‘ALL FANCY, PRIDE, AND FICKLE MAIDENHOOD.’
The return to Arlington Street meant
a return to the ceaseless whirl of gaiety. Even
at Rood Hall life had been as near an approach to perpetual
motion as one could hope for in this world; but the
excitement and the hurrying and scampering in Berkshire
had a rustic flavour; there were moments that were
almost repose, a breathing space between the blue
river and the blue sky, in a world that seemed made
of green fields and hanging woods, the plashing of
waters, and the song of the lark. But in London
the very atmosphere was charged with hurry and agitation;
the freshness was gone from the verdure of the parks;
the glory of the rhododendrons had faded; the Green
Park below Lady Kirkbank’s mansion was baked
and rusty; the towers of the Houses of Parliament yonder
were dimly seen in a mist of heat. London air
tasted of smoke and dust, vibrated with the incessant
roll of carriages, and the trampling of multitudinous
feet.
There are women of rank who can take
the London season quietly, and live their own lives
in the midst of the whirl and the riot-women
for whom that squirrel-like circulation round and
round the fashionable wheel has no charm-women
who only receive people they like, only go into society
that is congenial. But Lady Kirkbank was not one
of these. The advance of age made her only more
keen in the pursuit of pleasure. She would have
abandoned herself to despair had the glass over the
mantelpiece in her boudoir ceased to be choked and
littered with cards-had her book of engagements
shown a blank page. Happily there were plenty
of people-if not all of them the best people-who
wanted Sir George and Lady Kirkbank at their parties.
The gentleman was sporting and harmless, the lady was
good-natured, and just sufficiently eccentric to be
amusing without degenerating into a bore. And
this year she was asked almost everywhere, for the
sake of the beauty who went under her wing. Lesbia
had been as a pearl of price to her chaperon, from
a social point of view; and now that she was engaged
to Horace Smithson she was likely to be even more
valuable.
Mr. Smithson had promised Lady Kirkbank,
sportively as it were, and upon the impulse of the
moment, as he would have offered to wager a dozen of
gloves, that were he so happy as to win her protegee’s
hand he would find her an investment for, say, a thousand,
which would bring her in twenty per cent.; nay, more,
he would also find the thousand, which would have
been the initial difficulty on poor Georgie’s
part. But this little matter was in Georgie’s
mind a detail, compared with the advantages to accrue
to her indirectly from Lesbia’s union with one
of the richest men in London.
Lady Kirkbank had brought about many
good matches, and had been too often rewarded with
base ingratitude upon the part of her protegees,
after marriage; but there was a touch of Arcady in
the good soul’s nature, and she was always trustful.
She told herself that Lesbia would not be ungrateful,
would not basely kick down the ladder by which she
had mounted to heights empyrean, would not cruelly
shelve the friend who had pioneered her to high fortune.
She counted upon making the house in Park Lane as
her own house, upon being the prime mover of all Lesbia’s
hospitalities, the supervisor of her visiting list,
the shadow behind the throne.
There were balls and parties nightly,
dinners, luncheons, garden-parties; and yet there
was a sense of waning in the glory of the world-everybody
felt that the fag-end of the season was approaching.
All the really great entertainments were over-the
Cabinet dinners, the Reception at the Foreign Office,
the last of the State balls and concerts. Some
of the best people had already left town; and senators
were beginning to complain that they saw no prospect
of early deliverance. There was Goodwood still
to look forward to; and after Goodwood the Deluge-or
rather Cowes Regatta, about which Lady Kirkbank’s
set were already talking.
Lady Lesbia was to be at Cowes for
the Regatta week. That was a settled thing.
Mr. Smithson’s schooner-yacht, the Cayman, was
to be her hotel. It was to be Lady Kirkbank and
Lady Lesbia’s yacht for the nonce; and Mr. Smithson
was to live on shore at his villa, and at that aristocratic
club to which, by Maulevrier’s influence, and
on the score of his approaching marriage with an earl’s
daughter, he had been just selected. He would
be only Lady Kirkbank’s visitor on board the
Cayman. The severe etiquette of the situation
would therefore not be infringed; and yet Mr. Smithson
would have the happiness of seeing his betrothed sole
and sovereign mistress of his yacht, and of spending
the long summer days at her feet. Even to Lady
Lesbia this idea of the yacht was not without its
charm. She had never been on board such a yacht
as the Cayman; she was a good sailor, as testified
by many an excursion, in hired sailing boats, at Tynemouth,
and St. Bees; and she knew that she would be the queen
of the hour. She accepted Mr. Smithson’s
invitation for the Cowes week more graciously than
she was wont to receive his attentions, and was pleased
to say that the whole thing would be rather enjoyable.
