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"Was she a G.o.ddess?"
"It is something built to her memory. Such a view of the river! I was here once before and they took me up there. Everybody who comes here goes and sees Mrs. Arthur de Bever. They ought to have told you."
"Let us go then," said Miss Bonca.s.sen. "Only it must not be long."
"Five minutes will do it all." Then he walked rather quickly up a flight of rural steps. "Lovely spot; isn't it?"
"Yes, indeed."
"That's Maidenhead Bridge; - that's - somebody's place; - and now I've got something to say to you."
"You're not going to murder me now you've got me up here alone?" said Miss Bonca.s.sen, laughing.
"Murder you!" said Dolly, throwing himself into an att.i.tude that was intended to express devoted affection. "Oh no!"
"I am glad of that."
"Miss Bonca.s.sen!"
"Mr. Longstaff! If you sigh like that you'll burst yourself."
"I'll - what?"
"Burst yourself!" and she nodded her head at him.
Then he clapped his hands together, and turned his head away from her towards the little temple. "I wonder whether she knows what love is," he said, as though he were addressing himself to Mrs. Arthur de Bever.
"No, she don't," said Miss Bonca.s.sen.
"But I do," he shouted, turning back towards her. "I do. If any man were ever absolutely, actually, really in love, I am the man."
"Are you indeed, Mr. Longstaff? Isn't it pleasant?"
"Pleasant; - pleasant? Oh, it could be so pleasant."
"But who is the lady? Perhaps you don't mean to tell me that."
"You mean to say you don't know?"
"Haven't the least idea in life."
"Let me tell you then that it could only be one person. It never was but one person. It never could have been but one person. It is you." Then he put his hand well on his heart.
"Me!" said Miss Bonca.s.sen, choosing to be ungrammatical in order that he might be more absurd.
"Of course it is you. Do you think that I should have brought you all the way up here to tell you that I was in love with anybody else?"
"I thought I was brought to see Mrs. de Somebody, and the view."
"Not at all," said Dolly emphatically.
"Then you have deceived me."
"I will never deceive you. Only say that you will love me, and I will be as true to you as the North Pole."
"Is that true to me?"
"You know what I mean."
"But if I don't love you?"
"Yes, you do!"
"Do I?"
"I beg your pardon," said Dolly. "I didn't mean to say that. Of course a man shouldn't make sure of a thing."
"Not in this case, Mr. Longstaff; because really I entertain no such feeling."
"But you can if you please. Just let me tell you who I am."
"That will do no good whatever, Mr. Longstaff."
"Let me tell you at any rate. I have a very good income of my own as it is."
"Money can have nothing to do with it."
"But I want you to know that I can afford it. You might perhaps have thought that I wanted your money."
"I will attribute nothing evil to you, Mr. Longstaff. Only it is quite out of the question that I should - respond as I suppose you wish me to; and therefore, pray, do not say anything further."
She went to the head of the little steps but he interrupted her. "You ought to hear me," he said.
"I have heard you."
"I can give you as good a position as any man without a t.i.tle in England."
"Mr. Longstaff, I rather fancy that wherever I may be I can make a position for myself. At any rate I shall not marry with the view of getting one. If my husband were an English Duke I should think myself nothing, unless I was something as Isabel Bonca.s.sen."
When she said this she did not bethink herself that Lord Silverbridge would in the course of nature become an English Duke. But the allusion to an English Duke told intensely on Dolly, who had suspected that he had a n.o.ble rival. "English Dukes aren't so easily got," he said.
"Very likely not. I might have expressed my meaning better had I said an English Prince."
"That's quite out of the question," said Dolly. "They can't do it, - by Act of Parliament, - except in a hugger-mugger left-handed way, that wouldn't suit you at all."
"Mr. Longstaff, - you must forgive me - if I say - that of all the gentlemen - I have ever met in this country or in any other - you are the - most obtuse." This she brought out in little disjointed sentences, not with any hesitation, but in a way to make every word she uttered more clear to an intelligence which she did not believe to be bright. But in this belief she did some injustice to Dolly. He was quite alive to the disgrace of being called obtuse, and quick enough to avenge himself at the moment.
"Am I?" said he. "How humble-minded you must be when you think me a fool because I have fallen in love with such a one as yourself."
"I like you for that," she replied laughing, "and withdraw the epithet as not being applicable. Now we are quits and can forget and forgive; - only let there be the forgetting."
"Never!" said Dolly, with his hand again on his heart.
"Then let it be a little dream of your youth, - that you once met a pretty American girl who was foolish enough to refuse all that you would have given her."
"So pretty! So awfully pretty!" Thereupon she curtsied. "I have seen all the handsome women in England going for the last ten years, and there has not been one who has made me think that it would be worth my while to get off my perch for her."
"And now you would desert your perch for me!"
"I have already."
"But you can get up again. Let it be all a dream. I know men like to have had such dreams. And in order that the dream may be pleasant the last word between us shall be kind. Such admiration from such a one as you is an honour, - and I will reckon it among my honours. But it can be no more than a dream." Then she gave him her hand. "It shall be so; - shall it not?" Then she paused. "It must be so, Mr. Longstaff."
"Must it?"
"That and no more. Now I wish to go down. Will you come with me? It will be better. Don't you think it is going to rain?"
Dolly looked up at the clouds. "I wish it would with all my heart."
"I know you are not so ill-natured. It would spoil all."
"You have spoiled all."
