The Reflections of Ambrosine - LightNovelsOnl.com
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The pillow of art-needlework and frills had fallen to the floor--even it could not remain comfortably on the hard seat! There was nothing between us on the sofa.
Antony leaned forward, close to me. His voice was strangely moved.
"Comtesse!" he began, when McGreggor knocked at the door.
"Mr. Gurrage is calling you, ma'am," she said, in her heavy, Scotch voice, "and he seems in a hurry, ma'am."
"Ambrosine!" echoed impatiently in the hall.
"Why, it must be dressing-time!" said Antony, calmly, looking at his watch. "I must not keep you," and he quietly left the room as Augustus burst in from my bedroom door.
"Where on earth have you been?" he said, crossly. "That Dodd woman has been driving us all mad! Willie Dodd came and joined us at bridge and took McCormack's place, and the old she-tike came after him and chattered like a monkey until she got him away. Where were you that you did not look after her?"
"I was here, in my sitting-room, talking to Sir Antony Thornhirst," I said, almost laughing. The picture of Mrs. Dodd at the bridge-table amused me to think of. Augustus saw me smiling, and he looked less ruffled.
"She is an old wretch," he said. "I wish I had not to ask Willie Dodd every year, but business is business, and I'll trouble you to be civil to them. We will weed out the whole of this lot, gradually, now. The mater will go off to Bournemouth at this time of the year, and so, by-and-by, we can have nothing but smart people."
The evening pa.s.sed in an endless, boring round. This sort of company does not adapt itself as the people at Harley did. With my best endeavors to be a good hostess, the uneasiness of my guests prevented me from making them feel comfortable or at home.
Mrs. Dodd's impertinence would have been insupportable if it had not been so funny.
She complained of most things--the draughts, the inconvenience of the hours of the train departures, and so on.
She was gorgeously dressed and hung with diamonds. Without being exceptionally stout, everything is so tight and pushed-up that she seems to come straight out from her chin in a kind of platform, where the diamonds lose themselves in a narrow, perpendicular depression in the middle.
Antony sat next me at dinner, at one side; on the other was old Sir Samuel Wakely. Mr. Dodd on his left hand had Miss Springle, the playful, giddy daughter of one of the guns.
She chaffed him all the time, much to the annoyance of his life's partner, who was sitting opposite, and who, owing to an erection of flowers, was unable to quite see what was going on.
"Yes," we heard Mr. Dodd say, at last, "I nearly bought it in Paris at the Exhibition. Eh! but it was a beautiful statue!"
"I like statues," said Miss Springle.
"Well, she was just a perfect specimen of a woman, but Missus Dodd wouldna let me purchase her, because the puir thing wasna dressed. I didna think it could matter in marble."
"What's that you are saying about Mrs. Dodd?" demanded that lady from across the table, dodging the chrysanthemums.
"I was telling Miss Springle, my dear, of the statue of 'Innocence' I wanted to buy at the Exhibition at Paris," replied Mr. Dodd, meekly, "and that you wouldna let me on account of the scanty clothing."
"Innocence, indeed!" snorted Mrs. Dodd. "Pretty names they give things over there! And her clothing scant, you call it, Wullie? Why, you are stretching a point to the verge of untruth to call it clothing at all--a scarf of muslin and a couple of doves! Anyhow, I'll have it known I'll not have a naked woman in my drawing-room, in marble or fles.h.!.+"
The conversation of the whole table was paralyzed by her voice. My eye caught Antony's, and we both laughed.
"There, there, my dear, don't be even suggesting such things," said Mr. Dodd, soothingly.
"La! Mrs. Dodd, you make me blush," giggled Miss Springle.
I wondered what Antony thought of it all, and whether he had ever been among such people before. His face betrayed nothing after he laughed with me, and he seemed to be quietly enjoying his dinner, which, fortunately, was good.
It was only for a few minutes before we all said good-night that we spoke together alone.
"Shall you be down to breakfast, Comtesse?" he asked me.
"Oh yes," I said, "These people would never understand. They would think I was being deliberately rude if I breakfasted in my room."
"At nine o'clock, then?"
"Yes."
"Lend me your La Rochefoucauld to read to-night?" he asked.
"With pleasure. I will have it sent to your room."
"No, let me get it from your mustard boudoir myself. I shall be coming up, probably, to change into a smoking-coat, and my room is down that way, you know."
"Very well."
So we said good-night.
Half an hour afterwards, I was standing by my sitting-room fire when Antony came into the room. He leaned on the mantel-piece beside me and looked down into my face.
"When will you come over to Dane Mount, Comtesse? I want to show you _my_ great-great-grandmother. She was yours, too, by-the-way," he said.
"When will you ask us?"
"In about a fortnight. I have to run about Norfolk until then. Will you come some time near the 4th of November?"
"I shall have to ask Augustus, but I dare say we can."
He frowned slightly at the mention of Augustus.
"Of course. Well, I will not have a party, only some one to talk to--your husband. The ancestors won't interest him, probably."
"Oh! Do ask Lady Tilchester," I said. "I love her."
He bent down suddenly to look at the Dresden clock.
"No, I don't think so. She will be entertaining herself just then," he said, "and probably could not get away. But leave it to me, I promise to arrange that Augustus shall not be bored."
He picked up La Rochefoucauld and opened it.
"I see you have marked some of the _maximes_."
"No. Grandmamma and the Marquis must have done that. Look, they are all of the most witty and cynical that are pencilled. I can hear them talking when I read them. That is just how they spoke to one another."
He read aloud:
"'_C'est une grande folie de vouloir etre sage tout seul_!' Don't be '_sage tout seul_,' Comtesse. Let me keep you company in your _sagesse_," he said.