The accident at Hurlingham had opened
Sylla’s eyes. She became conscious of
what her feeling for Jim Bloxam was fast ripening into.
It made her thoughtful. She was suddenly aware
that she cared considerably more about him than it
was wise that a maiden should for any man not her
avowed lover. She was a good deal startled by
the discovery; for had she asked herself the question
previous to seeing him stretched, as she thought,
badly hurt, or perhaps even killed, on the grass at
that polo match, she would have answered, as she believed
truthfully, that she liked Captain Bloxam very much:
he was a very pleasant acquaintance; but as to his
being anything more to her, she would have scouted
the idea. She knew now that he was more to her
than that, and Sylla pondered gravely upon what was
her best course to pursue. One thing was quite
clear, and that was, a previous intention of hers
must be abandoned. She accordingly dispatched
a note to Lionel Beauchamp, telling him that he need
take no further trouble about her commission, which
elicited a speedy reply to the effect that it was
already executed.
One result of Sylla’s discovery
of the state of her feelings towards Captain Bloxam
was a strong desire to cultivate her acquaintance with
his mother and sister. She got on fairly with
Blanche down at Todborough, but was quite aware that
she was no favourite with Lady Mary. It most
certainly was not because she fancied this would give
her greater opportunities of meeting Jim. Far
from it. She knew very well that she was more
likely to meet Captain Bloxam in Hans Place than at
his mother’s house; for when he came up from
Aldershot, as he did pretty constantly, it was rarely
that Jim failed to appear in Mrs. Wriothesley’s
drawing-room; but the truth is the girl was rather
shy of meeting Captain Bloxam just now. That
Sylla’s overtures should be coldly received
was only what might be expected. Both Blanche
and her mother regarded her as a dangerous rival.
Indeed, Lady Mary’s dislike to her from the
first had proceeded from no other cause, so that Sylla’s
attempts to improve the acquaintance met with little
success. Had Mrs. Wriothesley not obtained the
keynote at Hurlingham, she would have been puzzled
to understand what had come to her niece. The
wand of the enchanter had transformed the girl.
Her vivacity was wonderfully toned down; her whole
manner softened; and Sylla, most self-possessed of
young ladies, was unmistakably shy in the presence
of Jim Bloxam. Diffidence is rarely an attribute
of Hussars, and Jim was not without experience of
women. The more retiring Miss Chipchase became,
the more ardent became the attentions of her admirer.
Mrs. Wriothesley of course comprehended
how matters were, and viewed the progress of events
with entire satisfaction. She saw that projected
scheme of hers rapidly approaching completion, and
requiring but little help from her fostering hand;
still it would be just as well, to use her own expression,
“to assist nature;” and, with that view,
she wrote a note to Jim Bloxam, suggesting that an
early dinner and a night at the play were the proper
restoratives for an invalid’s nerves.
She has seen Jim several times since his fall at Hurlingham,
and knows very well that he got over the effects of
that shaking in two or three days; but she has affected
to regard him as a convalescent ever since, and insists
upon it that quiet society is what he requires, meaning
that, whenever he comes to town, the little house in
Hans Place is the haven of rest best suited to him.
“I wish, Rip,” said Mrs.
Wriothesley, putting her head into her husband’s
sanctum one morning, “you would look in
at Bubb’s this afternoon, and tell them to send
me a box for the Prince of Wales’s next Wednesday.
You will of course do as you like, but I am going
to ask Jim Bloxam to dine and go with us to the play.”
“What a clever designing little
woman it is!” replied her husband lazily.
“I’ll order the box; but you must pick
up somebody else to do ‘gooseberry’ with
you, as I can’t come that night. It’s
hardly fair upon Jim; but as I have found matrimony
pleasant myself, I don’t for once mind being
in the conspiracy. Besides, Sylla is a good sort
if she will only take a fancy to him: she seems
rather inclined to avoid him, it strikes me.”
