Part 9 (1/2)
I found him a most engaging fellow, surprisingly well-informed on American topics. I credit myself with being a fairly good reader of faces, and, reading his as he bent it in Miss Annesley's direction, I began to worry about Mr. Robert's course of true love. Here was a man who possessed a t.i.tle, was handsome, rich, and of a.s.sured social position: it would take an extraordinary American girl to look coldly upon his attentions. By and by the two left us, Miss Annesley promising to call on Nancy.
”And where are you staying, Betty?”
”Father and I have taken Senator Blank's house in Chevy Chase for the winter. My horses are already in the stables. Do you ride?”
”I do.”
”Then we shall have some great times together.”
”Be sure to call. I want you to meet my brother.”
”I believe I have,” replied Miss Annesley.
”I mean my younger brother, a lieutenant in the Army.”
”Oh, then you have two brothers?”
”Yes,” said Nancy.
”The dance is dying, Mademoiselle,” said the count in French.
”Your arm, Monsieur. _Au revoir,_ Nancy.”
”Poor Bobby!” Nancy folded her hands and sighed mournfully. ”It appears to me that his love affair is not going to run very smooth. But isn't she just beautiful, Charlie? What color, what style!”
”She's a stunner, I'm forced to admit. Bob'll never stand a ghost of a show against that Russian. He's a great social catch, and is backed by many kopecks.”
”How unfortunate we did not know that she would be here! Bobby would have met her at his best, and his best is more to my liking than the count's. He has a way about him that the women like. He's no laggard.
But money ought not to count with Betty. She is worth at least a quarter of a million. Her mother left all her property to her, and her father acts only as trustee. Senator Blank's house rents for eight thousand the season. It's ready furnished, you know, and one of the handsomest homes in Was.h.i.+ngton. Besides, I do not trust those foreigners,”--taking a remarkably abrupt curve, as it were.
[Ill.u.s.tration: ”What were you doing off your own box?” ”Getting on the wrong box”--Act I.]
”There's two Bs in your bonnet, Nancy,” I laughed.
”Never mind the Bs; let us have the last of this waltz.”
This is not my own true story; so I shall bow off and permit my hero to follow the course of true love, which is about as rough-going a thoroughfare as the many roads of life have to offer.
VI
THE MAN ON THE BOX
At eleven-thirty he locked up his book and took to his room the mysterious bundle which he had purloined from the stables. It contained the complete livery of a groom. The clothes fitted rather snugly, especially across the shoulders. He stood before the pier-gla.s.s, and a complacent (not to say roguish) smile flitted across his face. The black half-boots, the white doeskin breeches, the brown bra.s.s-b.u.t.toned frock, and the white hat with the brown c.o.c.kade. ... Well, my word for it, he was the handsomest jehu Was.h.i.+ngton ever turned out. With a grin he touched his hat to the reflection in the gla.s.s, and burst out laughing. His face was as smooth as a baby's, for he had generously sacrificed his beard.
I can hear him saying to himself: ”Lord, but this is a lark! I'll have to take another Scotch to screw up the edge of my nerve. Won't the boys laugh when they hear how I stirred the girls' frizzes! We'll have a little party here when they all get home. It's a good joke.”
Mr. Robert did not prove much of a prophet. Many days were to pa.s.s ere he reentered his brother's house.
He stole quietly from the place. He hadn't proceeded more than a block when he became aware of the fact that he hadn't a penny in his clothes.