Rotten Row on a brilliant June morning,
and Hyde Park at its loveliest. The London “season”
at its height, and throngs of fashionably-dressed
men and women “taking the air,” strolling
idly to and fro, lounging on little green-painted
chairs, or leaning on the rails watching the riders
of all nationalities.
A sight well worth watching.
It is the week of the International Horse Show, and
there are many foreign officers in gaily-coloured uniforms,
mounted on sleek and beautiful thoroughbreds, cantering
along amidst a throng of more soberly clad riders
of both sexes.
The “liver brigade” is
at full strength. These red-faced, white-moustached,
elderly men, with “Retired Colonel, Indian Army,”
stamped all over them, as it were, are probably telling
each other, as they try to urge their hacks to a gallop,
that “the Row is becoming demnably overcrowded,
sir, and the place is going to the dogs. Those
confounded foreigner fellows look like circus performers,
and that sort of young woman wouldn’t have been
tolerated in my young days.... Gad! just look
at that girl!”
The girl in question is mounted on
a high-spirited bay which is resenting her mastery
and is fighting to get the bit between his teeth.
The horse rears, jerking his fine head from side to
side, then bucks with a whinny of rage, and the “liver
brigade” scatters. A mounted policeman,
on the alert to render assistance and prevent accidents,
brings along his well-trained steed at a hand-gallop,
recognises the rider of the bucking thoroughbred,
and reins up with a grin on his bronzed face.
He knows that Miss Myra Rostrevor,
although she looks a mere slip of a girl, is quite
capable of riding and handling almost any horse that
ever was saddled, and is no more likely to be thrown
than any of the Italian officers who have been competing
for championships at the Olympia. He remembers,
too, that when another woman’s horse bolted
with her a few weeks previously, Miss Rostrevor easily
outdistanced him in pursuit of the runaway, brought
the startled animal to a standstill, and rode off
without waiting for a word of thanks from the scared
rider.
Idlers lining the rails, however,
ignorant of the identity and capabilities of Miss
Myra Rostrevor, watch her struggle with her spirited
steed apprehensively if they are ignorant of horsemanship,
and with admiration if they are experienced.
“Ride him, missie, ride him!”
ejaculates a lean, bronzed American involuntarily.
“Gee! some girl! She’s sure got
you beat, horse, and you know it. Sits you as
surely as an Arizona cowboy, and must have wrists
like steel although she’s got hands like a baby.
Attaboy! ... Yep, she’ll give you your
head now, but I’ll gamble she’ll bring
you back quiet as Mary’s little lamb.”
He was right. Myra Rostrevor
gave her mount his head for a time and went the length
of the Row, then reined him in, turned, and trotted
him back at a pace that would scarce have shaken up
the most liverish of the Indian Colonels. She
eventually brought her horse to a standstill close
to the rails, and patted his neck as she bent forward
to chat smilingly to a tall, fair young man of aristocratic
appearance and languid air.
“I said it! Some good-looker,
too,” resumed the American, and turned to a
well-groomed stranger next to him, after eyeing the
graceful horsewoman admiringly. “Say,
sir, do you happen to know who that young lady is?”
he inquired.
“Yes, I happen to know the young
lady,” responded the other, politely willing
to satisfy the American’s curiosity. “She
is a Miss Rostrevor, daughter of a very old Irish
family, and as wild a madcap as ever came out of the
Emerald Isle.”
“She looks it,” the American
commented. “There’s a spice of devil
in her expression, and I see she has red hair.
I guess the man who marries her will sure need a
bearing rein and a special bit and snaffle to keep
that young beauty in order. But I’ll bet
she’s not short of admirers, and lots of fellers’d
jump at the chance of marrying her, and risk her kicking
over the traces?”
“You are perfectly right, sir,”
answered the Englishman, with an amused laugh.
“Miss Rostrevor has a host of admirers, which
is hardly surprising, considering her remarkable beauty.
Several young men have lost their heads about her,
and she is credited or should it be debited? with
having broken several hearts. Incidentally, the
man to whom she is talking might be interested in
your remark about the necessity for a special bit
and snaffle. He and Miss Rostrevor are engaged
to be married.”
“Is that so?” drawled
the American, gazing at the engaged couple with undisguised
curiosity. “What is he? A Lord, or
Duke, or something of the sort?”
“No, he hasn’t any title,
but he is well-connected, and is one of the wealthiest
and most eligible young men in England. His name
is Antony Standish, and his income is reputed to be
something like a hundred thousand pounds a year.
His father was Sir Mark Standish, a great iron-master
and coal magnate.”
“You don’t say!
Lemme see. One hundred thousand pounds.
That’s round about five hundred thousand dollars.
Some income! What does Mr. Antony Standish
do?”
“Nothing, if you are referring
to work. He does the usual Society rounds, takes
an interest in racing, and roams the world occasionally
in a palatial steam yacht. One does not have
to worry about work if one has an income of one hundred
thousand pounds a year.”
