who in the confusion and _tintamarre_ attendant on
+Bairam, was to escape to him by the rose-gardens, and being carried off
+as swiftly as Syrian stallions could take them, would be borne away by
+her infidel lover on board a yacht, belonging to a man whom he knew who
+was cruising in the Bosphorus, which would steam them away down the
+Dardanelles before the Turk had a chance of getting in chase. Nothing
+could be better planned for everybody but the luckless Mussulman who was
+to be robbed,--and the whole thing had a fine flavor about it of dash
+and difficulty, of piquance and poetry, of Mediaeval errantry and
+Oriental coloring, that put Leilah's Giaour most deliciously in his
+element, setting apart the treasure that he would carry off in that
+rich, soft, antelope-eyed, bright-haired Circassian loveliness which
+made all the dreams in Lalla Rookh and Don Juan look pale.
+
+So his raid was planned, and I agreed to go with him to cover the rear
+in case of pursuit, which was likely enough to be hot and sharp, for the
+Moslems, for all their apathy, lack the philosophic gratitude which your
+British husband usually exhibits towards his despoiler--but then, to be
+sure, an Englishman can't make a fresh purchase unless he's first robbed
+of the old! Night came; and the nights, I am forced to admit, have a
+witching charm of their own in the East, that the West never knows. The
+Commander of the Faithful went to prayer, with the roar of cannon and
+the roll of drums pealing down the Golden Horn, and along the
+cypress-clad valleys. The mosques and minarets, starred and circled with
+a myriad of lamps, gleamed through the dark foliage, and were mirrored
+in the silvery sheet of the waves. The caiques, as they swept along,
+left tracks of light in the phosphor-lit waves, and while the chant of
+the Muezzin rang through the air, the children of Allah, from one end of
+the Bosphorus to the other, held festival on the most holy eve of
+Bairam. A splendid night for a lyric of Swinburne's!--a superb scene for
+an amorous adventure! And as we mingled amongst the crowds of the
+Faithful, swarming with their painted lanterns, their wild music, their
+gorgeous colors, their booming guns, in street and caique, on land and
+sea, Sir Galahad, though an infidel, had certainly entered the Seventh
+Heaven. He had never been more intensely in love in his life; and, if
+the fates should decree that the dogs of Islam should slay him at her
+feet, in the sanctuary of her rose-paradise, he was ready to say in his
+pet poet's words, with the last breath of his lips,
+
+ It was ordained to be so, sweet and best
+ Comes now beneath thine eyes and on thy breast.
+ Still kiss me! Care not for the cowards! Care
+ Only to put aside thy beauteous hair
+ My blood will hurt!
+
+In the night of the feast all the world was astir, Franks and Moslems,
+believers and unbelievers, and we made our way through the press
+unwatched to where Omar's house was illumined, the cressets, and
+wreaths, and stars of light sparkling through the black foliage. Under
+the walls, hidden by a group of planes, we fastened the stallions in
+readiness, and Galahad, at the latticed door, gave the signal word,
+"Kef," low whispered. The door unclosed, and, true to her tryst, in the
+silvery Bosphorus moonlight, crouching in terror and shame, was the
+veiled and trembling Circassian.
+
+But not in peace was her capture decreed to be made; scarce had the door
+flown open, when the shrill yell of "Allah hu! Allah hu!" rung through
+the air; and from the dark aisles of the gardens poured Mussulmans,
+slaves, and eunuchs, the Turk with a shoal at his back, giving the alarm
+with hideous bellowings, while their drawn scimitars flashed in the
+white starlight, and their cries filled the air with their din. "Make
+off, while I hold the gate!" I shouted to Galahad, who, catching Leilah
+Derran in his arms before the Moslems could be nigh us, held her close
+with one hand, while with his right he levelled his revolver, as I did,
+and backed--facing the Turks. At sight of the lean shining barrels, the
+Moslems paused in their rush for a second--only a second; the next,
+shouting to Allah till the minarets gave back the echo, they sprang at
+us, their curled naked yataghans whirling above their heads, their jetty
+eyeballs flaming like tigers' on the spring. Our days looked
+numbered;--I gave them the contents of one barrel, and in the moment's
+check we gained the outside of the gardens; the swarm rushed after us,
+their shots flying wide, and whistling with a shrill hiss harmlessly
+past; we reserved further fire, not wishing to kill, if we could manage
+to cut our way through without bloodshed, and backed to the plane-trees,
+where the horses were waiting. There was a moment's blind but breathless
+struggle, swift and indistinct to remembrance, as a flash of lightning;
+the Turks swarmed around us, while we beat them off, and hurled them
+asunder somehow. Omar sprang like a rattlesnake on to his spoiler, his
+yataghan circling viciously in the air, to crash down upon Galahad's
+skull, who was encumbered by the clinging embrace of his stolen
+Circassian. I straightened my left arm with a remnant of "science" that
+savored more of old Cambridge than of Crimean custom; the Moslem went
+down like an ox, and keeping the yelling pack at bay with the levelled
+death-dealer, I threw myself into saddle just as Galahad flung himself
+on his stallion, and the Syrians, fleet as Arab breeding could make
+them, tore down the beach in the rich Eastern night, while the balls
+shrieked through the air past our ears, and the shouts of our laughter,
+with the salute of a ringing English cheer in victorious farewell,
+answered the howls of our distant and baffled pursuers.
+
+Sir Galahad's Raid was a triumph!
+
+On we went through the hot fragrant air, through the silvery moonlight,
+through the deep shade of cypress and pine woods; on we went through
+gorge, and ravine, and defile, through stretches of sweet wild
+lavender, of shining sands, of trampled rose-fields, with the
+phosphor-lit sea gleaming beside us, and the Islam Feast of Bairam left
+far distant behind. On and on--while the glorious night itself was
+elixir, and one shouted to the starry silence Robert Browning's grand
+challenge--
+
+ How good is man's life, the mere living! how fit to employ
+ All the heart, and the soul, and the senses, for ever in joy!
+
+That ride was superb!
+
+We never drew rein till some ten miles farther on, where we saw against
+the clear skies the dark outline of the yacht with a blue light burning
+at her mast-head, the signal selected; then Galahad checked the good
+Syrian, who had proved pace as fleet as the "wild pigeon blue" is ever
+vouched in the desert, and bent over his prize who, through that long
+ride, had been held close to his breast, with her arms wound about him,
+and the beautiful veiled face bowed on his heart. The moon was bright as
+day, and he stooped his head to uplift the envious veil, and see the
+radiant beauty that never again would be shrouded, and to meet once more
+the lips which his own had touched before but in one single caress; he
+bowed his head, and I thought that my disinterested ungrudging
+friendship made the friendships of antiquity look small; when----an oath
+that chilled my blood rang through the night and over the seas,
+startling the echoes from rock and hill; the veiled captive reeled from
+the saddle with a wailing scream, hurled to earth by the impetus with
+which his arms loosed her from him; and away into the night, without
+word or sign, plunging headlong down the dark defile, riding as men may
+ride from a field that reeks with death, far out of sight into the heart
+of the black dank woods, his Syrian bore Sir Galahad. And lo! in the
+white moonlight, against the luminous sea, slowly there rose before me,
+unveiled and confessed--THE NEGRESS!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The history of that night we never learnt. Whether Leilah Derran herself
+played the cruel trick on her Giaour lover (but this _he_ always
+scouted), whether Omar himself was a man of grim humor, whether the
+Abyssinian, having betrayed her mistress, was used as a decoy-bird,
+dressed like the Circassian, to lure the infidels into the rose-gardens
+where the Faithful intended to dispatch them hastily to Eblis--no one
+knows. We could never find out. The negress escaped me before my
+surprise let me stay her, and the fray made the place too hot for close
+investigation. Nor do I know where Galahad tore in that wild night-ride,
+whose spur was the first maddened pain and rage of shame that his life
+had tasted. I never heard where he spent the six days of his absence;
+but when he joined us again, six weeks in the sick-wards would not have
+altered him more; all he said to me was one piteous phrase--"For God's
+sake don't tell the fellows!"--and I never did; I liked him well enough
+not to make chaff of him. Unholily had I thirsted to see him
+disenchanted, ungenerously had I pined to see him goaded out of temper:
+I had my wish, and I don't think I enjoyed it. I saw him at last in
+passion that I had much to do to tame down from a deadly vengeance that
+would have rung through the Allied Armies; and I saw him loathe the
+East, curse romance, burn all the poets with Hafiz at their head, and
+shun a woman's beauty like the pestilence. To this day I believe that
+the image of Leilah Derran haunts his memory, and that a certain remorse
+consumes him for his lost gazelle, whom _he_ always thought paid penalty
+for their love under the silent waves of the Bosphorus, with those lost
+ones whose souls, according to the faith of Stamboul, flit ceaselessly
+above its waters, in the guise of its white-winged unrestful sea-gulls.
+He is far enough away just now--in which of the death-pots where we are
+simmering and fritting away in little wretched driblets men and money
+that would have sufficed Caesar or Scipio to conquer an Empire, matters
+not to his story. When he reads this, he will remember the bitterest
+night of his life, and the fiasco that ended SIR GALAHAD'S RAID!
+
+
+
+
+'REDEEMED.'
+
+
+
+
+"REDEEMED."
+
+AN EPISODE WITH THE CONFEDERATE HORSE.
+
+
+
+Bertie Winton had got the Gold Vase.
+
+The Sovereign, one of the best horses that ever had a dash of the
+Godolphin blood in him, had led the first flight over the
+ridge-and-furrow, cleared the fences, trying as the shire-thorn could
+make them, been lifted over the stiffest doubles and croppers, passed
+the turning-flags, and been landed at the straight run-in with the stay
+and pace for which his breed was famous, enrapturing the fancy, who had
+piled capfuls of money on him, and getting the Soldiers' Blue Riband
+from the Guards, who had stood crackers on little Benyon's mount--Ben,
+who is as pretty as a girl, with his _petites mains blanches_, riding
+like any professional.
+
+Now, I take it--and I suppose there are none who will disagree with
+me--that there are few things pleasanter in this life than to stand, in
+the crisp winter's morning, winner of the Grand Military, having got the
+Gold Vase for the old corps against the best mounts in the Service.
+
+Life must look worth having to you, when you have come over those black,
+barren pastures and rugged ploughed lands, where the field floundered
+helplessly in grief, with Brixworth brook yawning gaunt and wide beneath
+you, and the fresh cold north wind blowing full in your teeth, and have
+ridden in at the distance alone, while the air is rent by the echoing
+shouts of the surging crowd, and the best riding-men are left "nowhere"
+behind. Life must look pleasant to you, if it had been black as thunder
+the night before. Nevertheless, where Bertie Winton sat, having brought
+the Sovereign in, winner of the G. M., with that superb bay's head a
+little drooped, and his flanks steaming, but scarce a hair turned, while
+the men who had won pots of money on him crowded round in hot
+congratulation, and he drank down some Curacoa punch out of a
+pocket-pistol, with his habitual soft, low, languid laugh, he had that
+in his thoughts which took the flavor out of the Curacoa, and made the
+sunny, cheery winter's day look very dull and gray to him. For Bertie,
+sitting there while the cheers reeled round him like mad, with a
+singularly handsome, reckless face, long tawny moustaches, tired blue
+eyes, and a splendid length and strength of limb, knew that this was the
+last day of the old times for him, and that he had sailed terribly near
+the wind of--dishonor.
+
+He had been brought to _envisager_ his position a little of late, and
+had seen that it was very bad indeed--as bad as it could be. He had run
+through all his own fortune from his mother, a good one enough, and owed
+almost as much again in bills and one way and another. He had lost
+heavily on the turf, gamed deeply, travelled with the most expensive
+adventuresses of their day, startled town with all its worst crim.
+cons.; had every vice under heaven, save that he drank not at all; and
+now, having shot a Russian prince at Baden the August before, about
+Lillah Lis, had received on the night just passed, from the Horse
+Guards, a hint, which was a command, that his absence was requested from
+her Majesty's Service--a mandate which, politely though inexorably
+couched, would have taken a more forcible and public form but for the
+respect in which his father, old Lion Winton, as he was called, was held
+by the Army and the authorities. And Bertie, who for five-and-thirty
+years had never thought at all, except on things that pleasured him,
+and such bagatelles as _barriere_ duels abroad, delicately-spiced
+intrigues, bills easily renewed, the _cru_ of wines, and the siege of
+women, found himself pulled up with a rush, and face to face with
+nothing less than ruin.
+
+"I'm up a tree, Melcombe," he said to a man of his own corps that day as
+he finished a great cheroot before mounting.
+
+"Badly?"
+
+"Well, yes. It'll be smash this time, I suppose."
+
+"Bother! That's hard lines."
+
+"It's rather a bore," he answered, with a little yawn, as he got into
+the saddle; and that was all he ever said then or afterwards on the
+matter; but he rode the Sovereign superbly over the barren wintry
+grass-land, and landed him winner of the Blue Riband for all that,
+though Black Care, for the first time in his life, rode behind him and
+weighted the race.
+
+Poor Bertie! nobody would have believed him if he had said so, but he
+had been honestly and truly thinking, for some brief time past, whether
+it would not be possible and worth while for him to shake himself free
+of this life, of which he was growing heartily tired, and make a name
+for himself in the world in some other fashion than by winging Russians,
+importing new dancers, taking French women to the Bads, scandalizing
+society, and beggaring himself. He had begun to wonder whether it was
+not yet, after all, too late, and whether if----when down had come the
+request from the Horse Guards for him to sell out, and the rush of all
+his creditors upon him, and away forever went all his stray shapeless
+fancies of a possible better future. And--consolation or aggravation,
+whichever it be--he knew that he had no one, save himself, to thank for
+it; for no man ever had a more brilliant start in the race of life than
+he, and none need have made better running over the course, had he only
+kept straight or put on the curb as he went down-hill. Poor Bertie! you
+must have known many such lives, or I can't tell where your own has been
+spent; lives which began so brilliantly that none could rival them, and
+which ended--God help them!--so miserably and so pitifully that you do
+not think of them without a shudder still?
+
+Poor Bertie!--a man of a sweeter temper, a more generous nature, a more
+lavish kindliness, never lived. He had the most versatile talents and
+the gentlest manners in the world; and yet here he was, having fairly
+come to ruin, and very nearly to disgrace.
+
+It was little wonder that his father, looking at him and thinking of all
+he might have been, and all he might have done, was lashed into a
+terrible bitterness of passionate grief, and hurled words at him of a
+deadly wrath, in the morning that followed on the Grand Military. Fiery
+as his comrades the Napiers, of a stern code as a soldier, and a lofty
+honor as a man, haughty in pride and swift to passion, old Sir Lionel
+was stung to the quick by his son's fall, and would have sooner, by a
+thousand-fold, have followed him to his grave, than have seen him live
+to endure that tacit dismissal from the service of the country--the
+deepest shame, in his sight, that could have touched his race.
+
+"I knew you were lost to morality, but I did not know till now that you
+were lost to honor!" said the old Lion, with such a storm of passion in
+him that his words swept out, acrid and unchosen, in a very whirlwind.
+"I knew you had vices, I knew you had follies, I knew you wasted your
+substance with debtors and gamblers like yourself, on courtesans and
+gaming-tables, in Parisian enormities, and vaunted libertinage, but I
+did not think that you were so utterly a traitor to your blood as to
+bring disgrace to a name that never was approached by shame until _you_
+bore it!"
+
+Bertie's face flushed darkly, then he grew very pale. The indolence
+with which he lay back in an ecarte-chair did not alter, however, and he
+stroked his long moustaches a little with his habitual gentle
+indifferentism.
+
+"It is all over. Pray do not give it that tremendous earnestness," he
+said, quietly. "Nothing is ever worth that; and I should prefer it if we
+kept to the language of gentlemen!"
+
+"The language of gentlemen is _for_ gentlemen," retorted the old man,
+with fiery vehemence. His heart was cut to the core, and all his soul
+was in revolt against the degradation to his name that came in the train
+of his heir's ruin. "When a man has forgot that he has been a gentleman,
+one may be pardoned for forgetting it also! You may have no honor left
+for your career to shame; _I_ have--and, by God, sir, from this hour you
+are no son of mine. I disown you--I know you no longer! Go and drag out
+all the rest of a disgraced life in any idleness that you choose. If you
+were to lie dying at my feet, I would not give you a crust!"
+
+Bertie raised his eyebrows slightly.
+
+"_Soit!_ But would it not be possible to intimate this quietly? A scene
+is such very bad style--always exhausting, too!"
+
+The languid calmness, the soft nonchalance of the tone, were like oil
+upon flame to the old Lion's heart, lashed to fury and embittered with
+pain as it was. A heavier oath than print will bear broke from him, with
+a deadly imprecation, as he paced the library with swift, uneven steps.
+
+"It had been better if your 'style' had been less and your decency and
+your honor greater! One word more is all you will ever hear from my
+lips. The title must come to you; that, unhappily, is not in my hands to
+prevent. It must be yours when I die, if you have not been shot in some
+gambling brawl or some bagnio abroad before then; but you will remember,
+not a shilling of money, not a rood of the land are entailed; and, by
+the heaven above us, every farthing, every acre shall be willed to the
+young children. _You_ are disinherited, sir--disowned for ever--if you
+died at my feet! Now go, and never let me see your face again."
+
+As he spoke, Bertie rose.
+
+The two men stood opposite to each other--singularly alike in form and
+feature, in magnificence of stature, and distinction of personal beauty,
+save that the tawny gold of the old Lion's hair was flaked with white,
+and that his blue eyes were bright as steel and flashing fire, while the
+younger man's were very worn. His face, too, was deeply flushed and his
+lips quivered, while his son's were perfectly serene and impassive as he
+listened, without a muscle twitching, or even a gleam of anxiety coming
+into his eyes.
+
+They were of different schools.
+
+Bertie heard to the end; then bowed with a languid grace. "It will be
+fortunate for Lady Winton's children! Make her my compliments and
+congratulations. Good-day to you."
+
+Their eyes met steadily once--that was all; then the door of the library
+closed on him; Bertie knew the worst; he was face to face with beggary.
+As he crossed the hall, the entrance to the conservatories stood open;
+he looked through, paused a moment, and then went in. On a low chair,
+buried among the pyramids of blossom, sat a woman reading, aristocrat to
+the core, and in the earliest bloom of her youth, for she was scarcely
+eighteen, beautiful as the morning, with a delicate thorough-bred
+beauty, dark lustrous eyes, arched pencilled brows, a smile like
+sunshine, and lips sweet as they were proud. She was Ida Deloraine, a
+ward of Sir Lionel, and a cousin of his young second wife's.
+
+Bertie went up to her and held out his hand.
+
+"Lady Ida, I am come to wish you good-bye."
+
+She started a little and looked up.
+
+"Good-bye! Are you going to town?"
+
+"Yes--a little farther. Will you give me that camellia by way of _bon
+voyage_?"
+
+A soft warmth flushed her face for a moment; she hesitated slightly,
+toying with the snowy blossom; then she gave it him. He had not asked it
+like a love gage.
+
+He took it, and bowed silently over her hand.
+
+"You will find it very cold," said Lady Ida, with a trifle of
+embarrassment, nestling herself in her dormeuse in her warm bright nest
+among the exotics.
+
+He smiled--a very gentle smile.
+
+"Yes, I am frozen out. Adieu!"
+
+He paused a moment, looking at her--that brilliant picture framed in
+flowers; then, without another word, he bowed again and left her, the
+woman he had learned too late to love, and had lost by his own folly for
+ever.
+
+"Frozen out? What could he mean?--there is no frost," thought Lady Ida,
+left alone in her hot-house warmth among the white and scarlet blossoms,
+a little startled, a little disappointed, a little excited with some
+vague apprehension, she could not have told why; while Bertie Winton
+went on out into the cold gray winter's morning from the old
+Northamptonshire Hall that would know him no more, with no end so likely
+for him as that which had just been prophesied--a shot in a gambling
+hell.
+
+_Facilis descensus Averni_--and he was at the bottom of the pit. Well,
+the descent had been very pleasant. Bertie set his teeth tight, and let
+the waters close over his head and shut him out of sight. He knew that a
+man who is down has nothing more to do with the world, save to quietly
+accept--oblivion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a hot summer night in Secessia.
+
+The air was very heavy, no wind stirring the dense woods crowning the
+sides of the hills or the great fields of trodden maize trampled by the
+hoofs of cavalry and the tramp of divisions. The yellow corn waved above
+the earth where the dead had fallen like wheat in harvest-time, and the
+rice grew but the richer and the faster because it was sown in soil
+where slaughtered thousands rotted, unsepulchred and unrecorded. The
+shadows were black from the reared mountain range that rose frowning in
+the moonlight, and the stars were out in southern brilliancy, shining as
+calmly and as luminously as though their rays did not fall on graves
+crammed full with dead, on flaming homesteads, crowded sick-wards,
+poisonous waters that killed their thousands in deadly rivalry with shot
+and shell, and vast battalions sleeping on their arms in wheat-fields
+and by river-swamps, in opposing camps, and before beleaguered cities,
+where brethren warred with brethren, and Virginia was drenched with
+blood. There was no sound, save now and then the challenge of some
+distant picket or the faint note of a trumpet-call, the roar of a
+torrent among the hills, or the monotonous rise and fall from miles away
+in the interior, of the negroes' funeral song, "Old Joe,"--more
+pathetic, somehow, when you catch it at night from the far distance
+echoing on the silence as you sit over a watch-fire, or ride alone
+through a ravine, than many a grander requiem.
+
+It was close upon midnight, and all was very still; for they were in the
+heart of the South, and on the eve of a perilous enterprise, coined by a
+bold brain and to be carried out by a bold hand.
