Faith And Unfaith - BestLightNovel.com
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"A true one, nevertheless."
A little earnest shade shows itself upon his face, but Georgie laughs lightly, and moves away from him over to the window, and at this moment Clarissa returns, armed with paper and pencils and a very much pleased smile.
"Can't I have the gardens lighted?" she says, "with Chinese lanterns, and that? I have been thinking of it."
"I don't know about 'that,'" says Dorian. "I'm not sure but it might blow us all to atoms; but the celestial lights will be quite 'too, too!' It must be a splendid thing, Clarissa, to have a brain like yours. Now, neither Miss Broughton nor I have a particle between us."
"Speak for yourself, please," says Miss Broughton, very justly incensed.
"I'm doing even more than that, I'm speaking for you too. Don't put up too many Chinese lanterns, Clarissa, or it will be awkward: we shall be seen."
"What matter? I love light," says Georgie, innocently. "How I do hope there will be a moon! Not a mean effort at one, but a good, round, substantial, vast old moon, such as there was two months ago."
She has her wish: such another moonlight night as comes to Pullingham on the night of Miss Peyton's ball has been rarely, if ever, seen. It breaks over the whole place in a flood of light so whitely brilliant that the very sleeping flowers lift up their heads, as though believing the soft mystic light to be the early birth of morn.
All around is calm and drowsy sweet. The stars come forth to light the world, and, perhaps, to do homage to Clarissa on this the night of her first ball.
About six weeks have pa.s.sed since Ruth Annersley left her home, and as yet no tidings of her have reached Pullingham. Already people are beginning to forget that such an _esclandre_ ever occurred in their quiet village. The minutest inquiries have been made (chiefly by Lord Sartoris, who is now very seldom at home); rewards offered; numerous paragraphs, addressed to "R. A.," have appeared in the London papers, but without result. The world is growing tired of the miserable scandal, and Ruth's disappearance ceases to be the one engrossing topic of conversation at village teas and bar-room revelries.
To-night is fair enough to make one believe sin impossible. It is touched by heaven; great waves of light, sent by the "silver queen of night," lie languidly on tree and bower; the very paths are bright with its stray beams.
"Bats and grisly owls on noiseless wings" flit to and fro, "and now the nightingale, not distant far, begins her solitary song."
Within, music is sounding, and laughter, and the faint sweet dropping of fountains. Clarissa, moving about among her guests, is looking quite lovely in a pale satin trimmed heavily with old gold. She is happy and quite content, though her eyes, in spite of her, turn anxiously, every now and then, to the doorway.
Every one is smiling, radiant. Even Dorian, who is waltzing with any one but the woman he desires, is looking gracious all through, and is creating havoc in the bosom of the damsel who has rashly intrusted herself to his care.
Cissy Redmond, in the arms of a cavalry-man, is floating round the room, her unutterable little _nez retrousse_ looking even more p.r.o.nounced than usual. Her face is lit up with pleasurable excitement; to her--as she tells the cavalry-man without hesitation--the evening is "quite too awfully much, don't you know!" and the cavalry-man understands her perfectly, and is rather taking to her, which is undoubtedly clever of the cavalry-man.
He is now talking to her in his very best style, and she is smiling,--but not at him.
Within the shelter of a door, directly opposite, stands Mr. Hastings, and he is answering back her smile fourfold. He will not dance himself,--conscience forbidding,--yet it pleases him to see his Cissy (as she now is) enjoying herself. The band is playing "Beautiful Ferns" dreamily, languidly; and I think at this very moment Mr.
Hastings's reverend toes are keeping excellent time to the music. But this, of course, is barest supposition; for what human eye can penetrate leather?
The waltz comes to an end, and Dorian, having successfully rid himself of his late partner, draws Georgie's hand within his arm and leads her into a conservatory.