‘It will be simple enchantment,’
exclaimed the more enthusiastic Georgie Kirkbank.
’There is nothing so rapturous as life on board
a yacht; there is a flavour of adventure, a sansgene,
a-in short everything in the world that
I like. I shall wear my cotton frocks, and give
myself up to enjoyment, lie on the deck and look up
at the blue sky, too deliciously idle even to read
the last horrid thing of Zola’s.’
But the Cowes Regatta was nearly three
weeks ahead; and in the meantime there was Goodwood,
and the ravelled threads of the London season had to
be wound up. And by this time it was known everywhere
that the affair between Mr. Smithson and Maulevrier’s
sister was really on. ’It’s as settled
a business as the entries and bets for next year’s
Derby,’ said one lounger to another in the smoking-room
of the Haute Gomme. ’Play or
pay, don’t you know.’
Lady Kirkbank and Lesbia had both
written to Lady Maulevrier, Lesbia writing somewhat
coldly, very briefly, and in a half defiant tone, to
the effect that she had accepted Mr. Smithson’s
offer, and that she hoped her grandmother would be
pleased with a match which everybody supposed to be
extremely advantageous. She was going to Grasmere
immediately after the Cowes week to see her dear grandmother,
and to be assured of her approval. In the meanwhile
she was awfully busy; there were callers driving up
to the door at that very moment, and her brain was
racked by the apprehension that she might not get her
new gown in time for the Bachelor’s Ball, which
was to be quite one of the nicest things of the year,
so dearest grandmother must excuse a hurried letter,
etc., etc., etc.
Georgie Kirkbank was more effusive,
more lengthy. She expatiated upon the stupendous
alliance which her sweetest Lesbia was about to make;
and took credit to herself for having guided Lesbia’s
footsteps in the right way.
‘Smithson is a most difficult
person,’ she wrote. ’The least error
of taste on your dear girl’s part would have
froissed him. Men with that immense wealth
are always suspicious, ready to imagine mercenary
motives, on their guard against being trapped.
But Lesbia had me at her back, and she managed
him perfectly. He is positively her slave; and
you will be able to twist him round your little finger
in the matter of settlements. You may do what
you like with him, for the ground has been thoroughly
prepared by me.’
Lady Maulevrier’s reply was
not enthusiastic. She had no doubt Mr. Smithson
was a very good match, according to the modern estimate
of matrimonial alliances, in which money seemed to
be the Alpha and Omega. But she had cherished
views of another kind. She had hoped to see her
dear granddaughter wear one of those noble and historic
names which are a badge of distinction for all time.
She had hoped to see her enter one of those grand
old families which are a kind of royalty. And
that Lesbia should marry a man whose sole distinction
consisted of an immense fortune amassed heaven knows
how, was a terrible blow to her pride.
‘But it is not the first,’
wrote Lady Maulevrier. ’My pride has received
crushing blows in days past, and I ought to be humbled
to the dust. But there is a stubborn resistance
in some natures which stands firm against every shock.
You and Lesbia will both be surprised to hear that
Mary, from whom I expected so little, has made a really
great match. She was married yesterday afternoon
in my morning room, by special licence, to the Earl
of Hartfield, the lover of her choice, whom we at Fellside
have all known as plain John Hammond. He is an
admirable young man, and sure to make a great figure
in the world, as no doubt you know better than I do,
for you are in the way of hearing all about him.
His courtship of Mary is quite an idyll; and the happy
issue of this romantic love-affair has cheered and
comforted me more than anything that has happened since
Lesbia left me.’
This letter, written in Fraeulein’s
niggling little hand, Lady Kirkbank handed to Lesbia,
who read it through in silence; but when she came to
that part of the letter which told of her sister’s
marriage, her cheek grew ashy pale, her brow contracted,
and she started to her feet and stared at Lady Kirkbank
with wild, dilated eyes, as if she had been stung
by an adder.
‘A strange mystification, wasn’t
it?’ said Lady Kirkbank, almost frightened at
the awful look in Lesbia’s face, which was even
worse than Belle Trinder’s expression when she
read the announcement of Mr. Smithson’s flight.
