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Chapter XXXII. A Great Ball

The Shuttle





A certain great ball, given yearly at Dunholm Castle, was one of
the most notable social features of the county. It took place when
the house was full of its most interestingly distinguished guests,
and, though other balls might be given at other times, this one was
marked by a degree of greater state. On several occasions the chief
guests had been great personages indeed, and to be bidden to meet
them implied a selection flattering in itself. One's invitation must
convey by inference that one was either brilliant, beautiful, or
admirable, if not important.

Nigel Anstruthers had never appeared at what the uninvited were
wont, with derisive smiles, to call The Great Panjandrum
Function--which was an ironic designation not employed by such
persons as received cards bidding them to the festivity. Stornham
Court was not popular in the county; no one had yearned for the
society of the Dowager Lady Anstruthers, even in her youth; and a not
too well-favoured young man with an ill-favoured temper, noticeably
on the lookout for grievances, is not an addition to one's circle.
At nineteen Nigel had discovered the older Lord Mount Dunstan and his
son Tenham to be congenial acquaintances, and had been so often
absent from home that his neighbours would have found social
intercourse with him difficult, even if desirable. Accordingly, when
the county paper recorded the splendours of The Great Panjandrum
Function--which it by no means mentioned by that name--the list of
"Among those present " had not so far contained the name of Sir Nigel
Anstruthers.

So, on a morning a few days after his return, the master of
Stornham turned over a card of invitation and read it several times
before speaking.

"I suppose you know what this means," he said at last to
Rosalie, who was alone with him.

"It means that we are invited to Dunholm Castle for the ball,
doesn't it?"

Her husband tossed the card aside on the table.

"It means that Betty will be invited to every house where there
is a son who must be disposed of profitably.

"She is invited because she is beautiful and clever. She would
be invited if she had no money at all," said Rosy daringly. She was
actually growing daring, she thought sometimes. It would not have
been possible to say anything like this a few months ago.

"Don't make silly mistakes," said Nigel. "There are a good many
handsome girls who receive comparatively little attention. But the
hounds of war are let loose, when one of your swollen American
fortunes appears. The obviousness of it `virtuously' makes me sick.
It's as vulgar--as New York."

What befel next brought to Sir Nigel a shock of curious
enlightenment, but no one was more amazed than Rosy herself. She
felt, when she heard her own voice, as if she must be rather mad.

"I would rather," she said quite distinctly, "that you did not
speak to me of New York in that way."

"What!" said Anstruthers, staring at her with contempt which was
derision.

"It is my home," she answered. "It is not proper that I should
hear it spoken of slightingly."

"Your home! It has not taken the slightest notice of you for
twelve years. Your people dropped you as if you were a hot
potato."

"They have taken me up again." Still in amazement at her own
boldness, but somehow learning something as she went on.

He walked over to her side, and stood before her.

"Look here, Rosalie," he said. "You have been taking lessons
from your sister. She is a beauty and young and you are not. People
will stand things from her they will not take from you. I would
stand some things myself, because it rather amuses a man to see a
fine girl peacocking. It's merely ridiculous in you, and I won't
stand it--not a bit of it."

It was not specially fortunate for him that the door opened as
he was speaking, and Betty came in with her own invitation in her
hand. He was quick enough, however, to turn to greet her with a
shrug of his shoulders.

"I am being favoured with a little scene by my wife," he
explained. "She is capable of getting up excellent little scenes,
but I daresay she does not show you that side of her temper."

Betty took a comfortable chintz-covered, easy chair. Her
expression was evasively speculative.

"Was it a scene I interrupted?" she said. "Then I must not go
away and leave you to finish it. You were saying that you would not
`stand' something. What does a man do when he will not `stand' a
thing? It always sounds so final and appalling--as if he were
threatening horrible things such as, perhaps, were a resource in
feudal times. What is the resource in these dull days of law and
order--and policemen?"

"Is this American chaff?" he was disagreeably conscious that he
was not wholly successful in his effort to be lofty.

The frankness of Betty's smile was quite without prejudice.

"Dear me, no," she said. "It is only the unpicturesque result
of an unfeminine knowledge of the law. And I was thinking how one is
limited--and yet how things are simplified after all."

"Simplified!" disgustedly.

"Yes, really. You see, if Rosy were violent she could not beat
you--even if she were strong enough--because you could ring the bell
and give her into custody. And you could not beat her because the
same unpleasant thing would happen to you. Policemen do rob things
of colour, don't they? And besides, when one remembers that mere
vulgar law insists that no one can be forced to live with another
person who is brutal or loathsome, that's simple, isn't it? You
could go away from Rosy," with sweet clearness, "at any moment you
wished--as far away as you liked."