+
+It was in the narrow neck of a valley, pent up between rocky shelving
+ridges, anywhere you will between Maryland and Georgia--for he who did
+this thing would not care to have it too particularly drawn out from the
+million other deeds of "derring-do" that the mighty story of the Great
+War has known and buried. Eight hundred Confederate Horse, some of
+Stuart's Cavalry, had got driven and trapped and caged up in this
+miserable defile, misled and intercepted; with the dense mass of a
+Federal army marching on their rear, within them by bare fifteen miles,
+and the forward route through the crammed defile between the hills, by
+which alone they could regain Lee's forces, dammed up by a deep, rapid,
+though not broad river; by a bridge strongly fortified and barricaded;
+and, on the opposite bank, by some Federal corps a couple of thousand
+strong, well under cover in rifle-pits and earthworks, thrown up by keen
+woodsmen and untiring trench-diggers. It was close peril, deadly as any
+that Secessia had seen, here in the hot still midnight, with the columns
+of the Federal divisions within them by eight hours' march, stretching
+out and taking in all the land to the rear in the sweep of their
+semicircular wings; while in front rose, black and shapeless in the deep
+gloom of the rocks above, the barricades upon the bridge, behind which
+two thousand rifles were ready to open fire at the first alarm from the
+Federal guard. And alone, without the possibility of aid, caged in among
+the trampled corn and maize that filled the valley, imprisoned between
+the two Federal forces as in the iron jaws of a trap, the handful of
+Southern troopers stood, resolute to sell their lives singly one by one,
+and at a costly price, and perish to a man, rather than fall alive into
+the hands of their foes.
+
+When the morning broke they would be cut to pieces, as the chaff is cut
+by the whirl of the steam-wheels. They knew that. Well, they looked at
+it steadily; it had no terrors for them, the Cavaliers of Old Virginia,
+so that they died with their face to the front. There was but one chance
+left for escape; aid there could be none; and that chance was so
+desperate, that even to them--reckless in daring, living habitually
+between life and death, and ever careless of the issue--it looked like
+madness to attempt it. But one among them had urged it on their
+consideration--urged it with passionate entreaty, pledging his own life
+for its success; and they had given their adhesion to it, for his name
+was famous through the Confederacy.
+
+He had won his spurs at Manasses, at Antietam, at Chancellorsville; he
+had been in every headlong charge with Stuart; he had been renowned for
+the most dashing Border raids and conspicuous staff service of any
+soldier in Secessia; he had galloped through a tempest of the enemy's
+balls, and swept along their lines to reconnoitre, riding back through
+the storm of shot to Lee, as coolly as though he rode through a summer
+shower at a review; and his words had weight with men who would have
+gone after him to the death. He stood now, the only man dismounted, in
+true Virginia uniform; a rough riding-coat, crossed by an undressed
+chamois belt, into which his sabre and a brace of revolvers were thrust,
+a broad Spanish sombrero shading his face, great Hessians reaching above
+his knee, and a long silken golden-colored beard sweeping to his
+waist,--a keen reconnoitrer, a daring raider, a superb horseman, and a
+soldier heart and soul.
+
+When he had laid before them the solitary chance of the perilous
+enterprise that he had planned, each man of the eight hundred had sought
+the post of danger for himself; but there he was, inexorable--what he
+had proposed he alone would execute. The Federals were ignorant of their
+close vicinity, for their near approach had been unheard, the trodden
+maize and rice, and the angry foaming of the torrent above, deadening
+the sound of their horses' hoofs; and the Union-men, satisfied that the
+"rebels" were entrapped beyond escape, were sleeping securely behind
+their earth-works, the passage of the river blockaded by their
+barricade, while the Southerners were drawn up close to the head of the
+bridge in sections of threes, screened by the intense shadow of the
+overhanging rocks; shadow darker from the brilliance of the full summer
+moon that, shining on the enemy's encampment, and on the black boiling
+waters thundering through the ravine, was shut out from the defile by
+the leaning pine-covered walls of granite. It was terribly still, that
+awful silence, only filled with the splashing of the water and the
+audible beat of the Federal sentinel's measured tramp, as they were
+drawn up there by the bridge-head; and though they had cast themselves
+into the desperate effort with the recklessness of men for whom death
+waited surely on the morrow, it looked a madman's thought, a madman's
+exploit, to them, as their leader laid aside his sword and pistols, and
+took up a small barrel of powder, part of some ammunition carried off
+from some sappers and miners' stores in the raid of the past day, the
+sight of which had brought to remembrance a stray, half-forgotten story
+told him in boyhood of one of Soult's Army--the story on which he was
+about to act now.
+
+"For God's sake, take care!" whispered the man nearest him; and though
+he was a veteran who had gone through the hottest of the campaign since
+Bull's Run, his voice shook, and was husky as he spoke.
+
+The other laughed a little--a slight, soft, languid laugh.
+
+"All right, my dear fellow," he whispered back. "There's nothing in it
+to be alarmed at; a Frenchman did it in the Peninsula, you know. Only if
+I get shot, or blown up, and the alarm be given, do you take care to
+bolt over and cut your way through in the first of the rush, that's
+all."
+
+Then, without more words, he laid himself down at full length with a
+cord tied round his ankle, that they might know his progress, and the
+cask of gunpowder, swathed in green cloth, that it should roll without
+noise along the ground; and, creeping slowly on his way, propelling the
+barrel with his head, and guiding it by his hands, was lost to their
+sight in the darkness. By the string, as it uncoiled through their
+hands, they could tell he was advancing; that was all.
+
+The chances were as a million to one that his life would pay the forfeit
+for that perilous and daring venture; a single shot and he would be
+blown into the air a charred and shapeless corpse; one spark on that
+rolling mass that he pushed before him, and the explosion would hurl him
+upward in the silent night, mangled, dismembered, blackened, lifeless.
+But his nerve was not the less cool, nor did his heart beat one throb
+the quicker, as he crept noiselessly along in the black shade cast by
+the parapet of the bridge, with the tramp of the guard close above on
+his ear, and rifles ready to be levelled on him from the covered
+earthworks if the faintest sound of his approach or the dimmest streak
+of moonlight on his moving body told the Federals of his presence. He
+had looked death in the teeth most days through the last five years; it
+had no power to quicken or slacken a single beat of his pulse as he
+propelled himself slowly forward along the black, rugged, uneven ground,
+and on to the passage of the bridge, as coolly, as fearlessly, as he
+would have crept through the heather and bracken after the slot of a
+deer on the moor-side at home.
+
+He heard the challenge and the tramp of the sentinel on the opposite
+bank; he saw the white starlight shine on the barrels of their
+breech-loaders as they paced to and fro in the stillness, filled with
+the surge and rush of the rapid waters beneath him. Shrouded in the
+gloom, he dragged himself onward with slow and painful movement,
+stretched out on the ground, urging himself forward by the action of his
+limbs so cautiously that, even had the light been on him, he could
+scarcely have been seen to move, or been distinguished from the earth on
+which he lay. Eight hundred lives hung on the coolness of his own; if he
+were discovered, they were lost. And, without haste, without excitation,
+he drew himself along under the parapet until he came to the centre of
+the bridge, placed the barrel close against the barricades, uncovered
+the head of the cask, and took his way back by the same laborious,
+tedious way, until he reached the Virginian Troopers gathered together
+under the shelving rocks.
+
+A deep hoarse murmur rolling down the ranks, the repressed cheer they
+dared not give aloud, welcomed him and the dauntless daring of his act;
+man after man pressed forward entreating to take his place, to share his
+peril; he gave it up to none, and three times more went back again on
+that deadly journey, until sufficient powder for his purpose was lodged
+under the Federal fortifications on the bridge. Two hours went by in
+that slow and terrible passage; then, for the last time, he wound a
+saucisson round his body serpent-wise, and, with that coil of powder
+curled around him, took his way once more in the same manner through the
+hot, dark, heavy night.
+
+And those left behind in the impenetrable gloom, ignorant of his fate,
+knowing that with every instant the crack of the rifles might roll out
+on the stillness, and the ball pierce that death-snake twisted round his
+limbs, and the rocks echo with the roar of the exploding powder,
+blasting him in the rush of its sheet of fire and stones, sat mute and
+motionless in their saddles, with a colder chill in their bold blood,
+and a tighter fear at their proud hearts, than the Cavaliers of the
+South would have known for their own peril, or than he knew for his.
+
+Another half-hour went by--an eternity in its long drawn-out
+suspense--then in the darkness under the rocks his form rose up amongst
+them.
+
+"Ready?"--"Ready."
+
+The low whisper passed all but inaudible from man to man. He took back
+his sabre and pistols and thrust them into his belt, then stooped,
+struck a slow match, and laid it to the end of the saucisson, whose
+mouth he had fastened to the barrels on the bridge, and rapidly as the
+lightning, flung himself across the horse held for him, and fell into
+line at the head of the troop.
+
+There was a moment of intense silence while the fire crept up the long
+stick of the match; then the shrill, hissing, snake-like sound, that
+none who have once heard ever forget, rushed through the quiet of the
+night, and with a roar that startled all the sleeping echoes of the
+hills, the explosion followed; the columns of flame shooting upward to
+the starlit sky, and casting their crimson lurid light on the black
+brawling waters, on the rugged towering rocks, on the gnarled trunks of
+the lofty pines, and on the wild, picturesque forms and the bold,
+swarthy, Spanish-like faces of the Confederate raiders. With a shock
+that shook the earth till it rocked and trembled under them, the pillar
+of smoke and fire towered aloft in the hush of the midnight, blasting
+and hurling upward, in thunder that pealed back from rock to rock,
+lifeless bodies, mangled limbs, smouldering timbers, loosened stones,
+dead men flung heavenward like leaves whirled by the wind, and iron torn
+up and bent like saplings in a storm, as the mass of the barricades
+quivered, oscillated, and fell with a mighty crash, while the night was
+red with the hot glare of the flame, and filled with the deafening din.
+
+The Federals, sleeping under cover of their intrenchments, woke by that
+concussion as though heaven and earth were meeting, poured out from pit
+and trench, from salient and parallel, to see their fortifications and
+their guard blown up, while the skies were lurid with the glow of the
+burning barricades, and the ravine was filled with the yellow mist of
+the dense and rolling smoke. Confused, startled, demoralized, they ran
+together like sheep, vainly rallied by their officers, some few hundred
+opening an aimless desultory fire from behind their works, the rest
+rushing hither and thither, in that inextricable intricacy, and nameless
+panic, which doom the best regiments that were ever under arms, when
+once they seize them.
+
+"Charge!" shouted the Confederate leader, his voice ringing out clear
+and sonorous above the infernal tempest of hissing, roaring, shrieking,
+booming sound.
+
+With that resistless impetus with which they had, over and over again,
+broken through the granite mass of packed squares and bristling
+bayonets, the Southerners, raising their wild war-whoop, thundered on to
+the bridge, which, strongly framed of stone and iron, had withstood the
+shock, as they had foreseen; and while the fiery glare shone, and the
+seething flame hissed, on the boiling waters below, swept, full gallop,
+over the torn limbs, the blackened bodies, the charred wood, the falling
+timbers, the exploding powder, with which the passage of the bridge was
+strewn, and charged through the hellish din, the lurid fire, the heavy
+smoke, at a headlong pace, down into the Federal camp.
+
+A thousand shots fell like hail amongst them, but not a saddle was
+emptied, not even a trooper was touched; and with their line unbroken,
+and the challenge of their war-shout pealing out upon the uproar, they
+rode through the confusion worse confounded, and cutting their way
+through shot and sabre, through levelled rifles, and through piled
+earthworks, with their horses breathing fire, and the roar of the
+opening musketry pealing out upon their rear, dashed on, never drawing
+rein, down into the darkness of the front defile, and into the freshness
+of the starry summer night, saved by the leader that they loved,
+and--FREE!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Tarnation cheeky thing to do. Guess they ain't wise to rile us that
+way," said a Federal general from Vermont, as they discussed this
+exploit of the Eight Hundred at the Federal head-quarters.
+
+"A splendid thing!" said an English visitor to the Northern camp, who
+had come for a six months' tour to see the war for himself, having been
+in his own time the friend of Paget and Vivian and Londonderry, the
+comrade of Picton, of Mackinnon, and of Arthur Wellesley. "A magnificent
+thing! I remember Bouchard did something the same sort of thing at
+Amarante, but not half so pluckily, nor against any such odds. Who's the
+fellow that led the charge? I'd give anything to see him and tell him
+what I think of it. How Will Napier would have loved him, by George!"
+
+"Who's the d----d rebel, Jed?" said the General, taking his gin-sling.
+
+"Think he's an Englishman. We'd give ten thousand dollars for him, alive
+or dead: he's fifty devils in one, that _I_ know," responded the Colonel
+of Artillery, thus appealed to, a gentlemanlike, quiet man, educated at
+West Point.
+
+"God bless the fellow! I'm glad he's English!" said the English visitor,
+heartily, forgetting his Federal situation and companions. "Who is he?
+Perhaps I know the name."
+
+"Should say you would. It's the same as your own--Winton. Bertie Winton,
+they call him. Maybe he's a relative of yours!"
+
+The blood flushed the Englishman's face hotly for a second; then a stern
+dark shadow came on it, and his lips set tight.
+
+"I have no knowledge of him," he said, curtly.
+
+"Haven't you now? That's curious. Some said he was a son of yours,"
+pursued the Colonel.
+
+The old Lion flung back his silvery mane with his haughtiest
+imperiousness.
+
+"No, sir; he's no son of mine."
+
+Lion Winton sat silent, the dark shadow still upon his face. For five
+years no rumor even had reached him of the man he had disowned and
+disinherited; he had believed him dead--shot, as he had predicted, after
+some fray in a gaming-room abroad; and now he heard of him thus in the
+war-news of the American camp! His denial of him was not less stern,
+nor his refusal to acknowledge even his name less peremptory, because,
+with all his wrath, his bitterness, his inexorable passion, and his
+fierce repudiation of him as his son, a thrill of pleasure stirred in
+him that the man still lived--a proud triumph swept over him, through
+all his darker thoughts, at the magnificent dash and daring of a deed
+wholly akin to him.
+
+Bertie, a listless man about town, a dilettante in pictures, wines, and
+women, spending every moment that he could in Paris, gentle as any young
+beauty, always bored, and never roused out of that habitual languid
+indolent indifferentism which the old man, fiery and impassioned himself
+as the Napiers, held the most damnable effeminacy with which the present
+generation emasculates itself, had been incomprehensible, antagonistic,
+abhorrent to him. Bertie, the Leader of the Eight Hundred, the reckless
+trooper of the Virginian Horse, the head of a hundred wild night raids,
+the hero of a score of brilliant charges, the chief in the most daring
+secret expeditions and the most intrepid cavalry skirmishes of the
+South, was far nearer to the old Lion, who had in him all the hot fire
+of Crawford's school, with the severe simplicity of Wellington's stern
+creeds. "He is true to his blood at last," he muttered, as he tossed
+back his silky white hair, while his blue flashing eyes ranged over the
+far distance where the Southern lines lay, with something of eager
+restlessness; "he is true to his blood at last!"
+
+There was fighting some days later in the Shenandoah Valley.
+
+Longstreet's corps, with two regiments of cavalry, had attacked
+Sheridan's divisions, and the struggle was hot and fierce. The day was
+warm, and a brilliant sun poured down into the green cornland and
+woodland wealth of the valley as the Southern divisions came up to the
+attack in beautiful precision, and hurled themselves with tremendous
+_elan_ on the right front of the Federals, who, covered by their
+hastily thrown-up breastworks, opened a deadly fire that raked the whole
+Confederate line as they advanced. Men fell by the score under the
+murderous mitraille, but the ranks closed up shoulder to shoulder,
+without pause or wavering, only maddened by the furious storm of shot,
+as the engagement became general and the white rolling clouds of smoke
+poured down the valley, and hid conflict and combatants from sight, the
+thunder of the musketry pealing from height to height; while in many
+places men were fighting literally face to face and hand to hand in a
+death-struggle--rare in these days, when the duello of artillery and the
+rivalry of breech-loaders begins, decides, and ends most battles.
+
+On Longstreet's left, two squadrons of Virginian Cavalry were drawn up,
+waiting the order to advance, and passionately impatient of delay as
+regiment after regiment were sent up to the attack and were lost in the
+whirling cloud of dust and smoke, and they were kept motionless, in
+reserve. At their head was Bertie Winton, unconscious that, on a hill to
+the right, with a group of Federal commanders, his father was looking
+down on that struggle in the Shenandoah. Bertie was little altered, save
+that on his face there was a sterner look, and in his eyes a keener and
+less listless glance; but the old languid grace, the old lazy
+gentleness, were there still. They were part of his nature, and nothing
+could kill them in him. In the five years that had gone by, none whom he
+had known in Europe had ever heard a word of him or from him; he had cut
+away all the moorings that bound him to his old life, and had sought to
+build up his ruined fortunes, like the penniless soldier that he was, by
+his sword alone. So far he had succeeded: he had made his name famous
+throughout the States as a bold and unerring cavalry leader, and had won
+the personal friendship and esteem of the Chiefs of the Southern
+Confederacy. The five years had been filled with incessant adventures,
+with ever present peril, with the din of falling citadels, with the
+rush of headlong charges, with daring raids in starless autumn nights,
+with bivouacs in trackless Western forests, with desert-thirst in
+parching summer heats, with winters of such frozen roofless misery as he
+had never even dreamed--five years of ceaseless danger, of frequent
+suffering, of habitual renunciation; but five years of _life_--real,
+vivid, unselfish--and Bertie was a better man for them. What he had done
+at the head of Eight Hundred was but a sample of whatever he did
+whenever duty called, or opportunity offered, in the service of the
+South; and no man was better known or better trusted in all Lee's
+divisions than Bertie Winton, who sat now at the head of his regiment,
+waiting Longstreet's orders. An aide galloped up before long.
+
+"The General desires you to charge and break the enemy's square to the
+left, Colonel."
+
+Bertie bowed with the old Pall Mall grace, turned, and gave the word to
+advance. Like greyhounds loosed from leash, the squadrons thundered down
+the slope, and swept across the plain in magnificent order, charging
+full gallop, riding straight down on the bristling steel and levelled
+rifles of the enemy's kneeling square. They advanced in superb
+condition, in matchless order, coming on with the force of a whirlwind
+across the plain; midway they were met by a tremendous volley poured
+direct upon them; half their saddles were emptied; the riderless
+chargers tore, snorting, bleeding, terrified, out of the ranks; the line
+was broken; the Virginians wavered, halted, all but recoiled; it was one
+of those critical moments when hesitation is destruction. Bertie saw the
+danger, and, with a shout to the men to come on, he spurred his horse
+through the raking volley of shot, while a shot struck his sombrero,
+leaving his head bare, and urging the animal straight at the Federal
+front, lifted him in the air as he would have done before a fence, and
+landed him in the midst of the square, down on the points of the
+levelled bayonets. With their fierce war-cheer ringing out above the
+sullen uproar of the firing, his troopers followed him to a man, charged
+the enemy's line, broke through the packed mass opposed to them, cut
+their way through into the centre, and hewed their enemies down as
+mowers hew the grass. Longstreet's work was done for him; the Federal
+square was broken, never again to rally.
+
+But the victory was bought with a price; as his horse fell, pierced and
+transfixed by the crossed steel of the bayonets, a dozen rifles covered
+the Confederate leader; their shots rang out, and Bertie Winton reeled
+from his saddle and sank down beneath the press as his own Southerners
+charged above him in the rush of the onward attack. On an eminence to
+the right, through his race-glass, his father watched the engagement,
+his eyes seldom withdrawn from the Virginian cavalry, where, for aught
+he knew, one of his own blood and name might be--memories of Salamanca
+and Quatre Bras, of Moodkee and Ferozeshah, stirring in him, while the
+fire of his dead youth thrilled through his veins with the tramp of the
+opposing divisions, and he roused like a war-horse at the scent of the
+battle as the white shroud of the smoke rolled up to his feet, and the
+thunder of the musketry echoed through the valley. Through his glass, he
+saw the order given to the troopers held in reserve; he saw the
+magnificent advance of that charge in the morning light; he saw the
+volley poured in upon them; and he saw them under that shock reel,
+stagger, waver, and recoil. The old soldier knew well the critical
+danger of that ominous moment of panic and of confusion; then, as the
+Confederate Colonel rode out alone and put his horse at that leap on to
+the line of steel, into the bristling square, a cry loud as the
+Virginian battle-shout broke from him. For when the charger rose in the
+air, and the sun shone full on the uncovered head of the Southern
+leader, he knew the fair English features that no skies could bronze,
+and the fair English hair that blew in the hot wind. He looked once more
+upon the man he had denied and had disowned; and, as Bertie Winton
+reeled and fell, his father, all unarmed and non-combatant as he was,
+drove the spurs into his horse's flanks, and dashing down the steep
+hill-side, rode over the heaps of slain, and through the pools of gore,
+into the thick of the strife.
+
+With his charger dead under him, beaten down upon one knee, his
+sword-arm shivered by a bullet, while the blood poured from his side
+where another shot had lodged, Bertie knew that his last hour had come,
+as the impetus of the charge broke above him--as a great wave may sweep
+over the head of a drowning man--and left him in the centre of the foe.
+Kneeling there, while the air was red before his sight that was fast
+growing blind from the loss of blood, and the earth seemed to reel and
+rock under him, he still fought to desperation, his sabre in his left
+hand; he knew he could not hold out more than a second longer, but while
+he had strength he kept at bay.
+
+His life was not worth a moment's purchase,--when, with a shout that
+rang over the field, the old Lion rode down through the carnage to his
+rescue, his white hair floating in the wind, his azure eyes flashing
+with war-fire, his holster-pistol levelled; spurred his horse through
+the struggle, trampled aside all that opposed him, dashed untouched
+through the cross-fire of the bullets, shot through the brain the man
+whose rifle covered his son who had reeled down insensible, and
+stooping, raised the senseless body, lifted him up by sheer manual
+strength to the level of his saddle-bow, laid him across his holsters,
+holding him up with his right hand, and, while the Federals fell asunder
+in sheer amazement at the sudden onslaught, and admiration of the old
+man's daring, plunged the rowels into his horse, and, breaking through
+the reeking slaughter of the battle-field, rode back, thus laden with
+his prisoner, through the incessant fire of the cannonade up the heights
+to the Federal lines.
+
+"If you were to lie dying at my feet!"--his father remembered those
+words, that had been spoken five years before in the fury of a deadly
+passion, as Bertie lay stretched before him in his tent, the blood
+flowing from the deep shot-wound in his side, his eyes closed, his face
+livid, and about his lips a faint and ghastly foam.
+
+Had he saved him too late? had he too late repented?
+
+His heart had yearned to him when, in the morning light, he had looked
+once more upon the face of his son, as the Virginian Horse had swept on
+to the shock of the charge; and all of wrath, of bitterness, of hatred,
+of dark, implacable, unforgiving vengeance, were quenched and gone for
+ever from his soul as he stooped over him where he lay at his feet,
+stricken and senseless in all the glory of his manhood. He only knew
+that he loved the man--he only knew that he would have died for him, or
+died with him.
