Although Mr. Heatherbloom waited expectantly
that day for his dismissal, it did not come.
This surprised him somewhat; then he reflected that
Miss Elizabeth Dalrymple was probably so absorbed in
the prince remembering her rather effusive
greeting of that fortunate individual she
had forgotten such a small matter as having the dog
valet ejected from the premises. She would remember
on the morrow, of course.
But she didn’t! The hours
passed, and he was suffered to go about the even,
or uneven, tenor of his way. This he did mechanically;
he scrubbed and combed Beauty beautifully. With
a dire sense of fate knocking at the door, he passed
her on to Miss Van Rolsen, to be freshly be-ribboned
by that lady’s own particular hand. The
thin bony finger he thought would be pointed accusingly
at him, busied itself solely with the knots and bows
of a new ribbon; after which the grim lady dismissed
him from her presence, not the house curtly.
Several days went by; still no one
accused him; he was still suffered to remain.
Why? He could not understand. At the end
of a long seemingly interminable week he
put himself deliberately in the way of finding out.
Coming to, or going from the house, he lingered around
the area entrance, purposely to encounter her whom
he had heretofore, above all others, wished to avoid.
A feverish desire possessed him to meet the worst,
and then go about his way, no matter where it might
lead him. He was past solicitude in that regard.
He did at length manage to meet her not
as before in the full daylight but toward dusk, as
she returned, this time on foot, to the house.
“Miss Dalrymple, may I speak
to you?” he said to the indistinctly seen, slender
figure that started lightly up the front steps.
She did not even stop, although she
must have heard him; a moment he saw her like a shadow;
then the front door opened. He heard a crisp
metallic click; the door closed. Slowly with head
a little downbent he walked out, up the way she had
come; then around the corner a short distance to the
stables over which he had his room.
It was a nice room, he had at first
thought, probably because he liked horses. They four
or five thoroughbreds whinnied as he opened
the door. He had started up the dark narrow stairs
to his chamber, but stopped at that sound and groped
about from stall to stall passing around the expected
lumps of sugar. After which all seemed well as
far as he and they were concerned.
Only that other problem! he
could not shake it from him. To resign now? under
fire? How he wished he might! But to remain? his
situation was intolerable. He went up to his
room feeling like a ghost; his mind was full of dark
presences, as if he had lived a thousand times before
and had been surrounded only by hostile influences
that now came back in the still watches of the night
to haunt him.
He dreaded going to the house the
next day, but he went. Perhaps, he reflected,
she was only allowing him to retain his present position
under a kind of espionage; to trap him and put him
beyond the pale of respectable society. He remembered
the cruel lips, the passionate dislike contempt even
hatred in her eyes. Yes; that might
be it the reason for her temporary silence;
the house was full of valuable things; sooner or later
“Are you quite satisfied, Madam,
with my services?” said Mr. Heatherbloom that
afternoon to Miss Van Rolsen.
“You seem to do well enough,” she answered
shortly.
He brightened. “Perhaps some one else would
do better.”
“Perhaps,” she returned dryly. “But
I’m not going to try.”
“But,” he said desperately,
“I I don’t think they the
dogs, like me quite so much as they did. Naughty,
in particular,” he added quickly. “I I
thought yesterday he would have liked to growl
and nip at me.”
“Did he,” she asked, studying
him with disconcerting keenness, “actually do
that?”
“No. But ”
“Do I understand you wish to give me notice?”
she interrupted sharply.
“Not at all.” In
an alarmed tone. “I couldn’t I
mean I wouldn’t do that. Only I thought
you might have felt dissatisfied people
usually do with me,” he added impressively.
“So if you would like to give me ”
She made a gesture. “That
will do. I am very busy this morning. The
begging list, though smaller than usual only
three hundred and seventy-six letters has
to be attended to.”
Thus the matter of Mr. Heatherbloom’s
staying or going continued, much to that person’s
discomfiture, in statu quo. It is true
he found, later, a compromising course; a way out
of the difficulty as he thought, little
knowing the extraordinary new web he was weaving! but
before that time came, several things happened.
In the first place he discovered that Miss Dalrymple
was not entirely pleased at the publication of the
story of her engagement to the prince; her position her
family’s and that of Miss Van Rolsen, was such
that newspaper advertising or notoriety could not
but be distasteful.
“I hope people won’t think
I keep a social secretary,” Mr. Heatherbloom
heard her say.
Yes, heard her. He was in the
dogs’ “boudoir”; the conservatory
adjoined. He could not help being where he was;
he belonged there at the time. Nor could he help
hearing; he didn’t try to listen; he certainly
didn’t wish to, though she had a very sweet voice that
soothed one to a species of lotus dream forgetfulness
of soap-suds, or the odor of canine disinfectant permeating
the white foam
“Why should they think you have
a social secretary?” the voice of a man the
prince inquired.
He had deep fine tones; truly Russian
tones, with a subtle vibration in them.
“Because when such things are
published about people their secretaries usually put
them in,” returned the girl.
He was silent a moment; Mr. Heatherbloom
thought he heard the breaking of the stem of a flower.
“You were very much irritated angry?”
observed the prince at length, quietly.
“Weren’t you?” she asked.
“I? No. It is a bourgeois confession,
perhaps.”
Mr. Heatherbloom sat up straighter; the water dripped
from his fingers.
“I was pleased,” went on the sonorous
low voice. “I wished it were
so!”
There was a sudden movement in the
conservatory; a rustling of leaves, or of a gown;
then Mr. Heatherbloom relaxed in surprise a
peal of merry laughter filled the air.
“How apropos! How well you said that!”