‘Strange mystification!
It was base treachery-a vile and wicked
lie!’ cried Lesbia, furiously. ’What
right had he to come to us under false colours, to
pretend to be poor, a nobody-with only the
vaguest hope of making a decent position in the future?-and
to offer himself under such impossible conditions
to a girl brought up as I had been-a girl
educated by one of the proudest and most ambitious
of women-to force me to renounce everything
except him? How could he suppose that any girl,
so placed, could decide in his favour? If he had
loved me he would have told me the truth-he
would not have made it impossible for me to accept
him.’
‘I believe he is a very high
flown young man,’ said Lady Kirkbank, soothingly;
’he was never in my set, you know, dear.
And I suppose he had some old Minerva-press idea that
he would find a girl who would marry him for his own
sake. And your sister, no doubt, eager to marry
anybody, poor child, for the sake of getting
away from that very lovely dungeon of Lady Maulevrier’s,
snapped at the chance; and by a mere fluke she becomes
a countess.’
Lesbia ignored these consolatory remarks.
She was pacing the room like a tigress, her delicate
cambric handkerchief grasped between her two hands,
and torn and rent by the convulsive action of her fingers.
She could have thrown herself from the balcony on
to the spikes of the area railings, she could have
dashed herself against yonder big plate-glass window
looking towards the Green Park, like a bird which shatters
his little life against the glass barrier which he
mistakes for the open sky. She could have flung
herself down on the floor and grovelled, and torn
her hair-she could have done anything mad,
wicked, desperate, in the wild rage of this moment.
‘Loved me!’ she exclaimed;
’he never loved me. If he had he would have
told me the truth. What, when I was in his arms,
my head upon his breast, my whole being surrendered
to him, adoring him, what more could he want?
He must have known that this meant real love.
And why should he put it upon me to fight so hard
a fight-to brave my grandmother’s
anger-to be cursed by her-to
face poverty for his sake? I never professed
to be a heroine. He knew that I was a woman, with
all a woman’s weakness, a woman’s fear
of trial and difficulty in the future. It was
a cowardly thing to use me so.’
‘It was,’ said Lady Kirkbank,
in the same soothing tone; ’but if you liked
this Hammond-Hartfield creature-a little
in those old days, I know you have outlived that liking
long ago.’
’Of course; but it is a hard
thing to know one has been fooled, cheated, weighed
in the balance and found wanting,’ said Lesbia,
scornfully.
She was taming down a little by this
time, ashamed of that outbreak of violent passion,
feeling that she had revealed too much to Lady Kirkbank.
‘It was a caddish thing to do,’
said Georgie; ’and this Hartfield is just what
I always thought him-an insufferable prig.
However, my sweetest girl, there is really nothing
to lament in the matter. Your sister has made
a good alliance, which will score high in your favour
by-and-by, and you are going to marry a man who is
three times as rich as Lord Hartfield.’
’Rich, yes; and nothing but
rich; while Lord Hartfield is a man of the very highest
standing, belongs to the flower of English nobility.
Rich, yes; Mr. Smithson is rich; but, as Lady Maulevrier
says, He has made his money heaven knows how.’
‘Mr. Smithson has not made his
money heaven knows how,’ answered Lady Kirkbank,
indignantly. ’He has made it in cochineal,
in iron, in gunpowder, in coal, in all kinds of commodities.
Everybody in the City knows how he has made his money,
and that he has a genius for turning everything into
gold. If the gold changes back into one of the
baser metals, it is only when Mr. Smithson has made
all he wanted to make. And now he has quite done
with the City. The House is the only business
of his life; and he is becoming a power in the House.
You have every reason to be proud of your choice,
Lesbia.’
‘I will try to be proud of it,’
said Lesbia, resolutely. ’I will not be
scorned and trampled upon by Mary.’
‘She seemed a harmless kind
of girl,’ said Lady Kirkbank, as if she had
been talking of a housemaid.
‘She is a designing minx,’
exclaimed Lesbia, ’and has set her cap at that
man from the very beginning.’
‘But she could not have known
that he was Lord Hartfield.’
‘No; but he was a man; and that was enough for
her.’