+
+Bertie stirred faintly, with a heavy sigh, and his left hand moved
+towards his breast. Old Sir Lion bent over him, while his voice shook
+terribly, like a woman's.
+
+"Bertie! My God! don't you know _me_?"
+
+He opened his eyes and looked wearily and dreamily around; he did not
+know what had passed, nor where he was; but a faint light of wonder, of
+pleasure, of recognition, came into his eyes, and he smiled--a smile
+that was very gentle and very wistful.
+
+"I am glad of that--before I die! Let us part friends--_now_. They will
+tell you I have--redeemed--the name."
+
+The words died slowly and with difficulty on his lips, and as his
+father's hand closed upon his in a strong grasp of tenderness and
+reconciliation, his lids closed, his head fell back, and a deep-drawn,
+labored sigh quivered through all his frame; and Lion Winton, bowing
+down his grand white crest, wept with the passion of a woman. For he
+knew not whether the son he loved was living or dead--he knew not
+whether he was not at the last too late.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Three months further on, Lady Ida Deloraine sat in her warm bright nest
+among the exotics, gazing out upon the sunny lawns and the green
+woodlands of Northamptonshire. Highest names and proudest titles had
+been pressed on her through the five years that had gone, but her
+loveliness had been unwon, and was but something more thoughtful, more
+brilliant, more exquisite still than of old. The beautiful warmth that
+had never come there through all these years was in her cheeks now, and
+the nameless lustre was in her eyes, which all those who had wooed her
+had never wakened in their antelope brilliancy, as she sat looking
+outward at the sunlight; for in her hands lay a camellia, withered,
+colorless, and yellow, and eyes gazed down upon the marvellous beauty of
+her face which had remembered it in the hush of Virginian forests, in
+the rush of headlong charges, in the glare of bivouac fires, in the
+silence of night-pickets, and in the din of falling cities.
+
+And Bertie's voice, as he bent over her, was on her ear.
+
+"That flower has been on my heart night and day; and since we parted I
+have never done that which would have been insult to your memory. I have
+tried to lead a better and a purer life; I have striven to redeem my
+name and my honor; I have done all I could to wash out the vice and the
+vileness of my past. Through all the years we have been severed I have
+had no thought, no hope, except to die more worthy of you; but now--oh,
+my God!--if you knew how I love you, if you knew how my love alone saved
+me----"
+
+His words broke down in the great passion that had been his redemption;
+and as she lifted her eyes upward to his own, soft with tears that had
+gathered but did not fall, and lustrous with the light that had never
+come there save for him, he bowed his head over her, and, as his lips
+met hers, he knew that the redeemed life he laid at her feet was dearer
+to her than lives, more stainless, but less nobly won.
+
+
+
+
+OUR WAGER.
+
+
+
+
+OUR WAGER;
+
+OR,
+
+HOW THE MAJOR LOST AND WON.
+
+
+
+
+I
+
+INTRODUCES MAJOR TELFER OF THE 50TH DASHAWAY HUSSARS.
+
+
+The softest of lounging-chairs, an unexceptionable hubble-bubble bought
+at Benares, the last _Bell's Life_, the morning papers, chocolate milled
+to a T, and a breakfast worthy of Francatelli,--what sensible man can
+ask more to make him comfortable? All these was my chum, Hamilton
+Telfer, Major (50th Dashaway Hussars), enjoying, and yet he was in a
+frame of mind anything but mild and genial.
+
+"The deuce take the whole sex!" said he, stroking his moustache
+savagely. "They're at the bottom of all the mischief going. The idea of
+my father at seventy-five, with hair as white as that poodle's, making
+such a fool of himself, when here am I, at six-and-thirty, unmarried;
+it's abominable, it's disgusting. A girl of twenty, taking in an old man
+of his age, for the sake of his money----"
+
+"But are you sure, Telfer," said I, "that the affair's really on the
+tapis?"
+
+"Sure! Yes," said the Major, with immeasurable disgust. "I never saw her
+till last night, but the governor wrote no end of rhapsodies about her,
+and as I came upon them he was taking leave of her, holding her hand in
+his, and saying, 'I may write to you, may I not?' and the young
+hypocrite lifted her eyes so bewitchingly, 'Oh yes, I shall long so much
+to hear from you!' She colored when she saw me--well she might! If she
+thinks she'll make a fool of my father, and reign paramount at Torwood,
+give me a mother-in-law sixteen years younger than myself, and fill the
+house and cumber the estates with a lot of wretched little brats, she'll
+find herself mistaken, for I'll prevent it, if I live."
+
+"Don't be too sure of that," said I. "From what I know of Violet
+Tressillian, she's not the sort of girl to lure her quarry in vain."
+
+"Of course she'll try hard," answered Telfer. "She comes of a race that
+always were poor and proud; she's an orphan, and hasn't a sou, and to
+catch a man like my father worth 15,000_l._ a year, with the surety of a
+good dower and jointure house whenever he die, is one of the best things
+that could chance to her; but I'll be shot if she ever shall manage it."
+
+"_Nous verrons._ I bet you my roan filly Calceolaria against your colt
+Jockeyclub that before Christmas is out Violet Tressillian will be
+Violet Telfer."
+
+"Done!" cried the Major, stirring his chocolate fiercely. "You'll lose,
+Vane; Calceolaria will come to my stables as sure as this mouthpiece is
+made of amber. Whenever this scheming little actress changes her name,
+it sha'n't be to the same cognomen as mine. I say, it's getting deuced
+warm--one must begin to go somewhere. What do you say to going abroad
+till the 12th? I've got three months' leave--that will give me one away,
+and two on the moor. Will you go?"
+
+"Yes, if you like; town's emptying gradually, and it is confoundedly
+hot. Where shall it be?--Naples--Paris----"
+
+"Paris in July! Heaven forbid! Why, it would be worse than London in
+November. By Jove! I'll tell you where: let's go to Essellau."
+
+"And where may that be? Somewhere in the Arctic regions, I hope, for
+I've spent half my worldly possessions already in sherry and seltzer and
+iced punch, and if I go where it's warmer still, I shall be utterly
+beggared."
+
+"Essellau is in Swabia, as you ought to know by this, you Goth. It's
+Marc von Edenburgh's place, and a very jolly place, too, I can tell you;
+the sport's first-rate there, and the pig-sticking really splendid. He's
+just written to ask me to go, and take any fellows I like, as he's got
+some English people--some friends of his mother's. (A drawback that--I
+wonder who they are.) Will you come, Vane? I can promise you some fun,
+if only at the trente-et-quarante tables in Pipesandbeersbad."
+
+"Oh yes, I'll come," said I. "I hope the English won't be some horrid
+snobs he's picked up at some of the balls, who'll be scraping
+acquaintance with us when we come back."
+
+"No fear," said Telfer; "Marc's as English as you or I, and knows the
+good breed when he sees them. He'd keep as clear of the Smith, Brown,
+and Robinson style as we should. It's settled, then, you'll come. All
+right! I wish I could settle that confounded Violet, too, first. I hope
+nothing will happen while I'm in Essellau. I don't think it can. The
+Tressillian leaves town to-day with the Carterets, and the governor must
+stick here till parliament closes, and it's sure to be late this year."
+
+With which consolatory reflection the Major rose, stretched himself,
+yawned, sighed, stroked his moustache, fitted on his lavender gloves,
+and rang to order his tilbury round.
+
+Telfer was an only son, and when he heard it reported that his father
+intended to give him a _belle-mere_ in a young lady as attractive as she
+was poor, who, if she caught him, would probably make a fool of the old
+gentleman in the widest sense of the word, he naturally swore very
+heartily, and anything but relished the idea. Hamilton Telfer, senior,
+had certainly been a good deal with Violet that season, and Violet, a
+girl poor as a rat and beautiful as Semele, talked to him, and sang to
+him, and rode with him more than she did with any of us; so people
+talked and talked, and said the old member would get caught, and the
+Major, when he heard it, waxed fiercely wroth at the folly his parent
+had fallen into while he'd been off the scene down at Dover with his
+troop, but, like a wise man, said nothing, knowing, both by experience
+and observation, that opposition in such affairs is like a patent Vesta
+among hayricks. Telfer was a particular chum of mine: we'd lounged about
+town, and shot on the moors, and campaigned in India together, and I
+don't believe there was a better soldier, a cooler head, a quicker eye,
+or a steadier hand in the service than he was. He was six-and-thirty
+now, and had seen life pretty well, I can tell you, for there was not a
+get-at-able corner of the globe that he hadn't looked at through his
+eye-glass. Tall and muscular, with a stern, handsome face, with the
+prospect of Torwood (where there's some of the best shooting in England,
+I give you my word), and 15,000_l._ a year, Telfer was a great card in
+the matrimonial line, but hadn't let himself be played as yet, for the
+petty trickery the women used in trying to get him dealt to them
+disgusted him, and small wonder. Men liked him cordially, women thought
+him cold and sarcastic; and he was much more genial, I admit, at mess,
+or at lansquenet, or in the smoking-room of the U. S., than he was in
+boudoirs and ball-rooms, as the mere knowledge that mammas and their
+darlings were trying to hook him made him get on his stilts at once.
+
+"I don't feel easy in my mind about the governor," said he, as we drove
+along to the South-Eastern Station a few days after on our way to
+Essellau. "As I was bidding him good-bye this morning, Soames brought
+him a letter in a woman's hand. Heaven knows he may have a score of fair
+correspondents for anything I care, but if I thought it was the
+Tressillian, devil take her----"
+
+"And the devil won't have had a prettier prize since Proserpine was
+stolen," said I.
+
+"No, confound it, I saw she was handsome enough," swore the Major,
+disgusted; "and a pretty face always did make a fool of my father,
+according to his own telling. Well, thank God, I don't take that
+weakness after him. I never went mad about any woman. You've just as
+much control over love, if you like, as over a quiet shooting pony; and
+if it don't suit you to gallop, you can rein up and give over the sport.
+Any man who's anything of a philosopher needn't fall in love unless he
+likes."
+
+"Were you never in love, then, old boy?" I asked.
+
+"Of course I have been. I've made love to no end of women in my time;
+but when one love was died out I took another, as I take a cigar, and
+never wept over the quenched ashes. You need never fall in love unless
+it's convenient, and as to caring for a girl who don't care for you,
+that's a contemptible weakness, and one I don't sympathize with at all.
+Come along, or the train will be off."
+
+He went up to the carriages, opened a door, shut it hastily, and turned
+away, with the frigid bow with which Telfer, in common with every other
+Briton, can say, "Go to the devil," as plainly as if he spoke.
+
+"By Jove!" said I, "what's that eccentric move? Did you see the Medusa
+in that carriage, or a baby?"
+
+"Something quite as bad," said he, curtly. "I saw the Tressillian and
+her aunt. For Heaven's sake, let's get away from them. I'd rather have a
+special train, if it cost me a fortune, than travel with that girl,
+boxed up for four hours in the same compartment with such a little
+intrigante."
+
+"Calm your mind, old fellow; if she's aiming at your governor she won't
+hit you. She can't be your wife and your mother-in-law both," laughed
+Fred Walsham, a good-natured little chap in the Carabiniers, a friend of
+Von Edenburgh, who was coming with us.
+
+"I'll see her shot before she's either," said Telfer, fiercely stroking
+his moustache.
+
+"Hush! the deuce! hold your tongue," said Walsham, giving him a push.
+For past us, so close that the curling plumes in her hat touched the
+Major's shoulder, floated the "little intrigante" in question, who'd
+come out of her carriage to see where a pug of hers was put. She'd heard
+all we said, confound it, for her head was up, her color bright, and she
+looked at Telfer proudly and disdainfully, with her dark eyes flashing.
+Telfer returned it to the full as haughtily, for he never shirked the
+consequences of his own actions ('pon my life, they looked like a great
+stag and a little greyhound challenging each other), and Violet swept
+away across the platform.
+
+"You've made an enemy for life, Telfer," said Walsham, as we whisked
+along.
+
+"So much the better, if I'm a rock ahead to warn her off a marriage with
+the governor," rejoined the Major, smoking, as he always did, under the
+officials' very noses. "I hope I sha'n't come across her again. If the
+Tressillian and I meet, we shall be about as amicable as a rat and a
+beagle. Take a weed, Fred. I do it on principle to resist unjust
+regulations. Why shouldn't we take a pipe if we like? A man whose
+olfactory nerves are so badly organized as to dislike Cavendish is too
+great a muff to be considered."
+
+As ill luck would have it, when we crossed to Dover, who should cross,
+too, but the Tressillian and her party--aunt, cousins, maid, courier,
+and pug. Telfer wouldn't see them, but got on the poop, as far away as
+ever he could from the spot where Violet sat nursing her dog and
+reading a novel, provokingly calm and comfortable to the envious eyes of
+all the _malades_ around her.
+
+"Good Heavens!" said he, "was anything ever so provoking? Just because
+that girl's my particular aversion, she must haunt me like this. If
+she'd been anybody I wanted to meet, I should never have caught a
+glimpse of her. For mercy's sake, Vane, if you see a black hat and white
+feather anywhere again, tell me, and we'll change the route
+immediately."
+
+Change the route we did, for, going on board the steamer at Duesseldorf,
+there, on the deck, stood the Tressillian. Telfer turned sharp on his
+heel, and went back as he came. "I'll be shot if I go down the Rhine
+with her. Let's cut across into France." Cut across we did, but we
+stopped at Brussels on our way; and when at last we caught sight of the
+tops of the fir-trees around Essellau, Telfer took a long whiff at his
+pipe with an air of contentment. "I should say we're safe now. She'll
+hardly come pig-sticking into the middle of Swabia."
+
+
+
+
+II.
+
+VIOLET TRESSILLIAN.
+
+
+Essellau was a very jolly place, with thick woods round it, and the
+river Beersbad running in sight; and his pretty sister, the Comtesse
+Virginie, his good wines, and good sport, made Von Edenburgh's a
+pleasant house to visit at. Marc himself, who is in the Austrian service
+(he was winged at Montebello the other day by a rascally Zouave, but he
+paid him off for it, as I hope his countrymen will eventually pay off
+all the Bonapartists for their _galimatias_)--Marc himself was a jolly
+fellow, a good host, a keen shot, and a capital ecarte player, and made
+us enjoy ourselves at Essellau as he had done before, hunting and
+shooting with Telfer down at Torwood.
+
+"I've some countrywomen of yours here, Telfer," said Marc, after we'd
+talked over his English loves, given him tiding of duchesses and
+danseuses, and messages from no end of pretty women that he'd flirted
+with the Christmas before. "They're some friends of my mother's, and
+when they were at Baden-Baden last year, Virginie struck up a desperate
+young lady attachment with one of them----"
+
+"Are they good-looking?--because, if they are, they may be drysalters'
+daughters, and I shan't care," interrupted Fred.
+
+Telfer stroked his moustache with a contemptuous smile--_he_ wouldn't
+have looked at a drysalter's daughter if she'd had all the beauty of
+Amphitrite.
+
+"Come and see," said Marc. "Virginie will think you're neglecting her
+atrociously."
+
+Horribly bored to be going to meet some Englishwomen who might turn out
+to be Smiths or Joneses, and would, to a dead certainty, spoil all his
+pleasure in pig-sticking, shooting, and ecarte, by flirting with him
+whether he would or no, the Major strode along corridors and galleries
+after Von Edenburgh. When at length we reached the salon where Virginie
+and her mother and friends were, Telfer lifted his eyes from the ground
+as the door opened, started as if he'd been shot, and stepped back a
+pace or two, with an audible, "If that isn't the very devil!"
+
+There, in a low chair, sat the Tressillian, graceful as a Sphakiote
+girl, with a toilet as perfect as her profile, dark hair like waves of
+silk, and dark eyes full of liquid light, that, when they looked
+irresistible, could do anything with any man that they liked. Violet
+certainly looked as unlike that unlucky ogre and scapegoat, the devil,
+as a young lady ever could. But worse than a score of demons was she in
+poor Telfer's eyes: to have come out to Essellau only to be shut up in a
+country-house for a whole month with his pet aversion!--certainly it
+_was_ a hard case, and the fierce lightning glance he flashed on her was
+pardonable under the circumstances. But nobody's more impassive than the
+Major: I've seen him charge down into the Sikhs with just the same calm,
+quiet expression as he'd wear smoking and reading a novel at home; so he
+soon rallied, bowed to the Tressillian, who gave him an inclination as
+cold as the North Pole, shook hands with her aunt and cousins (three
+women I hate: the mamma's the most dexterous of manoeuvrers, and the
+girls the arrantest of flirts), and then sat down to a little quiet chat
+with Virginie von Edenburgh, who's pretty, intelligent, and unaffected,
+though she's a belle at the Viennese court. Telfer was pleasant with the
+little comtesse; he'd known her from childhood, and she was engaged to
+the colonel of Marc's troop, so that Telfer felt quite sure she'd no
+designs upon him, and talked to her _sans gene_, though to have wholly
+abstained from bitterness and satire would have been an impossibility to
+him, with the obnoxious Tressillian seated within sight. Once he fixed
+her with his calm gray eyes, she met them with a proud flashing glance;
+Telfer gave back the defiance, and _guerre a outrance_ was declared
+between them. It was plain to see that they hated one another by
+instinct, and I began to think Calceolaria wasn't so safe in my stables
+after all, for if the Major set his face against anything, his father,
+who pretty well worshipped him, would never venture to do it in
+opposition; he'd as soon think of leaving Torwood to the country, to be
+turned into an infirmary or a museum.
+
+That whole day Telfer was agreeable to the Von Edenburgh, distantly
+courteous to the Carterets, and utterly oblivious of the very existence
+of the Tressillian. When we were smoking together, after dinner, he
+began to unburden himself of his mighty wrath.
+
+"Where the deuce did you pick up that girl, Marc?" asked he, as we stood
+looking at the sun setting over the woods of Essellau, and crimsoning
+the western clouds.
+
+"What girl?" asked Marc.
+
+"That confounded Tressillian," answered the Major, gloomily.
+
+"I told you the Carterets were friends of my mother's, and last year,
+when the Tressillian came with them to Baden, Virginie met her, and they
+were struck with a great and sudden love for one another, after the
+insane custom of women. But why on earth, Telfer, do you call her such
+names? I think her divine; her eyes are something----"
+
+"I wish her eyes had been at the devil before she'd bewitched my poor
+father with them," said Telfer, pulling a rose to pieces fiercely. "I
+give you my word, Marc, that if I didn't like you so well, I'd go
+straight off home to-morrow. Here have I been turning out of my route
+twenty times, on purpose to avoid her, and then she must turn up at the
+very place I thought I was sure to be safe from her. It's enough to make
+a man swear, I should say, and not over-mildly either."
+
+"But what's she done?" cried Von Edenburgh, thinking, I dare say, that
+Telfer had gone clean mad. "Refused you--jilted you--what is it?"
+
+"Refused me! I should like to see myself giving her the chance," said
+the Major, with intense scorn. "No but she's done what I'd never
+forgive--tried to cozen the poor old governor into marrying her. She's
+no money, you know, and no home of her own; but, for all that, for a
+girl of twenty to try and hook an old man of seventy-five, to cheat him
+into the idea that he's made a conquest, and chisel him into the belief
+that she's in love with him--faugh! the very idea disgusts one. What
+sort of a wife would a woman make who could act such a lie?"
+
+As he spoke, a form swept past him, and a beautiful face full of scorn
+and passion gleamed on him through the _demi-lumiere_.
+
+"By Jove! you've done it now, Telfer," said Walsham. "She was behind us,
+I bet you, gathering those roses; her hands are full of them, and she
+took that means of showing us she was within earshot. You _have_ set
+your foot in it nicely, certainly."
+
+"_Ce m'est bien egal_," said Telfer, haughtily. "If she hear what I say
+of her, so much the better. It's the truth, that a young girl who'd sell
+herself for money, as soon as she's got what she wanted will desert the
+man who's given it to her; and I like my father too well to stand by and
+see him made a fool of. The Tressillian and I are open foes now--we'll
+see which wins."
+
+"And a very fair foe you have, too," thought I, as I looked at Violet
+that night as she stood in the window, a wreath of lilies on her
+splendid hair, and her impassioned eyes lighting into joyous laughter as
+she talked nonsense with Von Edenburgh.
+
+"Isn't she first-rate style, in spite of your prejudice?" I said to
+Telfer, who'd just finished a game at ecarte with De Tintiniac, one of
+the best players in Europe. If the Major has any weakness, ecarte is one
+of them. He just glanced across with a sarcastic smile.
+
+"Well got up, of course; so are all actresses--on the stage."
+
+Then he dropped his glass and went back to his cards, and seemed to
+notice the splendid Tressillian not one whit more than he did her pup.
+
+Whether his discourteous speeches had piqued Violet into showing off her
+best paces, or whether it's a natural weakness of her sex to shine in
+all times and places that they can, certain it was that I never saw the
+Tressillian more brilliant and bewitching than she was that night.
+Waltzing with Von Edenburgh, singing with me, talking fun with Fred, or
+merely lying back in her chair, playing lazily with her bouquet, she was
+eminently dangerous in whatever she did, and there wasn't a man in the
+castle who didn't gather round her, except her sworn foe the Major. Even
+De Tintiniac, that old campaigner at the green tables, who has long ago
+given over any mistress save hazard, glanced once or twice at the superb
+eyes beaming with the _droit de conquete_, but Telfer never looked up
+from his cards.
+
+Telfer and she parted with the chilliest of "good nights," and met again
+in the morning with the most frigid of "good mornings," and to that
+simple exchange of words was their colloquy limited for an entire
+fortnight. Unless I'd been witness of it, I wouldn't have credited that
+any two people could live for that space of time in the same
+country-house and keep so distant. Nobody noticed it, for there were no
+end of guests at Essellau, and the Tressillian had so many liege
+subjects ready to her slightest bidding, that the Major's _lese-majeste_
+wasn't of such consequence. But when day after day came, and he spent
+them all boar-hunting, shooting, fishing, or playing rouge-et-noir and
+roulette at the gaming-tables in Pipesandbeersbad, and when he was in
+the drawing-rooms at Essellau she saw him amusing and agreeable, and
+unbending to every one but herself, I don't know anything of woman's
+nature if I didn't see Violet's delicate cheek flush, and her eyes
+flash, whenever she caught the Major's cool, contemptuous, depreciating
+glance, much harder to her sex to bear than spoken ridicule or open war.
