Part 36 (1/2)

”You are a great friend of Anna's, are you not?” she enquired.

”We are engaged to be married,” he answered simply.

She made a little grimace.

”Ah!” she sighed, ”you nice men, it comes to you all. You amuse yourselves with us for a time, and then the real feeling comes, and where are we? But it is queer, too,” she went on thoughtfully, ”that Anna should marry an Englishman, especially just now.”

”Why 'especially just now'?”

The Comtesse evaded the question.

”Anna seemed always,” she said, ”to prefer the men of her own country.

Oh, what music! Shall we have one turn more, Mr. Francis Norgate? It is the waltz they played--but who could expect a man to remember!”

They plunged again into the crowd of dancers. The Comtesse was breathless yet exhilarated when at last they emerged.

”But you dance, as ever, wonderfully!” she cried. ”You make me think of those days in Paris. You make me even sad.”

”They remain,” he a.s.sured her, ”one of the most pleasant memories of my life.”

She patted his hand affectionately. Then her tone changed.

”Almost,” she declared, ”you have driven all other things out of my mind. What is it that Anna is so anxious to know from me? You are in her confidence, she tells me.”

”Entirely.”

”That again is strange,” the Comtesse continued, ”when one considers your nationality, yet Anna herself has a.s.sured me of it. Do you know that she is a person whom I very much envy? Her life is so full of variety. She is the special protegee of the Emperor. No woman at Vienna is more trusted.”

”I am not sure,” Norgate observed, ”that she was altogether satisfied with the results of her visit to Rome.”

The Comtesse's fan fluttered slowly back and forth. She looked for a moment or two idly upon the brilliant scene. The smooth garden paths, the sheltered seats, the lawns themselves, were crowded with little throngs of women in exquisite toilettes, men in uniform and Court dress. There were well-known faces everywhere. It was the crowning triumph of a wonderful London season.

”Anna's was a very difficult mission,” the Comtesse pointed out confidentially. ”There is really no secret about these matters. The whole world knows of Italy's position. A few months ago, at the time of what you call the Balkan Crisis, Germany pressed us very hard for a definite a.s.surance of our support, under any conditions, of the Triple Alliance. I remember that Andrea was three hours with the King that day, and our reply was unacceptable in Berlin. It may have helped to keep the peace.

One cannot tell. The Kaiser's present letter is simply a repet.i.tion of his feverish attempt to probe our intentions.”

”But at present,” Norgate ventured, ”there is no Balkan Crisis.”

The Comtesse looked at him lazily out of the corners of her sleepy eyes.

”Is there not?” she asked simply. ”I have been away from Italy for a week or so, and Andrea trusts nothing to letters. Yesterday I had a dispatch begging me to return. I go to-morrow morning. I do not know whether it is because of the pressure of affairs, or because he wearies himself a little without me.”

”One might easily imagine the latter,” Norgate remarked. ”But is it indeed any secret to you that there is a great feeling of uneasiness throughout the Continent, an extraordinary state of animation, a bustle, although a secret bustle, of preparation in Germany?”

”I have heard rumours of this,” the Comtesse confessed.

”When one bears these things in mind and looks a little into the future,”

Norgate continued, ”one might easily believe that the reply to that still unanswered letter of the Kaiser's might well become historical.”

”You would like me, would you not,” she asked, ”to tell you what that reply will most certainly be?”