“Oh, you goose!” replied
his wife. “Get me the box, and pray that
you may have decent luck at whist for the next few
weeks; we shall want all the sovereigns you can scrape
together to buy wedding presents before the season
is out.”
Lady Mary Bloxam was really very much
to be pitied. Here was the season slipping by,
and the design with which she had opened the campaign
seemed further from accomplishment than ever.
Worse than all, her own daughter was playing into
the hands of the enemy. There was no disguising
the fact. It was too palpably evident.
There was something wrong between Blanche and Lionel
Beauchamp. The young lady treated him with marked
coldness, which he on his side resented. In vain
did Lady Mary cross-examine her daughter in the most
insidious manner. Blanche would own to no quarrel,
nor assign any reason for their gradual estrangement;
but Lady Mary saw with dismay that the two were drifting
wider apart as the weeks wore on. That she should
attribute all this to Sylla and her designing aunt
may be easily supposed. It was true that in
society Lionel Beauchamp could most certainly not be
accused of paying pronounced devotion to Miss Chipchase.
But Lady Mary had ever a picture before her mind
of Beauchamp in a low chair, in the drawing-room at
Hans Place, making passionate love to Sylla; and her
dislike of that young lady was intensified accordingly.
She was at variance with her daughter just now on
the subject of the invitation they had received from
Lionel Beauchamp for a water party down the river,
and about which she and Blanche were by no means of
one mind. Lady Mary was all for its acceptance,
while Miss Bloxam persistently advocated its refusal.
“You are too provoking, Blanche,”
exclaimed Lady Mary; “sometimes you are dissatisfied
because we have not cards for this, that, and the
other; and now we have an invitation for what promises
to be a very pleasant party, you not only declare
you won’t go, but won’t give any reason
for declining.”
“I say ‘no’ because
I don’t wish to go,” replied Miss Bloxam.
“Fiddle-de-dee!” replied
her mother, sharply. “All girls like to
go to what promises to be a pleasant party.
It is only right and proper they should, unless they
are unwell. Is there anything the matter with
you?”
“No, unless it be that I am
getting rather tired of London gaiety. I shall
be very glad, indeed, to get back to Todborough.”
“That’s a most unnatural
remark for a girl to make in her second season.
None of your sisters, thank goodness, ever required
it; but I am afraid I shall have to see what a doctor
thinks of you. I must get hold of Pansey Cottrell
and hear what he says about this picnic. I declare,
if he reports favourably, I shall insist upon your
going, Blanche.”
“I cannot see, mamma, what Mr.
Cottrell has got to do with it. There can be
no possible use in consulting him.”
“Every use,” rejoined
Lady Mary quickly. “Pansey knows everything
that is going on in society. I declare I think
sometimes that he must employ a staff of detectives
to collect all such knowledge and gossip for him.
He will know who are going to this party.”
“If he knows everything,”
said Blanche, “he should be able to tell me
what I want to know.”
“And what is that?” inquired
Lady Mary, with no little curiosity.
“He will know that also if omniscient,
as you suppose, mamma.”
“You are talking downright nonsense!
How can any one answer a question which you won’t
ask them? But Pansey’s knowledge of what
goes on in his own world is marvellous. He sees
more than the most lynx-eyed matron amongst us.
I have been to a good many places this year for your
amusement, and unless you are really ill, Blanche,
it is only fair you should go this once for mine.”
Miss Bloxam made no reply, but inwardly
determined to be extremely unwell upon the day of
that picnic. She was by no means a selfish girl,
and would sacrifice herself to give her mother pleasure
at any time; but she felt that she had valid reasons
for declining any invitation from Lionel Beauchamp
as things stood between them. No accusation
of husband-hunting should ever be brought against her.
Her mother was, of course, ignorant of how matters
stood, and could therefore be no guide for her in
this affair.
Captain Bloxam, arriving at his quarters
to dress for mess after a hard afternoon’s racquets,
finds Mrs. Wriothesley’s note lying on his table.