+Occasionally he cast a sarcasm, quick, sharp, and relentless as a Minie
+ball, at her, which she fired back with such rifle-powder as she had in
+her flask; but the return shot fell as harmlessly as it might have done
+on Achilles's breast.
+
+"A man is very silly to marry," he was saying one evening to Marc,
+"since, as Emerson says, from the beginning of the world such as are in
+the institution want to get out, and such as are out want to get in."
+
+Violet, sitting near at the piano, turned half round. "If all others are
+of my opinion, Major Telfer, you will never be tempted, for no one will
+be willing to enter it with you."
+
+The shot fell short. Telfer neither smiled nor looked annoyed, but
+answered, tranquilly,--
+
+"Possibly; but my time is to come. When I own Torwood, ladies will be as
+kind to me as they are now to my father; for it is wonderful what a
+charm to renew youth, reform rakes, buy love, and make the Beast the
+Beauty, is '_un peu de poudre d'or_,' in the eyes of the _beau sexe_."
+
+The Tressillian flushed scarlet, but soon recovered herself.
+
+"I have heard," she said, pulling her bouquet to pieces with impatience,
+"that when people look through smoked glass the very sun looks dusky,
+and so I suppose, through your own moral perceptions, you view those of
+others. You know what De la Fayette wrote to Madame de Sable: '_Quelle
+corruption il faut avoir dans l'esprit pour etre capable d'imaginer tout
+cela!_'"
+
+"It does not follow," answered Telfer, impassively. "De la Fayette was
+quite wrong. Suard was nearer the truth when he said that Rochefoucauld,
+'_a peint les hommes comme il les a vus. Il n'appartenait qu'a un homme
+d'une reputation bien pure et bien distinguee d'oser fletrir ainsi le
+principe de toutes les actions humaines._'"
+
+"And Major Telfer is so unassailable himself that he can mount his
+pedestal and censure all weaker mortals," said Violet, sarcastically.
+"Your judgments are, perhaps, not always as infallible as the gods'."
+
+"You are gone very wide of the original subject, Miss Tressillian,"
+answered Telfer, coldly. "I was merely speaking of that common social
+fraud and falsehood, a _mariage de convenance_, which, as I shall never
+sin in that manner myself, I am at liberty to censure with the scorn I
+feel for it."
+
+He looked hard at her as he spoke. The Tressillian's eyes answered the
+stare as haughtily.
+
+"Some may not be all _mariages de convenance_ that you choose to call
+such. It does not necessarily follow, because a girl marries a rich man,
+that she marries him for his money. There _may_ be love in the case, but
+the world never gives her the grace of the doubt."
+
+"What hardy hypocrisy," thought Telfer. "She'd actually try to persuade
+me to my face that she was in love with the poor old governor and his
+gout!"
+
+"Pardon me," he said, with his most cynical smile. "In attributing
+disinterested affection to ladies, I think '_quelque disposition qu'ait
+le monde a mal juger, il fait plus souvent grace au faux merite qu'il ne
+fait injustice au veritable_.'"
+
+The Tressillian's soft lips curved angrily; she turned away, and began
+to sing again, at Walsham's entreaty. Telfer got up and lounged over to
+Virginie, with whom he laughed, talked, waltzed, and played chess for
+the rest of the evening.
+
+
+
+
+III.
+
+FROM WHICH IT WOULD APPEAR, THAT IT IS SOMETIMES WELL TO BEGIN WITH A
+LITTLE AVERSION.
+
+
+After this split, Telfer and the Tressillian were rather further off
+each other than before; and whenever riding, and driving, at dinner, or
+in lionizing, they came by chance together, he avoided her silently as
+much as ever he could, without making a parade of it. Violet could see
+very well how cordially he hated her, and, woman-like, I dare say mine,
+and Edenburgh's, and Walsham's, and all her devoted friends' admiration
+was valueless, as long as her vowed enemy treated her with such careless
+contempt.
+
+One morning the two foes met by chance. Telfer and I, after a late night
+over at Pipesandbeersbad, with lansquenet, cheroots, and cognac, had
+betaken ourselves out to whip the Beersbad, whose fish, for all their
+boiling by the hot springs, are first-rate, I can assure you. Telfer
+tells you he likes fishing, but I never see that he does much more than
+lie full length under the shadiest tree he can find, with his cap over
+his eyes and his cigar in his mouth, doing the _dolce_ lazily enough. A
+three-pound trout had no power to rouse him; and he's lost a salmon
+before now in the Tweed because it bored him to play it! Shade of old
+Izaak! is _that_ liking fishing? But few things ever did excite him,
+except it was a charge, or a Kaffir scrimmage; and then he looked more
+like a concentrated tempest than anything else, and woe to the turban
+that his sabre came down upon.
+
+That part of the stream we'd tried first had been whipped before us, or
+the fish wouldn't bite; and I, who haven't as much patience as I might
+have, went up higher to try my luck. Telfer declined to come; he was
+comfortable, he said, and out of the sun; he preferred "Indiana" and his
+cheroot to catching all the fish in the Beersbad, so I bid him good-bye,
+and left him smoking and reading at his leisure under the linden-trees.
+I went further on than I had meant, up round a bend of the river, and
+was too absorbed in filling my basket to notice a storm coming up from
+the west, till I began to find myself getting wet to the skin, and the
+lightning flying up and down the hills round Essellau. I looked for the
+Major as I passed the lime-trees, but he wasn't there, and I made the
+best of my way back to the castle, supposing he'd got there before me;
+but I was mistaken.
+
+"I've seen nothing of him," said Marc. "He's stalking about the woods, I
+dare say, admiring the lightning. That's more than the poor Tressillian
+does, I bet. She went out by herself, I believe, just before the storm,
+to get a water-lily she wanted to paint, and hasn't appeared since. By
+Jove! if Telfer should have to play knight-errant to his 'pet aversion,'
+what fun it would be."
+
+Marc had his fun, for an hour afterwards, when the storm had blown over,
+up the terrace steps came Violet and the Major. They weren't talking to
+each other, but they were actually walking together; and the courtesy
+with which he put a dripping rose-branch out of her path with his stick,
+was something quite new.
+
+It seems that Telfer, disliking disagreeable sensations, and classing
+getting wet among such, had arisen when the thunder began to growl, and
+slowly wended his way homewards. But before he was halfway to Essellau
+the rain began to drip off his moustache, and seeing a little marble
+temple (the Parthenon turned into a summer-house!) close by, he thought
+he might as well go in and have another weed till it grew finer. Go in
+he did; and he'd just smoked half a cigar, and read the last chapter of
+"Indiana," when he looked up, and saw the Tressillian's pug, looking a
+bedraggled and miserable object, at his feet, and the Tressillian
+herself standing within a few yards of him. If Telfer had abstained from
+a few fierce mental oaths, he would have been of a much more pacific
+nature than he ever pretended to be; and I don't doubt that he looked
+hauteur concentrated as he rose at his enemy's entrance. Violet made a
+movement of retreat, but then thought better of it. It would have seemed
+too much like flying from the foe. So with a careless bow she sank on
+one of the seats, took off her hat, shook the rain-drops off her hair,
+and busied herself in sedulous attentions to the pug. The Major thought
+it incumbent on him to speak a few sentences about the thunder that was
+cracking over their heads; Violet answered him as briefly; and Telfer
+putting down his cigar with a sigh, sat watching the storm in silence,
+not troubling himself to talk any more.
+
+As she bent down to pat the pug she caught his eyes on her with a cold,
+critical glance. He was thinking how pure her profile was and how
+exquisite her eyes, and--of how cordially he should hate her if his
+father married her. Her color rose, but she met his look steadily, which
+is a difficult thing to do if you've anything to conceal, for the
+Major's eyes are very keen and clear. Her lips curved with a smile half
+amused, half disdainful. "What a pity, Major Telfer," she said, with a
+silvery laugh, "that you should be condemned to imprisonment with one
+who is unfortunately such a _bete noire_ to you as I am! I assure you, I
+feel for you; if I were not coward enough to be a little afraid of that
+lightning, I would really go away to relieve you from your sufferings. I
+should feel quite honored by the distinction of your hatred if I didn't
+know, you, on principle, dislike every woman living. Is your judgment
+always infallible?"
+
+Beyond a little surprise in his eyes, Telfer's features were as
+impassive as ever. "Far from it," he answered, quietly "I merely judge
+people by their actions."
+
+The Tressillian's luminous eyes flashed proudly. "An unsafe guide, Major
+Telfer; you cannot judge of actions until you know their motives. I know
+perfectly well why you dislike and avoid me: you listened to a foolish
+report, and you heard me giving your father permission to write to me.
+Those are your grounds, are they not?"
+
+Telfer, for once in his life, _was_ astonished, but he looked at her
+fixedly. "And were they not just ones?"
+
+"No," said Violet, vehemently,--"no, they were most rankly unjust; and
+it is hard, indeed, if a girl, who has no friends or advisers that she
+can trust, may not accept the kindness and ask the counsels of a man
+fifty-five years older than herself without his being given to her as a
+lover, and the world's whispering that she is trying to entrap him. You
+pique yourself on your clear-sightedness, Major Telfer, but for once
+your judgment failed you when you attributed such mean and mercenary
+motives to me, and supposed, because, as you so generously stated, I had
+'no money and no home,' I must necessarily have no heart or conscience,
+but be ready to give myself at any moment to the highest bidder, and
+take advantage of the kindness of your noble-minded, generous-hearted
+father to trick him into marriage." She stopped, fairly out of breath
+with excitement. Telfer was going to speak, but she silenced him with a
+haughty gesture. "No; now we are started on the subject, hear me to the
+end. You have done me gross injustice--an offence the Tressillians never
+forgive--but, for my own sake, I wish to show you how mistaken you were
+in your hasty condemnation. At the beginning of the season I was
+introduced to your father. He knew my mother well in her girlhood, and
+he said I reminded him of her. He was very kind to me, and I, who have
+no real friend on earth, of course was grateful to him, for I was
+thankful to have any one on whom I could rely. You know, probably as
+well as I do, that there is little love lost between the Carterets and
+myself, though, by my father's will, I must stay with them till I am of
+age. I have one brother, a boy of eighteen; he is with his regiment
+serving out in India, and the climate is killing him by inches, though
+he is too brave to try and get sick leave. Your father has been doing
+all he can to have him exchanged; the letters I have had from him have
+been to tell me of his success, and to say that Arthur is gazetted to
+the Buffs, and coming home overland. There is the head and front of my
+offending, Major Telfer; a very simple explanation, is it not? Perhaps
+another time you will be more cautious in your censure."
+
+A faint flush came over the Major's bronzed cheek; he looked out of the
+portico, and was silent for a minute. The knowledge that he has wronged
+another is a keen pang to a proud man of an honor almost fastidious in
+his punctilio of right. He swung quickly round, and held out his hand to
+her.
+
+"I beg your pardon; I have misjudged you, and I am thoroughly ashamed of
+myself for it," he said, in a low voice.
+
+When the Major does come down from his hauteur, and let some of his
+winning cordial nature come out, no woman living, unless she were some
+animated Medusa, could find it in her heart to say him nay. His frank
+self-condemnation touched Violet, despite herself, and, without
+thinking, she laid her small fingers in his proffered hand. Then the
+Tressillian pride flashed up again; she drew it hastily away, and walked
+out into the air.
+
+"Pray do not distress yourself," she said, with an effort (not
+successful) to seem perfectly calm and nonchalant. "It is not of the
+slightest consequence; we understand each other's sentiments now, and
+shall in future be courteous in our hate like two of the French
+_noblesse_, complimenting one another before they draw their swords to
+slay or to be slain. It has cleared now, so I will leave you to the
+solitude I disturbed. Come, Floss." And calling the pug after her,
+Violet very gracefully swept down the steps, but with a stride the Major
+was at her side.
+
+"Nay, Miss Tressillian," he said, gently, "it is true I've given you
+cause to think me as rude as Orson or Caliban, but I am not quite such a
+bear as to let you walk home through these woods alone."
+
+Violet made an impatient movement. "Pray don't trouble yourself. We are
+close to the castle, and--pardon me, but truth-telling seems the order
+for the day--I much prefer you in your open enmity to your simulated
+courtesy. We have been rude to each other for three weeks; in another
+one you will be gone, so it is scarcely worth while to begin politeness
+now."
+
+"As you please," said Telfer, coldly.
+
+He'd made great advances and concessions for him, and was far too
+English when repulsed to go on making any more. But he was
+astonished--extremely so--for he'd been courted and sought since he was
+in jackets, and couldn't make out a young girl like the Tressillian
+treating him so lightly. He walked along beside her in profound silence,
+but though neither of them spoke a word, he didn't leave her side till
+she was safe on the terrace at Essellau. The Major was very grave that
+night at dinner, and occasionally he looked at Violet with a strange,
+inquiring glance, as the young lady, in the most brilliant of spirits,
+fired away French repartees with Von Edenburgh and De Tintiniac, her
+face absolutely _rayonnant_ in the gleam of the wax lights. I thought
+the spirits were a little too high to be real. Late at night, as he and
+I and Marc were smoking on the terrace, before turning in, Telfer
+constrained himself to tell us of the scene in the summer-house. He'd
+abused her to us. Common honor, he said, obliged him to tell us the
+truth about her.
+
+"I am sorry," said he, slowly, between the whiffs of his meerschaum. "If
+there is one thing I hate, it is injustice. I was never guilty of
+misjudging anybody before in my life, that I know of; and, I give you my
+word, I experienced a new sensation--I absolutely felt humbled before
+that girl's great, flashing, truthful eyes, to think that I'd been
+listening to report and judging from prejudice like any silly, gossiping
+woman."
+
+"It seems to have made a great impression on you, Telfer," laughed Marc.
+"Has your detestation of Violet changed to something as warm, but more
+gentle? Shall we have to say the love wherewith he loves her is greater
+than the hate wherewith he hated her?"
+
+"Not exactly," answered the Major, calmly, with a supercilious twist of
+his moustaches. "But I like pluck wherever I see it, and she's a true
+Tressillian."
+
+
+
+
+IV.
+
+IN WHICH THE MAJOR PROVOKES A QUARREL IN BEHALF OF THE FAIR TRESSILLIAN.
+
+
+"Well, Telfer," said I, two mornings after, "if you want to be at the
+moor by the 12th, we must start soon; this is the 6th. It will be sharp
+work to get there as it is."
+
+"What, do you think of not going at all?" said Telfer, laying down the
+_Revue des deux Mondes_ with a yawn. "We are very well here. Marc
+bothers me tremendously to stay on another month, and the shooting's as
+good as we shall get at Glenattock. What do you say, Vane?"
+
+"Just as you like," I answered. "The pigs are as good as the grouse, for
+anything I know. They put me in mind of getting my first spear at
+Burampootra. I only thought you wanted to be off out of sight of the
+Tressillian."
+
+He laughed slightly. "Oh! the young lady's no particular eyesore to me
+now I don't regard her in the light of a _belle-mere_. Well, shall we
+stop here, then?"
+
+"_Comme vous voulez._ I don't care."
+
+"No philosopher ever moves when he's comfortable," said the Major,
+laughing. "I'll write and tell Montague he can shoot over Glenattock if
+he likes. I dare say he can find some men who'll keep him company and
+fill the box. I say, old fellow, I've won Calceolaria, but I sha'n't
+have her, because I consider the bet drawn. Our wager was laid on the
+supposition that the Tressillian wished to marry the governor, but as
+she never has had the desire, I've neither lost nor won."
+
+"Well, we'll wait and see," said I. "Christmas isn't come yet. Here
+comes Violet. She looks well, don't she? Confess now, prejudice apart,
+that you admire her, _nolens volens_."
+
+Telfer looked at her steadily as she came into the billiard-room in her
+hat and habit, as she'd been riding with Lucy Carteret, Marc, and De
+Tintiniac. "Yes," he said, slowly, under his breath, "she is very good
+style, I admit."
+
+Lucy Carteret challenged Telfer to a game; she has a tall, _svelte_
+figure, and knows she looks well at billiards. He played lazily, and let
+her win easily enough, paying as little attention to the _agaceries_ and
+glances she lavished upon him as if he'd been an automaton. When they'd
+played it out, he went up to the Tressillian, who was talking to Marc in
+the window, and, to my supreme astonishment, asked her to have a game.
+
+"Thank you, no," answered Violet, coldly; "it is too warm for
+billiards."
+
+This was certainly the first time the Major had ever been refused in any
+of his overtures to her sex, and I believe it surprised him exceedingly.
+He bent his head, and soon after he went for a walk in the rosery with
+Lucy Carteret, whom he hates. We always hate those manoeuvring,
+_maniere_ girls, who are everlastingly flinging bait after us, whether
+or no we want to nibble; and just in proportion as they fixatrice, and
+crinoline, and cosmetique to hook us, will leave us to die in the sun
+when they've once trapped us into the basket.
+
+That night, when Telfer sat down to ecarte, Violet was singing in
+another room, out of which her voice came distinctly to us. I noticed he
+didn't play quite as well as usual. I don't suppose he could be
+listening, though, for he doesn't care for music, and still less for
+the Tressillian.
+
+"Mademoiselle," said De Tintiniac, going up to her afterwards, "you can
+boast of greater conquests than Orpheus. He only charmed rocks, but you
+have distracted the two most inveterate _joueurs_ in Europe."
+
+Telfer looked annoyed. Violet laughed. "Pardon me if I doubt your
+compliment. If you were so kind as to listen to me, I have not enough
+vanity to think that your opponent would yield to what _he_ would think
+such immeasurable weakness."
+
+"You are not magnanimous, Miss Tressillian," said Telfer, in a low tone,
+leaning down over the piano. "You are ceaselessly reminding me of a
+hasty prejudice, unjustly formed, of which I have told you I am heartily
+ashamed."
+
+"A hasty prejudice!" repeated Violet. "I beg your pardon, Major Telfer;
+I think ours is a very strong and lasting enmity, as mutual as it is
+well founded. Don't contradict me; you know you could have shot me with
+as little remorse as a partridge."
+
+"But can you never forget," continued Telfer, impatiently, "that my
+enmity, as you please to term it, was grafted on erroneous opinions and
+false reports, and will you never credit that when I see myself in the
+wrong, I am too just to others to continue in it?"
+
+The Tressillian laughed--a mischievous, _provoquant_ laugh. "No, I
+believe neither in sudden conversions nor sudden friendships. Pray do
+not trouble yourself to be 'just' to me; you see I did not droop and die
+under the shadow of your wrath."
+
+"Oh no," said Telfer, with a sardonic twist of his moustaches, "one
+would not accuse you of too much softness, Miss Tressillian."
+
+She colored, and the pride of her family flashed out of her eyes. The
+Tressillians are all deucedly proud, and would die sooner than yield an
+inch. "If by softness you mean weakness, you are right," she said,
+haughtily. "As I have told you, we never forgive injustice."
+
+Telfer frowned. If there was one thing he hated more than another, it
+was a woman who had anything hard about her. He smiled his chilliest
+smile. "Those are harsh words from a lady's lips--not so becoming to
+them as something gentler. You remind me, Miss Tressillian, of a young
+panther I once had, beautiful to look at, but eminently dangerous to
+approach, much less to caress. Everybody admired my panther, but no one
+dared to choose it for a pet."
+
+With this uncourteous allegory the Major turned away, leaving Violet to
+make it out as best she might. It was good fun to watch the
+Tressillian's face: I only, standing near, had caught what he said, for
+he had spoken very low. First she looked haughty and annoyed, then a
+little troubled and perplexed: she sat quiet a minute, playing
+thoughtfully with her bracelets; then shook her head with a movement of
+defiance, and began to sing a Venetian barcarole with more _elan_ and
+spirit than ever.
+
+"By Jove! Telfer," said I, as we sat in the smoking-room that night,
+"your would-have-been mother-in-law has plenty of pluck. She'd have kept
+you in good training, and made a better boy of you; it's quite a loss to
+your morals that your father didn't marry her."
+
+Telfer didn't look best pleased. He stretched himself full length on one
+of the divans, and answered not.
+
+"I shouldn't be surprised if, with all her beauty, she hangs on hand,"
+said Walsham, "for she hasn't a rap, you know; her governor gamed it all
+away, and she's certainly a bit of a flirt."
+
+"I don't think so," said Telfer, shortly.
+
+"Oh, by George! don't you? but I do," cried Fred. "Why, she takes a turn
+at us all, from old De Tintiniac, with his padded figure and coulisses
+compliments, to Marc, young and beautiful, as the novels say,--but we'll
+spare his blushes--from Vane, there, with his long rent-roll, to poor
+me, who she knows goes on tick for my weeds and gloves. She flirts with
+us all, one after the other, except you, whom she don't dare to touch.
+Tell me where you get your _noli me tangere_ armor, Telfer, and I'll
+adopt it to-morrow, for the girls make such desperate love to me I know
+some of them will propose before long."
+
+Telfer smoked vigorously during Fred's peroration, and his brow
+darkened. "I do not consider Miss Tressillian a flirt," he said, slowly.
+"She's too careless in showing you her weak points to be trying to trap
+you. What _I_ call a coquette is a woman who is all things to all men,
+whose every languishing glance is a bait, and whose every thought is a
+conquest."
+
+"And pray how can you tell but what the Tressillian's naturalness and
+carelessness may be only a superior bit of acting? The highest art, you
+know, is to imitate nature so close that you can't tell which is which,"
+laughed Walsham.
+
+Telfer didn't seem to relish the suggestion, but went on smoking
+fiercely.
+
+"Not that I want to speak against the girl," Fred went on; "she's very
+amusing, and well enough, I dare say, if she weren't so devilish proud."
+
+"You seem rather inconsistent," said Telfer, impatiently. "First, you
+accuse her of being too free, and then blame her for being too
+reserved."
+
+Walsham laughed.
+
+"If I'm inconsistent, you're a perfect weathercock. A month ago you were
+calling Violet every name you could think of, and now you snap us all
+off short if we say a word against her."
+
+Telfer looked haughty enough to extinguish Fred upon the spot; Fred
+being a small, lively little chap, with not the slightest dignity about
+him.
+
+"I know little or nothing of Miss Tressillian, but as I was the first
+to prejudice you all against her, it is only common honor to take her
+part when I think her unjustly attacked."
