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"Confound them! who can tell how it happened?" said he., "I 'll not meet him; I 'll leave the house,--I 'll not face such an indignity."
"But remember, Mark, none of us know your friend, we have not so much as seen him; and as he was to meet these people, it's all the better they came as acquaintances."
"That's all very fine," said he, angrily; "you can be beautifully philosophical about it, all because you have n't to go back to a mess-table and be badgered by all sorts of allusions and references to Maitland's capital story."
"Here they are, here they are!" cried Alice; and the next moment she was warmly embracing those dear friends to whose failings she was nowise blind, however ardent her late defence of them. Mark, meanwhile, had advanced towards Maitland, and gave him as cordial a welcome as he could command. "My sister Mrs. Trafford, Mr. Maitland," said he; and Alice gave her hand with a graceful cordiality to the new guest.
"I declare, Mark is afraid that I 'll kiss him," cried Beck. "Courage, _mon ami_, I'll not expose you in public."
"How are you? how are you?" cried the Commodore; "brown, brown, very brown; Indian sun. Lucky if the mischief is only skin-deep."
"Shake hands, Mark," said Sally, in a deep masculine voice; "don't bear malice, though I did pitch you out of the boat that day."
Mark was however, happily, too much engaged with his friend to have heard the speech. He was eagerly listening to Maitland's account of his first meeting with the Grahams.
"My lucky star was in the ascendant; for there I stood," said Maitland, "in the great square of Bally--Bally--"
"Ballymena," broke in Beck; "and there's no great square in the place; but you stood in a very dirty stable-yard, in a much greater pa.s.sion than such a fine gentleman should ever give way to."
"Calling, 'A horse! a horse! My kingdom for a horse!'"
"It was 'a chaise and pair' _I_ heard, and you were well laughed at for your demand. The baker offered you a seat, which you rejected with dismay; and, to tell the truth, it was half in the hope of witnessing another outburst of your indignation that I went across and said, 'Would you accept a place beside me, sir?'"
"And was I not overwhelmed with joy? Was it not in a transport of grat.i.tude that I embraced your offer?"
"I know you very nearly embraced my maid as you lifted her off the car."
"And, by the way, where is Patience?" asked Mrs. Trafford.
"She's coming on, some fas.h.i.+on, with the swell's luggage," added she, dropping her voice to a whisper,--"eight trunks, eleven carpet-bags, and four dressing-boxes, besides what I thought was a show-box, but is only a shower-bath."
"My people will take every care of her," said Maitland.
"Is Fenton still with you?" asked Mark.
"Yes; he had some thoughts of leaving me lately. He said he thought he 'd like to retire,--that he 'd take a consulate or a barrack-masters.h.i.+p; but I laughed him out of it."
Sir Arthur and Lady Lyle had now come down to welcome the new arrivals; and greetings and welcomes and felicitations resounded on all sides.
"Come along with me, Maitland," said Mark, hurrying his friend away.
"Let me show you your quarters;" and as he moved off, he added, "What a piece of ill-luck it was that you should have chanced upon the greatest bores of our acquaintance!--people so detestable to me that if I had n't been expecting your visit I 'd have left the house this morning."
"I don't know that," said Maitland, half languidly; "perhaps I have grown more tolerant, or more indifferent,--what may be another name for the same thing; but I rather liked the young women. Have we any more stairs to mount?"
"No; here you are;" and Mark reddened a little at the impertinent question. "I have put you here because this was an old _garcon_ apartment I had arranged for myself; and you have your bath-room yonder, and your servant, on the other side of the terrace."
"It's all very nice, and seems very quiet," said Maitland.
"As to that, you'll not have to complain; except the plash of the sea at the foot of those cliffs, you 'll never hear a sound here."
"It's a bold thing of you to make me so comfortable, Lyle. When I wrote to you to say I was coming, my head was full of what we call country-house life, with all its bustle and racket,--noisy breakfasts and noisier luncheons, with dinners as numerous as _tables d'hote_. I never dreamed of such a paradise as this. May I dine here all alone when in the humor?"