“Will I dine on Wednesday, go
to the play, and come back to supper afterwards?
Will I not?” ejaculates Jim. “I
am on duty on Wednesday, but somebody else will have
to do that; and there is a big field-day on the Thursday.
Never mind: get back by the early train in time
for it, and I can do as much sleep as one wants coming
down: so that is satisfactorily settled.”
Jim, by this, was very hard hit indeed;
and had he been asked to stay a month in the little
house in Hans Place, would have sold out rather than
have foregone the invitation; and the night in question
saw him duly seated in Mrs. Wriothesley’s dining-room
in the highest possible spirits.
“By the way,” said Pansey
Cottrell, who completed the quartet, addressing his
hostess, “what is our destined place of amusement
this evening? Are we bound for the French plays?”
“No, we are going to the Prince
of Wales’s Theatre,” rejoined Mrs. Wriothesley.
“Are you very much given to the French plays,
Mr. Cottrell?”
“I am not very much given to
any theatrical entertainment; but whenever I feel
low about the scarcity of money in the country, I like
to go the French plays. To see so many people
who can afford to pay a guinea for an arm-chair to
read in for three hours is a refreshing proof that
there is still money in the country. People go
there a great deal more because it is the fashion
than because they enjoy it. It is like the opera,
which, though exquisite enjoyment to many, always commands
a strong contingent who attend solely because it is
the fashion. You are going of course to this
water party of Beauchamp & Co.?”
“Yes,” replied Mrs. Wriothesley,
“I rather like the idea. It is quite a
novelty. They have chartered a large steamer,
and I hear the arrangements are very perfect.
You are going, Captain Bloxam?”
“Certainly,” replied Jim.
“I look forward to having pretty well the pleasantest
day of the season. We are to lunch on board,
dine on board, and, I believe, dance on board.
As I told Beauchamp, the only improvement I could
suggest was a stage for charades. We might have
as great a success, Miss Chipchase, as we had that
night at Todborough.”
“Yes,” replied Sylla,
slightly colouring at the recollection, and wondering,
in her mischievous resolve to a little shock Lady Mary,
whether she might not really have gone too far.
“I declare, if well done, if
they have got a big enough steamer, the right people,
and it is a fine day, it ought to be a great success,”
observed Cottrell.
“Well,” rejoined Mrs.
Wriothesley, “from what Lionel told me, they
have secured everything but the last; and I do think
their arrangements to meet that are as perfect as
possible.”
Mr. Cottrell shook his head dubiously.
“In the event of a very unpromising
day,” continued Mrs. Wriothesley, “people
will find a most excellent lunch spread in the cabins;
and they have made up their minds not to leave their
moorings at Westminster Bridge, so that people can
have just as much as they please of the entertainment.”
“That idea positively trenches
on genius,” exclaimed Mr. Cottrell approvingly,
“and reduces it merely to lunching at any house
in London. Cabs innumerable round there; one,
as you say, can get away at any time.”
“And now, Captain Bloxam,”
said Mrs. Wriothesley, “if you will ring the
bell for coffee, Sylla and I will get our cloaks on
while it cools; and then I think we must be going.
Oh, about transport?” she adds, pausing at
the door. “I think, Mr. Cottrell, if you
will take me in your brougham, we will send the young
couple in mine. Thanks,” she continued,
in reply to Mr. Cottrell’s bow of assent.
“Come, Sylla.”
Mr. Cottrell’s thoughts were
naturally unspoken, but he could not refrain from
mentally ejaculating, “Poor Lady Mary! what chance
can she have against such an artist as this?”
A few weeks ago, and no girl would,
perhaps, have laughed more at the idea of being nervous
about driving alone to the theatre with Captain Bloxam
than Sylla Chipchase; but she unmistakably was this
evening, and, only that she was afraid of being ridiculed
by her aunt, would have asked to change escorts.
