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she said to Jessie.
Miss Bridgeman was thoughtful, and made no reply to this remark. She was pondering the Major's conduct in this small matter, and it seemed to her that he must have some hidden reason for wishing Christabel not to see "Cupid and Psyche." That he, who had so faithfully waited upon all their fancies, taking infinite trouble to give them pleasure, could in this matter be disobliging or indifferent seemed hardly possible. There must be a reason; and yet what reason could there be to taboo a piece which the Major distinctly declared to be correct, and which all the fashionable world went to see? "Perhaps there is something wrong with the drainage of the theatre," Jessie thought, speculating vaguely--a suspicion of typhoid fever, which the Major had shrunk from mentioning, out of respect for feminine nerves.
"Did you ever tell Mr. Hamleigh you wanted to see 'Cupid and Psyche'?"
asked Miss Bridgeman at last, sorely exercised in spirit--fearful lest Christabel was incurring some kind of peril by her persistence.
"Yes, I told him; but it was at a time when we had a good many engagements, and I think he forgot all about it. Hardly like Angus, was it, to forget one's wishes, when he is generally so eager to antic.i.p.ate them?"
"A strange coincidence!" thought Jessie. Mr. Hamleigh and the Major had been unanimous in their neglect of this particular fancy of Christabel's.
At luncheon Miss Courtenay told her aunt the whole story--how Major Bree had been most disobliging, and how she had circ.u.mvented him.
"And my revenge will be to make him sit out 'Cupid and Psyche' for the second time," she said, lightly, "for he must be our escort. You will go, of course, dearest, to please me?"
"My pet, you know how the heat of a theatre always exhausts me!" pleaded Mrs. Tregonell, whose health, long delicate, had been considerably damaged by her duties as chaperon. "When you are going anywhere with Angus, I like to be seen with you; but to-night, with the Major and Jessie, I shall not be wanted. I can enjoy an evening's rest."
"But do you enjoy that long, blank evening, Auntie?" asked Christabel, looking anxiously at her aunt's somewhat careworn face. People who have one solitary care make so much of it, nurse and fondle it, as if it were an only child. "Once or twice when we have let you have your own way and stay at home, you have looked so pale and melancholy when we came back, as if you had been brooding upon sad thoughts all the evening."
"Sad thoughts will come, Belle."
"They ought not to come to you, Auntie. What cause have you for sadness?"
"I have a dear son far away, Belle--don't you think that is cause enough?"
"A son who enjoys the wild sports of the West ever so much better than he enjoys his home; but who will settle down by-and-by into a model country Squire."
"I doubt that, Christabel. I don't think he will ever settle down--now."
There was an emphasis--an almost angry emphasis--upon the last word which told Christabel only too plainly what her aunt meant. She could guess what disappointment it was that her aunt sighed over in the long, lonely evenings; and, albeit the latent resentfulness in Mrs.
Tregonell's mind was an injustice, her niece could not help being sorry for her.
"Yes, dearest, he will--he will," she said, resolutely. "He will have his fill of shooting bisons, and all manner of big and small game, out yonder; and he will come home, and marry some good sweet girl, who will love you only just a little less than I do, and he will be the last grand example of the old-fashioned country Squire--a race fast dying out; and he will be as much respected as if the power of the Norman Botterells still ruled in the land, and he had the right of dealing out high-handed justice, and immuring his fellow-creatures in a dungeon under his drawing-room."
"I would rather you would not talk about him," answered the widow, gloomily; "you turn everything into a joke. You forget that in my uncertainty about his fate, every thought of him is fraught with pain."
Belle hung her head, and the meal ended in silence. After luncheon came dressing, and then the drive to Twickenham, with Major Bree in attendance. Christabel told him of her success as they drove through the Park to Kensington.
"I have the pleasure to invite you to a seat in my box at the Kaleidoscope this evening," she said.
"What box?"
"A box which Jessie and I secured this morning, before you had finished your breakfast."
"A box for this evening?"
"For this evening."
"I wonder you care to go to a theatre without Hamleigh."
"It is very cruel of you to say that!" exclaimed Christabel, her eyes brightening with girlish tears, which her pride checked before they could fall. "You ought to know that I am wretched without him--and that I want to lose the sense of my misery in dreamland. The theatre for me is what opium was for Coleridge and De Quincey."
"I understand," said Major Bree; "'you are not merry, but you do beguile the thing you are by seeming otherwise.'"
"You will go with us?"
"Of course, if Mrs. Tregonell does not object."
"I shall be very grateful to you for taking care of them," answered the dowager languidly, as she leant back in her carriage--a fine example of handsome middle-age: gracious, elegant, bearing every mark of good birth, yet with a worn look, as of one for whom fading beauty and decline of strength would come too swiftly. "I know I shall be tired to death when we get back to town."
"I don't think London society suits you so well as the monotony of Mount Royal," said Major Bree.
"No; but I am glad Christabel has had her first season. People have been extremely kind. I never thought we should have so many invitations."
"You did not know that beauty is the ace of trumps in the game of society."
