Part 6 (2/2)
My behaviour towards Lato underwent no change: I had drawn the ”black ball,” and, in consequence, the most cordial friends.h.i.+p soon subsisted between us.
It would have been difficult not to like Lato, for I have never met a more amiable, agreeable young fellow.
He was about seventeen years old, very tall, and stooped slightly. His features were delicately chiselled; his smile was quite bewitching in its dreamy, all-embracing benevolence. There was decided melancholy in his large, half-veiled eyes, which caused Hedwig to liken him to Lord Byron.
His complexion was rather dark,--which was odd, as his hair was light brown touched with gold at the temples. His neck was too long, and his arms were uncommonly long. All his appointments, from his coats to his cigar-case, were extremely elegant, testifying to a degree of fastidiousness thitherto quite unknown in Komaritz. Nevertheless, he seemed very content in this primitive nest, ignoring all discomfort, and making no pretension. Heda, who was quick to seize upon every opportunity to admire him, called my attention to his amiable forbearance, or, I confess, I should not have noticed it.
From Hedwig I learned much concerning the young man; among other things, she gave me a detailed account of his family circ.u.mstances. His mother was, she informed me, a ”mediatisirte.”[1] She uttered the word reverently, and, when I confessed that I did not know what it meant, she nearly fainted. His father was one of the most fascinating men in Austria. He is still living, and is by no means, it seems, at the end of his fascinations, but, being a widower, hovers about from one amusing capital to another, breaking hearts for pastime. It seems to be a wonderfully entertaining occupation, and, when one once indulges in it, the habit cannot be got rid of,--like opium-eating.
While he thus paraded his brilliant fascinations in the gay world, he did not, of course, find much time to interest himself in his boy, who was left to the care of distant relatives, and who, when found to be backward in his studies, was placed, I believe by Uncle Karl's advice, under the care of a Prague professor by the name of Suwa, who kept, as Harry once told me, a kind of orthopdic inst.i.tution for minds that lacked training.
Beside Lato, during that vacation there were two other guests at Komaritz, one a very distant cousin of Harry's, and the other a kind of sub-tutor whose duty it was to coach Harry in his studies.
We could not endure the sub-tutor. His name was Franz Tuschalek; he was about nineteen, with hands and feet like shovels, and a flat, unmeaning face. His manner was intensely servile, and his coat-sleeves and trousers were too short, which gave him a terribly indigent air. One could not help regarding him with a mixture of impatience and sympathy.
By my radical uncle's express desire, he and Harry called each other by their Christian names. Still, obnoxious as poor Tuschalek was to us, he was more to our minds than the distant cousin.
This last was a Pole, about twenty years old, with a sallow face and long oblique eyes, which he rolled in an extraordinary way. His hair was black, and he curled it with the curling-tongs. He was redolent of musk, and affected large plaid suits of clothes. His German was not good, and his French was no better, but he a.s.sured us that he was a proficient in Chinese and Arabic. He was always playing long and difficult concertos on the table, but he never touched the piano at Komaritz, declaring that the instrument was worn out. He was always short of funds, and was perpetually boasting of the splendour of his family.
He frequently sketched, upon some stray piece of paper, a magnificent and romantic structure, which he would display to us as his Polish home,--”our ancestral castle.”
Sometimes this castle appeared with two turrets, sometimes with only one, a fact to which Harry did not fail to call his attention.
His distinguished ancestry was a topic of never-failing interest to him; he was never weary of explaining his connection with various European reigning dynasties, and his visiting-cards bore the high-sounding names ”Le Comte Ladislas Othon Fainacky de Chrast-Bambosch,” although, as Harry confided to us, he had no right to the t.i.tle of comte, being the son of a needy Polish baron.
Although Franz Tuschalek was almost as obnoxious to Harry as the ”braggart Sarmatian,” as Lato called the Pole, he never allowed his antipathy to be seen, but treated him with great consideration, as he did all inferiors, scarcely allowing himself to give vent to his distaste for him even in his absence. But he paraded his dislike of Fainacky, never speaking of him as a guest, but as an ”invasion,” and always trying to annoy him by some boyish trick.
At length, one Sunday, the crisis in Harry's first vacation occurred.
We had all been to early ma.s.s, and the celebrant had accompanied us back to Komaritz, as was his custom, to breakfast. After a hasty cup of coffee he took his leave of us children, and betook himself to the bailiff's quarters, where we more than suspected him of a quiet game of cards with that official and his underlings.
The door of the dining-room leading out into the garden was wide open, and delicious odours from the moist flower-beds floated in and mingled with the fragrance of the coffee. It had rained in the night, but the sun had emerged from the clouds and had thrown a golden veil over trees and shrubs. We were just rising from table when the ”braggart Sarmatian” entered, booted and spurred, smelling of all the perfumes of Arabia, and with his hair beautifully curled. He had not been to ma.s.s, and had breakfasted in his room in the frame house on the hill, which had been rebuilt since the fire. After he had bidden us all an affected good-morning, he said, turning to Harry,--
”Has the man come with the mail?”
”Yes,” Harry replied, curtly.
”Did no registered letter come for me?”
”No.”
”Strange!”
”Very strange,” Harry sneered. ”You have been expecting that letter a long time. If I were you, I'd investigate the matter.”
”There's something wrong with the post,” the Pole declared, with an air of importance. ”I must see about it. I think I had best apply to my uncle the cabinet-minister.”
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