She could not help showing it in her manner a little
when they were fairly started; and the Hussar was far
from discouraged thereby.
His mind was fully made up, and he
pleaded his best, not one bit abashed by her faint
responses to his passionate protestations.
“I cannot tell you when I began
to love you,” he continued; “it was from
the first time I saw you, I believe; and, Sylla, I
do hope you care a little about me. I can hardly
expect an answer tonight” (he did, and meant
having it, all the same). It would be hardly
fair; but if you can promise to be my wife before
we part, I shall be the lightest-hearted Hussar that
rides up the Long Valley tomorrow.”
“I don’t know. I
didn’t think you cared about me. I must
have time,” she murmured.
Oh, these lovers! She did know;
she did think he cared about her, and she wanted no
time.
“Sylla, dearest,” continued
Jim, “you must have known that I loved you;
no woman is ever blind to that. That you should
reflect before you give me an answer, I can understand;
but please let me know my fate as soon as possible.
It is cruel to keep me in suspense.” And
here the flood of Jim’s eloquence was arrested
by the brougham pulling up at the door of the theatre.
Mrs. Wriothesley and her cavalier
glanced keenly at the pair as they entered the box.
Mr. Cottrell, indeed, had complimented his hostess
on her little bit of finesse on the road, and
she had made no scruple of admitting that she hoped
to bring about a marriage between the two. As
to the Hussar, he was quite equal to the occasion,
and from all that could be gathered from his imperturbable
manner, might have been entertaining his companion
with his meteorological views for the last half-hour.
But with poor Sylla it was different. However
good an actress the girl might be theatrically, she
was a lamentable failure in the affairs of real life
now that she found herself the leading lady; and both
her quick-eyed aunt and the lynx-eyed Mr. Cottrell
felt just as certain that an éclaircissement
had taken place as if they had assisted at it.
More discreet chaperons were impossible, and
after the first glance they took no further notice
of the lovers, confining their conversation to each
other, and their attention to the stage. After
a little Mr. Cottrell discovered a friend in the stalls,
with whom it was an absolute necessity he should exchange
a few words; and then the interest Mrs. Wriothesley
took in the play proved what an enthusiast she was
about dramatic art.
But the green curtain fell at last though,
with the exception of Mrs. Wriothesley, it would be
almost open to question whether any of them knew even
the name of the piece they had witnessed and
the party proceeded homewards. Jim made good
use of his opportunities on the drive back to Hans
Place; and upon arrival, took advantage of Sylla’s
temporary escape upstairs to whisper to Mrs. Wriothesley
that he had told his tale, and been favourably listened
to. He felt assured of her congratulations.
He knew he was a favourite of hers, and that she was
much too clever a woman to have allowed him to see
so much of Sylla unless she had approved of his suit.
They were a very pleasant but rather quiet party
at supper. Lovers in the spring-tide of their
delirium have rarely conversation except for each other;
but then that suffices amply for their enjoyment.
Mrs. Wriothesley, triumphant in her schemes, chatted
gaily with Mr. Cottrell, who was Sybarite enough to
know that the discussion of the fish salad that he
was then engaged upon, accompanied by the prattle
of a pretty woman and irreproachable champagne, was
about as near Elysium as a man of his years and prosaic
temperament could expect to arrive at. He had
had some conversation with his hostess on the way
home. They had both arrived at the conclusion,
from what they had seen in the theatre, that, even
if everything was not yet settled, it would be before
the evening was out. When she bade him good night,
Mrs. Wriothesley added in low tones,
“Of course it is as we guessed;
but don’t say anything about it for the next
few days.”
It was with feelings of great complacency
that Mr. Cottrell, having lit his cigar, stepped into
his brougham. He had dined and supped satisfactorily.