The garden party was as other parties of the same genus: strawberry ices and iced coffee in a tent under a spreading Spanish chestnut--music and recitations in a drawing-room, with many windows looking upon the bright swift river--and the picturesque roofs of Old Richmond--just that one little picturesque group of bridge and old tiled-gables which still remains--fine gowns, fine talk; a dash of the aesthetic element; strange colours, strange forms and fashions; pretty girls in grandmother bonnets; elderly women in limp Ophelia gowns, with tumbled frills and lank hair. Christabel and the Major walked about the pretty garden, and criticized all the eccentricities, she glad to keep aloof from her many admirers--safe under the wing of a familiar friend.
"Five o'clock," she said; "that makes twenty-four hours. Do you think he will be back to-morrow?"
"He? Might I ask whom you mean by that p.r.o.noun?"
"Angus. His telegram this morning said that his aunt was really ill--not in any danger--but still quite an invalid, and that he would be obliged to stay a little longer than he had hoped might be needful, in order to cheer her. Do you think he will be able to come back to-morrow?"
"Hardly, I fear. Twenty-four hours would be a very short time for the cheering process. I think you ought to allow him a week. Did you answer his telegram?"
"Why, of course! I told him how miserable I was without him; but that he must do whatever was right and kind for his aunt. I wrote him a long letter before luncheon to the same effect. But, oh, I hope the dear old lady will get well very quickly!"
"If usquebaugh can mend her, no doubt the recovery will be rapid,"
answered the Major, laughing. "I dare say that is why you are so anxious for Hamleigh's return. You think if he stays in the North he may become a confirmed toddy-drinker. By-the-by, when his return is so uncertain, do you think it is quite safe for you to go to the theatre to-night? He might come to Bolton Row during your absence."
"That is hardly possible," said Christabel. "But even if such a happy thing should occur, he would come and join us at the Kaleidoscope."
This was the Major's last feeble and futile effort to prevent a wilful woman having her own way. They rejoined Mrs. Tregonell, and went back to their carriage almost immediately--were in Bolton Row in time for a seven o'clock dinner, and were seated in the box at the Kaleidoscope a few minutes after eight. The Kaleidoscope was one of the new theatres which have been added to the attractions of London during the last twenty years. It was a small house, and of exceeding elegance; the inspiration of the architect thereof seemingly derived rather from the _bonbonnieres_ of Siraudin and Boissier than from the severer exemplars of high art. Somebody said it was a theatre which looked as if it ought to be filled with glace chestnuts, or crystallized violets, rather than with substantial flesh and blood. The draperies thereof were of palest dove-coloured poplin and cream-white satin; the fauteuils were upholstered in velvet of the same dove colour, with a monogram in dead gold; the pilasters and mouldings were of the slenderest and most delicate order--no heavy ma.s.ses of gold or colour--all airy, light, graceful; the sweeping curve of the auditorium was in itself a thing of beauty: every fold of the voluminous dove-coloured curtain, lined with crimson satin--which flashed among the dove tints here and there, like a gleam of vivid colour in the breast of a tropical bird--was a study. The front of the house was lighted with old-fashioned wax candles, a recurrence to obsolete fashion which reminded the few survivors of the D'Orsay period of Her Majesty's in the splendid days of Pasta and Malibran, and which delighted the Court and Livery of the Tallow Chandlers' Company.
"What a lovely theatre!" cried Christabel, looking round the house, which was crowded with a brilliant audience; "and how cruel of you not to bring us here! It is the prettiest theatre we have seen yet."
"Yes; it's a nice little place," said the Major, feebly; "but, you see, they've been playing the same piece all the season--no variety."
"What did that matter, when we had not seen the piece? Besides, a young man I danced with told me he had been to see it fifteen times."
"That young man was an a.s.s!" grumbled the Major.
"Well, I can't help thinking so too," a.s.sented Christabel. And then the overture began--a dreamy, cla.s.sical compound, made up of reminiscences of Mozart, Beethoven, and Weber--a melodious patchwork, dignified by scientific orchestration. Christabel listened dreamily to the dreamy music, thinking of Angus all the while--wondering what he was doing in the far-away Scottish land, which she knew only from Sir Walter's novels.
The dove-coloured curtains were drawn apart to a strain of plaintive sweetness, and the play--half poem, half satire--began. The scene was a palace garden, in some "unsuspected isle in far-off seas." The personages were Psyche, her sisters, and the jealous G.o.ddess, whose rest had been disturbed by rumours of an earthly beauty which surpa.s.sed her own divine charms, and who approached the palace disguised as a crone, dealing in philters and simples, ribbons and perfumes, a kind of female Autolycus.
First came a dialogue between Venus and the elder sisters--handsome women both, but of a coa.r.s.e type of beauty, looking too large for the frame in which they appeared. Christabel and Jessie enjoyed the smartness of the dialogue, which sparkled with Aristophanian hits at the follies of the hour, and yet had a poetical grace which seemed the very flavour of the old Greek world.
At last, after the interest of the fable had fairly begun, there rose the faint melodious breathings of a strange music within the palace--the quaint and primitive harmonies of a three-stringed lyre--and Psyche came slowly down the marble steps, a slender, gracious figure in cla.s.sic drapery--Canova's statue incarnate.