Part 38 (1/2)

For past us, so close that the curling plumes in her hat touched the Major's shoulder, floated the ”little intrigante” in question, who'd come out of her carriage to see where a pug of hers was put. She'd heard all we said, confound it, for her head was up, her color bright, and she looked at Telfer proudly and disdainfully, with her dark eyes flas.h.i.+ng.

Telfer returned it to the full as haughtily, for he never s.h.i.+rked the consequences of his own actions ('pon my life, they looked like a great stag and a little greyhound challenging each other), and Violet swept away across the platform.

”You've made an enemy for life, Telfer,” said Walsham, as we whisked along.

”So much the better, if I'm a rock ahead to warn her off a marriage with the governor,” rejoined the Major, smoking, as he always did, under the officials' very noses. ”I hope I sha'n't come across her again. If the Tressillian and I meet, we shall be about as amicable as a rat and a beagle. Take a weed, Fred. I do it on principle to resist unjust regulations. Why shouldn't we take a pipe if we like? A man whose olfactory nerves are so badly organized as to dislike Cavendish is too great a m.u.f.f to be considered.”

As ill luck would have it, when we crossed to Dover, who should cross, too, but the Tressillian and her party--aunt, cousins, maid, courier, and pug. Telfer wouldn't see them, but got on the p.o.o.p, as far away as ever he could from the spot where Violet sat nursing her dog and reading a novel, provokingly calm and comfortable to the envious eyes of all the _malades_ around her.

”Good Heavens!” said he, ”was anything ever so provoking? Just because that girl's my particular aversion, she must haunt me like this. If she'd been anybody I wanted to meet, I should never have caught a glimpse of her. For mercy's sake, Vane, if you see a black hat and white feather anywhere again, tell me, and we'll change the route immediately.”

Change the route we did, for, going on board the steamer at Dusseldorf, there, on the deck, stood the Tressillian. Telfer turned sharp on his heel, and went back as he came. ”I'll be shot if I go down the Rhine with her. Let's cut across into France.” Cut across we did, but we stopped at Brussels on our way; and when at last we caught sight of the tops of the fir-trees around Essellau, Telfer took a long whiff at his pipe with an air of contentment. ”I should say we're safe now. She'll hardly come pig-sticking into the middle of Swabia.”

II.

VIOLET TRESSILLIAN.

Essellau was a very jolly place, with thick woods round it, and the river Beersbad running in sight; and his pretty sister, the Comtesse Virginie, his good wines, and good sport, made Von Edenburgh's a pleasant house to visit at. Marc himself, who is in the Austrian service (he was winged at Montebello the other day by a rascally Zouave, but he paid him off for it, as I hope his countrymen will eventually pay off all the Bonapartists for their _galimatias_)--Marc himself was a jolly fellow, a good host, a keen shot, and a capital ecarte player, and made us enjoy ourselves at Essellau as he had done before, hunting and shooting with Telfer down at Torwood.

”I've some countrywomen of yours here, Telfer,” said Marc, after we'd talked over his English loves, given him tiding of d.u.c.h.esses and danseuses, and messages from no end of pretty women that he'd flirted with the Christmas before. ”They're some friends of my mother's, and when they were at Baden-Baden last year, Virginie struck up a desperate young lady attachment with one of them----”

”Are they good-looking?--because, if they are, they may be drysalters'

daughters, and I shan't care,” interrupted Fred.

Telfer stroked his moustache with a contemptuous smile--_he_ wouldn't have looked at a drysalter's daughter if she'd had all the beauty of Amphitrite.

”Come and see,” said Marc. ”Virginie will think you're neglecting her atrociously.”

Horribly bored to be going to meet some Englishwomen who might turn out to be Smiths or Joneses, and would, to a dead certainty, spoil all his pleasure in pig-sticking, shooting, and ecarte, by flirting with him whether he would or no, the Major strode along corridors and galleries after Von Edenburgh. When at length we reached the salon where Virginie and her mother and friends were, Telfer lifted his eyes from the ground as the door opened, started as if he'd been shot, and stepped back a pace or two, with an audible, ”If that isn't the very devil!”