+
+Fred gave me a wink of intense significance, but remonstrated no
+further, for Telfer had something of the dark look upon him that our men
+knew so well when he led them down to the slaughter at Alma and
+Balaklava.
+
+"I tell you," continued the Major, after a little silence, "that I am
+disgusted with myself for having listened to whispers and reports, and
+believed in them just because they suited the bias of my prejudice. It
+didn't matter to me whom my father married, as far as money went, for
+beyond 10,000_l._ or so, it must all come in the entail; but I couldn't
+endure the idea of his being chiselled by some Becky Sharp or Blanche
+Armory, and I made up my mind that the Tressillian was of that genre.
+I've changed my opinion now. I don't think she either is an actress or
+an intrigante; and I should be a coward indeed if I hesitated to say so,
+out of common justice to a young girl who has no one to defend her."
+
+"Bravo, my boy!" said Walsham; "I thought the Tressillian's bright eyes
+wouldn't let you hate her long. You're quite right, though 'pon my life
+it is really horrid how women contrive to damage each other. If there's
+an unlucky girl who has made the best match of the season--she might be
+an angel from heaven--her bosom-friends would manage gently to spread
+abroad the interesting facts that she's a 'dreadful flirt,' 'has a snub
+nose,' is an awful temper, had a ballet-girl for her mamma, or something
+detrimental. An attractive woman is the target for all her sex to shoot
+their sneers at, and if the poor thing isn't so riddled with arrows that
+she's no beauty left, it isn't her sisters' fault."
+
+"I believe you," said Telfer. "My gauge of a woman's fascinations is the
+amount of hatred all the others bear her. It often amuses me to hear the
+tone that ladies take in talking of some girl whom we admire. She's a
+charming creature--a darling--their particular friend but ... there's
+always a 'but' to neutralize the praise, and with their honeyed hatred
+they contrive to damn the luckless object irretrievably. If another
+man's a good shot, or whip, or billiard-player, we're not spiteful to
+him for it. We think him a good fellow, and like him the better; but the
+dear _beau sexe_ cannot bear a rival, and never rest while one of their
+acquaintance has diamonds a carat larger, dresses a trifle more costly,
+has finer horses, or more conquests. The only style of friend I ever
+heard women speak well of is some plain and timorous individual,
+good-natured to foolery, and weak as water, who never comes in their
+orbit, and whom we never look at; and then what a darling she is, and
+how eloquently they will laud her to the skies, despising her miserably
+all the while for not having been born pretty!"
+
+"True enough," Marc began. "Why do the Carterets treat the Tressillian
+so disagreeably?--only because, though without their fortune, she makes
+ten times their coups; and get themselves up how they may, they know
+none of us care to waltz with them if she's in the room. Let's drink her
+health in Marcobrunnen--she's magnificent eyes."
+
+"And first-rate style," said I.
+
+"And a deuced pretty foot," cried Fred.
+
+"_Et une taille superbe_," added de Tintiniac, just come in. "_En
+verite, elle est chouette cette Violette Anglaise._"
+
+So we chanted the Tressillian's praises. Telfer drank the toast in
+silence--_I_ thought with a frown on his brow at the freedom with which
+we discussed his fair foe.
+
+Little Countess Virginie's wedding was to come off in another month, and
+Marc begged us so hard to stay on till then, that, Telfer seeming very
+willing, I consented, though it would be the first September I had ever
+spent out of the English open since I was old enough to know partridges
+from pheasants. The Tressillian being Virginie's pet friend, after young
+ladies' custom of contracting eternal alliances (which ordinarily
+terminate in a quarrel about the shade of a ponceau ribbon, or a mauve
+flower, or a cornet's eyes, some three months after the signing and
+sealing thereof), was of course to be one of the _filles d'honneur_. So,
+as I said to Telfer, he'd have time for a few more battles before the
+two enemies parted to meet again--nobody could tell when.
+
+I began to think that the Major had really been wounded, and that his
+opponent's bright eyes wouldn't let him come out of the fight wholly
+scathless, as I saw him leaning against the wall at a ball in the
+Redoute at Pipesandbeersbad, watching Violet with great earnestness as
+she whirled round in a _deux temps_, bewitching as was her wont all the
+frequenters of the Bad. Rich English dyspeptics, poverty-stricken
+princes, Austrian diplomats, come to cure their hypochondria; French
+_decores_, to try their new cabals and martingales; British snobs, to
+indulge the luxury of grumbling,--all of them found some strange
+attraction in the "Violette Anglaise."
+
+Violet sank on a seat after her valse. Telfer quietly displaced a young
+dragoon from Lucca, and sat down by her.
+
+"I am going to stay on another month, Miss Tressillian; are you not
+sorry to hear it?" he said, with a smile, but I thought a little anxiety
+in his eyes.
+
+The color flushed over her face, and she answered, with a laugh, not
+quite a real one: "Of course I am very sorry. I would go away myself to
+let you enjoy your last week in peace if I were not engaged to Virginie.
+Cannot you get me leave of absence from her? I know you would throw your
+whole heart into the petition."
+
+Telfer curled his moustaches impatiently.
+
+"Truth has come out of her well at last," he said, with a dash of
+bitterness, "and has disguised herself in Miss Tressillian's tulle
+illusion."
+
+Violet colored brighter still.
+
+"Well," she said, quickly, "was it not your decision that we should
+never waste courtesy on one another? Was not your own desire _guerre a
+outrance_?"
+
+"No," answered Telfer, his brow darkening; "that I certainly must deny.
+I did you injustice, and I offered you an apology. No man could do more
+than acknowledge he was in the wrong. I offered you the palm-branch
+once; you were pleased to refuse it. I am not a man, Miss Tressillian,
+to run the chance of another repulse. My friendship is not so cheap that
+I shall intrude it where it is undesired." He spoke with a laugh, but
+his eyes had a grave anger in them that Violet didn't quite relish.
+
+She looked a little bit frightened up at him. The proud, brilliant
+Tressillian was as pale and quiet as a little child after a good
+scolding. But she soon rallied, and flashed up haughtier than ever.
+
+"Major Telfer, you make one great error--one very common to your sex.
+You drop us one day, and take us up the next, and then think that we
+must be grateful to you for the supreme honor you do us. You are cold to
+us, absolutely rude, as long as it pleases your lordly will, and then,
+at the first word of courtesy and kindness, you expect us to rise and
+make you a _reverence_ in the utmost humiliation and thanksgiving. You
+men"--and Violet began destroying her bouquet with immense
+energy--"treat us exactly as a cat will treat a mouse. You yourself, for
+instance, in a moment's hasty judgment, construed all my actions by the
+light of your own unjust suspicions, and believing everything, no matter
+how unfounded, spoke against me to all your acquaintance, and treated me
+with, as you must admit, but scanty courtesy, for one whom I have heard
+piques himself on his high breeding. And now, when you discover that
+your suspicions had no foundation, and your hatred no grounds, you
+wonder that I find it difficult to be as grateful as you seem to think I
+should be for your having so kindly misjudged me."
+
+As the young lady gave all this forth with much vehemence and spirit,
+Telfer's lips set, and the blood forced itself through the bronze of his
+cheeks. He bent towards her till his moustache touched her hair.
+
+"You have no mercy, Violet Tressillian," he said, between his teeth.
+"Take care that no one is as pitiless to you in return."
+
+She started, and her bouquet fell to the ground. Telfer gave it her back
+without looking at her, and turned round to an Austrian with his usual
+impassive air.
+
+"Do you know where De Tintiniac is, Staumgaurn? In the roulette room?
+All right. I am going there now."
+
+He did go there, and I've a notion that the croupier of Pipesandbeersbad
+made something that night out of the Major's preoccupation.
+
+Violet, meanwhile, was waltzing with Staumgaurn and a dozen others, but
+looked rather white--not using any rouge but what nature had given
+her--and by the end of the evening her bouquet had utterly come to
+grief. Days went on till a fortnight of our last month had gone, and
+Telfer, to my sorrow (not surprise, for I always thought the Tressillian
+was a dangerous foe, and that, like Ringwood, he'd find himself unhorsed
+by a woman), grew grave and stern, haunted with ten times more
+recklessness than usual, and threw away his guineas at the Redoute in a
+wild way, quite new with him, for though he liked play _pour s'amuser_,
+he had too much control over his passions ever to let play get
+ascendancy over him. I used to think he had the strongest passions and
+the strongest will over them of any man I knew; but now a passion least
+undesired and most hopeless of any that ever entered his soul, seemed to
+have mastered him. Not that he showed it; with the Tressillian he was
+simply distantly courteous; but I, who was on the _qui vive_ for his
+first sign of being conquered, saw his eyebrows contract when somebody
+was paying her desperate court, and his glance lighten and flash when
+she passed near him. They had never been alone since the night of the
+ball, and Violet was too proud to try for a reconciliation, even if
+she'd cared for one.
+
+One night we were at a ball at the Prince Humbugandschwerinn's. The
+Tressillian had been waltzing with all her might, and had all the men in
+the room, Humbugandschwerinn himself included, round her. Telfer leaned
+against a console ten minutes, watching her, and then abruptly left the
+ball-room, and did not return again. He came instead into the card-room,
+and sat down to _ecarte_ with De Tintiniac, and lost two games at ten
+Napoleons a side. Generally, he played very steadily, never giving his
+attention to anything but the game; but now he was listening to what a
+knot of men were saying, who were laughing, chatting, and sipping
+coffee, while they talked about--the Tressillian.
+
+"I mark the king and play," said Telfer, his eyes fixed fiercely on a
+young fellow who was discussing Violet much as he'd have discussed his
+new Danish dog or English hunter. He was Jack Snobley, Lord
+Featherweight's son, who was doing the grand, a confounded young
+parvenu, vulgar as his cotton-spinning ancestry could make him, who
+could appreciate the Tressillian about as much as he could Dannecker's
+Ariadne, which work of art he pronounced, in my hearing, "a pretty girl,
+but the dawg very badly done--too much like a cat." "I take your three
+to two," continued Telfer, his brow lowering as he heard the young fool
+praising and criticising Violet with small ceremony. The Major had the
+haughtiest patrician principles, and to hear a snob like this
+sandy-haired honorable, speaking of the woman _he_ chose to champion as
+he might have done of some ballerina or Chaumiere belle, was rather too
+much for Telfer's self-control.
+
+When the game was done, he rose, and walked quietly over to where
+Snobley stood. He looked him down with that cold, haughty glance that
+has cowed men bolder than Lord Featherweight's hopeful offspring, and
+said a word or two to him in a low tone, which caused that gentleman to
+flush up red and look fierce with all his might.
+
+"What's the girl to you, that I mayn't speak as I choose of her?" he
+retorted; the Sillery, of which he'd taken a good deal too much, working
+up in his weak brain. "I've heard that she jilted you, and that was why
+you've been setting them all against her, and saying she wanted to hook
+your old governor."
+
+The Sillery must have indeed obscured Jack's reason with a vengeance to
+make him venture this very elegant and refined speech with the Major,
+most fastidious in his ideas of good breeding, and most direful in his
+wrath, of any man I ever knew. Telfer's cheek turned as white with
+passion as the bronze would let it; his gray eyes grew almost black as
+they stared at the young snob. He was so supremely astonished that this
+ill-bred boy had actually dared thus to address him!
+
+"Mr. Snobley," he said, with his chilled and most ironical smile, and
+his quietest, most courteous voice, "you must learn good manners before
+you venture to parley with gentlemen. Allow me to give you your first
+lesson." And stooping, as if to a very little boy--young Snobley was a
+good foot shorter than he--the Major struck him on the lips with his
+left-hand French kid glove. It was a very gentle blow--it would scarcely
+have reddened the Tressillian's delicate skin--but on the Hon. Jack it
+had electric effect. He was beginning to swear, to look big, to talk of
+satisfaction, insult, and all the rest of it; but Telfer laughed, bent
+his head, told him he was quite ready to satisfy him to any extent he
+required; and, turning away, sat down to _ecarte_ calm and impassive as
+ever, and pleased greatly with himself for having silenced this silly
+youth. The affair was much less exciting to him than it was to any other
+man in the room. "It's too great an honor for him, the young brute, for
+me to be called out by him, as if he were one of us. I hate snobs; Lord
+Featherweight's grandfather was butler to mine, and he himself was a
+cotton-spinner in Lancashire, and then this little contemptible puppy
+dares to----"
+
+Telfer finished his sentence with a puff of smoke from his meerschaum,
+as he sat in his bedroom after the ball, into which sanctuary I had
+followed him to talk a little before turning in.
+
+"To discuss the Tressillian," said I. "But that surprises me less, old
+fellow, than that you should champion her. What's it for? Has hate
+turned to the other thing? Have you come to think that, though she'd
+make a very bad mother-in-law, she'd make a charming wife? 'Pon my life,
+if you have----"
+
+"Hush! Don't jest!"
+
+I knew by the tone of those three little monosyllables that the Major
+was done for--caught, conquered, and fettered by his dangerous foe.
+
+Telfer sat silent for some minutes, looking out of the window where the
+dawn was rising over the hills, with a settled gloom upon his face. Then
+he rose, and began swinging about the room with his firm cavalry tread,
+his arms crossed on his chest, and his head bent down.
+
+"By Heaven! Vane," he said at length, in a tone low, but passionate and
+bitter, "I have gone on like a baby or a fool, playing with tools till
+they have cut me. Against my will, against my judgment, against reason,
+hope, everything, I have lingered in that girl's fascinations till I am
+bound by them hand and foot. I cannot deceive myself, I cannot shut the
+truth out; it was not honor, nor chivalry, nor friendship that made me
+to-night insult the man who spoke jestingly of her; it was love--love as
+mad, as reckless, as misplaced, as ever cursed a man and drove him to
+his ruin." He paused, breathing hard, with his teeth set, then broke out
+again: "I, who held love in such disdain, who have so long kept my
+passions in such strong control, who thought no woman had the power to
+move me against my will--I love at last, despite myself, though I know
+that she is pitiless, that nothing I have said has been able to touch
+her into softer feeling, and that, mad as my passion is for her, if her
+nature be as hard and haughty as I fear, I dare not, if I could, make
+her my wife. No, Vane, no," he went on, hastily, as I interrupted. "She
+does not love me, she has no gentler feeling in her; I thought she had,
+but I was mistaken. I tried her several times, but she will never
+forgive my first injustice to her; and to one with so little softness in
+her nature I dare not trust my peace. It were a worse hell even than
+that I now endure, to have her with me, loving her as I do, and feel
+that her cold heart gave no response to mine; to possess her glorious
+beauty, and yet know that her love and her soul were dead in their chill
+pride to me----"
+
+He paused again, and leaned against the window, his chest heaving, and
+hot tears standing in his haughty eyes, wrung from the very anguish of
+his soul. The pride that had never before bent to any human thing, was
+now cast in the dust before a woman who never did, and probably never
+would, love him in return.
+
+
+
+
+V.
+
+THE DUEL, AND ITS CONSEQUENCES.
+
+
+The contemptible young puppy, for whom Telfer considered the honor of a
+ball from his pistol a great deal too good in the morning, sent
+Heavysides, of the 40th, a chum of his found up at the Bad, to claim
+"satisfaction," the valor produced in him by Sillery over night having
+been kept up since by copious draughts of cognac and Seltzer. Having
+signified to Heavysides that the Major would do Mr. Snobley the favor of
+shooting him in the retired valley of Koenigshoehle at sunrise the next
+day, I went to tell Telfer, who had a hearty laugh at the young fellow's
+challenge.
+
+"I'd give him something to shoot me through the heart," said he,
+bitterly, "but I don't suppose he will. He's practised at pigeons, not
+at men, probably. I won't hurt him much, but a little lesson will do him
+good. Mind nobody in the house gets wind of the affair. Though I make a
+fool of myself in her defence, there is no need that she or others
+should know it. But if the boy should do for me, tell her, Vane--tell
+her," said the Major, shading his eyes with his hand, "that I have
+learnt to love her as I never dreamt I should love any woman, and that I
+do not blame her for the just lesson she has read me for the rudeness
+and the unjust prejudice I indulged in so long towards her. She
+retaliated fairly upon me, and God forbid that she should have one hour
+of her life embittered through remorse for me."
+
+His voice sank into a whisper as he spoke; then, with an effort, he
+forced himself into calmness, and went to play billiards with Marc. This
+was the man who, three months before, had told me with such contemptuous
+decision that "we need never fall in love unless it's convenient; and
+as to caring for a girl who doesn't care for us, that was a weakness
+with which he couldn't sympathize at all!"
+
+Late that night, Telfer and I, coming down the stairs, met the
+Tressillian going up them to her room. The Major stopped her, and held
+out his hand, with a softened light in his eyes. "Will you not bid me
+good-bye? I may not see you again."
+
+There was a sadness in his smile bitterly significant to me, but very
+likely she didn't see it, not having any key to it, as I had.
+
+Violet turned pale, and I fancied her lips twitched, but it might be the
+flickering of the light of the staircase lamps on her face. At any rate,
+being a young lady born and bred in good society, she put her hand in
+his, with a simple "What! are you going away?"
+
+"Perhaps. At any rate, let us part in peace."
+
+The proud man laughed as he said it, though he was enduring tortures.
+Violet heard the laugh, and didn't see the straining anxiety in his
+gaze.
+
+She drew her hand rapidly away. "Certainly. _Bon voyage_, Major Telfer,
+and good night," she answered, carelessly; and, with a graceful bend,
+the Tressillian floated on up the stairs with the dignity of a young
+empress.
+
+Telfer looked after the white gossamer dress and the beautiful head,
+with its wreath of scarlet flowers, and an iron sternness settled on his
+face. All hope was gone now. She could not have parted with him like
+this if she had cared for him one straw more than for the flowers in her
+hair. Yet, in the morning, he was going to risk his life for her. Ah,
+well! I've always seen that in love there's one of the two who gives all
+and gets nothing.
+
+In the morning, by five o'clock, in the valley of Koenigshoehle, a snug
+bit of pasture land between two rocks, where no gendarme could pounce
+upon us, young Snobley made his appearance to enjoy the honor of being
+a target for one of the best shots in Europe. Snobley had a good deal of
+swagger and would-be dash, and made a great show of pluck, which your
+man of true pluck never does. Telfer stood talking to me up to the last
+minute, took his pistol carelessly in his hand, and, without taking any
+apparent aim, fired.
+
+If Telfer made up his mind to shoot off your fifth waistcoat-button,
+your fifth waistcoat-button would be irrevocably doomed; and therefore,
+having determined to himself to lodge a bullet in this young puppy's
+left wrist, in the left wrist did the ball lodge. Snobley was
+"satisfied," very amply satisfied, I fancy, by his looks. He'd fired,
+and sent his shot right into the trunk of a chestnut growing some seven
+yards off his opponent, to Heavyside's supreme scorn.
+
+"That'll teach him not to talk of young ladies in his Mabille slang,"
+said Telfer, lighting his cigar. "I hope the little snob may be the
+better for my lesson. Now I am _en route_, I'll go over to
+Pipesandbeersbad, breakfast at the Hotel de France, and go and see
+Humbugandschwerinn: he wants me to look at some English racers Brookes
+has just sent him over. Make my excuses at Essellau; and I say, Vane,
+see if you can't get us away in a day or two; have some call home, or
+something, for I shall never stand this long."
+
+With which not over-clear speech the Major mounted his horse and
+cantered off towards the Bad.
+
+I rode back; went to my own room, had some chocolate, read Pigault le
+Brun, and about noon, seeing Virginie, the Tressillian, and several
+others out on the terrace, went to join them. Marc slipped his arm
+through mine and drew me aside.
+
+"I say, Vane, what's all this about Telfer striking some fellow for
+talking about the Tressillian? Staurmgaurn was over here just now, and
+told me there was a row in the card-room at Humbugandschwerinn's
+between Telfer and another Englishman. I knew nothing about it. Is it
+true?"
+
+"So far true," I answered, "that Telfer put a ball in the youth's wrist
+at seven o'clock this morning; and serve him right too--he's an impudent
+young snob."
+
+"By Jove!" cried Marc, "what in the world made him take the
+Tressillian's part? Have the _beaux yeux_ really made an impression on
+the most unimpressionable of men?"
+
+"The devil they have," said I, crossly; "but I wish she'd been at the
+deuce first, for he's too good a fellow to waste his best years pining
+after a pair of dark eyes."
+
+Marc shrugged his shoulders. "_C'est vrai_; but we're all fools some
+time or other. The idea of Telfer's chivalry! I declare it's quite like
+the old days of Froissart and Commines--fighting for my lady's favor."
+And away he went, singing those two famous lines from Alcyonee:
+
+ Pour meriter son coeur, pour plaire a ses beaux yeux,
+ J'ai fait la guerre aux rois: je l'aurais faite aux dieux;
+
+and I thought to myself that if the Tressillian proved a De Longueville,
+I could find it in my soul to shoot her without remorse.
+
+But as I turned away from Marc, I came upon her, looking pale and ill
+enough to satisfy anybody. The color flushed into her cheeks as she saw
+me; we spoke of the weather, the chances of storm, Floss's new collar,
+and other trifles; then she asked me, bending over her little dog,--
+
+"Is Captain Staurmgaurn's news true, that your friend has--has been
+quarrelling with a young Englishman?"
+
+"Yes," I answered. "I wonder Staurmgaurn told you; it is scarcely a
+topic to interest ladies. Telfer has given the young gentleman a
+well-merited lesson."
+
+"Have they fought?" she asked, breathlessly, laying her hand on my arm,
+and looking as white as a ghost.
+
+"Yes, they have," said I; "and he fought, Miss Tressillian, for one who
+gave him a very cold adieu last night."
+
+Her head drooped, she trembled perceptibly, and the color rushed back to
+her cheeks.
+
+"Is he safe?" she asked, in the lowest of whispers.
+
+"Quite," I answered, quickly, as De Tintiniac lounged up to us; and I
+left my words, like a prudent diplomatist, to bear fruit as best they
+might.
+
+I wondered if she cared for him, or if it was merely a girl's natural
+feeling for a man who had let himself be shot at, rather than hear a
+light word spoken of her. But they were both so deuced proud, Heaven's
+special intervention alone seemed likely to bring them together.
