Part 35 (2/2)
And Miss Skeat, in her high-bred old-fas.h.i.+oned way, had laid her hand gently on the Countess's arm in token of sympathy.
”Dear Countess,” she had said, ”please remember that it will not make any difference to me, and that I will never leave you. Poverty is not a new thing to me, my dear.” The tears came into Margaret's eyes as she pressed the elder lady's hand in silence. These pa.s.sages of feeling were rare between them, but they understood each other, for all that. And now Margaret was speaking despondently of the future. A few days before she had made up her mind at last to write the necessary letters to Russia, and she had now despatched them on their errand. Not that she had any real hope of bettering things, but a visit from Nicholas had roused her to the fact that it was a duty she owed to him as well as to herself to endeavour to recover what was possible of her jointure.
At last she opened the telegram and uttered an exclamation of surprise.
”What in the world does it mean?” she cried, and gave it to Miss Skeat, who held it close to the firelight.
The message was from Lord Fitzd.o.g.g.i.n, Her British Majesty's Amba.s.sador at St. Petersburg, and was an informal statement to the effect that his Excellency was happy to communicate to the Countess Margaret the intelligence that, by the untiring efforts and great skill of a personal friend, the full payment of her jointure was now secured to her in perpetuity. It stated, moreover, that she would shortly receive official information of the fact through the usual channels.
Miss Skeat beamed with pleasure; for though she had been willing to make any sacrifice for Margaret, it would not have been an agreeable thing to be so very poor again.
”I never met Lord Fitzd.o.g.g.i.n,” said Margaret, ”and I do not understand in the least. Why should he, of all people, inform me of this, if it is really true?”
”The Duke must have written to him,” said Miss Skeat, still beaming, and reading the message over again.
Margaret paused a moment in thought, then lighting the gas herself, she wrote a note and despatched Vladimir in hot haste.
”I have asked Mr. Bellingham to dine,” she said, in answer to Miss Skeat's inquiring look. ”He will go to the party with me afterwards, if he is free.”
It chanced that Mr. Bellingham was in his rooms when Margaret's note came, and he immediately threw over an engagement he had previously made, and sent word he would be at the Countess's disposal. Punctual to the minute he appeared. Margaret showed him the telegram.
”What does this mean, Mr. Bellingham?” she asked, smiling, but scrutinising his face closely.
”My dear Countess,” cried the old gentleman, delighted beyond measure at the result of his policy, and corruscating with smiles and twinkles, ”my dear Countess, allow me to congratulate you.”
”But who is the 'personal friend' mentioned? Is it the Duke? He is in the far West at this moment.”
”No,” answered Mr. Bellingham, ”it is not the Duke. I am inclined to think it is a manifestation of some great cosmic force, working silently for your welfare. The lovely spirits,” continued the old gentleman, looking up from under his brows, and gesticulating as though he would call down the mystic presence he invoked--”the lovely spirits that guard you would be loth to allow anything so fair to suffer annoyance from the rude world. You are well taken care of, Countess, believe me.”
Margaret smiled at Uncle Horace's way of getting out of the difficulty, for she suspected him of knowing more than he would acknowledge. But all she could extract from him was that he knew Lord Fitzd.o.g.g.i.n slightly, and that he believed the telegram to be perfectly genuine. He had played his part in the matter, and rubbed his hands as though was.h.i.+ng them of any further responsibility. Indeed he had nothing to tell, save that he had advised Claudius to get an introduction from the Duke. He well knew that the letters he had given Claudius had been the real means of his success; but as Margaret only asked about the telegram, he was perfectly safe in denying any knowledge of it. Not that such a consideration would have prevented his meeting her question with a little fib, just to keep the secret.
”Will you not go to this dance with me this evening?” asked Margaret after dinner, as they sat round the fireplace.
”What ball is that?” inquired Mr. Bellingham.
”I hardly know what it is. It is a party at the Van Sueindell's and there is 'dancing' on the card. Please go with me; I should have to go alone.”
”I detest the pomp and circ.u.mstance of pleasure,” said Uncle Horace, ”the Persian appurtenances, as my favourite poet calls them; but I cannot resist so charming an invitation. It will give me the greatest pleasure. I will send word to put off another engagement.”
”Do you really not mind at all?”
”Not a bit of it. Only three or four old fogies at the club. _Est mihi nonum superantis annum plenus Albani cadus_,” continued Mr. Bellingham, who never quoted Horace once without quoting him again in the next five minutes. ”I had sent a couple of bottles of my grandfather's madeira to the club, 1796, but those old boys will enjoy it without me. They would talk me to death if I went.”
”It is too bad,” said Margaret, ”you must go to the club. I would not let you break an engagement on my account.”
”No, no. Permit me to do a good deed without having to bear the infernal consequences in this life, at all events. The chatter of those people is like the diabolical screaming of the peac.o.c.k on the terrace of the Emir's chief wife, made memorable by Thackeray the prophet.” He paused a moment, and stroked his snowy pointed beard. ”Forgive my strong language,” he added; ”really, they are grand adjectives those, 'diabolical' and 'infernal.' They call up the whole of Dante to my mind.” Margaret laughed.
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