Part 80 (1/2)

”De Simoncourt, by all that's propitious!” cried Dalrymple.

”What--Major Dalrymple returned to Paris!”

”Ay, just returned. Bored to death with Berlin and Vienna--no place like Paris, De Simoncourt, go where one will!”

”None, indeed. There is but one Paris, and pleasure is the true profit of all who visit it.”

”My dear De Simoncourt, I am appalled to hear you perpetrate a pun! By the way, you have met Mr. Basil Arbuthnot at my rooms?”

M. de Simoncourt lifted his hat, and was graciously pleased to remember the circ.u.mstance.

”And now,” pursued Dalrymple, ”having met, what shall, we do next? Have you any engagement for the small hours, De Simoncourt?”

”I am quite at your disposal. Where were your bound for?”

”Anywhere--everywhere. I want excitement.”

”Would a hand at _ecarte_, or a green table, have any attraction for you?” suggested De Simoncourt, falling into the trap as readily as one could have desired.

”The very thing, if you know where they are to be found!”

”Nay, I need not take you far to find both. There is in this very street a house where money may be lost and won as easily as at the Bourse.

Follow me.”

He took us to the white house at the corner, and, pressing a spring concealed in the wood-work of the lintel, rung a bell of shrill and peculiar _timbre_. The door opened immediately, and, after we had pa.s.sed in, closed behind us without any visible agency. Still following at the heels of M. de Simoncourt, we then went up a s.p.a.cious staircase dimly lighted, and, leaving our hats in an ante-room, entered unannounced into an elegant _salon_, where some twenty or thirty _habitues_ of both s.e.xes had already commenced the business of the evening. The ladies, of whom there were not more than half-a-dozen, were all more or less painted, _pa.s.sees_, and showily dressed. Among the men were military stocks, ribbons, crosses, stars, and fine t.i.tles in abundance. We were evidently supposed to be in very brilliant society--brilliant, however, with a fict.i.tious l.u.s.tre that betrayed the tinsel beneath, and reminded one of a fas.h.i.+onable reception on the boards of the Haymarket or the Porte St. Martin. The mistress of the house, an abundant and somewhat elderly Juno in green velvet, with a profusion of jewelry on her arms and bosom, came forward to receive us.

”Madame de Sainte Amaranthe, permit me to present my friends, Major Dalrymple and Mr. Arbuthnot,” said De Simoncourt, imprinting a gallant kiss on the plump hand of the hostess.

Madame de Ste. Amaranthe professed herself charmed to receive any friends of M. de Simoncourt; whereupon M. de Simoncourt's friends were enchanted to be admitted to the privilege of Madame de Ste. Amaranthe's acquaintance. Madame de Ste. Amaranthe then informed us that she was the widow of a general officer who fell at Austerlitz, and the daughter of a rich West India planter whom she called her _pere adore_, and to whose supposit.i.tious memory she wiped away an imaginary tear with an embroidered pocket-handkerchief. She then begged that we would make ourselves at home, and, gliding away, whispered something in De Simoncourt's ear, to which he replied by a nod of intelligence.

”That harpy hopes to fleece us,” said Dalrymple, slipping his arm through mine and drawing me towards the roulette table. ”She has just told De Simoncourt to take us in hand. I always suspected the fellow was a Greek.”

”A Greek?”

”Ay, in the figurative sense--a gentleman who lives by dexterity at cards.”

”And shall you play?”

”By-and-by. Not yet, because--”

He checked himself, and looked anxiously round the room.

”Because what?”

”Tell me, Arbuthnot,” said he, paying no attention to my question; ”do _you_ mind playing?”

”I? My dear fellow, I hardly know one card from another.”

”But have you any objection?”