THE GARDEN-PARTY.
The morning of the garden-party arose
bright and clear, and Slowbridge awakened in a great
state of excitement. Miss Chickie, having worked
until midnight that all her orders might be completed,
was so overpowered by her labors as to have to take
her tea and toast in bed.
At Oldclough varied sentiments prevailed.
Lady Theobald’s manner was chiefly distinguished
by an implacable rigidity. She had chosen, as
an appropriate festal costume, a funereal-black moire
antique, enlivened by massive fringes and ornaments
of jet; her jewelry being chains and manacles of the
latter, which rattled as she moved, with a sound somewhat
suggestive of bones.
Mr. Dugald Binnie, who had received
an invitation, had as yet amiably forborne to say
whether he would accept it, or not. He had been
out when Mr. Burmistone called, and had not seen him.
When Lady Theobald descended to breakfast,
she found him growling over his newspaper; and he
glanced up at her with a polite scowl.
“Going to a funeral?” he demanded.
“I accompany my granddaughter
to this—this entertainment,” her ladyship
responded. “It is scarcely a joyous occasion,
to my mind.”
“No need to dress yourself like
that, if it isn’t,” ejaculated Mr. Binnie.
“Why don’t you stay at home, if you don’t
want to go? Man’s all right, isn’t
he? Once knew a man by the name of Burmistone,
myself. One of the few decent fellows I’ve
met. If I were sure this was the same man, I’d
go myself. When I find a fellow who’s neither
knave nor fool, I stick to him. Believe I’ll
send to find out. Where’s Lucia?”
What his opinion of Lucia was, it
was difficult to discover. He had an agreeable
habit of staring at her over the top of his paper,
and over his dinner. The only time he had made
any comment upon her, was the first time he saw her
in the dress she had copied from Octavia’s.
“Nice gown that,” he blurted out:
“didn’t get it here, I’ll wager.”
“It’s an old dress I remodelled,”
answered Lucia somewhat alarmed. “I made
it myself.”
“Doesn’t look like it,” he said
gruffly.
Lucia had touched up another dress,
and was very happy in the prospect of wearing it at
the garden-party.
“Don’t call on grandmamma
until after Wednesday,” she had said to Mr.
Burmistone: “perhaps she wouldn’t
let me go. She will be very angry, I am sure.”
“And you are not afraid?”
“No,” she answered:
“I am not afraid at all. I shall not be
afraid again.”
In fact, she had perfectly confounded
her ladyship by her demeanor. She bore her fiercest
glance without quailing in the least, or making any
effort to evade it: under her most scathing comments
she was composed and unmoved. On the first occasion
of my lady’s referring to her plans for her
future, she received a blow which fairly stunned her.
The girl rose from her chair, and looked her straight
in the face unflinchingly, and with a suggestion of
hauteur not easy to confront.
“I beg you will not speak to
me of that again,” she said: “I will
not listen.” And turning about, she walked
out of the room.
“This,” her ladyship had
said in sepulchral tones, when she recovered her breath,
“this is one of the results of Miss Octavia Bassett.”
And nothing more had been said on the subject since.
No one in Slowbridge was in more brilliant
spirits than Octavia herself on the morning of the
fête. Before breakfast Miss Belinda was
startled by the arrival of another telegram, which
ran as follows:—
“Arrived to-day, per ‘Russia.’
Be with you tomorrow evening. Friend with me.
“MARTIN BASSETT.”
On reading this communication, Miss
Belinda burst into floods of delighted tears.
“Dear, dear Martin,” she
wept; “to think that we should meet again! Why
didn’t he let us know he was on the way?
I should have been so anxious that I should not have
slept at all.”
“Well,” remarked Octavia,
“I suppose that would have been an advantage.”
Suddenly she approached Miss Belinda,
kissed her, and disappeared out of the room as if
by magic, not returning for a quarter of an hour, looking
rather soft and moist and brilliant about the eyes
when she did return.
Octavia was a marked figure upon the
grounds at that garden-party.
“Another dress, my dear,”
remarked Mrs. Burnham. “And what a charming
color she has, I declare! She is usually paler.
Perhaps we owe this to Lord Lansdowne.”
“Her dress is becoming, at all
events,” privately remarked Miss Lydia Burnham,
whose tastes had not been consulted about her own.
“It is she who is becoming,”
said her sister: “it is not the dress so
much, though her clothes always have a look,
some way. She’s prettier than ever to-day,
and is enjoying herself.”
She was enjoying herself. Mr.
Francis Barold observed it rather gloomily as he stood
apart. She was enjoying herself so much, that
she did not seem to notice that he had avoided her,
instead of going up to claim her attention. Half
a dozen men were standing about her, and making themselves
agreeable; and she was apparently quite equal to the
emergencies of the occasion. The young men from
Broadoaks had at once attached themselves to her train.