Her late partner was a fat, kindly squire, who _will_ dance, but who, at the expiration of each effort to eclipse Terpsich.o.r.e, feels devoutly thankful that his task has come to an end. He is, to say the mildest least of him, exceedingly tiring, and Georgie is rather glad than otherwise that Dorian should lead her into the cool recess where flowers and perfumed fountains hold full sway. She sinks into a seat, and sighs audibly, and looks upwards at her companion from under half-closed lids, and then, letting them drop suddenly, plays, in a restless fas.h.i.+on, with the large black fan she holds.
Brans...o...b.. is stupidly silent; indeed, it hardly occurs to him that speech is necessary. He is gazing earnestly, tenderly, at the small face beside him,--
"A face o'er which a thousand shadows go."
The small face, perhaps, objects to this minute scrutiny, because presently it raises itself, and says, coquettishly,--
"How silent you are! What are you thinking of?"
"Of you," says Dorian, simply. "What a foolish question! You are a perfect picture in that black gown, with your baby arms and neck."
"Anything else?" asks Miss Broughton, demurely.
"Yes. It also seems to me that you cannot be more than fifteen. You look such a little thing, and so young."
"But I'm not young," says Georgie, hastily. "I am quite old. I wish you would remember I am nearly nineteen."
"Quite a Noah's Ark sort of person,--a fossil of the pre-Adamite period. How I envy you! You are, indeed, unique in your way. Don't be angry with me because I said you looked young; and don't wish to be old. There is no candor so hateful, no truth so unpleasing, as age."
"How do you know?" demands she, saucily, sweetly, half touched by his tone. "You are not yet a Methuselah." Then, "Do you know your brother has come at last? He is very late, isn't he?"
"He always is," says Dorian.
"And he has brought a friend with him. And who do you think it is?"
"I haven't the faintest idea," says Brans...o...b.., turning a vivid red.
"Why, _my_ Mr. Kennedy!"
"_Your_ Mr. Kennedy?" reiterates he, blankly, his red becoming a crimson of the liveliest hue.
"Yes, the dark thin young man I met at Sir John Lincoln's. I dare say I told you about him?"
"Yes, you did," says Dorian, grimly.
"I see him over there," pointing airily with her fan through the open conservatory door to a distant wall where many young men are congregated together.
"The man with the nose?" asks Brans...o...b.., slightingly, feeling sure in his soul he is _not_ the man with the nose.
"He has a nose," says Miss Broughton, equably, "though there isn't much of it. He is very like a Chinese pug. Don't you see him? But he _is_ so nice."
Dorian looks again in the desired direction, and as he does so a tall young man, with a somewhat canine expression, but very kindly, advances towards him, and, entering the conservatory, comes up to Miss Broughton with a smile full of delight upon his ingenuous countenance.
"Miss Broughton," he says, in a low musical voice, that has unmistakable pleasure in it. "Can it really be you? I didn't believe life could afford me so happy a moment as this."
"I saw you ten minutes ago," says Georgie, in her quick bright fas.h.i.+on.
"And made no sign? that was cruel," says Kennedy, with some reproach in his tone. He is looking with ill-suppressed admiration upon her fair uplifted face. "Now that I have found you, what dance will you give me?"
"Any one I have," she says, sweetly.
"The tenth? The dance after next,--after this, I mean?"
Brans...o...b.., who is standing beside her, here turns his head to look steadfastly at her. His blue eyes are almost black, his lips are compressed, his face is very pale. Not an hour ago she had promised him this tenth dance. He had asked it of her in haste, even as he went by her with another partner, and she had smiled consent. Will she forget it?
"With pleasure," she says, softly, gayly, her usual lovely smile upon her lips. She is apparently utterly unconscious of any one except her old-new friend. Kennedy puts her name down upon his card.
At this Dorian makes one step forward, as though to protest against something,--some iniquity done; but, a sudden thought striking him, he draws back, and, bringing his teeth upon his under lip with some force, turns abruptly away. When next he looks in her direction, he finds both Georgie and her partner have disappeared.