When Martin and Wanda returned to
the grand-stand they found the next box to theirs,
which had hitherto been empty, occupied by a sedate
party of foreigners. Miss Mangles had come to
the races, not because she cared for sport, but because
she had very wisely argued in her mind that one cannot
set about to elevate human nature without a knowledge
of those depths to which it sometimes descends.
“And this,” she said,
when she had settled herself on the chair commanding
the best view, “this is the turf.”
“That,” corrected Mr.
Mangles, pointing down to the lawn with his umbrella,
“is the turf. This is the grand-stand.”
“The whole,” stated Miss
Mangles, rather sadly, and indicating with a graceful
wave of her card, which was in Russian and therefore
illegible to her, the scene in general, “the
whole constitutes the turf.”
Joseph P. Mangles sat corrected, and
looked lugubriously at Netty, who was prettily and
quietly dressed in autumnal tints, which set off her
delicate and transparent complexion to perfection.
Her hair was itself of an autumnal tint, and her eyes
of the deep blue of October skies.
“And these young men are on
it,” concluded Miss Mangles, with her usual
decision. One privilege of her sex she had not
laid aside the privilege of jumping to
conclusions. Netty glanced beneath her dark lashes
in the direction indicated by Miss Mangles’s
inexorable finger; but some of the young men happening
to look up, she instantly became interested in the
Russian race-card which she could not read.
“It is very sad,” she said.
Miss Mangles continued to look at
the young men severely, as if making up her mind how
best to take them in hand.
“Don’t see the worst of
’em here,” muttered Mr. Mangles, dismally.
“It isn’t round about the grand-stand
that young men come to grief on the turf.
That contingent is waiting to be called up into the
boxes, and reformed by the young women.”
Netty looked gently distressed.
At times she almost thought Uncle Joseph inclined
to be coarse. She looked across the lawn with
a rather wistful expression, eminently suited to dark
blue eyes. The young men below were still glancing
up in her direction, but she did not seem to see them.
At this moment Wanda and Martin returned to their box.
Wanda was preoccupied, and sat down without noticing
the new-comers. Several ladies leaned over the
low partitions and asked questions, which were unintelligible
to Netty, and the news was spread from mouth to mouth
that the Prince Bukaty was not hurt.
Joseph P. Mangles looked at the brother
and sister beneath his heavy brows. He knew quite
well who they were, but did not consider himself called
upon to transmit the information.
“Even the best people seem to
lend their countenance to this,” said Miss Mangles,
in an undertone.
“You are right, Jooly.”
But Miss Mangles did not hear.
She was engaged in bowing to Paul Deulin, who was
coming up the steps. She was rather glad to see
him, for the feeling had come over her that she was
quite unknown to all these people. This is a
feeling to which even the greatest are liable, and
it is most unpleasant. For the heart of the celebrated
is apt to hunger for the nudge of recognition and
the surreptitious sidelong glance which convey the
gratifying fact that one has been recognized.
Paul Deulin would serve to enlighten these benighted
people, and some little good might yet be done by
a distinct and dignified attitude of disapproval towards
the turf.
“One would scarcely expect to
see you here, Mr. Deulin,” she said, shaking
hands, with a playful shake of the head.
“Since you are here,”
he answered, “there can be no harm. It is
only a garden-party, after all.”
And he bowed over Netty’s head
with an empressement which would have conveyed to
any one more versed in the ways of men the reason why
he had come.
“Do you bet, Mr. Deulin?” inquired Jooly.
“Never, unless I am quite sure,” he answered.
“There is,” observed Miss
Mangles, who was inclined to be gracious “there
is perhaps less harm in that.”
“And less risk,” explained
Deulin gravely. “But surely,” he said,
in a lower tone, turning to Netty, “you know
the Princess Wanda? Did you not meet her at Lady
Orlay’s?”
Netty had already displayed some interest
in Martin Bukaty, which was perhaps indiscreet.
For a young man’s vanity is singularly alert,
and he was quite ready to return the interest with
interest, so to speak.
“Yes,” she replied, “we
met her at Lady Orlay’s. But I think she
does not remember though she seemed to
recollect Mr. Cartoner, whom she met at the same time.”