"You seem to forget," still feeling that convincing loftiness
was not easy, "that when a man leaves his wife, or she deserts him,
it is she who is likely to be called upon to bear the onus of public
opinion."

"Would she be called upon to bear it under all
circumstances?"

"Damned clever woman as you are, you know that she would, as
well as I know it." He made an abrupt gesture with his hand. "You
know that what I say is true. Women who take to their heels are
deucedly unpopular in England."

"I have not been long in England, but I have been struck by the
prevalence of a sort of constitutional British sense of fair play
among the people who really count. The Dunholms, for instance, have
it markedly. In America it is the men who force women to take to
their heels who are deucedly unpopular. The Americans' sense of fair
play is their most English quality. It was brought over in ships by
the first colonists--like the pieces of fine solid old furniture, one
even now sees, here and there, in houses in Virginia."

"But the fact remains," said Nigel, with an unpleasant laugh,
"the fact remains, my dear girl."

"The fact that does remain," said Betty, not unpleasantly at
all, and still with her gentle air of mere unprejudiced speculation,
"is that, if a man or woman is properly ill- treated--properly--not
in any amateurish way--they reach the point of not caring in the
least--nothing matters, but that they must get away from the horror
of the unbearable thing --never to see or hear of it again is heaven
enough to make anything else a thing to smile at. But one could
settle the other point by experimenting. Suppose you run away from
Rosy, and then we can see if she is cut by the county."

His laugh was unpleasant again.

"So long as you are with her, she will not be cut. There are a
number of penniless young men of family in this, as well as the
adjoining, counties. Do you think Mount Dunstan would cut her?"

She looked down at the carpet thoughtfully a moment, and then
lifted her eyes.

"I do not think so," she answered. "But I will ask him."

He was startled by a sudden feeling that she might be capable of
it.

"Oh, come now," he said, "that goes beyond a joke. You will not
do any such absurd thing. One does not want one's domestic
difficulties discussed by one's neighbours."

Betty opened coolly surprised eyes.

"I did not understand it was a personal matter," she remarked.
"Where do the domestic difficulties come in?"

He stared at her a few seconds with the look she did not like,
which was less likeable at the moment, because it combined itself
with other things.

"Hang it," he muttered. "I wish I could keep my temper as you
can keep yours," and he turned on his heel and left the room.

Rosy had not spoken. She had sat with her hands in her lap,
looking out of the window. She had at first had a moment of terror.
She had, indeed, once uttered in her soul the abject cry: "Don't
make him angry, Betty--oh, don't, don't!" And suddenly it had been
stilled, and she had listened. This was because she realised that
Nigel himself was listening. That made her see what she had not
dared to allow herself to see before. These trite things were true.
There were laws to protect one. If Betty had not been dealing with
mere truths, Nigel would have stopped her. He had been supercilious,
but he could not contradict her.

"Betty," she said, when her sister came to her, "you said that
to show me things, as well as to show them to him. I knew you did,
and listened to every word. It was good for me to hear you."

"Clear-cut, unadorned facts are like bullets," said Betty.
"They reach home, if one's aim is good. The shiftiest people cannot
evade them."

  .  .  .  .  .
A certain thing became evident to
Betty during the time which elapsed between the arrival of the
invitations and the great ball. Despite an obvious intention to
assume an amiable pose for the time being, Sir Nigel could not
conceal a not quite unexplainable antipathy to one individual. This
individual was Mount Dunstan, whom it did not seem easy for him to
leave alone. He seemed to recur to him as a subject, without any
special reason, and this somewhat puzzled Betty until she heard from
Rosalie of his intimacy with Lord Tenham, which, in a measure,
explained it. The whole truth was that "The Lout," as he had been
called, had indulged in frank speech in his rare intercourse with his
brother and his friends, and had once interfered with hot young fury
in a matter in which the pair had specially wished to avoid all
interference. His open scorn of their methods of entertaining
themselves they had felt to be disgusting impudence, which would have
been deservedly punished with a horsewhip, if the youngster had not
been a big-muscled, clumsy oaf, with a dangerous eye. Upon this
footing their acquaintance had stood in past years, and to decide--as
Sir Nigel had decided--that the oaf in question had begun to make his
bid for splendid fortune under the roof of Stornham Court itself was
a thing not to be regarded calmly. It was more than he could stand,
and the folly of temper, which was forever his undoing, betrayed him
into mistakes more than once. This girl, with her beauty and her
wealth, he chose to regard as a sort of property rightfully his own.
She was his sister-in-law, at least; she was living under his roof;
he had more or less the power to encourage or discourage such
aspirants as appeared. Upon the whole there was something soothing
to one's vanity in appearing before the world as the person at
present responsible for her. It gave a man a certain dignity of
position, and his chief girding at fate had always risen from the
fact that he had not had dignity of position. He would not be held
cheap in this matter, at least. But sometimes, as he looked at the
girl he turned hot and sick, as it was driven home to him that he was
no longer young, that he had never been good-looking, and that he had
cut the ground from under his feet twelve years ago, when he had
married Rosalie! If he could have waited--if he could have done
several other things--perhaps the clever acting of a part, and his
power of domination might have given him a chance. Even that
blackguard of a Mount Dunstan had a better one now. He was young, at
least, and free--and a big strong beast. He was forced, with bitter
reluctance, to admit that he himself was not even particularly
strong--of late he had felt it hideously.

