Part 11 (1/2)
”Ah! the Lelys!” she cried, raising her hand slightly toward the row of portraits on the wall. ”The dear impossible things! Are you still discussing them--as we used to do?”
Daphne started. ”You know this house, then?”
The smile broadened into a laugh of amus.e.m.e.nt, as Mrs. Fairmile turned to Roger's mother.
”Don't I, dear Lady Barnes--don't I know this house?”
Lady Barnes seemed to straighten in her chair. ”Well, you were here often enough to know it,” she said abruptly. ”Daphne, Mrs. Fairmile is a distant cousin of ours.”
”Distant, but quite enough to swear by!” said the visitor, gaily. ”Yes, Mrs. Barnes, I knew this house very well in old days. It has many charming points.” She looked round with a face that had suddenly become coolly critical, an embodied intelligence.
Daphne, as though divining for the first time a listener worthy of her steel, began to talk with some rapidity of the changes she wished to make. She talked with an evident desire to show off, to make an impression. Mrs. Fairmile listened attentively, occasionally throwing in a word of criticism or comment, in the softest, gentlest voice. But somehow, whenever she spoke, Daphne felt vaguely irritated. She was generally put slightly in the wrong by her visitor, and Mrs. Fairmile's extraordinary knowledge of Heston Park, and of everything connected with it, was so odd and disconcerting. She had a laughing way, moreover, of appealing to Roger Barnes himself to support a recollection or an opinion, which presently produced a contraction of Daphne's brows. Who was this woman? A cousin--a cousin who knew every inch of the house, and seemed to be one of Roger's closest friends? It was really too strange that in all these years Roger should never have said a word about her!
The red mounted in Daphne's cheek. She began, moreover, to feel herself at a disadvantage to which she was not accustomed. Dr. Lelius, meanwhile, turned to Mrs. Fairmile, whenever she was allowed to speak, with a joyous yet inarticulate deference he had never shown to his hostess. They understood each other at a word or a glance. Beside them Daphne, with all her cleverness, soon appeared as a child for whom one makes allowances.
A vague anger swelled in her throat. She noticed, too, Roger's silence and Lady Barnes's discomfort. There was clearly something here that had been kept from her--something to be unravelled!
Suddenly the new-comer rose. Mrs. Fairmile wore a dress of some pale gray stuff, cobweb-light and transparent, over a green satin. It had the effect of sea-water, and her gray hat, with its pale green wreath, framed the golden-gray of her hair. Every one of her few adornments was exquisite--so was her grace as she moved. Daphne's pink-and-black vivacity beside her seemed a pinchbeck thing.
”Well, now, when will you all come to Upcott?” Mrs. Fairmile said graciously, as she shook hands. ”The d.u.c.h.ess will be enchanted to see you any day, and----”
”Thank you! but we really can't come so far,” said a determined voice.
”We have only a shaky old motor--our new one isn't ready yet--and besides, we want all our time for the house.”
”You make him work so hard?”
Mrs. Fairmile, laughing, pointed to the speaker. Roger looked up involuntarily, and Daphne saw the look.
”Roger has nothing to do,” she said, quickly. ”Thank you very much: we will certainly come. I'll write to you. How many miles did you say it was?”
”Oh, nothing for a motor!--twenty-five. We used to think it nothing for a ride, didn't we?”
The speaker, who was just pa.s.sing through the door, turned towards Roger, who with Lelius, was escorting her, with a last gesture--gay, yet, like all her gestures, charged with a slight yet deliberate significance.
They disappeared. Daphne walked to the window, biting her lip.
As she stood there Herbert French came into the room, looking a little shy and ill at ease, and behind him three persons, a clergyman in an Archdeacon's ap.r.o.n and gaiters, and two ladies. Daphne, perceiving them sideways in a mirror to her right, could not repress a gesture and muttered sound of annoyance.
French introduced Archdeacon Mountford, his wife and sister. Roger, it seemed, had met them in the hall, and sent them in. He himself had been carried off on some business by the head keeper.
Daphne turned ungraciously. Her colour was very bright, her eyes a little absent and wild. The two ladies, both clad in pale brown stuffs, large mushroom hats, and stout country boots, eyed her nervously, and as they sat down, at her bidding, they left the Archdeacon--who was the vicar of the neighbouring town--to explain, with much amiable stammering, that seeing the d.u.c.h.ess's carriage at the front door, as they were crossing the park, they presumed that visitors were admitted, and had ventured to call.
Daphne received the explanation without any cordiality. She did indeed bid the callers sit down, and ordered some fresh tea. But she took no pains to entertain them, and if Lady Barnes and Herbert French had not come to the rescue, they would have fared but ill. The Archdeacon, in fact, did come to grief. For him Mrs. Barnes was just a ”foreigner,”
imported from some unknown and, of course, inferior _milieu_, one who had never been ”a happy English child,” and must therefore be treated with indulgence. He endeavoured to talk to her--kindly--about her country. A branch of his own family, he informed her, had settled about a hundred years before this date in the United States. He gave her, at some length, the genealogy of the branch, then of the main stock to which he himself belonged, presuming that she was, at any rate, acquainted with the name? It was, he said, his strong opinion that American women were very ”bright.” For himself he could not say that he even disliked the accent, it was so ”quaint.” Did Mrs. Barnes know many of the American bishops? He himself had met a large number of them at a reception at the Church House, but it had really made him quite uncomfortable! They wore no official dress, and there was he--a mere Archdeacon!--in gaiters. And, of course, no one thought of calling them ”my lord.” It certainly was very curious--to an Englishman. And Methodist bishops!--such as he was told America possessed in plenty--that was still more curious. One of the Episcopalian bishops, however, had preached--in Westminster Abbey--a remarkable sermon, on a very sad subject, not perhaps a subject to be discussed in a drawing-room--but still----
Suddenly the group on the other side of the room became aware that the Archdeacon's amiable prosing had been sharply interrupted--that Daphne, not he, was holding the field. A gust of talk arose--Daphne declaiming, the Archdeacon, after a first pause of astonishment, changing aspect and tone. French, looking across the room, saw the mask of conventional amiability stripped from what was really a strong and rather tyrannical face. The man's prominent mouth and long upper lip emerged. He drew his chair back from Daphne's; he tried once or twice to stop or argue with her, and finally he rose abruptly.