Lady Tancred unfortunately had one
of her very bad headaches, and an hour before dinner,
in fact before her son had left the Park Lane house,
a telephone message came to say she was dreadfully
sorry, it would be impossible for her to come.
It was Emily who spoke to Francis Markrute, himself.
“Mother is so disappointed,”
she said, “but she really suffers so dreadfully.
I am sure Countess Shulski will forgive her, and you,
too. She wants to know if Countess Shulski will
let Tristram bring her to-morrow morning, without
any more ceremony, to see her and stay to luncheon.”
Thus it was settled and this necessitated
a change in the table arrangements.
Lady Ethelrida would now sit on the
host’s right hand, and Lady Coltshurst, an aunt
on the Tancred side, at his left, while Zara would
be between the Duke and her fiance, as originally arranged.
Emily Guiscard would have Sir James Danvers and Lord
Coltshurst as neighbors, and Mary her uncle, the Duke’s
brother, a widower, Lord Charles Montfitchet, and
his son, “Young Billy,” the Glastonbury
heir Lady Ethelrida was the Duke’s
only child.
At a quarter before eight Francis
Markrute went up to his niece’s sitting-room.
She was already dressed in a sapphire-blue velvet
masterpiece of simplicity. The Tancred presents
of sapphires and diamonds lay in their open cases
on the table with the splendid Markrute yards of pearls.
She was standing looking down at them, the strangest
expression of cynical resignation upon her face.
“Your gift is magnificent, Uncle
Francis,” she said, without thanking him.
“Which do you wish me to wear? Yours or
his?”
“Lord Tancred’s, he has
specially asked that you put his on to-night,”
the financier replied. “These are only his
first small ones; the other jewels are being reset
for you. Nothing can be kinder or more generous
than the whole family has been. You see this brooch,
with the large drop sapphire and diamond, is from
the Duke.”
She inclined her head without enthusiasm,
and took her own small pearls from her ears, and replaced
them by the big sapphire and diamond earrings; a rivière
of alternate solitaire sapphires and diamonds she
clasped round her snowy throat.
“You look absolutely beautiful,”
her uncle exclaimed with admiration. “I
knew I could perfectly trust to your taste the
dress is perfection.”
“Then I suppose we shall have
to go down,” she said quietly.
She was perfectly calm, her face expressionless;
if there was a tempestuous suggestion in her somber
eyes she generally kept the lids lowered. Inwardly,
she felt a raging rebellion. This was the first
ceremony of the sacrifice, and although in the abstract
her fine senses appreciated the jewels and all her
new and beautiful clothes and apanages, they
in no way counterbalanced the hateful degradation.
To her it was a hideous mockery the
whole thing; she was just a chattel, a part of a business
bargain. She could not guess her uncle’s
motive for the transaction (he had a deep one, of course),
but Lord Tancred’s was plain and purely contemptible.
Money! For had not the whole degrading thing
been settled before he had ever seen her? He was
worse than Ladislaus who, at all events, had been passionately
in love, in his revolting, animal way.
She knew nothing of the English customs,
nor how such a thing as the arrangement of this marriage,
as she thought it was, was a perfectly unknown impossibility,
as an idea. She supposed that the entire family
were aware of the circumstances, and were willing to
accept her only for her uncle’s wealth she
already hated and despised them all. Her idea
was, “noblesse oblige,” and that
a great and ancient house should never stoop to such
depths.
Francis Markrute looked at her when
she said, “I suppose we shall have to go down,”
with that icy calm. He felt faintly uneasy.
“Zara, it is understood you
will be gracious? and brusquer no one?”
But all the reply he received was
a glance of scorn. She had given her word and
refused to discuss that matter.
And so they descended the stairs just
in time to be standing ready to receive Lord and Lady
Coltshurst who were the first to be announced.
He was a spare, unintelligent, henpecked, elderly
man, and she, a stout, forbidding-looking lady.
She had prominent, shortsighted eyes, and she used
longhandled glasses; she had also three chins, and
did not resemble the Guiscards in any way, except
for her mouth and her haughty bearing.
Zara’s manner was that of an
empress graciously receiving foreigners in a private
audience!
The guests now arrived in quick succession.