Deulin looked at her with his quick
smile as he nodded a little, comprehending nod, and
Netty’s eyes looked into his innocently.
“Be assured,” he answered,
“that she has not seen you, or she would not
fail to remember you. You are sitting back to
back, you observe. The princess is rather distrait
with thoughts of her father, who has just had a slight
mishap.”
He bent forward as he spoke and touched
Wanda on the shoulder.
“Wanda,” he said, “this
young lady remembers meeting you in London.”
Wanda turned and, rising, held her
hand over the low barrier that divided the two boxes.
“Of course,” she said,
“Miss Cahere. You must excuse my sitting
down so near to you without seeing you. I was
thinking of something else.”
“I hardly expect you to recollect
me,” Netty hastened to say. “You must
have met so many people in London. Is it not odd
that so many who were at Lady Orlay’s that night
should be in Warsaw to-day?”
“Yes,” answered Wanda, rather absently.
“Are there many?”
“Why, yes. Mr. Deulin was
there, and yourself and the prince and we three and Mr.
Cartoner.”
She looked round as she spoke for
Cartoner, but only met Martin Bukaty’s eyes
fixed upon her with open admiration. When speaking
she had much animation, and her eyes were bright.
“I am sure you are here with
your brother. The likeness is unmistakable.
I hope the prince is not hurt?” she said, in
her little, friendly, confidential way to Wanda.
“No, he is not hurt, thank you.
Yes, that is my brother. May I introduce him?
Martin. Miss Cahere my brother.”
And the introduction was effected,
which was perhaps what Netty wanted. She did
not take much notice of Martin, but continued to talk
to Wanda.
“It must be so interesting,”
she said, “to live in Warsaw and to be able
to help the poor people who are so down-trodden.”
“But I do nothing of that sort,”
replied Wanda. “It is only in books that
women can do anything for the people of their country.
All I can do for Poland is to see that one old Polish
gentleman gets what he likes for dinner, and to housekeep
generally just as you do when you are at
home, no doubt.”
“Oh,” protested Netty,
“but I am not so useful as that. That is
what distresses me. I seem to be of no use to
anybody. And I am sure I could never housekeep.”
And some faint line of thought, suggested
perhaps by the last remark, made her glance in passing
at Martin. It was so quick that only Martin saw
it. At all events, Paul Deulin appeared to be
looking rather vacantly in another direction.
“I suppose Miss Mangles does
all that when you are at home?” said Wanda,
glancing towards the great woman, who was just out
of ear-shot.
“My dear Wanda,” put in
Deulin, in a voice of gravest protest, “you
surely do not expect that of a lady who housekeeps
for all humanity. Miss Mangles is one of our
leaders of thought. I saw her so described in
a prominent journal of Smithville, Ohio. Miss
Mangles, in her care for the world, has no time to
think of an individual household.”
“Besides,” said Netty,
“we have no settled home in America. We
live differently. We have not the comfort of
European life.”
And she gave a little sigh, looking
wistfully across the plain. Martin noticed that
she had a pretty profile, and the tenderest little
droop of the lips.
At this moment a race, the last on
the card, put a stop to further conversation, and
Netty refused, very properly, to deprive Martin of
the use of his field-glasses.
“I can see,” she said,
in her confidential way, “well enough for myself
with my own eyes.”
And Martin looked into the eyes, so
vaunted, with much interest.
“I am sure,” she said
to Wanda, when the race was over, “that I saw
Mr. Cartoner a short time ago. Has he gone?”
“I fancy he has,” was the reply.
“He did not see us. And
we quite forgot to tell him the number of our box.
I only hope he was not offended. We saw a great
deal of him on board. We crossed the Atlantic
in the same ship, you know.”
“Indeed!”
“Yes. And one becomes so intimate on a
voyage. It is quite ridiculous.”
Deulin, leaning against the pillar
at the back of the box, was thoughtfully twisting
his grizzled mustache as he watched Netty. There
was in his attitude some faint suggestion of an engineer
who has set a machine in motion and is watching the
result with a contemplative satisfaction.
Martin was reluctantly making a move.