"No, no. I have spoiled nothing. It will only be a little dream about 'that strange American girl, who really did make me feel queer for half an hour.' Look at that. A great big drop - and the cloud has come over us as black as Erebus. Do hurry down." He was leading the way. "What shall we do for carriages to get us to the inn?"
"There's the summer-house."
"It will hold about half of us. And think what it will be to be in there waiting till the rain shall be over! Everybody has been so good-humoured and now they will be so cross!"
The rain was falling in big heavy drops, slow and far between, but almost black with their size. And the heaviness of the cloud which had gathered over them made everything black.
"Will you have my arm?" said Silverbridge, who saw Miss Bonca.s.sen scudding along, with Dolly Longstaff following as fast as he could.
"Oh dear no. I have got to mind my dress. There; - I have gone right into a puddle. Oh dear!" So she ran on, and Silverbridge followed close behind her, leaving Dolly Longstaff in the distance.
It was not only Miss Bonca.s.sen who got her feet into a puddle and splashed her stockings. Many did so who were not obliged by their position to maintain good-humour under their misfortunes. The storm had come on with such unexpected quickness that there had been a general stampede to the summer-house. As Isabel had said, there was comfortable room for not more than half of them. In a few minutes people were crushed who never ought to be crushed. A Countess for whom treble-piled sofas were hardly good enough was seated on the corner of a table till some younger and less gorgeous lady could be made to give way. And the Marchioness was declaring she was as wet through as though she had been dragged in a river. Mrs. Bonca.s.sen was so absolutely quelled as to have retired into the kitchen attached to the summer-house. Mr. Bonca.s.sen, with all his country's pluck and pride, was proving to a knot of gentlemen round him on the verandah, that such treachery in the weather was a thing unknown in his happier country. Miss Bonca.s.sen had to do her best to console the splashed ladies. "Oh Mrs. Jones, is it not a pity! What can I do for you?"
"We must bear it, my dear. It often does rain, but why on this special day should it come down out of buckets?"
"I never was so wet in all my life," said Dolly Longstaff, poking in his head.
"There's somebody smoking," said the Countess angrily. There was a crowd of men smoking out on the verandah. "I never knew anything so nasty," the Countess continued, leaving it in doubt whether she spoke of the rain, or the smoke, or the party generally.
Damp gauzes, splashed stockings, trampled muslins, and features which have perhaps known something of rouge and certainly encountered something of rain may be made, but can only, by supreme high breeding, be made compatible with good-humour. To be moist, muddy, rumpled and smeared, when by the very nature of your position it is your duty to be clear-starched up to the pellucidity of crystal, to be spotless as the lily, to be crisp as the ivy-leaf, and as clear in complexion as a rose, - is it not, O gentle readers, felt to be a disgrace? It came to pa.s.s, therefore, that many were now very cross. Carriages were ordered under the idea that some improvement might be made at the inn which was nearly a mile distant. Very few, however, had their own carriages, and there was jockeying for the vehicles. In the midst of all this Silverbridge remained as near to Miss Bonca.s.sen as circ.u.mstances would admit. "You are not waiting for me," she said.
"Yes, I am. We might as well go up to town together."
"Leave me with father and mother. Like the captain of a s.h.i.+p, I must be the last to leave the wreck."
"But I'll be the gallant sailor of the day who always at the risk of his life sticks to the skipper to the last moment."
"Not at all; - just because there will be no gallantry. But come and see us to-morrow and find out whether we have got through it alive."
CHAPTER x.x.xIII.
The Langham Hotel "What an abominable climate," Mrs. Bonca.s.sen had said when they were quite alone at Maidenhead.
"My dear, you didn't think you were to bring New York along with you when you came here," replied her husband.
"I wish I was going back to-morrow."
"That's a foolish thing to say. People here are very kind, and you are seeing a great deal more of the world than you would ever see at home. I am having a very good time. What do you say, Bell?"
"I wish I could have kept my stockings clean."
"But what about the young men?"
"Young men are pretty much the same everywhere, I guess. They never have their wits about them. They never mean what they say, because they don't understand the use of words. They are generally half impudent and half timid. When in love they do not at all understand what has befallen them. What they want they try to compa.s.s as a cow does when it stands stretching out its head towards a stack of hay which it cannot reach. Indeed there is no such thing as a young man, for a man is not really a man till he is middle-aged. But take them at their worst they are a deal too good for us, for they become men some day, whereas we must only be women to the end."
"My word, Bella!" exclaimed the mother.
"You have managed to be tolerably heavy upon G.o.d's creatures, taking them in a lump," said the father. "Boys, girls, and cows! Something has gone wrong with you besides the rain."
"Nothing on earth, sir, - except the boredom."
"Some young man has been talking to you, Bella."
"One or two, mother; and I got to be thinking if any one of them should ask me to marry him, and if moved by some evil destiny I were to take him, whether I should murder him, or myself, or run away with one of the others."
"Couldn't you bear with him till, according to your own theory, he would grow out of his folly?" said the father.
"Being a woman, - no. The present moment is always everything to me. When that horrid old harridan halloaed out that somebody was smoking, I thought I should have died. It was very bad just then."
"Awful!" said Mrs. Bonca.s.sen, shaking her head.
"I didn't seem to feel it much," said the father. "One doesn't look to have everything just what one wants always. If I did I should go nowhere; - but my total life would be less enjoyable. If ever you do get married, Bell, you should remember that."
"I mean to get married some day, so that I shouldn't be made love to any longer."
"I hope it will have that effect," said the father.
"Mr. Bonca.s.sen!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the mother.