+
+The Major didn't come home from Pipesandbeersbad till between two and
+three that night, and he's told me since that being _un peu fou_ with
+his self-willed and vehement passion, never went to bed at all, but sat
+and walked about his room smoking, unable to sleep, in a frame of mind
+that, when sane, a few months before, he would have pronounced spoony
+and contemptible in the lowest degree. At eight he strode forth into the
+park, brushing off the dew with his impatient steps, glad of the fresh
+morning air upon his brow, which was as burning as our first headache
+from "that cursed punch of Jones's," the day after our "first wine,"
+which acute suffering any gentleman who ever tasted that delicious
+_melange_ of rum and milk and lemons, will keenly recall among other
+passed-away passages of his green youth.
+
+Telfer strode on and on, over the molehills and through the ferns, down
+this slope and up that, under the oaks, and lindens, and fir-trees
+gleaming red beneath the October sun, with very little notion of where
+he was going or what he was doing, a great stag-hound of Marc's
+following at his heels. The path he took, without thinking, led him to
+the top of a rock overhanging the Beersbad, where that historic stream
+was but a few yards in width; and here Telfer, lying down with his head
+against a plane-tree, struck a fusee and lighted a cigar--for a weed's a
+pleasant companion in any stage of existence: if we're happy we smoke in
+the fulness of our hearts, and build airy castles on each fragrant
+cloud; and if we're unhappy, we smoke to console ourselves, and draw in
+with each whiff philosophy and peace. So the Major smoked and thought,
+till a bark from the staghound made him look up. On the top of the
+cliffs on the other side of the stream, looking down into the valleys
+below, with her head turned away from him, stood Violet Tressillian; and
+at the sight of that graceful figure, with its indescribable high-bred
+air, I don't doubt the Major's once unimpressive heart beat faster than
+it had ever done in a charge or a skirmish. She was full twenty feet
+above him, and the rocks on which she stood sloped precipitately down to
+a ledge exactly opposite that on which he lay smoking--a ledge in
+reality but a few inches wide, but to which the treacherous boughs and
+ferns waving over it gave a semblance of a firm broad footing--a
+semblance which (like a good many other things one meets with) it
+utterly failed to carry out when you came to try it.
+
+Violet, not seeing Telfer lying _perdu_ among the grass at the foot of
+his plane-tree, walked along to the edge of the cliff, her eyes on the
+ground, so deep in thought that she never noticed the river beneath, but
+began to descend the slope, little Floss coming with exceeding
+trepidation after her. Telfer sprang up to warn her. "Violet! Violet! go
+back! go back! Oh! my God, do you not hear?"
+
+His passionate tones startled her. Never dreaming he was there, she
+looked hurriedly up; her foot slipped; unable to stay her descent, she
+came down the steep cliff with an impetus which, to a certainty, would
+send her over the narrow ledge into the river below--a fall of full
+thirty feet. To see her perish thus before his eyes--die thus while he
+stood calmly by! A whole age of torture was crowded into the misery of
+that one brief moment. There was but one way to save her. He sprang
+across the gulf that parted them, while the river in its straitened bed
+hissed and foamed beneath him, and, standing on the narrow ledge, where
+there seemed scarce footing for a dog, he caught her as she fell in his
+iron grasp, as little swayed by the shock as the rock on which he stood.
+Holding her tight to him with one arm, he swung himself down by the
+other to a less dangerous position, on a flat plateau of cliff, and
+leaning against one of the linden-trees on its summit, he bent over her;
+his eyes dim, and his pulses beating with the emotions he had controlled
+while he wanted cool thought and firm nerve to save her, but over which
+he had no more power now. He pressed her to his heart, forgetting pride,
+and doubt, and fear; and Violet, by way of answer, only burst into a
+passion of tears. Who would have recognized the proud, brilliant
+Tressillian, in the pale, trembling woman who sobbed on his breast with
+the _abandon_ of a child, and who, at his passionate kisses, only
+blushed like a wild rose?
+
+Telfer evidently thought the transformation complete, for he forgot all
+his reserve resolutions and hauteur, and poured out the tenderest love
+for a girl who, three months before, he had wished at the devil! And the
+Tressillian was conquered at last; she was pitiless no longer, and,
+having vanquished him, was, woman-like, ready to be a slave to her
+captive; and her eyes were never more dangerous than now, when, shy and
+softened, they looked up through their tears into Telfer's.
+
+What old De Tintiniac said of her was true, that all her beauty wanted
+to make it perfect was for her to be in love!
+
+So at least I thought, when, several hours afterwards, I met them coming
+across the park, and I knew by the gleam of the Major's eyes that he
+had lost Calceolaria and won Violet.
+
+"How strange it is," laughed Telfer that evening, when they were alone
+in the conservatory, "that you and I, who so hated each other, should
+now be so dear to one another. Oh, Violet! how ashamed I have been since
+of my unjustifiable prejudices, my abominable discourtesy----"
+
+"You _were_ dreadfully rude," said the Tressillian, smiling; "and judged
+me very cruelly by all the false reports that women chose to gossip of
+me. But you are wrong. I never hated you. Your father had spoken of you
+as so generous, so noble, so chivalrous a soldier, so kind a son, that I
+was prepared to admire you immensely, and when you looked so sternly on
+me at our first introduction, and I overheard your bitter words about me
+at the station, I really was never more vexed and disappointed in my
+life. And then a demon entered into me, and I thought--forgive me,
+Hamilton--that I would try to make you repent your hasty judgment and
+recant your prejudices. But I could not always fight you with the
+coolness I wished; your indifference began to pique me more and more.
+Wounds from you ranked as they did from no one else, and something
+besides pride made me feel your neglect so keenly. I had meant--yes, I
+must tell you all," and the Tressillian, in her soft repentance, looked,
+Telfer thought, more bewitching than in her most brilliant moments--"I
+had wished," she went on in a whisper, with her color bright, "to make
+you regret your injustice, to conquer your stubborn pride, and to
+revenge myself on you for all the wrong you had done me in thoughts and
+words. But, you see, I wasn't so strong as I fancied; I thought I could
+fence with the buttons on, but I was mistaken, and--and--when I heard
+that you had fought for me, I knew then that----" And Violet stopped
+with a smile and a sigh; the sigh for the past, I suppose, and the smile
+for the present.
+
+"Well, _nous sommes quittes_, dearest," smiled Telfer. "Thank Heaven! we
+no longer need reproach each other. Too many elevate the one they love
+into an ideal of such superhuman excellence, that at the first shadow of
+mortality they see their poor idol is shivered from its pedestal. But we
+have seen the worst side of each other's character, Violet, and
+henceforth love shall cover all faults, and subdue all pride between
+us."
+
+Telfer kept his word. They had had their last quarrel, and buried their
+last suspicion before their marriage, and were not, like the generality,
+doves first and tigers after. The governor, of course, was charmed that
+a match on which he had secretly set his heart had brought itself about
+so neatly without his interference. He had begun to despair of his son's
+ever giving Torwood a mistress, and the diamonds he gave Violet, in the
+excess of his pleasure, brought her no end of female enemies, for they
+were some of the finest water in the kingdom. Seldom, indeed, has
+slander been productive of such good fruits, for rarely, _very_ rarely,
+does that Upas-tree put forth any but Dead Sea apples.
+
+Violet Tressillian _was_ Violet Telfer before the Christmas recess, but
+I considered the bet drawn. So Telfer and I exchanged the roan filly and
+the colt, and Calceolaria in the Torwood stables, and Jockey Club in my
+stalls, stand witnesses to this day of OUR WAGER, AND HOW THE MAJOR LOST
+AND WON.
+
+
+
+
+OUR COUNTRY QUARTERS.
+
+
+
+
+OUR COUNTRY QUARTERS.
+
+
+I remember well the day that we (that is the 110th Lancers) were ordered
+down to Layton Rise. Savage enough we all were to quit P---- for that
+detestable country place. Many and miserable were the tales we raked up
+of the _ennui_ we had experienced at other provincial quarters; sadly we
+dressed for Lady Dashwood's ball, the last _soiree_ before our
+departure. And then the bills and the _billets-doux_ that rained down
+upon our devoted heads!
+
+However, by some miracle we escaped them all; and on a bright April
+morning, 184-, we were _en route_ for this Layton Rise, this _terra
+incognita_, as grumpy and as seedy as ever any poor demons were. But
+there was no help for it; so leaving, we flattered ourselves, a great
+many hearts the heavier for this order from the Horse Guards, we, as I
+said, set out for Layton Rise.
+
+The only bit of good news that provoking morning had brought was that my
+particular chum, Drummond Fane, a captain of ours, who had been cutting
+about on leave from Constantinople to Kamtchatka for the last six
+months, would join us at Layton. Fane was really a good fellow, a
+perfect gentleman (_ca va sans dire_, as he was one of _ours_),
+intensely plucky, knew, I believe, every language under the sun, and, as
+he had been tumbling about in the world ever since he went to Eton at
+eight years old, had done everything, seen everything, and could talk on
+every possible subject. He was a great favorite with ladies: I always
+wonder they did not quite spoil him. I have seen a young lady actually
+neglect a most eligible heir to a dukedom, that her mamma had been at
+great pains to procure for her, if this "fascinating younger son" were
+by. For Fane _was_ the younger son of the Earl of Avanley, and would, of
+course, every one said, one day retrieve his fortunes by marriage with
+some heiress in want of rank.
+
+He has been my great friend ever since I, a small youth, spoiled by
+having come into my property while in the nursery, became his fag at
+Eton: and when I bought my commission in the 110th, of which he was a
+captain, our intimacy increased.
+
+But _revenons a nos moutons_. On the road we naturally talked of Layton,
+wondering if there was any one fit to visit, anybody that gave good
+dinners, if there was a pack of hounds, a billiard-room, or any pretty
+girls. Suddenly the Honorable Ennuye L'Estrange threw a little light on
+the matter, by recollecting, "now he thought of it, he believed that was
+where an uncle of his lived; his name was Aspi--Aspinall--no! Aspeden."
+"Had he any cousins?" was the inquiry. He "y'ally could not remember!"
+So we were left to conjure up imaginary Miss Aspedens, more handsome
+than their honorable cousin, who might relieve for us the monotony of
+country quarters. The sun was very bright as we entered Layton Rise; the
+clattering and clashing that we made soon brought out the inhabitants,
+and, lying in the light of a spring day, it did not seem such a very
+miserable little town after all. Our mess was established at the one
+good inn of the one good street of the place, and I and two other young
+subs fixed our residence at a grocer's, where a card of "Lodgings to let
+furnished" was embordered in vine-leaves and roses.
+
+As I was leaning out of the window smoking my last cigar before mess,
+with Sydney and Mounteagle stretched in equally elegant attitudes on
+equally hard sofas, I heard our grocer, a sleek little Methodist,
+addressing some party in the street with--"I fear me I have done evil in
+admitting these young servants of Satan into mine habitation!" "Well,
+Nathan," replied a Quaker, "thou didst it for the best, and verily these
+officers seem quiet and gentlemanly youths." "Gentlemanlike," I should
+say we were, _rather_--but "quiet!"--how we shouted over the innocent
+"Friend's" mistake. Here the voices again resumed. "Doubtless, when the
+Aspedens return, there will be dances and devices of the Evil One, and
+Quelps will make a good time of it; however, the custom of ungodly men I
+would not take were it offered!" So these Aspedens were out--confound
+it! But the clock struck six; so, flinging the remains of my cigar on
+the Quaker's broad-brimmed hat, adorned with which ornament he walked
+unconsciously away, we strolled down to the mess-room.
+
+A few hours later some of them met in my room, and having sent out for
+some cards, which the grocer kindly wrapped in a tract against gambling,
+we had just sat down to loo, when the door was thrown open, and Captain
+Fane announced. A welcome addition!
+
+"Fane, by all that's glorious!"--"Well, young one, how are you?" were
+the only salutations that passed between two men who were as true
+friends as any in England. Fane was soon seated among us, and telling us
+many a joke and tale. "And so," said he, "we're sent down to ruralize?
+(Mounteagle, you are 'loo'd.') Any one you know here?"
+
+"Not a creature! I am awfully afraid we shall be found dead of _ennui_
+one fine morning. I'll thank you for a little more punch, Fitzspur,"
+said Sydney. "I suppose, as usual, Fane," he continued, "you left at the
+very least twelve dozen German princesses, Italian marchesas, and French
+countesses dying for you?"
+
+"My dear fellow," replied Fane, "you are considerably under the mark
+(I'll take 'miss,' Paget!); but really, if women _will_ fall in love
+with you, how _can_ you help it? And if you _will_ flirt with them, how
+can they help it?"
+
+"I see, Fane, _your_ heart is as strong as ever," I added, laughing.
+
+"Of course," answered the gallant captain; "disinterested love is
+reserved for men who are too rich or too poor to mind its attendant
+evils. (The first, I must say, very rarely profit by the privilege!) No!
+I steel myself against all bright eyes and dancing curls not backed by a
+good dowry. Heiresses, though, somehow, are always plain; I never could
+do my duty and propose to one, though, of course, whenever I _do_
+surrender my liberty, which I have not the smallest intention of at
+present, it will be to somebody with at least fifty thousand a year.
+Hearts trumps, Mount?"
+
+"Yes--hurrah! Paget's loo'd at last.--Here, my dear, let us have lots
+more punch!" said Mounteagle, addressing the female domestic, who was
+standing open-mouthed at the glittering pool of half-sovereigns.
+
+I will spare the gentle reader--if I _may_ flatter myself that I
+entertain a _few_ such--a recital of the conversation which followed,
+and which was kept up until the very, very "small hours;" also I will
+leave it to her imagination to picture how we spent the next few days,
+how we found out a few families worth visiting, how we inspired the
+Layton youths with a vehement passion for smoking, billiards, and the
+cavalry branch of the service, and how we and our gay uniforms and our
+prancing horses were the admiration of all the young damsels in the
+place.
+
+One morning after parade, Fane and I, having nothing better to do,
+lighted our cigars and strolled down one of those shady lanes which
+almost reconcile one to the country--_out_ of the London season. Seeing
+the gate of a park standing invitingly open, we walked in and threw
+ourselves down under the trees. "Now we are in for it," said Fane, "if
+we are trespassing, and any adventurous-minded gamekeeper appears. Whose
+park is this?"
+
+"Mr. Aspeden's, Ennuye told me. It's rather a nice place," I replied.
+
+"And that castle, of which mine eyes behold the turrets afar off?" he
+asked.
+
+"Lord Linton's, I believe; the father of Jack Vernon, of the Rifles, you
+know," I answered.
+
+"Indeed! I never saw the old gentleman, but I remember his daughter
+Beatrice,--we had rather a desperate flirtation at Baden-Baden. She's a
+showy-looking girl," said the captain, stretching himself on the grass.
+
+"Why did you not allow her the sublime felicity of becoming Lady
+Beatrice Fane?" I asked, laughing.
+
+"My dear fellow, she had not a _sou_! That old marquis is as poor as a
+church-mouse. You forget that I am only a younger son, with not much
+besides my pay, and cannot afford to marry anywhere I like. I am not in
+your happy position, able to espouse any pretty face I may chance to
+take a fancy to. It would be utter madness in me. Do you think _I_ was
+made for a little house, one maid-servant, dinner at noon, and six small
+children? _Very_ much obliged to you, but love in a cottage is not _my_
+style, Fred; besides _j'aime a vivre garcon_!" added Fane.
+
+"_Et moi aussi!_" said I. "Really the girls one meets seem all tarlatan
+and coquetry. I have never seen one worth committing matrimony for."
+
+"Hear him!" cried Fane. "Here is the happy owner of Wilmot Park, at the
+advanced age of twenty, despairing of ever finding anything more worthy
+of his affection than his moustaches! Oh, what will the boys come to
+next? But, eureka! here comes a pretty girl if you like. Who on earth is
+she?" he exclaimed, raising his eye-glass to a party advancing up the
+avenue who really seemed worthy the attention.
+
+Pulling at the bridle of a donkey, "what wouldn't go," with all her
+might, was indeed a pretty girl. Her hat had fallen off and showed a
+quantity of bright hair and a lovely face, with the largest and darkest
+of eyes, and a mouth now wreathing with smiles. Unconscious of our
+vicinity, on she came, laughing, and beseeching a little boy, seated on
+the aforesaid donkey, and thumping thereupon with, a large stick, "not
+to be so cruel and hurt poor Dapple." At this juncture the restive steed
+gave a vigorous stride, and toppling its rider on the grass, trotted off
+with a self-satisfied air; but Fane, intending to make the rebellious
+charger a means of introduction, caught his bridle and led him back to
+his discomfited master. The young lady, who was endeavoring to pacify
+the child, looked prettier than ever as she smiled and thanked him. But
+the gallant captain was not going to let the matter drop _here_, so,
+turning to the youthful rider, he asked him to let him put him on "the
+naughty donkey again." Master Tommy acquiesced, and, armed with his
+terrible stick, allowed himself to be mounted. Certainly Fane was a most
+unnecessary length of time settling that child, but then he was talking
+to the young lady, whom he begged to allow him to lead the donkey home.
+
+"Oh! no, she was quite used to Dapple; she could manage him very well,
+and they were going farther." So poor Fane had nothing for it but to
+raise his hat and gaze at her through his eye-glass until some trees hid
+her from sight.
+
+"'Pon my word, that's a pretty girl!" said he, at length. "I wonder who
+she can be! However, I shall soon find out. Have another weed, Fred?"
+
+There was to be a ball that night at the Assembly Rooms, which we were
+assured only the "_best_ families" would attend for Layton was a very
+exclusive little town in its way. Some of us who were going were
+standing about the mess-room, recalling the many good balls and pretty
+girls of our late quarters, when Fane, who had declined to go, as he
+said he had a horror of "bad dancing, bad perfumes, bad ventilation, and
+bad champagne, and really could not stand the concentration of all of
+them, which he foresaw that night," to our surprise declared his
+intention of accompanying us.
+
+"I suppose, Fane, you hope to see your heroine of the donkey again?"
+asked Sydney.
+
+"Precisely," was Fane's reply; "or if not, to find out who she is. But
+here comes Ennuye, got up no end to fascinate the belles of Layton!"
+
+"The Aspedens are home; I saw 'em to-day," were the words of the
+honorable cornet, as he lounged into the room. "My uncle seems rather a
+brick, and hopes to make the acquaintance of all of you. He will mess
+with us to-morrow."
+
+"Have you any _belles cousines_?"--"Are they going to-night?" we
+inquired.
+
+"Yaas, I saw one; she's rather pretty," said L'Estrange.
+
+"Dark eyes--golden hair--about eighteen?" demanded Fane, eagerly.
+
+"Not a bit of it," replied the cornet, curling his moustache, and
+contemplating himself in the glass with very great satisfaction; "hair's
+as dark as mine, and eyes--y'ally I forget. But, let's have loo or
+whist, or something; we need not go for ages!" So down we sat, and soon
+nothing was heard but "Two by honors and the trick!" "Game and game!"
+&c., until about twelve, when we rose and adjourned to the ball-room.
+
+No sooner had we entered the room than Fane exclaimed, "There's my
+houri, by all that's glorious! and looking lovelier than ever. By Jove!
+that girl's too good for a country ball-room!" And there, in truth,
+waltzing like a sylph, was, as Sydney called her, the "heroine of the
+donkey." The dance over, we saw her join a party at the top of the room,
+consisting of a handsome but _passee_ woman, a lovely Hebe-like girl
+with dancing eyes, and a number of gentlemen, with whom they seemed to
+be keeping up an animated conversation.
+
+"Ennuye is with them--he will introduce me," said Fane, as he swept up
+the room.
+
+I watched him bow, and, after talking a few minutes, lead off his
+"houri" for a _valse_; and disengaging myself from a Cambridge friend
+whom I had met with, I professed my intention of following his example.
+
+"What? Who did you say? That girl at the top there? Why, man, that's my
+cousin Mary, and the other lady is my most revered aunt, Mrs. Aspeden.
+Did you not know I and Ennuye were related? Y'ally I forget how,
+exactly," he continued, mimicking the cornet. "But do you want to be
+introduced to her? Come along then."
+
+So, following my friend, who was a Trinity-man, of the name of
+Cleaveland, I soon made acquaintance with Mrs. Aspeden and her daughter
+Mary.
+
+"_Who_ is he?" I heard Mrs. Aspeden ask, in a low tone, of Tom
+Cleaveland, as I led off Mary to the _valse_.
+
+"A very good fellow," was the good-natured Cantab's reply, "with lots of
+tin and a glorious place. The shooting at Wilmot is really----"
+
+"_Bien!_" said his aunt, as she took Lord Linton's arm to the
+refreshment-room, satisfied, I suppose, on the strength of my "lots of
+tin," that I was a safe companion for her child.
+
+I found Mary Aspeden a most agreeable partner for a _dance_; she was
+lively, agreeable, and a coquette, I felt sure (women with those dancing
+eyes always are), and I thought I could not do better than amuse myself
+by getting up a flirtation with her. What an intensely good opinion I
+had of myself then! So I condescended to dance, though it was not
+Almack's, and actually permitted myself to be amused. Strolling through
+the rooms with Mary Aspeden on my arm, we entered one in which was an
+alcove fitted up with a _vis-a-vis_ sofa (whoever planned that Layton
+ball-room had a sympathy in the bottom of his heart for _tete-a-tete_),
+and here Fane was seated, talking to his "houri" with the soft voice and
+winning smiles which had gained the heart, or at least what portion of
+that member they possessed, of so many London belles, and which would do
+their work _here_ most assuredly.
+
+"There is my cousin Florence--ah! she does not observe us. Who is the
+gentleman with her?" said Miss Aspeden.
+
+"My friend, Captain Fane," I replied. "You have heard of their rencontre
+this morning?"
+
+"Indeed! is he Tommy's champion, of whom he has done nothing but talk
+all day, and of whom I could not make Florence say one word?" asked
+Mary. "You must know our donkey is the most determined and resolute of
+animals: if she 'will, she will,' you may depend upon it!" she
+continued.
+
+"Do you honor those most untrue lines upon ladies by a quotation?" I
+asked.
+
+"I do not think they _are_ so very untrue," laughed Mary, "except in
+confining obstinacy to us poor women and exempting the 'lords of the
+creation.' The Scotch adage knows better. 'A wilful _man_----' You know
+the rest."
+
+"Quite well," I replied; "but another poet's lines on _you_ are far more
+true. 'Ye are stars of the----'" I commenced.
+
+"Mary, my love, let me introduce you to Lord Craigarven," said Mrs.
