Part 14 (1/2)
”Or tremendous pride,” said I. ”Women make an odd world of it for the rest of us. There was good old George, as true and straight a man as ever lived--”
”And she took the other! Yes.” George's sister laughed sorrowfully.
”But George and she have both survived the mistake,” I went on with confidence. ”Her tragedy must have taught her some important differences. Haven't you a notion she'll be tremendously glad to see him when he comes back from America?”
”Ah, I do hope so!” she cried. ”You see, I'm fearing that he hopes so too--to the degree of counting on it.”
”You don't count on it yourself?”
She shook her head. ”With any other woman I should.”
”Why not with Mrs. Harman?”
”Cousin Louise has her ways,” said Miss Elizabeth slowly, and, whether she could not further explain her doubts, or whether she would not, that was all I got out of her on the subject at the time. I asked one or two more questions, but my companion merely shook her head again, alluding vaguely to her cousin's ”ways.” Then she brightened suddenly, and inquired when I would have my things sent up to the chateau from the inn.
At the risk of a misunderstanding which I felt I could ill afford, I resisted her kind hospitality, and the outcome of it was that there should be a kind of armistice, to begin with my dining at the chateau that evening. Thereupon she mounted to the saddle, a bit of gymnastics for which she declined my a.s.sistance, and looked down upon me from a great height.
”Did anybody ever tell you,” was her surprising inquiry, ”that you are the queerest man of these times?”
”No,” I answered. ”Don't you think you're a queerer woman?”
”FOOTLE!” she cried scornfully. ”Be off to your woods and your woodscaping!”
The bay horse departed at a smart gait, not, I was glad to see, a parkish trot--Miss Elizabeth wisely set limits to her sacrifices to Mode--and she was far down the road before I had pa.s.sed the outer fringe of trees.
My work was accomplished after a fas.h.i.+on more or less desultory that day; I had many absent moments, was restless, and walked more than I painted. Oliver Saffron did not join me in the late afternoon; nor did the echo of distant yodelling bespeak any effort on his part to find me. So I gave him up, and returned to the inn earlier than usual.
While dressing I sent word to Professor Keredec that I should not be able to join him at dinner that evening; and it is to be recorded that Glouglou carried the message for me. Amedee did not appear, from which it may be inferred that our maitre d'hotel was subject to lucid intervals. Certainly his present shyness indicated an intelligence of no low order.
CHAPTER XI
The dining-room at Quesnay is a pretty work of the second of those three Louises who made so much furniture. It was never a proper setting for a rusty, out-of-doors painter-man, nor has such a fellow ever found himself complacently at ease there since the day its first banquet was spread for a score or so of fine-feathered epigram jinglers, fiddling Versailles gossip out of a rouge-and-lace Quesnay marquise newly sent into half-earnest banishment for too much king-hunting. For my part, however, I should have preferred a chance at making a place for myself among the wigs and brocades to the Crusoe's Isle of my chair at Miss Elizabeth's table.
I learned at an early age to look my vanities in the face; I outfaced them and they quailed, but persisted, surviving for my discomfort to this day. Here is the confession: It was not until my arrival at the chateau that I realised what temerity it involved to dine there in evening clothes purchased, some four or five or six years previously, in the economical neighbourhood of the Boulevard St. Michel. Yet the things fitted me well enough; were clean and not s.h.i.+ny, having been worn no more than a dozen times, I think; though they might have been better pressed.
Looking over the men of the Quesnay party--or perhaps I should signify a reversal of that and say a glance of theirs at me--revealed the importance of a particular length of coat-tail, of a certain rich effect obtained by widely separating the lower points of the waistcoat, of the display of some imagination in the b.u.t.tons upon the same garment, of a doubled-back arrangement of cuffs, and of a specific design and dimension of tie. Marked uniformity in these matters denoted their necessity; and clothes differing from the essential so vitally as did mine must have seemed immodest, little better than no clothes at all. I doubt if I could have argued in extenuation my lack of advantages for study, such an excuse being itself the d.a.m.ning circ.u.mstance. Of course eccentricity is permitted, but (as in the Arts) only to the established. And I recall a painful change of colour which befell the countenance of a s.h.i.+ning young man I met at Ward's house in Paris: he had used his handkerchief and was absently putting it in his pocket when he providentially noticed what he was doing and restored it to his sleeve.
Miss Elizabeth had the courage to take me under her wing, placing me upon her left at dinner; but sprightlier calls than mine demanded and occupied her attention. At my other side sat a magnificently upholstered lady, who offered a fine shoulder and the rear wall of a collar of pearls for my observation throughout the evening, as she leaned forward talking eagerly with a male personage across the table.
This was a prince, ending in ”ski”: he permitted himself the slight vagary of wearing a gold bracelet, and perhaps this flavour of romance drew the lady. Had my good fortune ever granted a second meeting, I should not have known her.
Fragments reaching me in my seclusion indicated that the various conversations up and down the long table were animated; and at times some topic proved of such high interest as to engage the comment of the whole company. This was the case when the age of one of the English king's grandchildren came in question, but a subject which called for even longer (if less spirited) discourse concerned the shameful lack of standard on the part of citizens of the United States, or, as it was put, with no little exasperation, ”What is the trouble with America?”
Hereupon brightly gleamed the fat young man whom I had marked for a wit at Les Trois Pigeons; he pictured with inimitable mimicry a western senator lately in France. This outcast, it appeared, had worn a slouch hat at a garden party and had otherwise betrayed his country to the ridicule of the intelligent. ”But really,” said the fat young man, turning plaintiff in conclusion, ”imagine what such things make the English and the French think of US!” And it finally went by consent that the trouble with America was the vulgarity of our tourists.
”A dreadful lot!” Miss Elizabeth cheerfully summed up for them all.
”The miseries I undergo with that cla.s.s of 'prominent Amurricans' who bring letters to my brother! I remember one awful creature who said, when I came into the room, 'Well, ma'am, I guess you're the lady of the house, aren't you?'”
Miss Elizabeth sparkled through the chorus of laughter, but I remembered the ”awful creature,” a genial and wise old man of affairs, whose daughter's portrait George painted. Miss Elizabeth had missed his point: the canva.s.ser's phrase had been intended with humour, and even had it lacked that, it was not without a pretty quaintness. So I thought, being ”left to my own reflections,” which may have partaken of my own special kind of sn.o.bbery; at least I regretted the Elizabeth of the morning garden and the early walk along the fringe of the woods.