Lord Charles and his son, “Young Billy,”
then Tristram and his sisters, and Jimmy Danvers, and,
lastly, the Duke and Lady Ethelrida.
They were all such citizens of the
world there was no awkwardness, and the old Duke had
kissed his fair, prospective niece’s hand when
he had been presented, and had said that some day
he should claim the privilege of an old man and kiss
her cheek. And Zara had smiled for an instant,
overcome by his charm, and so she had put her fingers
on his arm, and they had gone down to dinner; and
now they were talking suavely.
Francis Markrute had a theory that
certain human beings are born with moral antennæ a
sort of extra combination beyond the natural of the
senses of sight, smell, hearing and understanding which
made them apprehend situations and people even when
these chanced to be of a hitherto unknown race or
habit. Zara was among those whose antennæ were
highly developed. She had apprehended almost instantaneously
that whatever their motives were underneath, her future
husband’s family were going to act the part
of receiving her for herself. It was a little
ridiculous, but very well bred, and she must fall in
with it when with them collectively like this.
Before they had finished the soup
the Duke was saying to himself that she was the most
attractive creature he had ever met in his life, and
no wonder Tristram was mad about her; for Tristram’s
passionate admiration to-night could not have been
mistaken by a child!
And yet Zara had never smiled, but
that once in the drawing-room.
Lady Ethelrida from where she sat
could see her face through a gap in the flowers.
The financier had ordered a tall arrangement on purpose:
if Zara by chance should look haughtily indifferent
it were better that her expression should escape the
observation of all but her nearest neighbors.
However, Lady Ethelrida just caught the picture of
her through an oblique angle, against a background
of French panelling.
And with her quiet, calm judgment
of people she was wondering what was the cause of
that strange look in her eyes? Was it of a stag
at bay? Was it temper, or resentment, or only
just pain? And Tristram had said their color
was slate gray; for her part she saw nothing but pools
of jet ink!
“There is some tragic story
hidden here,” she thought, “and Tristram
is too much in love to see it.” But she
felt rather drawn to her new prospective cousin, all
the same.
Francis Markrute seemed perfectly
happy his manner as a host left nothing
to be desired; he did not neglect the uninteresting
aunt, who formed golden opinions of him; but he contrived
to make Lady Ethelrida feel that he wished only to
talk to her; not because she was an attractive, young
woman, but because he was impressed with her intelligence,
in the abstract. It made things very easy.
The Duke asked Zara if she knew anything
about English politics.
“You will have to keep Tristram
up to the mark,” he said, “he has done
very well now and then, but he is a rather lazy fellow.”
And he smiled.
“‘Tristram,’”
she thought. “So his name is ’Tristram’!”
She had actually never heard it before, nor troubled
herself to inquire about it. It seemed incredible,
it aroused in her a grim sense of humor, and she looked
into the old Duke’s face for a second and wondered
what he would say if she announced this fact, and
he caught the smile, cynical though it was, and continued:
“I see you have noticed his
laziness! Now it will really be your duty to
make him a first-rate fighter for our cause. The
Radicals will begin to attack our very existence presently,
and we must all come up to the scratch.”
“I know nothing as yet of your
politics,” Zara said. “I do not understand
which party is which, though my uncle says one consists
of gentlemen, and the other of the common people.
I suppose it is like in other countries, every one
wanting to secure what some one above him has got,
without being fitted for the administration of what
he desires to snatch.”
“That is about it,” smiled the Duke.
“It would be reasonable, if
they were all oppressed here, as in France before
the great revolution, but are they?”
“Oh! dear, no!” interrupted
Tristram. “All the laws are made for the
lower classes. They have compensations for everything,
and they have openings to rise to the top of the tree
if they wish to. It is wretched landlords like
my uncle and myself who are oppressed!” and he
smiled delightedly, he was so happy to hear her talk.
“When I shall know I shall perhaps
find it all interesting,” she continued to the
Duke.
“Between us we shall have to
instruct you thoroughly, eh, Tristram, my boy?
And then you must be a great leader, and have a salon,
as the ladies of the eighteenth century did:
we want a beautiful young woman to draw us all together.”
“Well, don’t you think
I have found you a perfect specimen, Uncle!”