So he detested Mount Dunstan the more for increasing reasons, as
he thought the matter over. It would seem, perhaps, but a subtle
pleasure to the normal mind, but to him there was
pleasure--support--aggrandisement--in referring to the ill case of
the Mount Dunstan estate, in relating illustrative anecdotes, in
dwelling upon the hopelessness of the outlook, and the notable
unpopularity of the man himself. A confiding young lady from the
States was required, he said on one occasion, but it would be
necessary that she should be a young person of much simplicity, who
would not be alarmed or chilled by the obvious. No one would realise
this more clearly than Mount Dunstan himself. He said it coldly and
casually, as if it were the simplest matter of fact. If the fellow
had been making himself agreeable to Betty, it was as well that
certain points should be--as it were inadvertently --brought before
her.

Miss Vanderpoel was really rather fine, people said to each
other afterwards, when she entered the ballroom at Dunholm Castle
with her brother-in-law. She bore herself as composedly as if she
had been escorted by the most admirable and dignified of conservative
relatives, instead of by a man who was more definitely disliked and
disapproved of than any other man in the county whom decent people
were likely to meet. Yet, she was far too clever a girl not to
realise the situation clearly, they said to each other. She had
arrived in England to find her sister a neglected wreck, her fortune
squandered, and her existence stripped bare of even such things as
one felt to be the mere decencies. There was but one thing to be
deduced from the facts which had stared her in the face. But of her
deductions she had said nothing whatever, which was, of course,
remarkable in a young person. It may be mentioned that, perhaps,
there had been those who would not have been reluctant to hear what
she must have had to say, and who had even possibly given her a
delicate lead. But the lead had never been taken. One lady had even
remarked that, on her part, she felt that a too great reserve verged
upon secretiveness, which was not a desirable girlish quality.

Of course the situation had been so much discussed that people
were naturally on the lookout for the arrival of the Stornham party,
as it was known that Sir Nigel had returned home, and would be likely
to present himself with his wife and sister-in-law. There was not a
dowager present who did not know how and where he had reprehensibly
spent the last months. It served him quite right that the Spanish
dancing person had coolly left him in the lurch for a younger and
more attractive, as well as a richer man. If it were not for Miss
Vanderpoel, one need not pretend that one knew nothing about the
affair--in fact, if it had not been for Miss Vanderpoel, he would not
have received an invitation--and poor Lady Anstruthers would be
sitting at home, still the forlorn little frump and invalid she had
so wonderfully ceased to be since her sister had taken her in hand.
She was absolutely growing even pretty and young, and her clothes
were really beautiful. The whole thing was amazing.

Betty, as well as Rosalie and Nigel--knew that many people
turned undisguisedly to look at them--even to watch them as they came
into the splendid ballroom. It was a splendid ballroom and a stately
one, and Lord Dunholm and Lord Westholt shared a certain thought when
they met her, which was that hers was distinctly the proud young
brilliance of presence which figured most perfectly against its
background. Much as people wanted to look at Sir Nigel, their eyes
were drawn from him to Miss Vanderpoel. After all it was she who
made him an object of interest. One wanted to know what she would do
with him--how she would "carry him off." How much did she know of
the distaste people felt for him, since she would not talk or
encourage talk? The Dunholms could not have invited her and her
sister, and have ignored him; but did she not guess that they would
have ignored him, if they could? and was there not natural
embarrassment in feeling forced to appear in pomp, as it were, under
his escort?