One or two carriages were allowed to come to the gate
of the lawn, and of these one was Prince Bukaty’s.
“Come, Wanda,” said Martin.
“We must not keep him waiting. I can see
him, with his two sticks, coming out of the club enclosure.”
“I will go with you to make
sure that he is none the worse,” said Deulin,
“and then return to the assistance of these ladies.”
He did not speak as they moved slowly
through the crowd. Nor did he explain to Wanda
why he had reintroduced Miss Cahere. He stood
watching the carriages after they had gone.
“The gods forbid,” he
said, piously, to himself, “that I should attempt
to interfere in the projects of Providence! But
it is well that Wanda should know who are her friends
and who her enemies. And I think she knows now,
my shrewd princess.”
And he bowed, bareheaded, in response
to a gay wave of the hand from Wanda as the carriage
turned the corner and disappeared. He turned on
his heel, to find himself cut off from the grand-stand
by a dense throng of people moving rather confusedly
towards the exit. The sky was black, and a shower
was impending.
“Ah, well!” he muttered,
philosophically, “they are capable of taking
care of themselves.”
And he joined the throng making for
the gates. It appeared, however, that he gave
more credit than was merited; for Netty was carried
along by a stream of people whose aim was a gate to
the left of the great gate, and though she saw the
hat of her uncle above the hats of the other men,
she could not make her way towards it. Mr. Mangles
and his sister passed out of the large gateway, and
waited in the first available space beyond it.
Netty was carried by the gentle pressure of the crowd
to the smaller gate, and having passed it, decided
to wait till her uncle, who undoubtedly must have
seen her, should come in search of her. She was
not uneasy. All through her life she had always
found people, especially men, ready, nay, anxious,
to be kind to her. She was looking round for
Mr. Mangles when a man came towards her. He was
only a workman in his best suit of working clothes.
He had a narrow, sunburned face, and there was in
his whole being a not unpleasant suggestion of the
seafaring life.
“I am afraid,” he said,
in perfect English, as he raised his cap, “that
you have lost the rest of your party. You are
also in the wrong course, so to speak. We are
the commoner people here, you see. Can I help
you to find your father?”
“Thank you,” answered
Netty, without concealing her surprise. “I
think my uncle went out of the larger gate, and it
seems impossible to get at him. Perhaps ”
“Yes,” answered Kosmaroff,
“I will show you another way with pleasure.
Then that tall gentleman is not your father?”
“No. Mr. Mangles is my
uncle,” replied Netty, following her companion.
“Ah, that is Mr. Mangles! An American,
is he not?”
“Yes. We are Americans.”
“A diplomatist?”
“Yes, my uncle is in the service.”
“And you are at the Europe.
Yes, I have heard of Mr. Mangles. This way; we
can pass through this alley and come to the large gate.”
“But you you are
not a Pole? It is so kind of you to help me,”
said Netty, looking at him with some interest.
And Kosmaroff, perceiving this interest, slightly
changed his manner.
“Ah! you are looking at my clothes,”
he said, rather less formally. “In Poland
things are not always what they seem, mademoiselle.
Yes, I am a Pole. I am a boatman, and keep my
boat at the foot of Bednarska Street, just above the
bridge. If you ever want to go on the river, it
is pleasant in the evening, you and your party, you
will perhaps do me the great honor of selecting my
poor boat, mademoiselle?”
“Yes, I will remember,”
answered Netty, who did not seem to notice that his
glance was, as it were, less distant than his speech.
“I knew at once at
once,” he said, “that you were English
or American.”
“Ah! Then there is a difference ”
said Netty, looking round for her uncle.
“There is a difference yes, assuredly.”
“What is it?” asked Netty,
with a subtle tone of expectancy in her voice.
“Your mirror will answer that
question,” replied Kosmaroff, with his odd,
one-sided smile, “more plainly than I should
ever dare to do. There is your uncle, mademoiselle,
and I must go.”
Mr. Mangles, perceiving the situation,
was coming forward with his hand in his pocket, when
Kosmaroff took off his cap and hurried away.
“No,” said Netty, laying
her hand on Mr. Mangle’s arm, “do not give
him anything. He was rather a superior man, and
spoke a little English.”