The Reflections of Ambrosine - BestLightNovel.com
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"What do you mean?" demanded Babykins, pouting.
"Exactly what you do," and he looked at her, smiling in a way I should have said was insolent had it been I who was concerned.
"But I want to go and help the poor dear fellows, and to cheer them and make their time pleasanter."
"I said you would be an ideal convalescent nurse. But what would become of the pigs?"
"Oh, Edward could look after them. I think too little attention has been paid to the poor boys who are getting well. I could read to them and write their letters home for them," and she looked pathetically sympathetic.
"Hubble-bubble, toil and trouble," quoted Sir Antony.
"Who for?" laughed Lord Tilchester, in his rough, gruff way.
"The recipients of the letters, who would certainly receive them in the wrong envelopes," said Sir Antony. "I think, Tilchester, you had better persuade Babykins to stay in England, for the sake of the peace of many respectable and innocent families."
"How wicked you are to me," flashed Babykins.
"Just what you deserve," chuckled Lord Tilchester.
"What tiresome nonsense these people talk," said Sir Antony, calmly, to me. "You and I were in the middle of an interesting problem discussion, were we not? And now I have lost the thread."
"It does not in the least matter," I said.
The Duke, who was on the other side of me, did not care to be left out, and persistently talked to me for the rest of lunch.
Sir Antony consumed his with the appreciation of a connoisseur. It appeared to be the only thing which interested him.
Babykins, from the other side, did her utmost to engage him in a war of wits, but he remained calm, with the air of a placid lion.
When we got outside in the great tent he came up to me.
"I am going to take you for a walk," he said--"a nice, cool walk in the woods. Will you get your parasol?"
The Duke was at that moment fetching it for me from the hall table, where I had left it.
"I do not know what we shall do to-day," I said, "I believe I am going to play croquet."
"Oh no, you are not. It is much too hot, and you must see the woods.
They are historical, and--Here, take this parasol and let us start."
This last hurriedly, as the Duke was seen returning with mine.
I cannot say why I allowed myself to be dragged off like this. My natural impulse has always been to do the opposite thing when ordered by any one but grandmamma. But here I found myself walking meekly beside my kinsman down a yew-bordered path, holding a mauve silk parasol over my head which did not belong to me.
We did not speak until we got quite to the end, where there is a quaint fountain, the centre of four _allees_ of clipped yews.
My heart still continued to beat in a quick, tiresome manner.
"You look changed, Comtesse," Sir Antony said. "Your little face is pale. Do you remember the night we danced together? It was round and rosy then. Is it a hundred years ago?"
There is a something in his voice which is alluring. The mocking sound goes out of it now and then, and when it does one feels as if one must listen. Oh, but listen with both one's ears!
"Yes, it is a hundred years ago," I said.
"I was so sorry to hear of your grandmother's death," he continued. "I wanted to tell you how I felt for you, but I was away in Norway, and have only just returned. Did you think I was unkind?"
"No, I never thought at all. Grandmamma was glad to die. I knew she could not live, but it came suddenly at the end."
"What a splendid personality! How I wish I had seen more of her! I generally manage to seize the occasion, but fate kept you and her beyond my reach. Why did we not all meet this time last year?"
"Oh, do not talk of that!" I cried. I felt I could not bear to hear any more. "I am trying to forget, and to find life full of compensations. Grandmamma and the Marquis promised me that I should."
He looked at me, stopped in the path, and bent down to a level with my face. His eyes seemed as if they could see right through my mind then, as on another occasion in our lives.
"Dear little white Comtesse!" he said. Almost the same words.
An emotion that is new to me happened. It was as if my heart beat in my throat.
"We are dawdling by this fountain," I said. "Where are the woods?"
After that we were gay. He told me of many things. I seemed to see a clear picture of the world as he talked--a light and pleasant world, where no one was so foolish as to care for anything seriously.
One felt a donkey, to worry or grieve when the sun shone and the birds sang!
How I enjoyed myself!
"Has Babykins chirped at you yet?" he asked, presently. "She is very dangerous when she chirps."
"I do not like her," I said.
"Oh, you will presently. We all love Babykins. She acts as a sort of moral mosquito in a big party. She flies around stinging every one, and then we compare our bites and tear and scratch the irritated places together. You will meet her everywhere--she is the only person Tilchester takes a serious interest in."
"Are you staying here," I asked, "or did you only drive over?"
"I sent for my servant to bring my things, and I shall stay now I find you. You always seem to forget we are cousins, and that people ought to take an interest in their relations!"
"Tell me about your house--Dane Mount it is called, is it not?" I asked, presently. We had been silent for a moment, walking down a shady path, great pine-trees on each side.
"No, I won't tell you about it; you must come over there some day and stop with me for a night or so. You ought to see the home of your ancestors, you know. Promise me you will when I come back from Scotland!"
We had gone deep into the wood by now. It was quite dusky. The thick trees met overhead, and only an occasional sunbeam penetrated through.
I felt stupid. The words did not come so easily as when I am with the Duke.
"How silent you are, Comtesse!"
"Is it not time to go back?" I said, stupidly.
"No, not nearly time. I want you to tell me all about yourself--where you lived, and all that happened until you flashed into my life at the Tilchester ball. See, we will sit down on this log of wood and be quite comfortable."