“Miss Dalrymple!” There
was a slightly rising inflection in the man’s
tones. “You doubt my sincerity?”
“The sincerity of a Russian prince? No,
indeed!” she returned gaily.
“I am in earnest,” he said simply.
“Don’t be!” Mr.
Heatherbloom could, in fancy, see the flash of a white
hand amid red flowers; eyes dancing like violets in
the wind. He could perceive, also, as plainly
as if he were in that other room, the deep ardent
eyes of the prince downbent upon the blither ones,
the commanding figure of the man near that other slender,
almost illusive presence. A flower to be grasped
only by a bold wooer, like the prince!
“Don’t be,” she
repeated. “You are so much more charming
when you are not. I think I heard that line in
a play once. One of the Robertson kind; it was
given by a stock company in San Francisco. That’s
where I came from, you know. Have you ever been
there?”
“No,” said the prince slowly.
Dark eyes trying to beat down the
merriment in the blue ones! Mr. Heatherbloom
could, in imagination, “fill in” all the
stage details. If it only were “stage”
dialogue; “stage” talk; not “playing
with love”, in earnest!
“Playing with love!” He
had read a book of that name once; somewhere.
In Italy? yes. It sounded like an Italian
title. Something very disagreeable happened to
the heroine. A woman, or a girl, can not lightly
“play with love” with a Sicilian.
But, of course, the prince wasn’t a Sicilian.
“No,” he was saying now
with admirable poise, in answer to her question, “I
haven’t visited your wonderful Golden Gate, but
I hope to go there some day with you!”
he added. His words were simple; the accent alone
made them sound formidable; it seemed to convey an
impregnable purpose, one not to be shaken or disturbed.
Mr. Heatherbloom felt vaguely disturbed;
his heart pounded oddly. He half started to get
up, then sank back. He waited for another peal
of laughter; it didn’t come. Why?
“Of course I should have no
objection to your being one of a train party,”
said Miss Dalrymple at length.
“That isn’t just what
I mean,” returned the prince in his courtliest
tones. But it wasn’t hard to picture him
now with a glitter in his gaze, immovable,
sure of himself.
There was a rather long pause; broken
once more by Miss Dalrymple: “Shall we
not return to the music room?”
That interval? What had it meant?
Mute acquiescence on her part, a down-turning of the
imperious lashes before the steadfastness of the other’s
look? tacit assent? The casting off
of barriers, the opening of the gates of the divine
inner citadel? Mr. Heatherbloom was on his feet
now. He took a step toward the door, but paused.
Of course! Something clammy had fallen from his
hand; lay damp and dripping on the rag. He stared
at it a bar of soap.
What had he been about to do he! to
step in there into the conservatory, with
his bar of soap? grotesque anomaly!
His face wore a strange expression; he was laughing
inwardly. Oh, how he was laughing at himself!
Fortunately he had a saving sense of humor.
What had next been said in the conservatory?
What was now being said there? He heard words
but they had no meaning for him. “I will
send you the second volume of The Fire and Sword
trilogy,” went on the prince. “One
of my ancestors figures in it. The hero who
is not exactly a hero, perhaps, in the heroine’s
mind, for a time does what he must do; he
has what he must have. He claims what nature
made for him; he knows no other law than that of his
imperishable inner self. I, too, must rise to
those heights my eyes are set on. It must be;
it is written. We are fatalists, we Russians
near the Tartar line! And you and I” fervently “were
predestined for each other.”
Mr. Heatherbloom had but dimly heard
the prince’s words and failed to grasp them;
he didn’t want to; his head was humming.
Her light answer sounded as if she might be very happy.
Yes; naturally. She was made to be happy, to
dance about like sunshine. He liked to think of
the picture. The prince, too, was necessary to
complete it; necessary, reaffirmed Mr. Heatherbloom
to himself, pulling with damp fingers at the inconsequential
lock of hair over his brow. Of course, if the
prince could be eliminated from that mental picture
of her felicity? but he was a part of the
composition; big, barbaric, romantic looking!
In fact, it wouldn’t have been an adequate composition
at all without him; no, indeed!
And something rose in Mr. Heatherbloom’s
throat; one of his eyes or was it both
of them? seemed a little misty. That
confounded soap! It was strong; a bit of it in
the corner of the eyes made one blink.
The two in the conservatory said something
more; but the young man in the “boudoir”
didn’t catch it at all well. By some intense
mental process, or the sound of the scrubber on the
edge of the tub, he found he could shut a definite
cognizance of words almost entirely from his sense
of hearing. The prince’s voice seemed slightly
louder; that, in a general way, was patent; no doubt
the occasion warranted more fervor on his part.
Mr. Heatherbloom tried to imagine what she would look
like in so to say, a very complaisant mood;
not with flaming glance full of aversion and scorn!
Violet eyes replete only with love
lights! Mr. Heatherbloom bent lower over the
tub; his four-footed charge Beauty, contentedly immersed
to the neck in nice comfortably warm water, licked
him. He did not feel the touch; the fragrance
of orchids seemed to come to him above that other
more healthful, less agreeable odor of special cleansing
preparation.
Her accents were heard once more.
Those final words sounded like a soft command.
Naturally! She could command the prince now!
Mr. Heatherbloom heard a door close a replica
of the harsh click he had listened to when she had
shut the front door so unceremoniously on him a short
time before. Then he heard nothing more.
He gazed around him as he sat with his hands tightly
closed. Had it been only a dream? Naughty
whined; Sardanapolis edged toward him and mechanically
he began to brush him down until he shone as sleek
and shining as his Assyrian namesake.