"You are to be all your own master, and to do exactly as you please. I need not say, though, that I will scarce forgive you if you grudge us your company."
"I'm not always up to society. I'm growing a little footsore with the world, Lyle, and like to lie down in the shade."
"Lewis told me you were writing a book,--a novel, I think he said," said Mark.
"I write a book! I never thought of such a thing. Why, my dear Lyle, the fellows who--like myself--know the whole thing, never write! Have n't you often remarked that a man who has pa.s.sed years of life in a foreign city loses all power of depicting its traits of peculiarity, just because, from habit, they have ceased to strike him as strange? So it is. Your thorough man of the world knows life too well to describe it.
No, no; it is the creature that stands furtively in the flats that can depict what goes on in the comedy. Who are your guests?"
Mark ran over the names carelessly.
"All new to me, and I to them. Don't introduce me, Mark; leave me to shake down in any bivouac that may offer. I'll not be a bear if people don't bait me. You understand?"
"Perhaps I do."
"There are no foreigners? That's a loss. They season society, though they never make it, and there's an evasive softness in French that contributes much to the courtesies of life. So it is; the habits of the Continent to the wearied man of the world are just like loose slippers to a gouty man. People learn to be intimate there without being over-familiar,--a great point, Mark."
"By the way,--talking of that same familiarity,--there was a young fellow who got the habit of coming here, before I returned from India, on such easy terms that I found him installed like one of ourselves. He had his room, his saddle-horse, a servant that waited on him, and who did his orders, as if he were a son of the family. I cut the thing very short when I came home, by giving him a message to do some trifling service, just as I would have told my valet. He resented, left the house, and sent me this letter next morning."
"Not much given to letter-writing, I see," muttered Mait-land, as he read over Tony's epistle; "but still the thing is reasonably well put, and means to say, 'Give me a chance, and I 'm ready for you.' What's the name,--Buller?"
"No; Butler,--Tony Butler they call him here."
"What Butlers does he belong to?" asked Maitland, with more interest in his manner.
"No Butlers at all,--at least, none of any standing. My sisters, who swear by this fellow, will tell you that his father was a colonel and C.B., and I don't know what else; and that his uncle was, and I believe is, a certain Sir Omerod Butler, minister or ex-minister somewhere; but I have my doubts of all the fine parentage, seeing that this youth lives with his mother in a cottage here that stands in the rent-roll at 18 per annum."
"There is a Sir Omerod Butler," said Maitland, with a slow, thoughtful enunciation.
"But if he be this youth's uncle, he never knows nor recognizes him. My sister, Mrs. Trafford, has the whole story of these people, and will be charmed to tell it to you."
"I have no curiosity in the matter," said Maitland, languidly. "The world is really so very small that by the time a man reaches my age he knows every one that is to be known in it. And so," said he, as he looked again at the letter, "he went off, after sending you the letter?"
"Yes, he left this the same day."
"And where for?"
"I never asked. The girls, I suppose, know all about his movements. I overhear mutterings about poor Tony at every turn. Tell me, Maitland,"
added he, with more earnestness, "is this letter a thing I can notice?
Is it not a regular provocation?"
"It is, and it is not," said Maitland, as he lighted a cigar, puffing the smoke leisurely between his words. "If he were a man that you would chance upon at every moment, meet at your club, or sit opposite at dinner, the thing would fester into a sore in its own time; but here is a fellow, it may be, that you 'll never see again, or if so, but on distant terms, I 'd say, put the doc.u.ment with your tailor's bills, and think no more of it."
Lyle nodded an a.s.sent, and was silent.
"I say, Lyle," added Maitland, after a moment, "I'd advise you never to speak of the fellow,--never discuss him. If your sisters bring up his name, let it drop unnoticed; it is the only way to put the tombstone on such memories. What is your dinner-hour here?"