He had passed a pleasant evening, and he was in the
early possession of a little piece of intelligence
connected with that comedy which he had seen commenced
at Todborough which made its finish perfectly plain
to him. He could not help laughing as he thought
of the complication of feeling that this would produce
in the mind of Lady Mary Bloxam when it reached her,
which of course it speedily would. Would indignation
at having to welcome as a daughter-in-law a girl she
disliked so much as she did Sylla Chipchase overcome
the gratification she would feel at finding that she
need no longer dread her as an obstacle to her plans
for the settlement of Blanche? Upon the whole,
Mr. Cottrell thought not.
“They don’t know it,”
he argued; “but Sylla Chipchase’s father
is a wealthy man, and the young lady, in consequence
of her mother’s settlement, a very long way
off a penniless maiden. I don’t think Lady
Mary has ever yet thought about Jim’s marrying
at all; but if Beauchamp and Blanche only make a match
of it, I fancy it would reconcile her ladyship to
a good deal. She wouldn’t then, at all
events, be beaten at all points of the game by her
pet aversion Mrs. Wriothesley.”
And once more Mr. Cottrell chuckled over the situation.
“Piccadilly, eh?” he muttered, looking
out of the window. “I don’t feel
a bit like bed. Egad, I’ll turn in here
and have another cigar;” and so saying Mr. Cottrell
stopped his brougham at the door of a well-known club,
got out, and leisurely ascended the steps.
Several men were seated smoking in
the hall, and a little knot, of which Lionel Beauchamp
was the principal figure, attracted Mr. Cottrell’s
attention.
“Ah, my lords of Greenwich and
Gravesend!” he exclaimed gaily, “all the
world is much exercised about you and your doings.
Wondrous are the stories afloat as to the fitting
out of your ship, and all the fun that you have prepared
for us. People don’t know what to expect.
Some say you are about to revive the old Folly and
Ranelagh. Others that you have rolled the Italian
Opera and Willis’s Rooms all into one, and put
it on board ship.”
“I can’t say what they
expect in the way of entertainment,” exclaimed
Beauchamp, “but they seem to think that we have
at all events chartered the Great Eastern. We
are perfectly inundated with applications for tickets.”
“No doubt,” replied Cottrell,
as he took a chair beside them; “and from people
of whose existence you were in happy ignorance.
To extend your acquaintance, only give a big show
of some sort, and let it be known that a card of invitation
is well-nigh an impossibility. But what a very
dandy cigar-case!” and as he spoke Cottrell lifted
from the table by Beauchamp’s side a very smart
specimen of the article in question, made of maroon
velvet, with a monogram embroidered on one side, and
the motto, “Loquaces si sapiat vitet,”
on the other. “Very pretty indeed,”
he continued, looking at the monogram; “but surely
you don’t spell Lionel with a T?”
“No,” replied Beauchamp,
laughing; “I spell it with an ‘L,’
like other people; but that cigar-case was neither
embroidered nor made for me.”
“I see,” rejoined Cottrell:
“you have been annexing a friend’s property.
I regret to see the notorious laxity of principle
on the subject of umbrellas is extending to cigar-cases.”
“Wrong again,” replied
Beauchamp. “I am in perfectly legitimate
possession of the case, although it was not made for
me.”
Insatiable thirst for gossip is naturally
allied with insatiable curiosity, and Mr. Cottrell
was no exception.
“J. B., J. B.?” he said, still fingering
the case.
“I have it! I am right,
for a dollar! You borrowed it from Jim Bloxam
when we were down at Todborough.”
“No,” returned Lionel,
much amused; “you are wrong again. I had
a commission to get that case made
“For Jim Bloxam,” interposed Cottrell
quickly.
“I didn’t say that,”
returned Lionel; “anyhow, it was not wanted;
and at the risk of being accused of not being able
to spell my own name, I kept it for myself.
I was further commanded to adhere strictly to the
motto.”
“And ‘avoid talkative
people.’ Curious, very,” observed
Mr. Cottrell, as he put down the cigar-case, wondering
not a little who gave the commission, and for whom
the case was originally intended; but he of course
refrained from further inquiry.