“What do you think of the
evening, Aunt Ruth?” Ethel was in her aunt’s
room, comfortably wrapped in a pink kimono, when she
asked this question.
“What do you think of it, Ethel?”
“I am not sure.”
“The dinner was well served.”
“Yes. Who was the little
dark man you talked with, aunt?”
“He was a Mr. Marriot, a banker,
and a friend of Bryce Denning’s. He is
a fresh addition to society, I think. He had
the word `gold’ always on his lips; and he believes
in it as good men believe in God. The general
conversation annoyed him; he could not understand
men being entertained by it.”
“They were, though, for once
Jamie Sayer forgot to talk about his pictures.”
“Is that the name of your escort?”
“Yes.”
“And is he an artist?”
“A second-rate one. He is painting
Dora’s picture, and is a great favorite of
Mrs. Denning’s.”
“A strange, wild-looking man.
When I saw him first he was lying, dislocated, over
his ottoman rather than sitting on it.”
“Oh, that is a part of his affectations.
He is really a childish, self-conscious creature,
with a very decided dash of vulgarity. He only
tries to look strange and wild, and he would be delighted
if he knew you had thought him so.”
“I was glad to see Claudine
Jeffrys. How slim and graceful she is! And,
pray, who is that Miss Ullman?”
“A very rich woman. She
has Bryce under consideration. Many other men
have been in the same position, for she is sure they
all want her money and not her. Perhaps she is
right. I saw you talking to her, aunt.”
“For a short time. I did
not enjoy her company. She is so mercilessly
realistic, she takes all the color out of life.
Everything about her, even her speech, is sharp-lined
as the edge of a knife. She could make Bryce’s
life very miserable.”
“Perhaps it might turn out the
other way. Bryce Denning has capacities in the
same line. How far apart, how far above every
man there, stood Basil Stanhope!”
“He is strikingly handsome and
graceful, and I am sure that his luminous serenity
does not arise from apathy. I should say he was
a man of very strong and tender feelings.”
“And he gives all the strength
and tenderness of his feelings to Dora. Men are
strange creatures.”
“Who directed Dora’s dress
this evening?”
“Herself or her maid. I
had nothing to do with it. The effect was stunning.”
“Fred thought so. In fact,
Fred Hostyn——”
“Fell in love with her.”
“Exactly. `Fell,’ that
is the word—fell prostrate. Usually
the lover of to-day walks very timidly and carefully
into the condition, step by step, and calculating
every step before he takes it. Fred plunged headlong
into the whirling vortex. I am very sorry.
It is a catastrophe.”
“I never witnessed the accident
before. I have heard of men getting wounds and
falls, and developing new faculties in consequence,
but we saw the phenomenon take place this evening.”
“Love, if it be love, is known
in a moment. man who never saw the sun before would
know it was the sun. In Fred’s case it was
an instantaneous, impetuous passion, flaming up at
the sight of such unexpected beauty— a
passion that will probably fade as rapidly as it rose.”
“Fred is not that kind of a
man, aunt. He does not like every one and everything,
but whoever or whatever he does like becomes a lasting
part of his life. Even the old chairs and tables
at Mostyn are held as sacred objects by him, though
I have no doubt an American girl would trundle them
off to the garret. It is the same with the people.
He actually regards the Rawdons as belonging in some
way to the Mostyns; and I do not believe he has ever
been in love before.”
“Nonsense!”
“He was so surprised by the
attack. If it had been the tenth or twentieth
time he would have taken it more philosophically;
besides, if he had ever loved any woman, he would
have gone on loving her, and we should have known
all about her perfections by this time.”
“Dora is nearly a married woman,
and Mostyn knows it.”
“Nearly may make all the difference.
When Dora is married he will be compelled to accept
the inevitable and make the best of it.”
“When Dora is married he will
idealize her, and assure himself that her marriage
is the tragedy of both their lives.”
“Dora will give him no reason
to suppose such a thing. I am sure she will not.
She is too much in love with Mr. Stanhope to notice
any other lover.”
“You are mistaken, Ethel.
Swiftly as Fred was vanquished she noticed it, and
many times—once even while leaning on Mr.
Stanhope’s arm—she turned the arrow
in the heart wound with sweet little glances and
smiles, and pretty appeals to the blind adoration
of her new lover. It was, to me, a humiliating
spectacle. How could she do it?”
“I am sure Dora meant no wrong.
It is so natural for a lovely girl to show off a
little. She will marry and forget Fred Mostyn
lives.”
“And Fred will forget?”
“Fred will not forget.”
“Then I shall be very sorry
for your father and grandmother.”
“What have they to do with Fred marrying?”
“A great deal. Fred has
been so familiar and homely the last two or three
weeks, that they have come to look upon him as a future
member of the family. It has been `Cousin Ethel’
and `Aunt Ruth’ and even `grandmother’
and `Cousin Fred,’ and no objections have been
made to the use of such personal terms. I think
your father hopes for a closer tie between you and
Fred Mostyn than cousinship.”
“Whatever might have been is
over. Do you imagine I could consent to be the
secondary deity, to come after Dora—Dora
of all the girls I have ever known? The idea
is an insult to my heart and my intelligence.
Nothing on earth could make me submit to such an indignity.”
“I do not suppose, Ethel, that
any wife is the first object of her husband’s
love.”
“At least they tell her she
is so, swear it an inch deep; and no woman is fool
enough to look beyond that oath, but when she is sure
that she is a second best! Ah! That
is not a position I will ever take in any man’s
heart knowingly.”
“Of course, Fred Mostyn will
have to marry.”
“Of course, he will make a duty
of the event. The line of Mostyns must be continued.
England might go to ruin if the Mostyns perished off
the English earth; but, Aunt Ruth, I count myself
worthy of a better fate than to become a mere branch
in the genealogical tree of the Mostyns. And
that is all Fred Mostyn’s wife will ever be
to him, unless he marries Dora.”
“But that very supposition implies
tragedy, and it is most unlikely.”
“Yes, for Dora is a good little
thing. She has never been familiar with vice.
She has even a horror of poor women divorced from
impossible husbands. She believes her marriage
will be watched by the angels, and recorded in heaven.
Basil has instructed her to regard marriage as a holy
sacrament, and I am sure he does the same.”
“Then why should we forecast
evil to their names? As for Cousin Fred, I dare
say he is comfortably asleep.”
“I am sure he is not. I
believe he is smoking and calling himself names for
not having come to New York last May, when father
first invited him. Had he done so things might
have been different.”
“Yes, they might. When
Good Fortune calls, and the called `will not when
they may,’ then, `when they will’ Good
Fortune has become Misfortune. Welcome a pleasure
or a gain at once, or don’t answer it at all.
It was on this rock, Ethel, the bark that carried
my love went to pieces. I know; yes, I know!”
“My dear aunt!”
“It is all right now, dear;
but things might have been that are not. As to
Dora, I think she may be trusted with Basil Stanhope.
He is one of the best and handsomest men I ever saw,
and he has now rights in Dora’s love no one
can tamper with. Mostyn is an honorable man.”
“All right, but—
“Love will venture in,
Where he daurna well
be seen;
O Love will venture in,
Where Wisdom once has
been—
and then, aunt, what then?”