“I say, Barold,” they
had said to him, “why didn’t you tell us
about this? Jolly good fellow you are, to come
mooning here for a couple of months, and keep it all
to yourself.”
And then had come Lord Lansdowne,
who, in crossing the lawn to shake hands with his
host, had been observed to keep his eye fixed upon
one particular point.
“Burmistone,” he said,
after having spoken his first words, “who is
that tall girl in white?”
And in ten minutes Lady Theobald,
Mrs. Burnham, Mr. Barold, and divers others too numerous
to mention, saw him standing at Octavia’s side,
evidently with no intention of leaving it.
Not long after this Francis Barold
found his way to Miss Belinda, who was very busy and
rather nervous.
“Your niece is evidently enjoying herself,”
he remarked.
“Octavia is most happy to-day,”
answered Miss Belinda. “Her father will
reach Slowbridge this evening. She has been looking
forward to his coming with great anxiety.”
“Ah!” commented Barold.
“Very few people understand
Octavia,” said Miss Belinda. “I’m
not sure that I follow all her moods myself.
She is more affectionate than people fancy. She—she
has very pretty ways. I am very fond of her.
She is not as frivolous as she appears to those who
don’t know her well.”
Barold stood gnawing his mustache,
and made no reply. He was not very comfortable.
He felt himself ill-used by Fate, and rather wished
he had returned to London from Broadoaks, instead
of loitering in Slowbridge. He had amused himself
at first, but in time he had been surprised to find
his amusement lose something of its zest. He glowered
across the lawn at the group under a certain beech-tree;
and, as he did so, Octavia turned her face a little
and saw him. She stood waving her fan slowly,
and smiling at him in a calm way, which reminded him
very much of the time he had first caught sight of
her at Lady Theobald’s high tea.
He condescended to saunter over the
grass to where she stood. Once there, he proceeded
to make himself as disagreeable as possible, in a silent
and lofty way. He felt it only due to himself
that he should. He did not approve at all of
the manner in which Lansdowne kept by her.
“It’s deucedly bad form
on his part,” he said mentally. “What
does he mean by it?”
Octavia, on the contrary, did not
ask what he meant by it. She chose to seem rather
well entertained, and did not notice that she was being
frowned down. There was no reason why she should
not find Lord Lansdowne entertaining: he was
an agreeable young fellow, with an inexhaustible fund
of good spirits, and no nonsense about him.
He was fond of all pleasant novelty,
and Octavia was a pleasant novelty. He had been
thinking of paying a visit to America; and he asked
innumerable questions concerning that country, all
of which Octavia answered.
“I know half a dozen fellows
who have been there,” he said. “And
they all enjoyed it tremendously.”
“If you go to Nevada, you must
visit the mines at Bloody Gulch,” she said.
“Where?” he ejaculated.
“I say, what a name! Don’t deride
my youth and ignorance, Miss Bassett.”
“You can call it L’Argentville,
if you would rather,” she replied.
“I would rather try the other,
thank you,” he laughed. “It has a
more hilarious sound. Will they despise me at
Bloody Gulch, Miss Bassett? I never killed a
man in my life.”
Barold turned, and walked away, angry,
and more melancholy than he could have believed.
“It is time I went back to London,”
he chose to put it. “The place begins to
be deucedly dull.”
“Mr. Francis Barold seems rather
out of spirits,” said Mrs. Burnham to Lady Theobald.
“Lord Lansdowne interferes with his pleasure.”
“I had not observed it,”
answered her ladyship. “And it is scarcely
likely that Mr. Francis Barold would permit his pleasure
to be interfered with, even by the son of the Marquis
of Lauderdale.”
But she glared at Barold as he passed,
and beckoned to him.
“Where is Lucia?” she demanded.—
“I saw her with Burmistone half
an hour ago,” he answered coldly. “Have
you any message for my mother? I shall return
to London to-morrow, leaving here early.”
She turned quite pale. She had
not counted upon this at all, and it was extremely
inopportune.
“What has happened?” she asked rigidly.
He looked slightly surprised.
“Nothing whatever,” he
replied. “I have remained here longer than
I intended.”
She began to move the manacles on
her right wrist. He made not the smallest profession
of reluctance to go. She said, at last, “If
you will find Lucia, you will oblige me.”
She was almost uncivil to Miss Pilcher, who chanced
to join her after he was gone. She had not the
slightest intention of allowing her plans to be frustrated,
and was only roused to fresh obstinacy by encountering
indifference on one side and rebellion on the other.
She had not brought Lucia up under her own eye for
nothing. She had been disturbed of late, but
by no means considered herself baffled. With
the assistance of Mr. Dugald Binnie, she could certainly
subdue Lucia, though Mr. Dugald Binnie had been of
no great help so far. She would do her duty unflinchingly.
In fact, she chose to persuade herself, that, if Lucia
was brought to a proper frame of mind, there could
be no real trouble with Francis Barold.