Part 41 (1/2)
Briggs appeared doubtful about this, and meditated for a long time over his third gla.s.s of port with the profound gravity of a philosopher.
”No, Mamzelle,” he said at last, when he rose from the table to return to his duties upstairs--”No! there I must differ from you. I am a close observer. Wotever Winsleigh's faults,--and I do not deny that they are many,--he is a gentleman-that I _must_ admit--and with _hevery_ respect for you, Mamzelle--I can a.s.sure you he's no fool!”
And with these words Briggs betook himself to the library to arrange the reading-lamp and put the room in order for his master's return, and as he did so, he paused to look at a fine photograph of Lady Winsleigh that stood on the oak escritoire, opposite her husband's arm-chair.
”No,” he muttered to himself. ”Wotever he thinks of some goings-on, he ain't blind nor deaf--that's certain. And I'd stake my character and purfessional reputation on it--wotever he is, he's no fool!”
For once in his life, Briggs was right. He was generally wrong in his estimate of both persons and things--but it so happened on this particular occasion that he had formed a perfectly correct judgment.
CHAPTER XIX.
”Could you not drink her gaze like wine?
Yet in its splendor swoon Into the silence languidly, As a tune into a tune?”
DANTE ROSSETTI.
On the morning of the twenty-fifth of May, Thelma, Lady Bruce-Errington, sat at breakfast with her husband in their sun-s.h.i.+ny morning-room, fragrant with flowers and melodious with the low piping of a tame thrush in a wild gilded cage, who had the sweet habit of warbling his strophes to himself very softly now and then, before venturing to give them full-voiced utterance. A bright-eyed, feathered poet he was, and an exceeding favorite with his fair mistress, who occasionally leaned back in her low chair to look at him and murmur an encouraging ”Sweet, sweet!” which caused the speckled plumage on his plump breast to ruffle up with suppressed emotion and grat.i.tude.
Philip was pretending to read the _Times_, but the huge, self-important printed sheet had not the faintest interest for him,--his eyes wandered over the top of its columns to the golden gleam of his wife's hair, brightened just then by the sunlight streaming through the window,--and finally he threw it down beside him with a laugh.
”There's no news,” he declared. ”There never _is_ any news!”
Thelma smiled, and her deep-blue eyes sparkled.
”No?” she half inquired--then taking her husband's cup from his hand to re-fill it with coffee, she added, ”but I think you do not give yourself time to find the news, Philip. You will never read the papers more than five minutes.”
”My dear girl,” said Philip gaily, ”I am more conscientious than you are, at any rate, for you never read them at all!”
”Ah, but you must remember,” she returned gravely, ”that is because I do not understand them! I am not clever. They seem to me to be all about such dull things--unless there is some horrible murder or cruelty or accident--and I would rather not hear of these. I do prefer books always--because the books last, and news is never certain--it may not even be true.”
Her husband looked at her fondly; his thoughts were evidently very far away from newspapers and their contents.
As she met his gaze, the rich color flushed her soft cheeks and her eyes drooped shyly under their long lashes. Love, with her, had not yet proved an illusion,--a bright toy to be s.n.a.t.c.hed hastily and played with for a brief while, and then thrown aside as broken and worthless. It seemed to her a most marvellous and splendid gift of G.o.d, increasing each day in worth and beauty,--widening upon her soul and dazzling her life in ever new and expanding circles of glory. She felt as if she could never sufficiently understand it,--the pa.s.sionate adoration Philip lavished upon her, filled her with a sort of innocent wonder and grat.i.tude, while her own overpowering love and wors.h.i.+p of him, sometimes startled her by its force into a sweet shame and hesitating fear. To her mind he was all that was great, strong, n.o.ble, and beautiful--he was her master, her king,--and she loved to pay him homage by her exquisite humility, clinging tenderness, and complete, contented submission. She was neither weak nor timid,--her character, moulded on grand and simple lines of duty, saw the laws of Nature in their true light, and accepted them without question. It seemed to her quite clear that man was the superior,--woman the inferior, creature--and she could not understand the possibility of any wife not rendering instant and implicit obedience to her husband, even in trifles.
Since her wedding-day no dark cloud had crossed her heaven of happiness, though she had been a little confused and bewildered at first by the wealth and dainty luxury with which Sir Philip had delighted to surround her. She had been married quietly at Christiania, arrayed in one of her own simple white gowns, with no ornament save a cl.u.s.ter of pale blush-roses, the gift of Lorimer. The ceremony was witnessed by her father and Errington's friends,--and when it was concluded they had all gone on their several ways,--old Guldmar for a ”toss” on the Bay of Biscay,--the yacht _Eulalie_, with Lorimer, Macfarlane, and Duprez on board, back to England, where these gentlemen had separated to their respective homes,--while Errington, with his beautiful bride, and Britta in demure and delighted attendance on her, went straight to Copenhagen.
From there they travelled to Hamburg, and through Germany to the Schwarzwald, where they spent their honeymoon at a quiet little hotel in the very heart of the deep-green Forest.