From this time forward there was a
change in Lady Lesbia’s style and manner-a
change very much for the worse, as old-fashioned people
thought; but to the taste of some among Lady Kirkbank’s
set, the change was an improvement. She was gayer
than of old, gay with a reckless vivacity, intensely
eager for action and excitement, for cards and racing,
and all the strongest stimulants of fashionable life.
Most people ascribed this increased vivacity, this
electric manner, to the fact of her engagement to
Horace Smithson. She was giddy with her triumph,
dazzled by a vision of the gold which was soon to be
hers.
’Egad, if I saw myself in a
fair way of being able to write cheques upon such
an account as Smithson’s I should be as wild
as Lady Lesbia,’ said one of the damsel’s
military admirers at the Rag. ’And I believe
the young lady was slightly dipped.’
‘Who told you that?’ asked his friend.
‘A mother of mine,’ answered
the youth, with an apologetic air, as if he hardly
cared to own such a humdrum relationship. ’Seraphine,
the dressmaker, was complaining-wanted
to see the colour of Lady Lesbia Haselden’s
money-vulgar curiosity-asked
my old mother if she thought the account was safe,
and so on. That’s how I came to know all
about it.’
‘Well, she’ll be able to pay Seraphine
next season.’
Lord Maulevrier came back to London
directly after his sister’s wedding. The
event, which came off so quietly, so happily, filled
him with unqualified joy. He had hoped from the
very first that his Molly would win the cup, even
while Lesbia was making all the running, as he said
afterwards. And Molly had won, and was the wife
of one of the best young men in England. Maulevrier,
albeit unused to the melting-mood, shed a tear or
two for very joy as the sister he loved and the friend
of his boyhood and youth stood side by side in the
quiet room at Grasmere, and spoke the solemn words
that made them one for ever.
The first news he heard after his
return to town was of Lesbia’s engagement, which
was common talk at the clubs. The visitors at
Rood Hall had come back to London full of the event,
and were proud of giving a detailed account of the
affair to outsiders.
They all talked patronisingly of Smithson,
and seemed to think it rather a wonderful fact that
he did not drop his aspirates or eat peas with a knife.
‘A man of stirling metal,’
said the gossips, ’who can hold his own with
many a fellow born in the purple.’
Maulevrier called in Arlington Street,
but Lady Kirkbank and her protegee were out;
and it was at a cricket match at the Orleans Club
that the brother and sister met for the first time
after Lord Hartfield’s wedding, which by this
time had been in all the papers; a very simple announcement:
’On the 29th inst., at Grasmere,
by the Reverend Douglass Brooke, the Earl of Hartfield
to Mary, younger daughter of the ninth Earl of Maulevrier.’
Lesbia was the centre of a rather
noisy little court, in which Mr. Smithson was conspicuous
by his superior reserve.
He did not exert himself as a lover,
paid no compliments, was not sentimental. The
pearl was won, and he wore it very quietly; but wherever
Lesbia went he went; she was hardly ever out of his
sight.
Maulevrier received the coolest possible
greeting. Lesbia turned pale with anger at sight
of him, for his presence reminded her of the most
humiliating passage in her life; but the big red satin
sunshade concealed that pale angry look, and nothing
in Lesbia’s manner betrayed emotion.
’Where have you been hiding
yourself all this time, and why were you not at Henley?’
she asked.
‘I have been at Grasmere.’
’Oh, you were a witness of that
most romantic marriage. The Lady of Lyons reversed,
the gardener’s son turning out to be an earl.
Was it excruciatingly funny?’
‘It was one of the most solemn weddings I ever
saw.’
‘Solemn! what, with my Tomboy sister as bride!
Impossible!’
’Your sister ceased to be a
Tomboy when she fell in love. She is a sweet
and womanly woman, and will make an adorable wife to
the finest fellow I know. I hear I am to congratulate
you, Lesbia, upon your engagement with Mr. Smithson.’
’If you think I am the
person to be congratulated, you are at liberty to
do so. My engagement is a fact.’
’Oh, of course, Mr. Smithson
is the winner. But as I hope you intend to be
happy, I wish you joy. I am told Smithson is a
really excellent fellow when one gets to know him;
and I shall make it my business to be better acquainted
with him.’
Smithson was standing just out of
hearing, watching the bowling. Maulevrier went
over to him and shook hands, their acquaintance hitherto
having been of the slightest, and very shy upon his
lordship’s part; but now Smithson could see
that Maulevrier meant to be cordial.