Part 7 (1/2)
”I only know that Father Frontford said that we were to put ourselves under her orders,” was the reply. ”Of course it is something about the election.”
Maurice looked at him keenly.
”Old fellow,” he said, ”you look pale. What's the matter with you?”
”I didn't sleep well,” Ashe answered with a flush. ”I went to Mrs.
Fenton's to dine, and the indulgence wasn't good for me. It's really nothing.”
Maurice did not reply, but sank into an easy-chair and looked about him. The room was a charming fancy of the decorator, who claimed to have taken his inspiration from the American mullein. The ceiling was of a pale, almost transparent blue, a tint just strong enough to suggest a sky and yet leave it half doubtful if such a meaning were intended; the walls were hung with a rough paper matching in hue the velvety leaves of the plant, here and there touched with conventionalized figures of the yellow blossoms. This contrast of green and yellow was softened and united by a clever use of the clear red of the mullein stamens sparingly used in the figures on the walls, in the cords of the draperies, and in the tr.i.m.m.i.n.gs of the velvet furniture.
The decorator had used the same simple tone for walls, furniture, and curtains; and the effect was delightfully soothing and distinguished.
Wynne felt somehow out of place in this room which bore the stamp of wealth and taste so markedly. He smiled to himself a little bitterly, recalling how alien he was to these things. Descended from a family for generations established in a New England town, he had in his veins too good blood to feel abashed at the sight of splendors; but he had in his life seen little of the world outside of lecture-rooms or the Clergy House. Born with the appreciation of sensuous delight, with the instinctive desire for the beautiful and refined, he felt awake within him at contact with the richness and luxury of the life which he was now leading tastes which he had before hardly been aware of possessing.
He was being influenced by the joy of worldly life, so subtly presented that he did not even appreciate the need of guarding against the danger.
His reflections were cut short by the entrance of a servant who conducted the young men to a private sitting-room up-stairs. The halls through which they pa.s.sed were hung with superb old tapestry, interspersed with magnificent pictures. On the broad landing it was almost as if the visitors came into the presence of a beautiful woman, lying naked amid bright cus.h.i.+ons in an oriental interior. As he dropped his eyes from the alluring vision, Maurice saw in the corner the name of the artist.
”Fenton,” he said aloud. ”Did he paint that?”
His companion started, regarding the picture with widening eyes. The English footman, whom Wynne addressed, turned back to say over his shoulder:--
”Yes, sir; they say it's his best picture, and some says he painted his best friend's wife that way, with nothing on, sir.”
”It is a wicked picture!” Ashe said with what seemed to Maurice unnecessary emphasis.
The footman regarded the speaker over his shoulder with a smile.
”Oh, that's owin' to your bein' of the cloth, sir,” was his comment.
”They don't generally feel to own to likin' it; but they mostly notices it.”
A superb screen of carved and gilded wood stood before an open door above. When this was reached, the footman slipped noiselessly behind it, and they heard their names announced.
”Show them in,” Mrs. Wilson's voice said.
The lady met them in a wonderful morning gown which seemed to be chiefly cascades of lace, with bows of carmine ribbon here and there which brought out the color of the dark eyes and hair of the wearer.
Maurice could hardly have told why he flushed, yet he was conscious of the feeling that there was something intimate in the costume. To be met by this beautiful woman, her hand outstretched in greeting, her eyes s.h.i.+ning, her white neck rising out of the foam of laces; to breathe the air, soft and perfumed, of this room; to be surrounded by this luxury, these tokens of a life which stinted nothing in the pursuit of enjoyment; more than all to appreciate by some subtle inner sense the appealing charm of femininity, the suggestions of domestic intimacies; all this was to the young deacon to be exposed to influences far more formidable to the ascetic life than those grosser temptations with which a stupid fiend a.s.sailed St. Anthony. Wynne drew a deep breath, wondering why he felt so strangely moved and confused; yet unconsciously steeling himself against owning to his conscience what was the truth.
”It is so good of you to come early,” Mrs. Wilson said brightly. ”I hope you don't mind coming upstairs. I wanted to talk to you confidentially, and we might be interrupted. Besides, you see, I am not dressed to go down.”
The young men murmured something to the effect that they did not in the least mind coming up.
”Didn't mind coming up!” she echoed. ”Is that the way you answer a lady who gives you the privilege of her private sitting-room? Come, you must do better than that. If you can't compliment me on my frock, you might at least say that you are proud to be here.”
The two deacons stood awkwardly in the middle of the room, abashed at her raillery. Maurice saw the lips of Ashe harden, and he hastened to speak lest his companion should say something stern.
”You should remember, Mrs. Wilson,” he said a little timidly, yet not without a gleam of humor, ”that our curriculum at the Clergy House does not include a course in compliment.”
”It should then,” she responded gayly. ”How in the world is a clergyman to get on with the women of his congregation if he can't compliment?
Why, the salvation or the d.a.m.nation of most women is determined by compliments.”