But no embarrassment was perceptible. Her manner committed her
to no recognition of a shadow of a flaw in the character of her
companion. It even carried a certain conviction with it, and the
lookers-on felt the impossibility of suggesting any such flaw by
their own manner. For this evening, at least, the man must actually
be treated as if he were an entirely unobjectionable person. It
appeared as if that was what the girl wanted, and intended should
happen.

This was what Nigel himself had begun to perceive, but he did
not put it pleasantly. Deucedly clever girl as she was, he said to
himself, she saw that it would be more agreeable to have no nonsense
talked, and no ruffling of tempers. He had always been able to
convey to people that the ruffling of his temper was a thing to be
avoided, and perhaps she had already been sharp enough to realise
this was a fact to be counted with. She was sharp enough, he said to
himself, to see anything.

The function was a superb one. The house was superb, the rooms
of entertainment were in every proportion perfect, and were quite
renowned for the beauty of the space they offered; the people
themselves were, through centuries of dignified living, so placed
that intercourse with their kind was an easy and delightful thing.
They need never doubt either their own effect, or the effect of their
hospitalities. Sir Nigel saw about him all the people who held
enviable place in the county. Some of them he had never known, some
of them had long ceased to recall his existence. There were those
among them who lifted lorgnettes or stuck monocles into their eyes as
he passed, asking each other in politely subdued tones who the man
was who seemed to be in attendance on Miss Vanderpoel. Nigel knew
this and girded at it internally, while he made the most of his suave
smile.

The distinguished personage who was the chief guest was to be
seen at the upper end of the room talking to a tall man with broad
shoulders, who was plainly interesting him for the moment. As the
Stornham party passed on, this person, making his bow, retired, and,
as he turned towards them, Sir Nigel recognising him, the agreeable
smile was for the moment lost.

"How in the name of Heaven did Mount Dunstan come here?" broke
from him with involuntary heat.

"Would it be rash to conclude," said Betty, as she returned the
bow of a very grand old lady in black velvet and an imposing tiara,
"that he came in response to invitation?"

The very grand old lady seemed pleased to see her, and, with a
royal little sign, called her to her side. As Betty Vanderpoel was a
great success with the Mrs. Weldens and old Dobys of village life,
she was also a success among grand old ladies. When she stood before
them there was a delicate submission in her air which was suggestive
of obedience to the dignity of their years and state. Strongly
conservative and rather feudal old persons were much pleased by this.
In the present irreverent iconoclasm of modern times, it was most
agreeable to talk to a handsome creature who was as beautifully
attentive as if she had been a specially perfect young
lady-in-waiting.

This one even patted Betty's hand a little, when she took it.
She was a great county potentate, who was known as Lady Alanby of
Dole--her house being one of the most ancient and interesting in
England.

"I am glad to see you here to-night," she said. "You are
looking very nice. But you cannot help that."

Betty asked permission to present her sister and brother-in-
law. Lady Alanby was polite to both of them, but she gave Nigel a
rather sharp glance through her gold pince-nez as she greeted him.

"Janey and Mary," she said to the two girls nearest her, "I
daresay you will kindly change your chairs and let Lady Anstruthers
and Miss Vanderpoel sit next to me."

The Ladies Jane and Mary Lithcom, who had been ordered about by
her from their infancy, obeyed with polite smiles. They were not
particularly pretty girls, and were of the indigent noble. Jane, who
had almost overlarge blue eyes, sighed as she reseated herself a few
chairs lower down.

"It does seem beastly unfair," she said in a low voice to her
sister, "that a girl such as that should be so awfully good-looking.
She ought to have a turned-up nose."

"Thank you," said Mary, "I have a turned-up nose myself, and
I've got nothing to balance it."

"Oh, I didn't mean a nice turned-up nose like yours," said Jane;
"I meant an ugly one. Of course Lady Alanby wants her for Tommy."
And her manner was not resigned.

"What she, or anyone else for that matter," disdainfully, "could
want with Tommy, I don't know," replied Mary.

"I do," answered Jane obstinately. "I played cricket with him
when I was eight, and I've liked him ever since. It is awful," in a
smothered outburst, "what girls like us have to suffer."

Lady Mary turned to look at her curiously.

"Jane," she said, "are you suffering about Tommy?"

"Yes, I am. Oh, what a question to ask in a ballroom! Do you
want me to burst out crying?"

"No," sharply, "look at the Prince. Stare at that fat woman
curtsying to him. Stare and then wink your eyes."

Lady Alanby was talking about Mount Dunstan.

