The result of Mrs. Mason’s latest
reconciliation with the man she honestly believed
to be her husband, was soon made visible in more lavish
expenditure, and a display in her entertainments never
attempted before.
An exuberant taste kept her always
on the alert. The constant suggestion of some
extravagant novelty became an habitual stimulant, now
that home affection had become a hopeless thing with
her.
During the season of moroseful discontent
which we have described, Nelson had checked this wanton
craving for display by less liberal supplies of money;
but now that he was grateful and generous again, the
fever burst forth in new vigor. One of her fashionable
friends had just given a fancy ball, where the flowers
alone cost a little fortune. Mrs. Nelson was
not to be distanced thus in extravagance. She
would give an entertainment before which that of her
rival should wither into insignificance, like the
roses swept from her banqueting hall the morning after
that great triumph. This had been a leading motive
for the interview described in another chapter.
With a few smiles and caressing words she had won
a new hold upon the purse, which opened grudgingly
only when she grew neglectful or insolent by a repletion
of her wishes.
Mrs. Nelson’s rival had given
a fancy ball at one of the principal watering-places,
which certainly had proved the great success of the
season. She would do something better than that.
Her ball should rival royalty. It should be quoted
in our republican society as the charming entertainments
of Maria Antoinette, in her little palace in the Park
at Versailles, became the conversation of all France.
The weather was lovely. Summer
had just melted into the golden autumn. The atmosphere
was delicious with fruity odors, in which the breath
of late flowers mingled in sensuous richness.
This was the season for her grand effort. Society
had just come back from the springs and the fashionable
watering-places, eager for something new. Her
friends should be gratified; nay, astonished.
She would throw that entire mansion open. Its
rich draperies, its statues and bronzes, the frescoed
ceilings, and rare pictures. All should flash
upon the world at once. She would illuminate
the grounds, weigh down the old forest trees with a
fruitage of lights, build pavilions and rustic bridges.
Nothing should be omitted to turn her residence into
a paradise.
This was all accomplished. As
if to crown her triumph, a moon, just swelling from
its crescent, came out among the bright stars, and
shone with peculiar radiance that evening. Every
thing smiled upon this woman. Officious menials
in livery crowded her halls her supper room
was one bower of blossoms; delicious fruits nestled
in them, and mingled still more ruddy tints with their
bloom; cut-glass shone through their leaves like gushes
of water; silver glittered through them like frost
work; and heavy garlands clambered up the pillars
that supported the frescoed ceiling, forming light
colonnades on each side, where mirrors reflected every
thing, as lovely landscapes are seen sleeping in a
lake the shadows more beautiful than the
substance.
Down from her dressing-room, rustling
in white silk, embroidered with silver flowers, that
shimmered like moonlight among the heavy folds, came
the mistress of this festival, superb in her own beauty,
with jewels flashing on her bare neck and arms, and
lighting up her heavy tresses like clustering stars.
Nelson met her on the broad staircase.
He was grave and sad. These ostentatious entertainments
were against his taste, and always displeased him.
This evening a heavier weight than usual fell upon
his spirits; even the rare loveliness of his wife
failed to win a smile to his lips.
She held out her hand, smiling radiantly
upon him. Her triumph was certain. Nothing
like the scene that broke upon her through the open
door had met her eye before. She could afford
to smile on the man whose gold had opened this paradise
to her ambition. He made no response, but sighing
heavily, turned at her request and walked by her side
through the sumptuous rooms. She was exultant;
the effect surpassed her expectations. The tread
of her silken-clad feet on the marble floor and moss-like
carpets was like that of an empress, but it annoyed
her that Nelson took no part in her joy. She
observed that he turned away with uneasiness whenever
she lifted her arm to point out a beautiful object
or some peculiar effect. She did not know that
the flash of those jewels which clasped her snow-white
arm was like the glitter of a serpent to him.
A thousand times he had wished those diamonds at the
bottom of the ocean.
Those jewels reminded him of so much
that he would have given worlds to forget. They
brought to his mind that palace home at Port au
Prince, where he had stolen at night in search
of the treasures which, in the end, tempted that woman
to become his wife. He remembered the horrid
scene in that cellar. He remembered the descent
of Captain Mason upon him just as he was breaking
open the vault where the wealth of many a rich man
lay buried the honest indignation of that
noble face the cold protest. Then
the crowd of negro fiends that rushed upon them, reeling
with drunkenness, gnashing their white teeth, and emitting
gleams of hatred from their bloodshot eyes. He
remembered how the crowbar had fallen from his hands,
and felt anew the thrill with which he had pointed
out Captain Mason to the vengeance of these demons.
No wonder he shuddered and turned
away sick with loathing of the jewels. By eternal
tortures, such as pressed upon him now, he had bought
them, and, through them, the woman whose cold beauty
they adorned.
They were the embodiment of his crimes.
Why would she wear them? Could she not guess
that every rainbow flash that came from her person
filled his brain with pictures of blood? Would
she never permit him to forget the riot of that awful
night, when the brave man, whose wife she had been,
was dragged lifeless along the muddy floor of the cellar,
and carried off to be flung in the heaps of slain
humanity which blocked up the streets of Port
au Prince after the carnage which makes men
shudder yet, even in remembrance?
She wanted him to be happy, and yet
persisted in wearing those things. True, he had
never dared to object, they were hers. He had
bought her with them; what excuse could he make for
the loathing with which he regarded their display?
She saw the pallor of his countenance and laughed.
“How strange,” she said,
surveying herself in a mirror, and changing one of
the ornaments in her hair, “how strange, Nelson,
that you never can accustom yourself to society.
The very expectation of doing the honors of your own
house to a fashionable crowd makes a coward of you;
while I well, it is true we ladies do adapt
ourselves to circumstances better than men. Confess
this, husband, and I will permit you to tie the laces
of this slipper; see, they have broken loose.”
Nelson, still grave and sad, dropped
on one knee, and tied the laces around that exquisitely
turned ankle. She laughed at his awkwardness,
and spurned him playfully with her foot when the task
was done.
“Come, now, I hear a carriage.
It is early, but our guests are impatient, I suppose.
No wonder; it is not often they will see any thing
like this. Come, you must help me receive, or
people will think I am ashamed of my husband.”