Tristram exclaimed; and he raised his glass and kissed
the brim, while he whispered:
“Darling, my sweet lady I drink to
your health.”
But this was too much for Zara he
was overdoing the part and she turned and
flashed upon him a glance of resentment and contempt.
Beyond the Duke sat Jimmy Danvers,
and then Emily Guiscard and Lord Coltshurst, and the
two young people exchanged confidences in a low voice.
“I say, Emily, isn’t she
a corker?” Sir James said. “She don’t
look a bit English, though, she reminds me of a oh,
well, I’m not good at history or dates, but
some one in the old Florentine time. She looks
as if she could put a dagger into one or give a fellow
a cup of poison, without turning a hair.”
“Oh, Jimmy! how horrid,”
exclaimed Emily. “She does not seem to me
to have a cruel face, she only looks peculiar and
mysterious, and and unsmiling.
Do you think she loves Tristram? Perhaps that
is the foreign way to appear so cold.”
At that moment Sir James Danvers caught
the glance which Zara gave her fiance for his toast.
“Je-hoshaphat!” he
exclaimed! But he realized that Emily had not
seen, so he stopped abruptly.
“Yes one can never
be sure of things with foreigners,” he said,
and he looked down at his plate. That poor devil
of a Tristram was going to have a thorny time in the
future, he thought, and he was to be best man at the
wedding; it would be like giving the old chap over
to a tigress! But, by Jove! such a
beautiful one would be worth being eaten by he
added to himself.
And during one of Francis Markrute’s
turnings to his left-hand neighbor Lord Coltshurst
said to Lady Ethelrida:
“I think Tristram’s choice
peculiarly felicitous, Ethelrida, do not you?
But I fear her ladyship” and he glanced
timidly at his wife “will not take
this view. She has a most unreasonable dislike
for young women with red hair. ‘Ungovernable
temperaments,’ she affirms. I trust she
won’t prejudice your Aunt Jane.”
“Aunt Jane always thinks for
herself,” said Lady Ethelrida. She announced
no personal opinion about Tristram’s fiance,
nor could Lord Coltshurst extort one from her.
As the dinner went on she felt a growing
sense that they were all on the edge of a volcano.
Lady Ethelrida never meddled in other
people’s affairs, but she loved Tristram as
a brother and she felt a little afraid. She could
not see his face, from where she sat the
table was a long one with oval ends but
she, too, had seen the flash from Zara which had caused
Jimmy Danvers to exclaim: “Jehoshaphat!”
The host soon turned back from duty
to pleasure, leaving Lady Coltshurst to Lord Charles
Montfitchet. The conversation turned upon types.
Types were not things of chance, Francis
Markrute affirmed; if one could look back far enough
there was always a reason for them.
“People are so extremely unthinking
about such a number of interesting things, Lady Ethelrida,”
he said, “their speculative faculties seem only
to be able to roam into cut and dried channels.
We have had great scientists like Darwin investigating
our origin, and among the Germans there are several
who study the atavism of races, but in general even
educated people are perfectly ignorant upon the subject,
and they expect little Tommy Jones and Katie Robinson,
or Jacques Dubois and Marie Blanc, to have the same
instincts as your cousin, Lord Tancred, and you, for
instance. Whatever individual you are dealing
with, you should endeavor to understand his original
group. In moments of great excitement when all
acquired control is in abeyance the individual always
returns to the natural action of his group.”
“How interesting!” said
Lady Ethelrida. “Let us look round the table
and decide to what particular group each one of us
belongs.”
“Most of you are from the same
group,” he said meditatively. “Eliminating
myself and my niece, Sir James Danvers has perhaps
had the most intermixtures.”
“Yes,” said Lady Ethelrida,
and she laughed. “Jimmy’s grandmother
was the daughter of a very rich Manchester cotton
spinner; that is what gives him his sound common sense.
I am afraid Tristram and the rest of us except Lord
Coltshurst have not had anything sensible like that
in us for hundreds of years, so what would be your
speculation as to the action of our group?”
“That you would have high courage
and fine senses, and highly-strung, nervous force,
and chivalry and good taste, and broad and noble aims
in the higher half and that in the lower portion you
would run to the decadence of all those things the
fine turned to vices yet even so I would
not look for vulgarity, or bad taste, or cowardice
in any of you.”