"Lord Dunholm has given us a lead. He is an old friend of mine,
and he has been talking to me about it. It appears that he has been
looking into things seriously. Modern as he is, he rather tilts at
injustices, in a quiet way. He has satisfactorily convinced himself
that Lord Mount Dunstan has been suffering for the sins of the
fathers--which must be annoying."

"Is Lord Dunholm quite sure of that?" put in Sir Nigel, with a
suggestively civil air.

Old Lady Alanby gave him an unencouraging look.

"Quite," she said. "He would be likely to be before he took any
steps."

"Ah," remarked Nigel. "I knew Lord Tenham, you see."

Lady Alanby's look was more unencouraging still. She quietly
and openly put up her glass and stared. There were times when she
had not the remotest objection to being rude to certain people.

"I am sorry to hear that," she observed. "There never was any
room for mistake about Tenham. He is not usually mentioned."

"I do not think this man would be usually mentioned, if
everything were known," said Nigel.

Then an appalling thing happened. Lady Alanby gazed at him a
few seconds, and made no reply whatever. She dropped her glass, and
turned again to talk to Betty. It was as if she had turned her back
on him, and Sir Nigel, still wearing an amiable exterior, used
internally some bad language.

"But I was a fool to speak of Tenham," he thought. "A great
fool."

A little later Miss Vanderpoel made her curtsy to the exalted
guest, and was commented upon again by those who looked on. It was
not at all unnatural that one should find ones eyes following a girl
who, representing a sort of royal power, should have the good fortune
of possessing such looks and bearing.

Remembering his child bete noir of the long legs and square,
audacious little face, Nigel Anstruthers found himself restraining a
slight grin as he looked on at her dancing. Partners flocked about
her like bees, and Lady Alanby of Dole, and other very grand old or
middle-aged ladies all found the evening more interesting because
they could watch her.

"She is full of spirit," said Lady Alanby, "and she enjoys
herself as a girl should. It is a pleasure to look at her. I like a
girl who gets a magnificent colour and stars in her eyes when she
dances. It looks healthy and young."

It was Tommy Miss Vanderpoel was dancing with when her ladyship
said this. Tommy was her grandson and a young man of greater rank
than fortune. He was a nice, frank, heavy youth, who loved a simple
county life spent in tramping about with guns, and in friendly
hobnobbing with the neighbours, and eating great afternoon teas with
people whose jokes were easy to understand, and who were ready to
laugh if you tried a joke yourself. He liked girls, and especially
he liked Jane Lithcom, but that was a weakness his grandmother did
not at all encourage, and, as he danced with Betty Vanderpoel, he
looked over her shoulder more than once at a pair of big, unhappy
blue eyes, whose owner sat against the wall.

Betty Vanderpoel herself was not thinking of Tommy. In fact,
during this brilliant evening she faced still further developments of
her own strange case. Certain new things were happening to her.
When she had entered the ballroom she had known at once who the man
was who stood before the royal guest--she had known before he bowed
low and withdrew. And her recognition had brought with it a shock of
joy. For a few moments her throat felt hot and pulsing. It was
true--the things which concerned him concerned her. All that
happened to him suddenly became her affair, as if in some way they
were of the same blood. Nigel's slighting of him had infuriated her;
that Lord Dunholm had offered him friendship and hospitality was a
thing which seemed done to herself, and filled her with gratitude and
affection; that he should be at this place, on this special occasion,
swept away dark things from his path. It was as if it were stated
without words that a conservative man of the world, who knew things
as they were, having means of reaching truths, vouched for him and
placed his dignity and firmness at his side.

And there was the gladness at the sight of him. It was an
overpoweringly strong thing. She had never known anything like it.
She had not seen him since Nigel's return, and here he was, and she
knew that her life quickened in her because they were together in the
same room. He had come to them and said a few courteous words, but
he had soon gone away. At first she wondered if it was because of
Nigel, who at the time was making himself rather ostentatiously
amiable to her. Afterwards she saw him dancing, talking, being
presented to people, being, with a tactful easiness, taken care of by
his host and hostess, and Lord Westholt. She was struck by the
graceful magic with which this tactful ease surrounded him without
any obviousness. The Dunholms had given a lead, as Lady Alanby had
said, and the rest were following it and ignoring intervals with
reposeful readiness. It was wonderfully well done. Apparently there
had been no past at all. All began with this large young man, who,
despite his Viking type, really looked particularly well in evening
dress. Lady Alanby held him by her chair for some time, openly
enjoying her talk with him, and calling up Tommy, that they might
make friends.