“No, I guess I’d somehow
manage to struggle along on half a million dollars
a year myself and kiss work good-bye,” said the
American, with a broad grin. “The little
lady sure seems to have made a catch, sir, judging
from what you’ve told me, and yet Mr. Antony
Standish somehow don’t look to me to be her
style. By the look of Miss Rostrevor, and the
way she handled that horse, I should have guessed her
fancy would have run to something more of the big,
he-man type, instead of to a Society dandy.
But one can never tell where women are concerned.
And five hundred thousand dollars a year will make
any kind of guy almost any kind of girl’s ideal.”
Antony Standish was not a “guy,”
in the colloquial English sense of the word, but he
was hardly the type of man one would have imagined
as likely to capture the heart of the high-spirited
Irish beauty. He was good-looking, with a fair
complexion and a little sandy moustache, and he carried
himself with the air of a patrician, but his face lacked
character, and he had rather a weak chin. He
had earned the reputation of being one of the best-dressed
men in London, had a host of friends, most of whom
called him “Tony,” and he was talked of
as “a good sport.”
“Sure, and I wasn’t showing
off at all, at all, Tony,” Myra Rostrevor was
saying to him in her soft, musical voice with a delightfully
attractive touch of the brogue. “It was
Tiger here that was trying to show off and make himself
out to be my master.... Weren’t ye, Tiger?”
She patted the sleek neck of her horse again as she
spoke, and he pricked his ears and tossed his head
as if he understood. “There isn’t
any horse or man who is going to master Myra Rostrevor,”
she added.
“That sounds like a challenge,
Myra,” drawled Tony Standish smilingly.
“How do you know but what I may adopt cave-man
tactics after we are married, and attempt to beat
you into submission?”
Myra tossed her red-gold head much
in the same way as her spirited mount had tossed his,
and trilled out a laugh.
“I think, Tony, you’d
be even less successful than Tiger, and more sorry
for yourself than he is after your very first attempt,”
she responded.
“So perhaps I’d better
not make a first attempt, even in the hope of getting
a pat on the neck afterwards,” laughed Tony.
There was pride and admiration in
his pale blue eyes as he looked up at the girl who
had promised to marry him. He was the owner of
many priceless art treasures, none of which, however,
was half as beautiful in his eyes as Myra Rostrevor.
Her beauty was unique, and even in
an assembly of lovely women she would have attracted
attention. Yet her features were not classically
perfect, her small nose had the faintest suspicion
of tip-tilt, and there was nothing stately or majestic
about her. No one had ever compared her to a
Greek goddess, but even artists raved about her beauty
and charm, and competed for the privilege of painting
her portrait.
She was slim but shapely. Her
hair was the auburn that Titian loved to paint, with
a golden gleam in it, as if a sunbeam had become entangled
and failed to escape. Her complexion, innocent
of powder or cosmetics, was clear and delicate as
a rose-leaf but with the faintest tinge of healthy
tan. Her eyes, blue as summer seas, were fringed
with long, dark lashes, and she had an aggravatingly
seductive dimple in each cheek, and another in the
centre of her daintily-rounded chin.
A lovely, fascinating and bewitching
girl, whom the fates and the fairies had endowed with
that undefinable gift we call “charm.”
And Myra had charmed the hearts out of many men,
while remaining herself heart-whole. She was
still heart-whole although she was engaged to be married
to Tony Standish, and she had left her fiance no illusions
on that point.
“Yes, I’ll marry you,
Tony, but I don’t love you,” she had told
him, when he proposed a second time after having been
rejected on the first occasion. “I’m
going to marry you because Aunt Clarissa insists I
must marry a rich man, and you happen to be the least
objectionable rich man who wants me. I like
you, Tony, and think you are rather a dear, but I
want you to understand I’m not in love, and you
will be buying me. I’m selling myself
simply because I love all the good things of life,
because you can pay for them, and because Aunt Clarissa
keeps badgering me to marry and I am dependent on
her for practically everything.”
“You have turned down other
fellows as rich as I am who were crazy about you,
and other men much more attractive, so you must love
me a little, Myra dear,” Tony had responded.
“I am going to make you love me a lot.”
Antony Standish had a good conceit
of himself, which was hardly surprising, for he was
the only child of a very rich man, had been pampered
and made much of in his childhood, and later had been
toadied to and sought after by women as well as men,
first as heir to, and subsequently as the actual possessor
of, a vast fortune. Many girls with an eye on
the main chance had set their caps at him, angled for
him, and made no secret of their willingness to become
Mrs. Antony Standish, and Tony was not unaware of
the fact.
Perhaps it was because Myra Rostrevor
had always seemed to be totally indifferent to him
that he had lost his heart to her, and made up his
mind to win her and make her his wife at all costs.
It had not been easy, but Tony had found a very willing
ally in the person of Myra’s aunt, Clarissa,
Lady Fermanagh. For Lady Fermanagh was only too
anxious to get her orphan niece off her hands, not
only because Myra was an expense, but because her
madcap exploits occasionally drove her almost to distraction,
while her heartbreaking flirtations were the cause
of gossip.
Like her fiance, Myra was an only
child, who had been allowed to do everything she liked
practically since infancy, and had come to expect,
and accept, homage, almost as a right. Her father,
Sir Dennis Rostrevor, had at one time been wealthy,
but had lost practically everything in the Rebellion,
when the great house that had been the home of the
Rostrevors for generations was burned to the ground.