+Aspeden, coming up with Lord Linton's heir-apparent.
+
+At the same time I was introduced to Mr. Aspeden, a hearty Englishman,
+loving his horses, his dogs, and his daughter; and as much the inferior
+of his aristocratic-looking wife in _intellect_ as he was her superior
+in _heart_. When we parted that night he gave Fane and me a most
+hospitable general invitation, and, what was more, an especial one for
+the next night. As we walked home "i' the grey o' the morning," I asked
+Fane who his "houri" was.
+
+"A niece of Mr. Aspeden's, and cousin to your friend Cleaveland," was
+the reply. "Those Aspedens really seem to be uncle and aunt to every
+one. She is staying there now."
+
+"So is Tom Cleaveland," said I. "But, pray, are your expectations quite
+realized? Is she as charming as she looks, this Miss Florence----"
+
+"Aspeden?" added Fane. "Yes, quite. But here are my quarters; so good
+night, old fellow."
+
+We had soon established ourselves as _amis de la maison_ at Woodlands,
+the Aspedens' place, and found him, as his nephew had stated, "rather a
+brick," and her daughter and niece something more. All of us, especially
+Fane and I, spent the best part of our time there, lounging away the
+days between the shady lanes, the little lake, and the music or
+billiard-rooms. Fane seemed entirely to appropriate Florence, and to
+fascinate her as he had fascinated so many others. I really felt angry
+with him; for, as Tom Cleaveland had candidly told me that poor Florie
+had not a rap--her father had run through all his property and left her
+an orphan, and a very poor one too--of course Fane could not marry her,
+but would, I feared, "ride away" some day, like the "gay dragoon,"
+heartwhole _himself_--but would _she_ come out as scatheless? Poor
+Mounteagle, too, was getting quite spooney about Florence, and, owing to
+Fane, she paid him no more heed than if he had been an old dried-up
+Indianized major. _He_, poor fellow! followed her about everywhere,
+asked her to dance in quite an insane manner, and made the most
+horrible revokes in whist and mistakes in pool that can be imagined.
+
+"By George! she is pretty, and no mistake!" said Sydney, as Florence
+rode past us one day as we were sauntering down Layton, looking
+charmingly _en amazone_.
+
+"Pretty! I should rather think so. She is more beautiful than any other
+woman upon earth!" cried Mounteagle.
+
+"Y'ally! well, I can't see _that_," replied Ennuye. "She has tolerably
+good eyes, but she is too _petite_ to please me."
+
+"Ah! the adjutant's girls have rendered L'Estrange _difficile_. He
+cannot expect to meet _their_ equals in a hurry!" said Fane, in a very
+audible aside.
+
+Poor Ennuye was silenced--nay, he even blushed. The adjutant's girls
+recalled an episode in which the gallant cornet had shone in a rather
+verdant light. Fane had effectually quieted him.
+
+"I wonder if Florence Aspeden will marry Mount?" I remarked to Fane,
+when the others had left us. "She does not seem to pay him much heed
+_yet_; but still----"
+
+"The devil, no!" cried Fane, in an unusually energetic manner. "I would
+stake my life she would not have such a muff as that, if he owned half
+the titles in the peerage!"
+
+"You seem rather excited about the matter," I observed. "It would not be
+such a bad match for her, for you know she has no tin; but I am sure,
+with your opinion on love-matches, you would not counsel Mount to such a
+step."
+
+"Of course not!" replied Fane, in his ordinary cool tones. "A man has no
+right to marry for love, except he is one of those fortunate individuals
+who own half a county, or some country doctor or parson of whom the
+world takes no notice. There may be a few exceptions. But yet," he
+continued, with the air of a person trying to convince himself against
+his will, "did you ever see a love match turn out happily? It is all
+very well for the first week, but the roses won't bloom in winter, and
+then the cottage walls look ugly. Then a fellow cannot live as he did
+_en garcon_, and all his friends drop him, and altogether it is an act
+no wise man would perpetrate. But I shall forget to give you a message I
+was intrusted with. They are going to get up some theatricals at
+Woodlands. I have promised to take _Sir Thomas Clifford_ (the piece is
+the 'Hunchback'). and they want you to play _Modus_ to Mary Aspeden's
+_Helen_. Do, old fellow. Acting is very good fun with a pretty girl----"
+
+"Like the _Julia_ you will have, I suppose," I said. "Very well, I will
+be amiable and take it. Mary will make a first-rate _Helen_. Come and
+have a game of billiards, will you?"
+
+"Can't," replied the gallant captain. "I promised to go in half an hour
+with--with the Aspedens to see some waterfall or ruin, or something, and
+the time is up. So, _au revoir, monsieur_."
+
+Many of ours were pressed into the service for the coming theatricals,
+and right willingly did we rehearse a most unnecessary number of times.
+Many merry hours did we spend at Woodlands, and I sentimentalized away
+desperately to Mary Aspeden; but, somehow or other, always had an
+uncomfortable suspicion that she was laughing at me. She never seemed
+the least impressed by all my gallantries and pretty speeches, which was
+peculiarly mortifying to a moustached cornet of twenty, who thought
+himself irresistible. I began, too, to get terribly jealous of Tom
+Cleaveland, who, by right of his cousinship, arrived at a degree of
+intimacy _I_ could not attain.
+
+One morning Fane and I (who were going to dine there that evening), the
+Miss Aspedens, and, of course, that Tom Cleaveland, were sitting in the
+drawing-room at Woodlands. Fane and Florence were going it at some
+opera airs (what passionate emphasis that wicked fellow gave the loving
+Italian words as his rich voice rolled them out to her accompaniment!),
+the detestable Trinity-man had been discoursing away to Mary on
+boat-racing, outriggers, bumping, and Heaven knows what, and I was just
+taking the shine out of him with the description of a shipwreck I had
+had in the Mediterranean, when Mary, who sat working at her _broderie_,
+and provokingly giving just as sweet smiles to the one as to the other,
+interrupted me with--
+
+"Goodness, Florie, there is Mr. Mills coming up the avenue. He is my
+cousin's admirer and admiration!" she added, mischievously, as the door
+opened, and a little man about forty entered.
+
+There was all over him the essence of the country. You saw at once he
+had never passed a season in London. His very boots proclaimed he had
+never been presented; and we felt almost convulsed with laughter as he
+shook hands with us all round, and attempted a most _empresse_ manner
+with Florence.
+
+"Beautiful weather we have now," remarked Mrs. Aspeden.
+
+"She is indeed!" answered the little squire, with a gaze of admiration
+at Florence.
+
+Fane, who was leaning against the mantelpiece, looking most superbly
+haughty and unapproachable, shot an annihilating glance at the small
+man, which would have quite extinguished him had he seen it.
+
+"The country is very pretty in June," said Mrs. Aspeden, hazarding
+another original remark.
+
+"Lovely--too lovely!" echoed Mr. Mills, with a profound sigh, at which
+the country must have felt exceedingly flattered.
+
+"Glorious creature your new mare is, Mr. Mills," cried the Cantab;
+"splendid style she took the fences in yesterday."
+
+"Wilkins may well say she is the _belle_ of the county!" continued Mr.
+Mills, dreamily. "I beg your pardon, what did you say? my mother took
+the fences well? No, she never hunts."
+
+"Pray tell Mrs. Mills I am very much obliged for the beautiful azalias
+she sent me," interposed Florence, with her sweet smile.
+
+"I--I am sure anything we have _you_ are welcome to. I--I--allow me----"
+And the poor squire, stooping for Florence's thimble, upset a tiny
+table, on which stood a vase with the azalias in question, on the back
+of a little bull of a spaniel, who yelled, and barked, and flew at the
+squire's legs, who, for his part, became speechless from fright,
+reddened all over, and at last, stammering out that he wanted to see Mr.
+Aspeden, and would go to him in the grounds, rushed from the room.
+
+We all burst out laughing at this climax of the poor little man's
+misery.
+
+"I will not have you laugh at him so," said Florence, at length. "I know
+him to be truly good and charitable, for all his peculiarities of
+manner."
+
+"It is but right Miss Aspeden should defend a _soupirant_ so charming in
+every way," said the captain, his moustache curling contemptuously.
+
+"Oh! Florie's made an out-and-out conquest, and no mistake!" cried Tom
+Cleaveland.
+
+Florence did not heed her cousin, but looked up in Fane's face, utterly
+astonished at his sarcastic tones. No man could have withstood that look
+of those large, beautiful eyes, and Fane bent down and asked her to sing
+"_Roberto, oh tu che adoro!_"
+
+"Yes, that will just do. Robert is his name; pity he is not here to hear
+it. 'Robert Mills, _oh tu che adoro!_'" sang the inexorable Cantab, as
+he walked across the room and asked Mary to have a game of billiards.
+For once I had the pleasure of forestalling him, but he, nevertheless,
+came and marked for us in a very amiable manner. "How well you play,
+Mary," said he. "Really, stunningly for a woman. Do you know Beauchamp
+of Kings won three whole pools the other day without losing a life!"
+
+"Indeed!" said Mary. "What good fun it is to see Mr. Mills play; he
+holds his queue as if he were afraid of it."
+
+"I say, Mary," said Cleaveland, "you don't think that Florence will
+marry that contemptible little wretch, do you? Hang it, I should be
+savage if she had not better taste. There's a cannon."
+
+"She has better taste," replied Mary, in a low tone, as Mrs. Aspeden and
+Fane entered the room.
+
+I never could like Mrs. Aspeden--peace be with her now, poor woman--but
+there was such a want of delicacy and tact, and such open manoeuvring
+in all she did, which surprised me, clever woman as she was.
+
+No sooner had she approached the billiard-table that day, than she
+began:
+
+"Florence was called away from her singing to a conference with her
+uncle, and--with somebody else, I fancy." (Fane darted a keen look of
+inquiry at her.) "Poor dear girl! being left so young an orphan, I have
+always felt such a great interest and affection for her, and I shall
+rejoice to see her happily settled as--as I trust there is a prospect of
+now," she continued.
+
+Could she mean Florence Aspeden had engaged herself to Mr. Mills? A
+roguish smile on Mary's face reassured me, but Fane walked hastily to
+the window, and stood with folded arms looking out upon the sunny
+landscape.
+
+Inveterate flirt that he was, his pride was hurt at the idea of a rival,
+and _such_ a rival, winning in a game in which _he_ deigned to have
+_ever_ so small a stake, _ever_ such a passing interest!
+
+The dinner passed off heavily--_very_ heavily--for gay Woodlands, for
+the gallant captain and Florence were both of them _distraits_ and
+_genes_, and he hardly spoke to the poor girl. Oh, wicked Fane!
+
+We sat but little time after the ladies had retired, and Tom and Mr.
+Aspeden going after some horse or other, Fane and I ascended to the
+drawing-room alone. It was unoccupied, and we sat down to await them, I
+amusing myself with teaching Master Tommy, the young heir of Woodlands,
+some comic songs, wherewith to astonish his nurse pretty considerably,
+and Fane leaning back in an arm-chair, with Florence's dog upon his knee
+in _that_, for _him_, most extraordinary thing, a "brown study."
+
+Suddenly some voices were heard in the next room.
+
+"Florence, it is your duty, recollect."
+
+"Aunt, I can recollect nothing, save that it would be far, far worse
+than death to me to marry Mr. Mills. I hold it dread sin to marry a man
+for whom one can have nothing but contempt. Once for all, I cannot,--I
+will not."
+
+Here the voice was broken with sobs. Fane had raised his head eagerly at
+the commencement of the dialogue, but now, recollecting that we were
+listeners, rose, and closed the door. I did not say a word on the
+conversation we had just heard, for I felt out of patience with him for
+his heartless flirtation; so, taking up a book on Italy, I looked over
+the engravings for a little time, and then, Tommy having been conveyed
+to the nursery in a state of rebellion, I reminded Fane of a promise he
+had once made to accompany me to Rome the next winter, and asked him if
+he intended to fulfil it.
+
+"Really, my dear fellow, I cannot tell what I may possibly do next
+winter; I hate making plans for the future. We may none of us be alive
+then," said he, in an unusually dull strain for him: "I half fancy I may
+exchange into some regiment going on foreign service. But _l'homme
+propose_, you know. By the by, poor Castleton" (his elder brother) "is
+very ill at Brussels."
+
+"Yes. I was extremely sorry to hear it, in a letter I had from Vivian
+this morning," I replied. "He is at Brussels also, and mentions a
+_belle_ there, Lady Adeliza Fitzhowden, with whom, he says, the world is
+associating _your_ name. Is it true, Fane?"
+
+"_Les on dit font la gazette des fous!_" cried the captain, impatiently,
+stroking Florence's little King Charles. "I saw Lady Adeliza at Paris
+last January, but I would not marry her--no! not if there were no other
+woman upon earth! I thought, Fred, really you were too sensible to
+believe all the scandal raked up by that gossiping Vivian. I do hope you
+have not been propagating his most unfounded report?" asked my gallant
+friend, in quite an excited tone.
+
+At this moment the ladies entered. Florence with her dark eyes looking
+very sad under their long lashes, but they soon brightened when Fane
+seated himself by her side, and began talking in a lower tone, and with
+even more _tendresse_ than ever.
+
+I had the pleasure of quite eclipsing Tom Cleaveland, I thought, as I
+turned over the leaves of Mary's music, and looked unutterable things,
+which, however, I fear were all lost, as Mary _would_ look only at the
+notes of the piano, and I firmly believe never heard a word I said.
+
+How Florence blushed as Fane whispered his soft good night; she looked
+so happy, poor girl, and he, heartless demon, talked of going into
+foreign service! By the by, what put that into his head, I wonder?
+
+The night of our grand theatricals at length arrived, and we were all
+assembled in the library, converted for the time into a green-room.
+Mounteagle was repeating to himself, for the hundredth time, his part of
+_Lord Tinsel_; I, in my _Modus_ dress, which I had a disagreeable idea
+was not becoming, was endeavoring to make an impression on the
+not-to-be impressed Mary, and Florence was looking lovelier than ever in
+her rich old-fashioned dress, when Fane entered, and bending, offered
+her a bouquet of rare flowers. She blushed deeply as she took it. Oh!
+Fane, Fane, what will you have to answer for?
+
+We were waiting the summons for the first scene, when, to Mary's horror,
+I suddenly exclaimed that I could not play!
+
+"Good Heavens! why not?" was the general inquiry.
+
+"Why!" I said. "I never thought of it until now, but certainly _Modus_
+ought to appear without moustaches, and, hang it, I cannot cut mine
+off."
+
+"Take my life, but spare my moustaches!" cried Mary, in tragic tones.
+"Certainly though, Mr. Wilmot, you are right; _Modus_ ought not to be
+seen with the characteristic 'musk-toshes,' as nurse calls them; of an
+English officer. What is to be done?"
+
+"Please, sir, will you come? Major Vaughan says the group is agoing to
+be set for the first scene, and you are wanted, sir," was a flunkey's
+admonition to Fane, who went off accordingly, after advising me to add a
+dishevelled beard to my tenderly cared-for moustaches, which would seem
+as if _Modus_ had entirely neglected his toilette.
+
+There was a general rush for part books, a general cry for things that
+were not forthcoming, and a general despair on the parts of the youngest
+amateurs at forgetting their cues just when they were most wanted.
+
+Fane, when he came off the stage after the first scene, leant against a
+pillar to watch the pretty one between _Julia_ and _Helen_, so near that
+he must have been seen by the audience, and presented a most handsome
+and interesting spectacle, I dare say, for young ladies to gaze at.
+Fixing his eyes on Florence, whose rendering of the part was really
+perfect as she uttered these words, "Helen, I'm constancy!" he
+unconsciously muttered aloud, "I believe it!"
+
+"So do I!" I could not help saying, "and therefore more shame to whoever
+wins such a heart to throw it away. 'Beneath her feet, a duke--a duke
+might lay his coronet!'" I quoted.
+
+"Are you in love yourself, Fred?" laughed the captain; then, stroking
+his moustaches thoughtfully for some minutes, he said at last, as if
+with an effort, "You are right, young one, and yet----"
+
+If I was right, what need was there for him to throw such passion into
+his part--what need was there for him to say with such _empressement_
+those words:
+
+ A willing pupil kneels to thee,
+ And lays his title and his fortune at thy feet?
+
+If he intended to go into foreign service, why did he not go at once?
+Though I confess it seemed strange to me why Fane--the courted, the
+flattered, the admired Fane--should wish to leave England.
+
+Reader, mind, the gallant captain is a desperate flirt, and I do not
+believe he will go into foreign service any more than I shall, but I
+_am_ afraid he will win that poor girl's heart with far less thought
+than you buy your last "little darling French bonnet," and when he is
+tired of it will throw it away with quite as little heed. But I was not
+so much interested in his flirtation as to forget my own, still I was
+obliged to confess that Mary Aspeden did not pay me as much attention as
+I should have wished.
+
+I danced the first dance with her, after the play was over--(I forgot to
+tell you we were very much applauded)--and Tom Cleaveland engaging her
+for the next, I proposed a walk through the conservatories to a
+sentimental young lady who was my peculiar aversion, but to whom I
+became extremely _devoue_, for I thought I would try and pique Mary if I
+could.
+
+The light strains of dance music floated in from the distance, and the
+air was laden with the scent of flowers, and many a _tete-a-tete_ and
+_partie carree_ was arranged in that commodious conservatory.
+
+Half hidden by an orange-tree, Florence Aspeden was leaning back in a
+garden-chair, close to where we stood looking out upon the beautiful
+night. Her fair face was flushed, and she was nervously picking some of
+the blossoms to pieces; before her stood Mounteagle, speaking eagerly. I
+was moving away to avoid being a hearer of his love-speech, as I doubted
+not it was, but my companion, with many young-ladyish expressions of
+adoration of the "sublime moonlight," begged me to stay "one moment,
+that she might see the dear moon emerge like a swan from that dark,
+beautiful cloud!" and in the pauses of her ecstatics I heard poor
+Mount's voice in a tone of intense entreaty.
+
+At that moment Fane passed. He glanced at the group behind the
+orange-trees, and his face grew stern and cold, and his lips closed with
+that iron compression they always have when he is irritated. His eyes
+met Florences, and he bowed haughtily and stiffly as he moved on, and
+his upright figure, with its stately head, was seen in the room beyond,
+high above any of those around him. A heavy sigh came through the orange
+boughs, and her voice whispered, "I--I am very sorry, but----"
+
+"Oh! _do_ look at the moonbeams falling on that darling little piece of
+water, Mr. Wilmot!" exclaimed my decidedly _moonstruck_ companion.
+
+"Is there no hope?" cried poor Mount.
+
+"None!" And the low-whispered knell of hope came sighing over the
+flowers. I thought how little she guessed there was none for her. Poor
+Florence!
+
+"Oh, this night! I could gaze on it forever, though it is saddening in
+its sweetness, do not you think?" asked my romantic demoiselle. "Ah!
+what a pretty _valse_ they are playing!"
+
+"May I have the pleasure of dancing it with you?" I felt myself obliged
+to ask, although intensely victimized thereby, as I hate dancing, and
+wonder whatever idiot invented it.
+
+Miss Chesney, considering her devotion to the moon, consented very
+joyfully to leave it for the pleasures (?) of a _valse a deux temps_.
+
+As we moved away, I saw that Florence was alone, and apparently occupied
+with sad thoughts. She, I dare say, was grieving over Fane's cold bow,
+and poor Mount had rushed away somewhere with his great sorrow. Fane
+came into my room next morning while I was at breakfast, having been
+obliged to get up at the unconscionable hour of ten, to be in time for a
+review we were to have that day on Layton Common for the glorification
+of the country around.
+
+The gallant captain flung himself on my sofa, and, after puffing away at
+his cigar for some minutes, came out with, "Any commands for London? I
+am going to apply for leave, and I think I shall start by the express
+to-morrow."
+
+"What's in the wind now?" I asked. "Is Lord Avanley unwell?"
+
+"No; the governor's all right, thank you. I am tired of rural felicity,
+that is all," replied Fane. "I must stay for this review to-day, or the
+colonel would make no end of a row. He is a testy old boy. I rather
+think I shall set out, or exchange into the Heavies."
+
+"What in the world have you got into your head, Fane?" I asked, utterly
+astonished to see him diligently smoking an extinguished cigar. "I am
+sorry you are going to leave us. The 110th will miss you, old fellow;
+and what _will_ the Aspedens say to losing their _preux chevalier_? By
+the way, speaking of them, poor Mount received his _conge_ last night, I
+expect."
+
+"What! are you sure? What did you say?" demanded Fane, stooping to
+relight his cigar.
+
+I told him what I had overheard in the conservatory.
+
+"Oh! well--ah! indeed--poor fellow!" ejaculated the captain. "But
+there's the bugle-call! I must go and get into harness."
+
+And I followed his example, turning over in my mind, as I donned my
+uniform, what might possibly have induced Fane to leave Layton Rise so
+suddenly. Was it, at last, pity for Florence? And if it were, would not
+the pity come too late?
+
+Layton Rise looked very pretty and bright under the combined influence
+of beauty and valor (that is the correct style, is it not?). The
+Aspedens came early, and drew up their carriages close to the
+flag-staff. Fane's eye-glass soon spied them from our distant corner of
+the field, and, as we passed before the flagstaff, he bent low to his
+saddle with one of those fascinating smiles which have gone deep to so
+many unfortunate young ladies' hearts. Again I felt angry with him, as I
+rode along thinking of that girl, her whole future most likely clouded
+for ever, and he going away to-morrow to enjoy himself about in the
+world, quite reckless of the heart he had broken, and---- But in the
+midst of my sentimentalism I was startled by hearing the sharp voice of
+old Townsend, our colonel, who was a bit of a martinet, asking poor
+Ennuye "what he lifted his hand for?"
+
+"There was a bee upon my nose, colonel."
+
+"Well, sir, and if there were a whole hive of bees upon your nose, what
+right have you to raise your hand on parade?" stormed the colonel.
+
+There was a universal titter, and poor Ennuye was glad to hide his
+confusion in the "charge" which was sounded.
+
+On we dashed our horses at a stretching gallop, our spurs jingling, our
+plumes waving in the wind, and our lances gleaming in the sunlight.
