Part 45 (2/2)
”And a dinner as well,” Salvers had answered, ”to say nothing of breakfast and a bed to one's self. By the way, is your system of serving newsboys and boot-blacks on credit successful?”
Father Algarcife smiled.
”I have found it so,” he replied; ”but, you know, our terms are long, and we give good measure for the money.”
It was in this work that he was absorbing himself, when, one day in early December, he received a note from Mrs. Ryder:
”I have secured a box at the opera for Thursday night,” (she wrote), ”that I might beg you to hear Madame Cambria, who sings Ortrude in 'Lohengrin.' Her contralto is superb, and I wish to engage her for our Christmas services, but I hesitate to do so until I have had your verdict upon her voice. This is a new charitable appeal, and one which I trust you will not refuse.
”Believe me to be, ”Always sincerely yours, ”FLORENCE VAN HORNE RYDER.
”The De Reszkes sing also.”
He sent an acceptance, and the following day received an urgent request that he should dine quietly with Mr. Ryder and herself on Thursday evening. To this he consented, after some hesitation; and when the evening came he presented himself, to find Mrs. Ryder awaiting him with the pretty, vivacious young woman of the dinner-party, who was a guest in the house.
Mrs. Ryder crossed the room, with her large white hand outstretched, her satin gown rustling as she moved, and the lamplight s.h.i.+mmering over her ma.s.sive shoulders in their setting of old lace. The vivacious young woman, whose name was Darcy, greeted him with a smile which seemed to blend in a flash of brightness her black eyes and white teeth.
”Mr. Ryder is a little late,” his wife explained, ”but he will not delay us long.” And she pa.s.sed to the subject of the Christmas services and the contralto she wished to secure.
While she was speaking, Ryder came in with his usual cordial pleasantries. He was looking fresh and a little flushed, as if he had just left a Turkish bath, and was dressed with an immaculateness of detail which carried a suggestion of careful polish. His sensitive skin, beneath which the purplish flush rose, was as fine as a child's, and his round, smooth hands had a suffusion of pink in the palms.
In a moment dinner was served, and they went into the dining-room. Ryder was easy and affable. He talked pleasantly about the events of the past few weeks, describing as if for the hundredth time the success of the Horse Show, and stating good-natured objections to the awards of the judges.
”It is a farce,” he said--”a mere farce. They don't recognize the best horse-flesh when they see it.” Then he smiled at his wife. ”But who can blame them? It was really a puzzle to decide which were the most worth looking at, the horses or the women. It is hard to say where the blue ribbon belonged. Ah, father, you miss a great deal by being a saint.”
Miss Darcy interrupted him with a pretty protest. ”I am sure a saint may look at a horse,” she said, ”and a woman.” And she added: ”I have always forgotten to ask you who the lady in violet and silver-fox was who sat in Mr. Buisson's box? I did not recognize her.”
Ryder's eyes narrowed slightly, but he answered easily, ”Oh, that was Mrs. Gore, I believe.”
Miss Darcy flashed a smile.
”The Englishwoman I have heard so much about? Why, I thought she was called a beauty!”
Ryder laughed.
”She is a beauty when you know her,” he said, ”or, rather, you get the idea that she is. But she isn't English, you know. She married an Englishman.”
Then he changed the subject and drew Father Algarcife into a discussion of church decorations.
When dinner was over, Mrs. Ryder's maid appeared, bearing the opera-wraps, and the two women trailed down the steps and into the carriage. When Father Algarcife had stepped inside, Ryder closed the door and made his excuses.
”I'll look in a little later,” he said; ”but if Mr. Nevins finds you you won't need me, and a whole evening of it tires my nerves.”
Then he lighted a cigar and strolled off leisurely, while the carriage started.
When they entered the opera-house the curtain had risen, and the tenor was singing his farewell to the swan.
As Father Algarcife seated himself in the shadow of the box and looked over Mrs. Ryder's superb shoulders at the stage and the glittering foot-lights, he felt a quick impulse to rush away from it all. He hated the noise and the heat and the glare. The heavy atmosphere seemed oppressive and unnatural, and the women, sparkling brilliantly in the tiers of boxes, looked like beautiful exotics, fragrant with the perishable bloom of a hot-house. It was with a sensation of relief that he recalled the dull mission in the slums, where he had spent the morning.
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