Volume I Part 17 (1/2)
”You prefer a rough young fellow, like Roderick Vawdrey, who talks slang, and smells of the stables.”
”I prefer anyone who is good and true,” retorted Vixen. ”Roderick is a man, and not to be named in the same breath with your fine gentleman.”
”I admit that the comparison would be vastly to his disadvantage,” said the widow. ”But it's time to dress for dinner.”
”And we are to dine with the Mortimers,” yawned Vixen. ”What a bore!”
This young lady had not that natural bent for society which is symptomatic of her age. The wound that pierced her young heart two years ago had not healed so completely that she could find pleasure in inane conversation across a primeval forest of sixpenny ferns, and the fact.i.tious liveliness of a fas.h.i.+onable dinner-table.
CHAPTER XI.
”It shall be Measure for Measure.”
The night of the ball came, and, in spite of her aversion for Captain Winstanley, and general dislike of the whole thing, Violet Tempest began the evening by enjoying herself. She was young and energetic, and had an immense reserve of animal spirits after her two years of sadness and mourning. She danced with the partners her friends brought her--some of the most eligible men in the room--and was full of life and gaiety; yet the festival seemed to her in somewise horrible all the time.
”If papa could know that we are dancing and smiling at each other, as if all life was made up of gladness, when he is lying in his cold grave!” thought Vixen, after joining hands with her mother in the ladies' chain.
The widow looked as if she had never known a care. She was conscious that Worth's _chef-d'oeuvre_ was not thrown away. She saw herself in the great mirrors which once reflected George and his lovely Fitzherbert in their days of gladness--which reflected the same George later, old, and sick, and weary.
”That French _grande dame_ was right,” thought Mrs. Tempest, ”who said, '_Le noir est si flattant pour les blondes_.'”
Black was flattering for Vixen's auburn hair also. Though her indifferent eye rarely glanced at the mirrored walls, she had never looked lovelier. A tall graceful figure, in billowy black tulle, wreathed with white chrysanthemums; a queen-like head, with a red-gold coronal; a throat like an ivory pillar, spanned with a broad black ribbon, fastened with a diamond clasp; diamond stars in her ears, and a narrow belt of diamonds round each white arm.
”How many waltzes have you kept for me?” Captain Winstanley asked presently, coming up to Vixen.
”I have not kept waltzes for anyone,” she answered indifferently.
”But surely you were under a promise to keep some for me? I asked you a week ago.”
”Did you? I am sure I never promised anything of the kind.”
”Here is only one little shabby waltz left,” said the Captain, looking at her programme. ”May I put my name down for that?”
”If you like,” answered Vixen indifferently; and then, with the faintest suspicion of malice, she added, ”as mamma does not dance round dances.”
She was standing up for the Lancers presently, and her partner had just led her to her place, when she saw that she had her mother and Captain Winstanley again for her _vis-a-vis_. She grew suddenly pale, and turned away.
”Will you let me sit this out?” she said. ”I feel awfully ill.”
Her partner was full of concern, and carried her off at once to a cooler room.
”It is too bad!” she muttered to herself. ”The Lancers! To go romping round with a lot of wild young men and women. It is as bad as the Queen in Hamlet.”
This was the last dance before supper. Vixen went in to the supper-room presently with her attentive partner, who had kept by her side devotedly while the lively scramble to good old English tunes was going on in the dancing-room.
”Are you better?” he asked tenderly, fanning her with her big black fan, painted with violets and white chrysanthemums. ”The room is abominably hot.”
”Thanks. I'm quite well now. It was only a momentary faintness. But I rather hate the Lancers, don't you?”