After a while, Betty said to herself, he would come and ask for
a dance. But he did not come, and she danced with one man after
another. Westholt came to her several times and had more dances than
one. Why did the other not come? Several times they whirled past
each other, and when it occurred they looked--both feeling it an
accident--into each other's eyes.

The strong and strange thing--that which moves on its way as do
birth and death, and the rising and setting of the sun-- had begun to
move in them. It was no new and rare thing, but an ancient and
common one--as common and ancient as death and birth themselves; and
part of the law as they are. As it comes to royal persons to whom
one makes obeisance at their mere passing by, as it comes to scullery
maids in royal kitchens, and grooms in royal stables, as it comes to
ladies-in-waiting and the women who serve them, so it had come to
these two who had been drawn near to each other from the opposite
sides of the earth, and each started at the touch of it, and withdrew
a pace in bewilderment, and some fear.

"I wish," Mount Dunstan was feeling throughout the evening,
"that her eyes had some fault in their expression--that they drew one
less--that they drew me less. I am losing my head."

"It would be better," Betty thought, "if I did not wish so much
that he would come and ask me to dance with him-- that he would not
keep away so. He is keeping away for a reason. Why is he doing
it?"

The music swung on in lovely measures, and the dancers swung
with it. Sir Nigel walked dutifully through the Lancers once with
his wife, and once with his beautiful sister-in-law. Lady
Anstruthers, in her new bloom, had not lacked partners, who
discovered that she was a childishly light creature who danced
extremely well. Everyone was kind to her, and the very grand old
ladies, who admired Betty, were absolutely benign in their manner.
Betty's partners paid ingenuous court to her, and Sir Nigel found he
had not been mistaken in his estimate of the dignity his position of
escort and male relation gave to him.

Rosy, standing for a moment looking out on the brilliancy and
state about her, meeting Betty's eyes, laughed quiveringly.

"I am in a dream," she said.

"You have awakened from a dream," Betty answered.

From the opposite side of the room someone was coming towards
them, and, seeing him, Rosy smiled in welcome.

"I am sure Lord Mount Dunstan is coming to ask you to dance with
him," she said. "Why have you not danced with him before, Betty?"

"He has not asked me," Betty answered. "That is the only
reason."

"Lord Dunholm and Lord Westholt called at the Mount a few days
after they met him at Stornham," Rosalie explained in an undertone.
"They wanted to know him. Then it seems they found they liked each
other. Lady Dunholm has been telling me about it. She says Lord
Dunholm thanks you, because you said something illuminating. That
was the word she used--`illuminating.' I believe you are always
illuminating, Betty."

Mount Dunstan was certainly coming to them. How broad his
shoulders looked in his close-fitting black coat, how well built his
whole strong body was, and how steadily he held his eyes! Here and
there one sees a man or woman who is, through some trick of fate, by
nature a compelling thing unconsciously demanding that one should
submit to some domineering attraction. One does not call it
domineering, but it is so. This special creature is charged unfairly
with more than his or her single share of force. Betty Vanderpoel
thought this out as this "other one" came to her. He did not use the
ballroom formula when he spoke to her. He said in rather a low
voice:

"Will you dance with me?"

"Yes," she answered.

Lord Dunholm and his wife agreed afterwards that so noticeable a
pair had never before danced together in their ballroom. Certainly
no pair had ever been watched with quite the same interested
curiosity. Some onlookers thought it singular that they should dance
together at all, some pleased themselves by reflecting on the fact
that no other two could have represented with such picturesqueness
the opposite poles of fate and circumstance. No one attempted to
deny that they were an extraordinarily striking-looking couple, and
that one's eyes followed them in spite of one's self.

"Taken together they produce an effect that is somehow rather
amazing," old Lady Alanby commented. "He is a magnificently built
man, you know, and she is a magnificently built girl. Everybody
should look like that. My impression would be that Adam and Eve did,
but for the fact that neither of them had any particular character.
That affair of the apple was so silly. Eve has always struck me as
being the kind of woman who, if she lived to-day, would run up stupid
bills at her dressmakers and be afraid to tell her husband. That
wonderful black head of Miss Vanderpoel's looks very nice poised near
Mount Dunstan's dark red one."

"I am glad to be dancing with him," Betty was thinking. "I am
glad to be near him."

"Will you dance this with me to the very end," asked Mount
Dunstan--"to the very late note?"

"Yes," answered Betty.

