Part 36 (1/2)

”Are you fond of Dante?” asked she.

”Very. I sometimes buy a cheap copy and subst.i.tute the names of my pet enemies all through the _Inferno_ wherever they will suit the foot. In that way I get all the satisfaction the author got by putting his friends in h.e.l.l, without the labour of writing, or the ability to compose, the poem.” The Countess laughed again.

”Do you ever do the same thing with the _Paradiso_?”

”No,” answered Uncle Horace, with a smile. ”Purgatory belonged to an age when people were capable of being made better by suffering, and as for paradise, my heaven admits none but the fair s.e.x. They are all beautiful, and many of them are young.”

”Will you admit me, Mr. Bellingham?”

”St. Margaret has forestalled me,” said he gallantly, ”for she has a paradise of her own, it seems, to which she has admitted me.”

And so they pa.s.sed the evening pleasantly until the hour warned them that it was time to go to the great Van Sueindell house. That mansion, like all private houses in America, and the majority of modern dwellings in other parts of the world, is built in that depraved style of architecture which makes this age pre-eminent in the ugliness of brick and stone. There is no possibility of criticism for such monstrosity, as there also seems to be no immediate prospect of reform. Time, the iron-fisted Nihilist, will knock them all down some day and bid mankind begin anew. Meanwhile let us ignore what we cannot improve. Night, the all-merciful, sometimes hides these excrescences from our sight, and sometimes the moon, Nature's bravest liar, paints and moulds them into a fugitive harmony. But in the broad day let us fix our eyes modestly on the pavement beneath us, or turn them boldly to the sky, for if we look to the right or the left we must see that which sickens the sense of sight.

On the present occasion, however, nothing was to be seen of the house, for the long striped canvas tent, stretching from the door to the carriage, and lined with plants and servants, hid everything else from view. There is probably no city in the world where the _business_ of ”entertaining” is so thoroughly done as in New York. There are many places where it is more agreeable to be ”entertained;” many where it is done on a larger scale, for there is nothing in America so imposing as the receptions at Emba.s.sies and other great houses in England and abroad. To bring the matter into business form, since it is a matter of business, let us say that nowhere do guests cost so much by the cubic foot as in New York. Abroad, owing to the peculiar conditions of court-life, many people are obliged to open their houses at stated intervals. In America no one is under this necessity. If people begin to ”entertain” they do it because they have money, or because they have something to gain by it, and they do it with an absolute regardlessness of cost which is enough to startle the sober foreigner.

It may be in bad taste, but if we are to define what is good taste in these days, and abide by it, we shall be terribly restricted. As an exhibition of power, this enormous expenditure is imposing in the extreme; though the imposing element, being strictly confined to the display of wealth, can never produce the impressions of durability, grandeur, and military pomp so dear to every European. Hence the Englishman turns up his nose at the gilded shows of American society, and the American sniffs when he finds that the door-sc.r.a.per of some great London house is only silverplated instead of being solid, and that the carpets are at least two years old. They regard things from opposite points of view, and need never expect to agree.

Margaret, however, was not so new to American life, seeing she was American born, as to bestow a thought or a glance on the appointments of Mr. and Mrs. Van Sueindell's establishment; and as for Mr. Bellingham, he had never cared much for what he called the pomp and circ.u.mstance of pleasure, for he carried pleasure with him in his brilliant conversation and his ready tact. All places were more or less alike to Mr.

Bellingham. At the present moment, however, he was thinking princ.i.p.ally of his fair charge, and was wondering inwardly what time he would get home, for he rose early and was fond of a nap in the late evening. He therefore gave Margaret his arm, and kept a lookout for some amusing man to introduce to her. He had really enjoyed his dinner and the pleasant chat afterwards, but the prospect of piloting this magnificent beauty about till morning, or till she should take it into her head to go home, was exhausting. Besides, he went little into society of this kind, and was not over-familiar with the faces he saw.