There, in a low chair, sat the Tressillian, graceful as a Sphakiote girl, with a toilet as perfect as her profile, dark hair like waves of silk, and dark eyes full of liquid light, that, when they looked irresistible, could do anything with any man that they liked. Violet certainly looked as unlike that unlucky ogre and scapegoat, the devil, as a young lady ever could. But worse than a score of demons was she in poor Telfer's eyes: to have come out to Essellau only to be shut up in a country-house for a whole month with his pet aversion!--certainly it _was_ a hard case, and the fierce lightning glance he flashed on her was pardonable under the circ.u.mstances. But n.o.body's more impa.s.sive than the Major: I've seen him charge down into the Sikhs with just the same calm, quiet expression as he'd wear smoking and reading a novel at home; so he soon rallied, bowed to the Tressillian, who gave him an inclination as cold as the North Pole, shook hands with her aunt and cousins (three women I hate: the mamma's the most dexterous of manoeuvrers, and the girls the arrantest of flirts), and then sat down to a little quiet chat with Virginie von Edenburgh, who's pretty, intelligent, and unaffected, though she's a belle at the Viennese court. Telfer was pleasant with the little comtesse; he'd known her from childhood, and she was engaged to the colonel of Marc's troop, so that Telfer felt quite sure she'd no designs upon him, and talked to her _sans gene_, though to have wholly abstained from bitterness and satire would have been an impossibility to him, with the obnoxious Tressillian seated within sight. Once he fixed her with his calm gray eyes, she met them with a proud flas.h.i.+ng glance; Telfer gave back the defiance, and _guerre a outrance_ was declared between them. It was plain to see that they hated one another by instinct, and I began to think Calceolaria wasn't so safe in my stables after all, for if the Major set his face against anything, his father, who pretty well wors.h.i.+pped him, would never venture to do it in opposition; he'd as soon think of leaving Torwood to the country, to be turned into an infirmary or a museum.

That whole day Telfer was agreeable to the Von Edenburgh, distantly courteous to the Carterets, and utterly oblivious of the very existence of the Tressillian. When we were smoking together, after dinner, he began to unburden himself of his mighty wrath.

”Where the deuce did you pick up that girl, Marc?” asked he, as we stood looking at the sun setting over the woods of Essellau, and crimsoning the western clouds.

”What girl?” asked Marc.

”That confounded Tressillian,” answered the Major, gloomily.

”I told you the Carterets were friends of my mother's, and last year, when the Tressillian came with them to Baden, Virginie met her, and they were struck with a great and sudden love for one another, after the insane custom of women. But why on earth, Telfer, do you call her such names? I think her divine; her eyes are something----”

”I wish her eyes had been at the devil before she'd bewitched my poor father with them,” said Telfer, pulling a rose to pieces fiercely. ”I give you my word, Marc, that if I didn't like you so well, I'd go straight off home to-morrow. Here have I been turning out of my route twenty times, on purpose to avoid her, and then she must turn up at the very place I thought I was sure to be safe from her. It's enough to make a man swear, I should say, and not over-mildly either.”

”But what's she done?” cried Von Edenburgh, thinking, I dare say, that Telfer had gone clean mad. ”Refused you--jilted you--what is it?”

”Refused me! I should like to see myself giving her the chance,” said the Major, with intense scorn. ”No but she's done what I'd never forgive--tried to cozen the poor old governor into marrying her. She's no money, you know, and no home of her own; but, for all that, for a girl of twenty to try and hook an old man of seventy-five, to cheat him into the idea that he's made a conquest, and chisel him into the belief that she's in love with him--faugh! the very idea disgusts one. What sort of a wife would a woman make who could act such a lie?”

As he spoke, a form swept past him, and a beautiful face full of scorn and pa.s.sion gleamed on him through the _demi-lumiere_.