He had spoken in a low but level voice--the kind of voice whose
tone places a man and woman alone together, and wholly apart from all
others by whomsoever they are surrounded. There had been no
preliminary speech and no explanation of the request followed. The
music was a perfect thing, the brilliant, lofty ballroom, the beauty
of colour and sound about them, the jewels and fair faces, the warm
breath of flowers in the air, the very sense of royal presence and
its accompanying state and ceremony, seemed merely a naturally
arranged background for the strange consciousness each held close and
silently--knowing nothing of the mind of the other.

This was what was passing through the man's mind.

"This is the thing which most men experience several times
during their lives. It would be reason enough for all the great
deeds and all the crimes one hears of. It is an enormous kind of
anguish and a fearful kind of joy. It is scarcely to be borne, and
yet, at this moment, I could kill myself and her, at the thought of
losing it. If I had begun earlier, would it have been easier? No,
it would not. With me it is bound to go hard. At twenty I should
probably not have been able to keep myself from shouting it aloud,
and I should not have known that it was only the working of the Law.
`Only!' Good God, what a fool I am! It is because it is only the
Law that I cannot escape, and must go on to the end, grinding my
teeth together because I cannot speak. Oh, her smooth young cheek!
Oh, the deep shadows of her lashes! And while we sway round and
round together, I hold her slim strong body in the hollow of my
arm."

It was, quite possibly, as he thought this that Nigel
Anstruthers, following him with his eyes as he passed, began to
frown. He had been watching the pair as others had, he had seen what
others saw, and now he had an idea that he saw something more, and it
was something which did not please him. The instinct of the male
bestirred itself--the curious instinct of resentment against another
man--any other man. And, in this case, Mount Dunstan was not any
other man, but one for whom his antipathy was personal.

"I won't have that," he said to himself. "I won't have it."

  .  .  .  .  .
The music rose and swelled, and then
sank into soft breathing, as they moved in harmony together, gliding
and swirling as they threaded their way among other couples who
swirled and glided also, some of them light and smiling, some
exchanging low-toned speech--perhaps saying words which, unheard by
others, touched on deep things. The exalted guest fell into
momentary silence as he looked on, being a man much attracted by
physical fineness and temperamental power and charm. A girl like
that would bring a great deal to a man and to the country he belonged
to. A great race might be founded on such superbness of physique and
health and beauty. Combined with abnormal resources, certainly no
more could be asked. He expressed something of the kind to Lord
Dunholm, who stood near him in attendance.

To herself Betty was saying: "That was a strange thing he asked
me. It is curious that we say so little. I should never know much
about him. I have no intelligence where he is concerned--only a
strong, stupid feeling, which is not like a feeling of my own. I am
no longer Betty Vanderpoel-- and I wish to go on dancing with him--on
and on--to the last note, as he said."

She felt a little hot wave run over her cheek uncomfortably, and
the next instant the big arm tightened its clasp of her-- for just
one second--not more than one. She did not know that he, himself,
had seen the sudden ripple of red colour, and that the equally sudden
contraction of the arm had been as unexpected to him and as
involuntary as the quick wave itself. It had horrified and made him
angry. He looked the next instant entirely stiff and cold.

"He did not know it happened," Betty resolved.

"The music is going to stop," said Mount Dunstan. "I know the
waltz. We can get once round the room again before the final chord.
It was to be the last note--the very last," but he said it quite
rigidly, and Betty laughed.

"Quite the last," she answered.

The music hastened a little, and their gliding whirl became more
rapid--a little faster--a little faster still--a running sweep of
notes, a big, terminating harmony, and the thing was over.

"Thank you," said Mount Dunstan. "One will have it to
remember." And his tone was slightly sardonic.

"Yes," Betty acquiesced politely.

"Oh, not you. Only I. I have never waltzed before."

Betty turned to look at him curiously.

"Under circumstances such as these," he explained. "I learned
to dance at a particularly hideous boys' school in France. I
abhorred it. And the trend of my life has made it quite easy for me
to keep my twelve-year-old vow that I would never dance after I left
the place, unless I wanted to do it, and that, especially, nothing
should make me waltz until certain agreeable conditions were
fulfilled. Waltzing I approved of --out of hideous schools. I was a
pig-headed, objectionable child. I detested myself even, then."

Betty's composure returned to her.

"I am trusting," she remarked, "that I may secretly regard
myself as one of the agreeable conditions to be fulfilled. Do not
dispel my hopes roughly."

"I will not," he answered. "You are, in fact, several of
them."

"One breathes with much greater freedom," she responded.

This sort of cool nonsense was safe. It dispelled feelings of
tenseness, and carried them to the place where Sir Nigel and Lady
Anstruthers awaited them. A slight stir was beginning to be felt
throughout the ballroom. The royal guest was retiring, and soon the
rest began to melt away. The Anstruthers, who had a long return
drive before them, were among those who went first.