+Hurrah! there is no charge in the world like the resistless English
+dragoons'! On we went, till suddenly there was a piercing cry, and one
+of the carriages, in which the ponies had been most negligently left,
+broke from the circle and tore headlong down the common, at the bottom
+of which was a lake. One young lady alone was in it. It was impossible
+for her to pull in the excited little grays, and, unless they _were_
+stopped, down they would all go into it. But as soon as it was
+perceived, Fane had rushed from the ranks, and, digging his spurs into
+his horse, galloped after the carriage. Breathless we watched him. We
+would not follow, for we knew that he would do it, if any man could, and
+the sound of many in pursuit would only further exasperate the ponies.
+Ha! he is nearing them now. Another moment and they will be down the
+sloping bank into the lake. The girl gives a wild cry; Fane is straining
+every nerve. Bravo! well done---he has saved her! I rushed up, and
+arrived to find Fane supporting a half-fainting young lady, in whose
+soft face, as it rested on his shoulder, I recognized Florence Aspeden.
+Her eyes unclosed as I drew near, and, blushing, she disengaged herself
+from his arms. Fane bent his head over her, and murmured, "Thank God, I
+have saved you!" But perhaps I did not hear distinctly.
+
+By this time all her friends had gathered round them, and Fane had
+consigned her to her cousin's care, and she was endeavoring to thank
+him, which her looks, and blushes, and smiles did most eloquently; Mr.
+Aspeden was shaking Fane by the hand, and what further might have
+happened I know not, if the colonel (very wrathful at such an unseemly
+interruption to his cherished manoeuvres) had not shouted out, "Fall
+in, gentlemen--fall in! Captain Fane, fall in with your troop, sir!" We
+did accordingly fall in, and the review proceeded; but my friend
+actually made some mistakes in his evolutions, and kept his eye-glass
+immovably fixed on the point in the circle, and behaved altogether in a
+_distrait_ manner--Fane, whom I used to accuse of having too much _sang
+froid_--whom nothing could possibly disturb--whom I never saw agitated
+before in the whole course of my acquaintance!
+
+What an inexplicable fellow he is!
+
+The review over, we joined the Aspedens, and many were the
+congratulations Florence had heaped upon her; but she looked
+_distraite_, too, until Fane came up, and leaning his hand on the
+carriage, bent down and talked to her. Their conversation went on in a
+low tone, and as I was busy laughing with Mary, I cannot report it, save
+that from the bright blushes on the one hand, and the soft whispered
+tones on the other, Fane was clearly at his old and favorite work of
+winning hearts.
+
+"You seem quite _occupe_ this morning, Mr. Wilmot," said Mary, in her
+winning tones. "I trust you have had no bad news--no order from the
+Horse Guards for the Lancers to leave off moustaches."
+
+"No, Miss Aspeden," said Sydney; "if such a calamity as that had
+occurred, you would not see Wilmot here, he would never survive the loss
+of his moustaches--they are his first and only love."
+
+"And a first affection is never forgotten," added that provoking Mary,
+in a most melancholy voice.
+
+"It would be a pity if it were, as it seems such a fertile source of
+amusement to you and Miss Aspeden," I said, angrily, to Sydney, too much
+of a boy then to take a joke.
+
+"Captain Fane has an invitation for you and Mr. Sydney," said Mary, I
+suppose by way of _amende_. "We are going on the river, to a picnic at
+the old castle;--you will come?"
+
+The tones were irresistible, so I smoothed down my indignation and my
+poor moustache, and replied that I would have that pleasure, as did
+Sydney.
+
+"_Bien!_ good-bye, then, for we must hasten home," said Mary, whipping
+her ponies. And off bowled the carriage with its fair occupants.
+
+"You won't be here for this picnic, old fellow," I remarked to Fane, as
+we rode off the ground.
+
+"Well! I don't know. I hardly think I shall go just yet. You see I had
+six months' leave when I was in Germany, before I came down here, and I
+hardly like to ask for another so soon, and----"
+
+"It is so easy to find a reason for what one _wishes_," I added,
+smiling.
+
+"Come and look at my new chestnut, will you?" said Fane, not deigning to
+reply to my insinuation. "I am going to run her against Stuckup of the
+Guards' bay colt!"
+
+That beautiful morning in June! How well I remember it, as we dropped
+down the sunlit river, under the shade of the branching trees, the
+gentle plash of the oars mingling with the high tones and ringing
+laughter of our merry party, on our way to the castle picnic.
+
+"How beautiful this is," I said to Mary Aspeden; "would that life could
+glide on calmly and peacefully as we do this morning!"
+
+"How romantic you are becoming!" laughed Mary. "What a pity that I feel
+much more in mood to fish than to sentimentalize!"
+
+"Ah!" I replied, "with the present companionship I could be content to
+float on forever."
+
+"Hush! I beg your pardon, but _do_ listen to that dear thrush,"
+interrupted Mary, not the least disturbed, or even interested, by my
+pretty speeches.
+
+I was old enough to know I was not the least in love with Mary Aspeden,
+but I was quite too much of a boy not to feel provoked I did not make
+more impression. I was a desperate puppy at that time, and she served
+me perfectly right. However, feeling very injured, I turned my attention
+to Fane, who sat talking of course to Florence, and left Mary to the
+attentions of her Cantab cousin.
+
+"Miss Aspeden does not agree with you, Fred," said Fane. "She says life
+was not intended to glide on like a peaceful river; she likes the waves
+and storms," he added, looking down at her with very visible admiration.
+
+"No, not for myself," replied Florence, with a sweet, sad smile. "I did
+not mean _that_. One storm will wreck a _woman's_ happiness; but were I
+a man I should glory in battling with the tempest-tossed waves of life.
+If there be no combat there can be no fame, and the fiercer, the more
+terrible it is, the more renown to be the victor in the struggle!"
+
+"You are right," answered Fane, with unusual earnestness. "That used to
+be _my_ dream once, and I think even now I have the stuff in me for it;
+but then," he continued, sinking his voice, "I must have an end, an aim,
+and, above all, some one who will sorrow in my sorrow, and glory in my
+glory; who will be----"
+
+"Quite ready for luncheon, I should think; hope you've enjoyed your
+boating!" cried Mr. Aspeden's hearty voice from the shore, where, having
+come by land, he now stood to welcome us, surrounded by a crowd of
+anxious mammas, wondering if the boating had achieved the desirable end
+of a proposal from Captain A----; hoping Mr. B----, who had nothing but
+his pay, had not been paying too much attention to Adelina; and that
+Honoria had given sufficient encouragement to Mr. C----, who, on the
+strength of 1000_l._ a year, and a coronet in prospect, was considered
+an eligible _parti_ (his being a consummate scamp and inveterate gambler
+is nothing); and that D---- has too much "consideration for his family"
+to have any "serious intentions" to Miss E----, whom he is assisting to
+land. However, whatever proposals have been accepted or rejected, here
+we all were ready for luncheon, which was laid out on the grass, and
+Fane will be obliged to finish his speech another time, for little now
+is heard but _bons mots_, laughter, and champagne corks. The captain is
+more brilliant than ever, and I make Mary laugh if I cannot make her
+sigh. Luncheon over, what was to be done? See the castle, of course, as
+we were in duty bound, since it was what we came to do; and the
+_tete-a-tete_ of the boats are resumed, as ladies and gentlemen ascended
+the grassy slopes on which the fine old ruins stood. I looked for Mary
+Aspeden, feeling sure that I should conquer her in time (though I did
+not _want_ to in the least!), but she had gone off somewhere, I dare say
+with Tom Cleaveland; so I offered my arm to that same sentimental Miss
+Chesney who had bored me into a _valse a deux temps_ the night of the
+theatricals, and I have no doubt her mamma contemplated her as Mrs.
+Wilmot, of Wilmot Park, with very great gratification and security.
+Becoming rather tired of the young lady's hackneyed style of
+conversation, which consisted, as usual, of large notes of exclamation
+about "the _sweet_ nightingales!" "the _dear_ ruins!" "the _darling_
+flowers!" &c. &c., I managed to exchange with another sub, and strolled
+off by myself.
+
+As I was leaning against an old wall in no very amiable frame of mind,
+consigning all young ladies to no very delightful place, and returning
+to my old conclusion that they were all tarlatan and coquetry, soft
+musical voices on the other side of the wall fell almost unconsciously
+on my ear.
+
+"Oh! Florence, I am so unhappy!"
+
+"Are you, darling? I wish I could help you. Is it about Cyril Graham?"
+
+"Yes!" with a tremendous sigh. "I am afraid papa, and I am sure mamma,
+will never consent. I know poor dear Cyril is not rich, but then he is
+so clever, he will soon make himself known. But if that tiresome Fred
+Wilmot should propose, I know they will want me to accept him." (There
+is one thing, I never, _never will_!) "I do snub him as much as ever I
+can, but he is such a puppy, I believe he thinks I am in love with
+him--as if Cyril, were not worth twenty such as he, for all he is the
+owner of Wilmot Park!"
+
+Very pleasant this was! What a fool I must have made of myself to Mary
+Aspeden, and how nice it was to hear one's self called "a puppy!"
+
+"Of course, dear," resumed Florence, "as you love Cyril, it is
+impossible for you to love any one ever again; but I do not think Mr.
+Wilmot a puppy. He is conceited, to be sure, but I do not believe he
+would be so much liked by--by those who are his friends, if he were not
+rather nice. Come, dear, cheer up. I am sure uncle Aspeden is too kind
+not to let you marry Cyril when he knows how much you love one another.
+_I_ will talk to him, Mary dear, and bring him round, see if I do not!
+But--but--will you think me _very_ selfish if I tell you"--(a long
+pause)--"he has asked me--I mean--he wishes--he told me--he says he does
+love me!"
+
+"Who, darling? Let me think--Lord Athum?--Mr. Grant?"
+
+"No, Mary--Drummond--that is, Captain Fane--he said----Oh, Mary, I am so
+happy!"
+
+At this juncture it occurred suddenly to me that I was playing the part
+of a listener. (But may not much be forgiven a man who has heard himself
+called "a puppy"?) So I moved away, leaving the fair Florence to her
+blushes and her happiness, unshared by any but her friend. Between my
+astonishment at Fane and my indignation at Mary, I was fairly
+bewildered. Fane actually had proposed! _He_, the Honorable Drummond
+Fane, who had always declaimed against matrimony--who had been
+proof-hardened against half the best matches in the country--that
+desperate flirt who we thought would never fall in love, to have tumbled
+in headlong like this!
+
+Well, there was some satisfaction, I would chaff him delightfully about
+it; and I was really glad, for if Florence had given her heart to Fane,
+she was not the sort of girl to forget, nor he the sort of man to be
+forgotten, in a hurry. But in what an awfully foolish light I must have
+appeared to Mary Aspeden! There was one thing, she would never know I
+had overheard her. I would get leave, and go off somewhere--I would
+marry the first pretty girl I met with--she should _not_ think I cared
+for _her_. No, I would go on flirting as if nothing had happened, and
+then announce, in a natural manner, that I was going into the Highlands,
+and then _she_ would be the one to feel small, as she had made so _very_
+sure of my proposal. And yet, if I went away, that was the thing to
+please her. _Hang_ it! I did not know _what_ to do! My vanity was most
+considerably touched, though my heart was not; but after cooling down a
+little, I saw how foolishly I should look if I behaved otherwise than
+quietly and naturally, and that after all _that_ would be the best way
+to make Mary reverse her judgment.
+
+So, when I met her again, which was not until we were going to return, I
+offered her my arm to the boat where Fane and his _belle fiancee_ were
+sitting, looking most absurdly happy; and the idea of my adamantine
+friend being actually caught seemed so ridiculous, that it almost
+restored me to my good humor, which, sooth to say, the appellation of
+"puppy" had somewhat disturbed.
+
+And so the moon rose and shed her silver light over the young lady who
+had sentimentalized upon her, and a romantic cornet produced a
+concertina, and sent forth dulcet strains into the evening air, and
+Florence and her captain talked away in whispers, and Mary Aspeden sat
+with tears in her eyes, thinking, I suppose, of "Cyril" and I mused on
+my "puppyism;" and thus, wrapped each in our own little sphere, we
+floated down the river to Woodlands, and, it being late, with many a
+soft good night, and many a gentle "_Au revoir_," we parted, and Mr.
+Aspeden's castle picnic was over!
+
+I did not see Fane the next day, except at parade, until I was dressing
+for mess, when he stalked into my room, and stretching himself on a
+sofa, said, after a pause,
+
+"Well, old boy, I've been and gone and done it."
+
+"Been and gone and done what?" I asked, for, by the laws of retaliation,
+I was bound to tease him a little.
+
+"Confound you, what an idiot you are!" was the complimentary rejoinder.
+"Why, my dear fellow, the truth is, that, like most of my unfortunate
+sex, I have at last turned into that most tortuous path called love, and
+surrendered myself to the machinations of beautiful woman. The long and
+the short of it is--I am engaged to be married!"
+
+"Good Heavens! Fane!" I exclaimed, "what next? _You_ married! Who on
+earth is she? I know of no heiress down here!"
+
+"She is no heiress," said the captain; "but she is what is much
+better--the sweetest, dearest, most lovable----"
+
+"Of _course_!" I said, "but no heiress! My dear Fane, you cannot mean
+what you say?"
+
+"I should be sorry if I did not," was the cool reply; "and you must be
+more of a fool, Fred, than I took you for, if you cannot see that
+Florence Aspeden is worth all the heiresses upon earth, and is the
+embodiment of all that is lovely and winning in woman----"
+
+"No doubt of it, _tout cela saute aux yeux_," I answered. "But reflect,
+Fane; it would be utter madness in _you_ to marry anything but an
+heiress. Love in a cottage is not _your_ style. _You_ were not made for
+a small house, one maid-servant, and dinner----"
+
+"Ah!" laughed Fane, "you are bringing my former nonsense against me.
+Some would say I was committing worse folly now, but believe me, Fred,
+the folly even of the heart is better than the calculating wisdom of the
+world. I do not hesitate to say that if Florence had fortune I should
+prefer it, for such a _vaurien_ as I was made to spend money; but as she
+has not, I love her too dearly to think about it, and my father, I have
+no doubt, will soon get me my majority, and we shall get on stunningly.
+So marry for _love_, Fred, if you take my advice."
+
+"A _rather_ different opinion to that which you inculcated so
+strenuously a month ago," I observed, smiling; "but let me congratulate
+you, old fellow, with all my heart. 'Pon my word, I am very glad, for I
+always felt afraid you would, like Morvillier's _garcon_, resist all the
+attractions of a woman until the '_cent mille ecus_,' and then, without
+hesitation, declare, '_J'epouse_.' But you were too good to be spoiled."
+
+"As for my goodness, there's not much of _that_," replied Fane; "I am
+afraid I am much better off than I deserve. I wrote to the governor last
+night: dear old boy! he will do anything _I_ ask him. By the by, Mary
+will be married soon too. I hope you are not _epris_ in that quarter,
+Fred?--pray do not faint if you are. _My_ Florence, who can do anything
+she likes with anybody (do you think any one _could_ be angry with
+_her_?) coaxed old Aspeden into consenting to Mary's marriage with a
+fellow she really is in love with--Graham, a barrister. I think she
+would have had more difficulty with the lady-mother, if a letter had not
+most opportunely come from Graham this morning, announcing the agreeable
+fact that he had lots of tin left him unexpectedly. I wish somebody
+would do the same by me. And so this Graham will fly down on the wings
+of love--represented in these days by the express train--to-morrow
+evening."
+
+"And how about the foreign service, Fane?" I could not help asking.
+"And do you intend going to London to-morrow?"
+
+"I made those two resolutions under very different circumstances to the
+_present_, my dear fellow," laughed Fane: "the first, when I determined
+to cut away from Florence altogether, as the only chance of forgetting
+her; sad the second, when I thought poor Mount was an accepted lover,
+and I confess that I did not feel to have stoicism enough to witness his
+happiness. But how absurd it seems that _I_ should have fallen in love,"
+continued he; "_I_, that defied the charms of all the Venuses upon
+earth--the last person any one would have taken for a marrying man. I am
+considerably astonished myself! But I suppose love is like the
+whooping-cough, one must have it some time or other." And with these
+words the gallant captain raised himself from the sofa, lighted a cigar,
+and, strolling out of the room, mounted his horse for Woodlands, where
+he was engaged of course to dinner that evening.
+
+And now, gentle reader, what more is there to tell? I fear as it is I
+have written too "much about nothing," and as thou hast, I doubt not, a
+fine imagination, what need to tell how Lord Avanley and Mr. Aspeden
+arranged matters, not like the cross papas in books and dramas, but
+amicably, as gentlemen should; how merrily the bells pealed for the
+double wedding; how I, as _garcon d'honneur_, flirted with the
+bridesmaids to my heart's content; how Fane is my friend, _par
+excellence_, still, and how his love is all the stronger for having
+"come late," he says. How all the young ladies hated Florence, and all
+the mammas and chaperones blessed her for having carried off the
+"fascinating younger son," until his brother Lord Castleton dying at the
+baths, Fane succeeded of course to the title; how she is, if possible,
+even more charming as Lady Castleton than as Florence Aspeden, and how
+they were _really_ heart-happy until the Crimean campaign separated
+them; and how she turns her beautiful eyes ever to the East and heeds
+not, save to repulse, the crowd of admirers who seek to render her
+forgetful of her soldier-husband.
+
+True wife as she is, may he live to come back with laurels hardly won,
+still to hold her his dearest treasure.
+
+_May 1, 1856._--Fane _has_ come back all safe. I hope, dear reader, you
+are as glad as I am. He has distinguished himself stunningly, and is now
+lieutenant-colonel of the dear old 110th. You have gloried in the charge
+of ours at Balaklava, but as I have not whispered to you my name, you
+cannot possibly divine that a rascally Russian gave me a cut on the
+sword-arm that very day in question, which laid me _hors de combat_, but
+got me my majority.
+
+Well may I, as well as Fane, bless the remembrance of Layton Rise, for
+if I had never made the acquaintance of Mary Aspeden--I mean Graham--I
+might never have known her _belle-soeur_ (who is now shaking her head
+at me for writing about her), and whom, either through my interesting
+appearance when I returned home on the sick-list, and my manifold
+Crimean adventures, or through the usual perversity of women, who will
+fall always in love with scamps who do not deserve half their
+goodness--(Edith, you shall _not_ look over my shoulder)--I prevailed on
+to accept my noble self and Lancer uniform, with the "_puppyism_" shaken
+pretty well out of it! And so here we are _very happy of course_.--"As
+yet," suggests Edith.
+
+Ah! Fane and I little knew--poor unhappy wretches that we were--what our
+fate was preparing for us when it led us discontented _blases_ and
+_ennuyes_ down to our Country Quarters!
+
+
+
+
+THE CHALLONERS
+
+ BY E. F. BENSON
+
+ _12mo. Cloth, $1.50._
+
+ The theme is a father's concern lest his children become
+ contaminated by what he considers an unwholesome social
+ atmosphere. The book is filled with Mr. Benson's clever
+ observations on the English smart set, and the love-story
+ shows him at his best.
+
+
+MORGANATIC
+
+ BY MAX NORDAU
+
+ _12mo. Decorated cloth, $1.50._
+
+ This new book by the author of "Degeneration," has many of the
+ qualities which gave its predecessor such a phenomenal sale. It
+ is a study of morganatic marriage, and full of strong
+ situations.
+
+
+OLIVE LATHAM
+
+ By E. L. VOYNICH
+ Author of "Jack Raymond" and "The Gadfly." Cloth, $1.50
+
+"The author's knowledge of this matter has been painfully personal. Her
+husband, a Polish political refugee, at the age of twenty-two, was
+arrested and thrown into a vile Russian prison without trial, and spent
+five years of his life thereafter in Siberian exile, escaping in 1890
+and fleeing to England. Throughout 'Olive Latham' you get the impression
+that it is a veritable record of what one woman went through for
+love.... This painful, poignant, powerfully-written story permits one
+full insight into the cruel workings of Russian justice and its effects
+upon the nature of a well-poised Englishwoman. Olive comes out of the
+Russian hell alive, and lives to know what happiness is again, but the
+horror of those days in St. Petersburg, the remembrance of the
+inhumanity which killed her lover never leaves her.... It rings true. It
+is a grewsome study of Russian treatment of political offenders. Its
+theme is not objectionable--a criticism which has been brought against
+other books of Mrs. Voynich's."--_Chicago Record-Herald._
+
+"So vividly are the coming events made to cast their shadows before,
+that long before the half-way point is reached the reader knows that
+Volodya's doom is near at hand, and that the chief interest of the story
+lies not with him, but with the girl, and more specifically with the
+curious mental disorders which her long ordeal brings upon her. It is
+seldom that an author has succeeded in depicting with such grim horror
+the sufferings of a mind that feels itself slipping over the brink of
+sanity, and clutches desperately at shadows in the effort to drag itself
+back."--_New York Globe._
+
+
+BACCARAT
+
+ BY FRANK DANBY
+ AUTHOR OF "PIGS IN CLOVER"
+
+ _12 mo. Six illustrations in color. Cloth, $1.50._
+
+ The story of a young wife left by her husband at a Continental
+ watering place for a brief summer stay, who, before she is
+ aware, has drifted into the feverish current of a French Monte
+ Carlo.
+
+ A dramatic and intense book that stirs the pity. One cannot read
+ "Baccarat" unmoved.
+
+"The finished style and unforgettable story, the living characters, and
+compact tale of the new book show it to be a work on which care and time
+have been expended.
+
+"Much more dramatic than her first novel, it possesses in common with it
+a story of deep and terrible human interest."--_Chicago Tribune._
+
+
+THE ISSUE
+
+ By GEORGE MORGAN
+
+ Illustrated. Cloth, $1.50
+
+"Will stand prominently forth as the strongest book that the season has
+given us. The novel is a brilliant one, and will command wide
+attention."--_Philadelphia Public Ledger._
+
+"The love story running through the book is very tender and
+sweet."--_St. Paul Despatch._
+
+"Po, a sweet, lovable heroine."--_The Milwaukee Sentinel._
+
+"Such novels as 'The Issue' are rare upon any theme. It is a work that
+must have cost tremendous toil, a masterpiece. It is superior to 'The
+Crisis.'"--_Pittsburg Gazette._
+
+"The best novel of the Civil War that we have had."--_Baltimore Sun._
+
+
+ J. B. LIPPINCOTT COMPANY, PHILADELPHIA.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Beatrice Boville and Other Stories, by Ouida
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