“No,” said Lady Ethelrida “I
hope not. Then, according to your reasoning it
is very unjust of us when we say, as perhaps you have
heard it said, that Lady Darrowood is to blame when
she is noisy and assertive and treats Lord Darrowood
with bad taste?”
“Certainly she only
does those things when she is excited and has gone
back to her group. When she is under her proper
control she plays the part of an English marchioness
very well. It is the prerogative of a new race
to be able to play a part; the result of the cunning
and strength which have been required of the immediate
forbears in order to live at all under unfavorable
conditions. Now, had her father been a Deptford
ox-slaughterer instead of a Chicago pig-sticker she
could never have risen to the rôle of a marchioness
at all. This is no new country; it does not need
nor comprehend bluff, and so produces no such type
as Lady Darrowood.”
At this moment Lady Ethelrida again
caught sight of Zara. She was silent at the instant,
and a look of superb pride and disdain was on her face.
Almost before she was aware of it Ethelrida had exclaimed:
“Your niece looks like an empress,
a wonderful, Byzantine, Roman empress!”
Francis Markrute glanced at her, sideways,
with his clever eyes; had she ever heard anything
of Zara’s parentage, he wondered for a second,
and then he smiled at himself for the thought.
Lady Ethelrida was not likely to have spoken so in
that case she would not be acting up to
her group.
“There are certain reasons why
she should,” he said. “I cannot answer
for the part of her which comes from her father, Maurice
Grey, a very old English family, I believe, but on
her mother’s side she could have the passions
of an artist and the pride of a Cæsar: she is
a very interesting case.”
“May I know something of her?”
Ethelrida said, “I do so want them to be happy.
Tristram is one of the simplest and finest characters
I have ever met. He will love her very much,
I fear.”
“Why do you say you fear?”
Lady Ethelrida reddened a little;
a soft, warm flush came into her delicate face and
made it look beautiful: she never spoke of love to
men.
“Because a great love is a very
powerful and sometimes a terrible thing, if it is
not returned in like measure. And, oh, forgive
me for saying so, but the Countess Shulski does not
look as if she loved Tristram much.”
Francis Markrute did not speak for
an instant, then he turned and gazed straight into
her eyes gravely, as he said:
“Believe me, I would not allow
your cousin to marry my niece if I were not truly
convinced that it will be for the eventual great happiness
of them both. Will you promise me something,
Lady Ethelrida? Will you help me not to permit
any one to interfere between them for some time, no
matter how things may appear? Give them the chance
of settling everything themselves.”
Ethelrida looked back at him, with
a seriousness equal to his own as she answered, “I
promise.” And inwardly the sense of some
unknown undercurrent that might grow into a rushing
torrent made itself felt, stronger than before.
Meanwhile Lady Coltshurst, who could
just see Zara’s profile all the time when she
put up those irritating, longhandled glasses of hers,
now gave her opinion of the bride-elect to Lord Charles
Montfitchet, her neighbor on the left hand.
“I strongly disapprove of her,
Charles. Either her hair is dyed or her eyes
are blackened; that mixture is not natural, and if,
indeed, it should be in this case then I consider
it uncanny and not what one would wish for in the
family.”
“Oh, I say, my lady!”
objected Lord Charles, “I think she is the most
stunning-looking young woman I’ve seen in a month
of Sundays!”
Lady Coltshurst put up her glasses again and glared:
“I cannot bear your modern slang,
Charles, but ‘stunning,’ used literally,
is quite appropriate. She does stun one; that
is exactly it. I fear poor Tristram with such
a type can look forward to very little happiness,
or poor Jane to any likelihood that the Tancred name
will remain free from scandal.”
Lord Charles grew exasperated and retaliated.
“By George! A demure mouse
can cause scandal to a name, with probably more certainty
than this beauty!”
There was a member of Lady Coltshurst’s
husband’s family whom she herself, having no
children, had brought out, and who had been perilously
near the Divorce Court this very season: and she
was a dull, colorless little thing.
Her ladyship turned the conversation
abruptly, with an annihilating glance. And fortunately,
just then Zara rose, and the ladies filed out of the
room: and so this trying dinner was over.