When Lady Anstruthers and her sister returned from the cloak
room, they found Sir Nigel standing near Mount Dunstan, who was going
also, and talking to him in an amiably detached manner. Mount
Dunstan, himself, did not look amiable, or seem to be saying much,
but Sir Nigel showed no signs of being disturbed.

"Now that you have ceased to forswear the world," he said as his
wife approached, "I hope we shall see you at Stornham. Your visits
must not cease because we cannot offer you G. Selden any longer."

He had his own reasons for giving the invitation--several of
them. And there was a satisfaction in letting the fellow know,
casually, that he was not in the ridiculous position of being unaware
of what had occurred during his absence--that there had been
visits--and also the objectionable episode of the American bounder.
That the episode had been objectionable, he knew he had adroitly
conveyed by mere tone and manner.

Mount Dunstan thanked him in the usual formula, and then spoke
to Betty.

"G. Selden left us tremulous and fevered with ecstatic
anticipation. He carried your kind letter to Mr. Vanderpoel, next to
his heart. His brain seemed to whirl at the thought of what `the
boys' would say, when he arrived with it in New York. You have
materialised the dream of his life!"

"I have interested my father," Betty answered, with a brilliant
smile. "He liked the romance of the Reuben S. Vanderpoel who
rewarded the saver of his life by unbounded orders for the
Delkoff."

  .  .  .  .  .
As their carriage drove away, Sir
Nigel bent forward to look out of the window, and having done it,
laughed a little.

"Mount Dunstan does not play the game well," he remarked.

It was annoying that neither Betty nor his wife inquired what
the game in question might be, and that his temperament forced him
into explaining without encouragement.

"He should have `stood motionless with folded arms,' or
something of the sort, and `watched her equipage until it was out of
sight.' "

"And he did not?" said Betty

"He turned on his heel as soon as the door was shut."

"People ought not to do such things," was her simple comment.
To which it seemed useless to reply.







                                                                                    

 

 

Go back to the Burnett page for related resources.
Move on to the next section in this etext, Chapter XXXIII. For Lady Jane.

The Shuttle

Chapter I. The Weaving of the Shuttle
Chapter II. A Lack of Perception
Chapter III. Young Lady Anstruthers
Chapter IV. A Mistake of the Postboy's
Chapter V. On Both Sides of the Atlantic
Chapter VI. An Unfair Endowment
Chapter VII. On Board the "Meridiana"
Chapter VIII. The Second-Class Passenger
Chapter IX. Lady Jane Grey
Chapter X. "Is Lady Anstruthers at Home?"
Chapter XI. "I Thought You Had All Forgotten "
Chapter XII. Ughtred
Chapter XIII. One of the New York Dresses
Chapter XIV. In the Gardens
Chapter XV. The First Man
Chapter XVI. The Particular Incident
Chapter XVII. Townlinson and Sheppard
Chapter XVIII. The Fifteenth Earl of Mount Dunstan
Chapter XIX. Spring in Bond Street
Chapter XX. Things Occur in Stornham Village
Chapter XXI. Kedgers
Chapter XXII. One of Mr. Vanderpoel's Letters
Chapter XXIII. Introducing G. Selden
Chapter XXIV. The Political Economy of Stornham
Chapter XXV. "We Began to Marry Them, My Good Fellow!"
Chapter XXVI. "What it Must be to You--Just You!"
Chapter XXVII. Life
Chapter XXVIII. Setting Them Thinking
Chapter XXIX. The Thread of G. Selden
Chapter XXX. A Return
Chapter XXXI. No, She Would Not
Chapter XXXII. A Great Ball
Chapter XXXIII. For Lady Jane
Chapter XXXIV. Red Godwyn
Chapter XXXV. The Tidal Wave
Chapter XXXVI. By the Roadside Everywhere
Chapter XXXVII. Closed Corridors
Chapter XXXVIII. At Shandy's
Chapter XXXIX. On the Marshes
Chapter LX. "Don't Go on with This"
Chapter XLI. She Would Do Something
Chapter XLII. In the Ballroom
Chapter XLIII. His Chance
Chapter XLIV. A Footstep
Chapter XLV. The Passing Bell
Chapter XLVI. Listening
Chapter XLVII. "I Have No Word or Look to Remember"
Chapter XLVIII. The Moment
Chapter XLIX. At Stornham and at Broadmorlands
Chapter L. The Primeval Thing

 


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