Part 22 (1/2)
”But you know, these b.a.l.l.s are very amusing,” said Mme. Dawson.
”Do you think so?”
”I do, and so do you.”
”Besides, an observer like you,” added Mlle. Cadet, ”can devote himself to taking notes.”
”And why do you conclude that I am an observer?” asked Caesar.
”The idea! Because it is evident.”
”And an observer with very evil intentions,” insisted Mlle. de Sandoval.
”You credit me with qualities I haven't got.”
Caesar had to accede, and the Dawson ladies and he were the first to enter the salon and take their seats. In one corner was a gla.s.s vase hung from the ceiling by a pulley.
”What is that?” Mme. Dawson asked a servant.
”It is a gla.s.s vase full of bonbons, which you have to break with a pole with your eyes closed.”
”Ah, yes.”
Since n.o.body else came in, the Dawson girls and Caesar wandered about looking into the cupboards and finding the Marchesa Sciacca's music and the Neapolitan's. They looked out one of the salon windows. It was a detestable night, raining and hailing; the great drops were bouncing on the sidewalks of the Piazza Esedra. Water and hail fell mixed together, and for moments at a time the ground would stay white, as if covered with a thin coating of pearls.
The fountain in the centre cast up its streams of water, which mingled with the rain, and the central jet shone in the lays of the arc-lights; now and again the livid brilliance of lightning illuminated the stone arches and the rumbling of thunder was heard...
Still n.o.body else came to the salon. Doubtless the ladies were preparing their toilets very carefully.
The first to appear, dressed for the ball, were the Marchesa Sciacca and her husband, accompanied by the inevitable Carminatti.
The Marchesa, with her habitual brutality toward everybody that lived in the house, bowed with formal coolness to Mme. Dawson, and sat down by the piano, as far away as possible from the French ladies.
She wore a gown of green silk, with lace and gold ornaments. She was very decolletee and had a fretful air. Her husband was small and stooped, with a long moustache and s.h.i.+ny eyes; on his cheek-bones were the red spots frequent in consumptives, and he spoke in a sharp voice.
”Are you acquainted with the Marquis?” Mme. Dawson asked Caesar.
”Yes, he is a tiresome busybody,” said Caesar, ”the most boresome fellow you could find. He stops you in the street to tell you things. The other day he made me wait a quarter of an hour at the door of a tourist agency, while he inquired the quickest way of getting to Moscow. 'Are you thinking of going there?' I asked him. 'No; I just wanted to find out....' He is an idiot.”
”G.o.d preserve us from your comments. What will you be saying about us?”
exclaimed Mlle. de Sandoval.
The Countess Brenda entered, with her husband, her daughter, and a friend. She was dressed in black, low in the neck, and wore a collar of brilliants as big as filberts, which surrounded her bosom with rays of light and blinding reflections.
Her friend was a young lady of consummate beauty; a brunette with colour in her skin and features of flawless perfection; with neither the serious air nor the statuesqueness of a great beauty, and with none of the negroid tone of most brunettes. When she smiled she showed her teeth, which were a burst of whiteness. She was rather loaded with jewels, which gave her the aspect of an ancient G.o.ddess.
”You, who find everything wrong,” said Mlle. Cadet to Caesar, ”what have you to say of that woman? I have been looking at her ever since she came in, and I don't find the slightest defect.”