The loss broke his heart and killed
him, and his death almost broke Myra’s heart
and left her for a time distraught and inconsolable,
for she had loved and adored her handsome and indulgent
father. Time, however, speedily heals grief’s
wounds when one is in the early twenties, and in the
social whirl of English Society Myra had all but forgotten
her loss and the dark days of tragedy in Ireland.
“Will you be at home if I call
round in an hour or so?” inquired Tony, as Myra
was about to move off, her horse becoming restive again.
“I’ve got something important to discuss.”
“Let me see,” answered
Myra. “I’ve got a luncheon appointment,
then I’m going on to Hurlingham, dining with
the Fitzpatricks, and going on later to Lady Trencrom’s
dance. Have to see my hairdresser and manicurist
at eleven this morning, but I expect I shall be free
by noon. Call about twelve, Tony, and don’t
forget to bring some chocolate and cigarettes with
you.”
“Righto, old thing!” said
Tony smilingly, and his eyes followed Myra as she
cantered away, the cynosure of many admiring glances.
Tony liked her to be admired.
It seemed a compliment to his own good taste and
discrimination. He liked to think that other
men envied him his position as Myra’s accepted
lover. It pleased him to be pointed out as the
lucky man who had won the heart and hand of the beautiful
Miss Rostrevor, and he was not unconscious of the fact
that he was being pointed out as he strolled along
the Row after watching Myra out of sight.
“I remembered your instructions,
darling,” he announced, when he called on his
betrothed at her aunt’s house in Mayfair a couple
of hours later. “Here we are! Chocs,
your favourite brand of cigarettes, a few roses, and er just
a little thing here that caught my eyes in Asprey’s
window, which I thought you might like.”
The “little thing” he
produced from his pocket was a platinum bracelet set
with diamonds, and Myra uttered an involuntary exclamation
of admiration as she opened the case containing it.
“How lovely! Sure, but
you’re an extravagant darlint, Tony! You
deserve a kiss for this.”
She just brushed Tony’s cheek
with her lips, and evaded him when he tried to enfold
her in his arms.
“Myra, darling, I want to fix
a date for our wedding,” said Tony. “Let’s
get married before the Season is over, or early in
the Autumn, and spend a long honeymoon in the East
or in the South Seas. I want to make you all
mine as soon as possible, dear. Let’s arrange
to get married next month.”
Myra’s smile faded, and she shook her red-gold
head.
“Tony, darlint, I don’t
want to marry you just yet,” she answered gently.
“I told you when we became engaged that you
must give me time to get accustomed to the idea of
becoming your wife, time to try to fall in love with
you first.”
“Why not reverse the usual procedure,
marry me first and fall in love with me after?”
suggested Tony, and again Myra shook her head.
“I love taking risks, Tony,
but that would be too great a risk,” she responded.
“It would be ghastly for us both if I married
you and found myself incapable of loving you, and
tragic if I fell in love with somebody else later.
Please be patient, Tony. I am really and truly
trying to fall in love with you.”
“And you know I am tremendously
in love with you, Myra, and want to make you all my
own,” said Tony, capturing her hands. “I
know I can make you love me, and we will be enormously
happy after we are married. Do be a darling and
let me fix a date for our wedding.”
“Be a dear, Tony, and don’t
press me,” pleaded Myra. “We are
happy enough as we are, and since we became engaged
and Aunt Clarissa ceased to badger me, I’ve
been having a gorgeous time. Let’s postpone
fixing a date for our marriage until next Spring,
by which time I may be sure of my own heart.
Perhaps it’s an old-fashioned idea, but I’d
like to be in love with the man I marry.”
“I say, Myra!” exclaimed
Tony, as if struck by a sudden idea, after a few moments
of silence. “I say! A promise is
a promise, you know. You won’t throw me
over and make me look and feel an ass, will you, if
you should happen to meet someone you think you like
better than me? You’ve promised to be my
wife, you know.”
“Yes, I know, Tony, but I also
know you are too much of a sportsman to hold me to
my promise if I should happen to fall in love with
another man,” Myra responded. “That
isn’t in the least likely to happen, Tony dear,
and I am truly trying to love you in the way a girl
should love the man she has promised to marry, as
I have already told you. Let me have my freedom
and my fling for a few months longer.”
“Well, I suppose it isn’t
any use my trying to bully you into marrying me at
once,” said Tony, with a shrug, a sigh, and a
wry smile. “But you know I’m tremendously
in love with you, darling, and I can’t help
feeling jealous of the fellows who still go on dancing
attendance on you although you are engaged to me.
I’m haunted by the fear of someone stealing
you from me.”
“Tony, darlint, you’ve
no need to be jealous,” Myra smilingly assured
him, and patted his cheek. “There isn’t
anyone else. Dozens of men profess to be in
love with me, but there isn’t a single man or
a married man either that I’m the
slightest little bit in love with. So don’t
worry! I promise you that if ever I do meet a
man whom I’d rather marry than you, I’ll
tell you.”
And with that Tony had, perforce, to be content.