He need not have been disturbed, however, for they had not been many minutes in the rooms before a score of men had applied for the ”pleasure of a turn.” But still she held Mr. Bellingham's arm, obdurately refusing to dance. As Barker came up a moment later, willing, perhaps, to show his triumph to the rejected suitors, Margaret thanked Mr. Bellingham, and offered to take him home if he would stay until one o'clock; then she glided away, not to dance but to sit in a quieter room, near the door of which couples would hover for a quarter of an hour at a time waiting to seize the next pair of vacant seats. Mr. Bellingham moved away, amused by the music and the crowd and the fair young faces, until he found a seat in a corner, shaded from the flare of light by an open door close by, and there, in five minutes, he was fast asleep in the midst of the gaiety and noise and heat--unnoticed, a gray old man amid so much youth.

But Barker knew the house better than the most of the guests, and pa.s.sing through the little room for which every one seemed fighting, he drew aside a heavy curtain and showed a small boudoir beyond, lighted with a solitary branch of candles, and occupied by a solitary couple.

Barker had hoped to find this sanctum empty, and as he pushed two chairs together he eyed the other pair savagely.

”What a charming little room,” said Margaret, sinking into the soft chair and glancing at the walls and ceiling, which were elaborately adorned in the j.a.panese fas.h.i.+on. The chairs also were framed of bamboo, and the table was of an unusual shape. It was the ”j.a.panese parlour[3],”

as Mrs. Van Sueindell would have called it. Every great house in New York has a j.a.panese or a Chinese room. The entire contents of the apartment having been brought direct from Yokohama, the effect was harmonious, and Margaret's artistic sense was pleased.

[Footnote 3: Parlour or parlor, American for ”sitting-room.”]

”Is it not?” said Barker, glad to have brought her to a place she liked.

”I thought you would like it, and I hoped,” lowering his voice, ”that we should find it empty. Only people who come here a great deal know about it.”

”Then you come here often?” asked Margaret, to say something. She was glad to be out of the din, for though she had antic.i.p.ated some pleasure from the party, she discovered too late that she had made a mistake, and would rather be at home. She had so much to think of, since receiving that telegram; and so, forgetting Barker and everything else, she followed her own train of thought. Barker talked on, and Margaret seemed to be listening--but it was not the music, m.u.f.fled through the heavy curtains, nor the small voice of Mr. Barker that she heard. It was the was.h.i.+ng of the sea and the creaking of cordage that were in her ears--the rush of the s.h.i.+p that was to bring him back--that was perhaps bringing him back already. When would he come? How soon? If it could only be to-morrow, she would so like to--what in the world is Mr. Barker saying so earnestly? Really, she ought to listen. It was very rude.

”Conscious of my many defects of character--” Oh yes, he was always talking about his defects; what next? ”--conscious of my many defects of character,” Mr. Barker was saying, in an even, determined voice, ”and feeling deeply how far behind you I am in those cultivated pursuits you most enjoy, I would nevertheless scorn to enlarge upon my advantages, the more so as I believe you are acquainted with my circ.u.mstances.”

Good gracious! thought Margaret, suddenly recovering the acutest use of her hearing, what is the man going to say? And she looked fixedly at him with an expression of some astonishment.

”Considering, as I was saying,” he continued steadily, ”those advantages upon which I will not enlarge, may I ask you to listen to what I am going to say?”

Margaret, having lost the first part of Barker's speech completely, in her fit of abstraction, had some vague idea that he was asking her advice about marrying some other woman.

”Certainly,” she said indifferently; ”pray go on.” At the moment of attack, however, Barker's heart failed him for an instant. He thought he would make one more attempt to ascertain what position Claudius held towards Margaret.

”Of course,” he said, smiling and looking down, ”we all knew about Dr.

Claudius on board the _Streak_.”

”What did you know about him?” asked Margaret calmly, but her face flushed for an instant. That might have happened even if she had not cared for Claudius; she was so proud that the idea of being thought to care might well bring the colour to her cheek. Barker hardly noticed the blush, for he was getting into very deep water, and was on the point of losing his head.

”That he proposed to you, and you refused him,” he said, still smiling.