Days of delicious dreaming were these,--days of roaming on the emerald green turf under the stately and odorous pines, listening to the dash of the waterfalls, or watching the crimson sunset burning redly through the darkness of the branches,--and in the moonlit evenings sitting under the trees to hear the entrancing music of a Hungarian string-band, which played divine and voluptuous melodies of the land,--”lieder” and ”walzer” that swung the heart away on a golden thread of sound to a paradise too sweet to name! Days of high ecstacy, and painfully pa.s.sionate joy!--when ”love, love!” palpitated in the air, and struggled for utterance in the jubilant throats of birds, and whispered wild suggestions in the rustling of the leaves! There were times when Thelma,--lost and amazed and overcome by the strength and sweetness of the nectar held to her innocent lips by a smiling and flame-winged Eros,--would wonder vaguely whether she lived indeed, or whether she were not dreaming some gorgeous dream, too brilliant to last? And even when her husband's arms most surely embraced her, and her husband's kiss met hers in all the rapture of victorious tenderness, she would often question herself as to whether she were worthy of such perfect happiness, and she would pray in the depths of her pure heart to be made more deserving of this great and wonderful gift of love--this supreme joy, almost too vast for her comprehension.
On the other hand, Errington's pa.s.sion for his wife was equally absorbing--she had become the very moving-spring of his existence. His eyes delighted in her beauty,--but more than this, he revelled in and reverenced the crystal-clear parity and exquisite refinement of her soul. Life a.s.sumed for him a new form,--studied by the light of Thelma's straightforward simplicity and intelligence, it was no longer, as he had once been inclined to think, a mere empty routine,--it was a treasure of inestimable value fraught with divine meanings. Gradually, the touch of modern cynicism that had at one time threatened to spoil his nature, dropped away from him like the husk from an ear of corn,--the world arrayed itself in bright and varying colors--there was good--nay, there was glory--in everything.
With these ideas, and the healthy satisfaction they engendered, his heart grew light and joyous,--his eyes more l.u.s.trous,--his step gay and elastic,--and his whole appearance was that of man at his best,--man, as G.o.d most surely meant him to be--not a rebellious, feebly-repining, sneering wretch, ready to scoff at the very sunlight,--but a being both brave and intelligent, strong and equally balanced in temperament, and not only contented, but absolutely glad to be alive,--glad to feel the blood flowing through the veins,--glad and grateful for the gifts of breathing and sight.
As each day pa.s.sed, the more close and perfect grew the sympathies of husband and wife,--they were like two notes of a perfect chord, sounding together in sweetest harmony. Naturally, much of this easy and mutual blending of character and disposition arose from Thelma's own gracious and graceful submissiveness,--submissiveness which, far from humiliating her, actually placed her (though she knew it not) on a throne of almost royal power, before which Sir Philip was content to kneel--an ardent wors.h.i.+pper of her womanly sweetness. Always without question or demur, she obeyed his wishes implicitly,--though, as has been before mentioned, she was at first a little overpowered and startled by the evidences of his wealth, and did not quite know what to do with all the luxuries and gifts he heaped upon her. Britta's worldly prognostications had come true,--the simple gowns her mistress had worn at the Altenfjord were soon discarded for more costly apparel,--though Sir Philip had an affection for his wife's Norwegian costumes, and in his heart thought they were as pretty, if not prettier, than the most perfect triumphs of a Parisian _modiste_.
But in the social world, Fas.h.i.+on, the capricious deity, must be followed, if not wholly, yet in part; and so Thelma's straight, plain garments were laid carefully by as souvenirs of the old days, and were replaced by toilettes of the most exquisite description,--some simple,--some costly,--and it was difficult to say in which of them the lovely wearer looked her best. She herself was indifferent in the matter--she dressed to please Philip,--if he was satisfied, she was happy--she sought nothing further. It was Britta whose merry eyes sparkled with pride and admiration when she saw her ”Froken” arrayed in gleaming silk or sweeping velvets, with the s.h.i.+ne of rare jewels in her rippling hair,--it was Britta who took care of all the dainty trifles that gradually acc.u.mulated on Thelma's dressing table,--in fact, Britta had become a very important personage in her own opinion. Dressed neatly in black, with a coquettish muslin ap.r.o.n and cap becomingly frilled, she was a very taking little maid, with her demure rosy face and rebellious curls, though very different to the usual trained spy whose officious ministrations are deemed so necessary by ladies of position, whose lofty station in life precludes them from the luxury of brus.h.i.+ng their own hair. Britta's duties were slight--she invented most of them--yet she was always busy sewing, dusting, packing, or polis.h.i.+ng. She was a very wide-awake little person, too,--no hint was lost upon her,--and she held her own wherever she went with her bright eyes and sharp tongue. Though secretly in an unbounded state of astonishment at everything new she saw, she was too wise to allow this to be noticed, and feigned the utmost coolness and indifference, even when they went from Germany to Paris, where the brilliancy and luxury of the shops almost took away her breath for sheer wonderment.
In Paris, Thelma's wardrobe was completed--a certain Madame Rosine, famous for ”artistic arrangements,” was called into requisition, and viewing with a professional eye the superb figure and majestic carriage of her new customer, rose to the occasion in all her glory, and resolved that Miladi Bruce-Errington's dresses should be the wonder and envy of all who beheld them.