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"After all," he heard one of the younger men begin behind him
(everybody talked through the Mephistophelesand -Martha scenes), "after
all, just WHAT happened?"
"Well--she left him; nobody attempts to deny that."
"He's an awful brute, isn't he?" continued the young enquirer, a
candid Thorley, who was evidently preparing to enter the lists as the lady's
champion.
"The very worst; I knew him at Nice," said Lawrence Lefferts with
authority. "A half-paralysed white sneering fellow--rather handsome head,
but eyes with a lot of lashes. Well, I'll tell you the sort: when he wasn't
with women he was collecting china. Paying any price for both, I
understand."
There was a general laugh, and the young champion said: "Well,
then----?"
"Well, then; she bolted with his secretary."
"Oh, I see." The champion's face fell.
"It didn't last long, though: I heard of her a few months later living
alone in Venice. I believe Lovell Mingott went out to get her. He said she was
desperately unhappy. That's all right--but this parading her at the Opera's
another thing."
"Perhaps," young Thorley hazarded, "she's too unhappy to be
left at home."
This was greeted with an irreverent laugh, and the youth blushed deeply, and
tried to look as if he had meant to insinuate what knowing people called a
"double entendre."
"Well--it's queer to have brought Miss Welland, anyhow," some one
said in a low tone, with a sideglance at Archer.
"Oh, that's part of the campaign: Granny's orders, no doubt,"
Lefferts laughed. "When the old lady does a thing she does it
thoroughly."
The act was ending, and there was a general stir in the box. Suddenly
Newland Archer felt himself impelled to decisive action. The desire to be the
first man to enter Mrs. Mingott's box, to proclaim to the waiting world his
engagement to May Welland, and to see her through whatever difficulties her
cousin's anomalous situation might involve her in; this impulse had abruptly
overruled all scruples and hesitations, and sent him hurrying through the red
corridors to the farther side of the house.
As he entered the box his eyes met Miss Welland's, and he saw that she had
instantly understood his motive, though the family dignity which both
considered so high a virtue would not permit her to tell him so. The persons of
their world lived in an atmosphere of faint implications and pale delicacies,
and the fact that he and she understood each other without a word seemed to the
young man to bring them nearer than any explanation would have done. Her eyes
said: "You see why Mamma brought me," and his answered: "I would
not for the world have had you stay away."
"You know my niece Countess Olenska?" Mrs. Welland enquired as she
shook hands with her future sonin -law. Archer bowed without extending his
hand, as was the custom on being introduced to a lady; and Ellen Olenska bent
her head slightly, keeping her own pale-gloved hands clasped on her huge fan of
eagle feathers. Having greeted Mrs. Lovell Mingott, a large blonde lady in
creaking satin, he sat down beside his betrothed, and said in a low tone:
"I hope you've told Madame Olenska that we're engaged? I want everybody to
know--I want you to let me announce it this evening at the ball."
Miss Welland's face grew rosy as the dawn, and she looked at him with
radiant eyes. "If you can persuade Mamma," she said; "but why
should we change what is already settled?" He made no answer but that
which his eyes returned, and she added, still more confidently smiling:
"Tell my cousin yourself: I give you leave. She says she used to play with
you when you were children."
She made way for him by pushing back her chair, and promptly, and a little
ostentatiously, with the desire that the whole house should see what he was
doing, Archer seated himself at the Countess Olenska's side.
"We DID use to play together, didn't we?" she asked, turning her
grave eyes to his. "You were a horrid boy, and kissed me once behind a
door; but it was your cousin Vandie Newland, who never looked at me, that I was
in love with." Her glance swept the horse-shoe curve of boxes. "Ah,
how this brings it all back to me--I see everybody here in knickerbockers and
pantalettes," she said, with her trailing slightly foreign accent, her
eyes returning to his face.
Agreeable as their expression was, the young man was shocked that they
should reflect so unseemly a picture of the august tribunal before which, at
that very moment, her case was being tried. Nothing could be in worse taste
than misplaced flippancy; and he answered somewhat stiffly: "Yes, you have
been away a very long time."
"Oh, centuries and centuries; so long," she said, "that I'm
sure I'm dead and buried, and this dear old place is heaven;" which, for
reasons he could not define, struck Newland Archer as an even more
disrespectful way of describing New York society.
III.
It invariably happened in the same way.
Mrs. Julius Beaufort, on the night of her annual ball, never failed to
appear at the Opera; indeed, she always gave her ball on an Opera night in
order to emphasise her complete superiority to household cares, and her
possession of a staff of servants competent to organise every detail of the
entertainment in her absence.
The Beauforts' house was one of the few in New York that possessed a
ball-room (it antedated even Mrs. Manson Mingott's and the Headly Chiverses');
and at a time when it was beginning to be thought "provincial" to put
a "crash" over the drawing-room floor and move the furniture
upstairs, the possession of a ball-room that was used for no other purpose, and
left for three-hundred-and-sixty-four days of the year to shuttered darkness,
with its gilt chairs stacked in a corner and its chandelier in a bag; this
undoubted superiority was felt to compensate for whatever was regrettable in
the Beaufort past.
Mrs. Archer, who was fond of coining her social philosophy into axioms, had
once said: "We all have our pet common people--" and though the
phrase was a daring one, its truth was secretly admitted in many an exclusive
bosom. But the Beauforts were not exactly common; some people said they were
even worse. Mrs. Beaufort belonged indeed to one of America's most honoured
families; she had been the lovely Regina Dallas (of the South Carolina branch),
a penniless beauty introduced to New York society by her cousin, the imprudent
Medora Manson, who was always doing the wrong thing from the right motive. When
one was related to the Mansons and the Rushworths one had a "droit de
cite" (as Mr. Sillerton Jackson, who had frequented the Tuileries, called
it) in New York society; but did one not forfeit it in marrying Julius
Beaufort?
The question was: who was Beaufort? He passed for an Englishman, was
agreeable, handsome, ill-tempered, hospitable and witty. He had come to America
with letters of recommendation from old Mrs. Manson Mingott's English
son-in-law, the banker, and had speedily made himself an important position in
the world of affairs; but his habits were dissipated, his tongue was bitter,
his antecedents were mysterious; and when Medora Manson announced her cousin's
engagement to him it was felt to be one more act of folly in poor Medora's long
record of imprudences.
But folly is as often justified of her children as wisdom, and two years
after young Mrs. Beaufort's marriage it was admitted that she had the most
distinguished house in New York. No one knew exactly how the miracle was
accomplished. She was indolent, passive, the caustic even called her dull; but
dressed like an idol, hung with pearls, growing younger and blonder and more
beautiful each year, she throned in Mr. Beaufort's heavy brown-stone palace,
and drew all the world there without lifting her jewelled little finger. The
knowing people said it was Beaufort himself who trained the servants, taught
the chef new dishes, told the gardeners what hot-house flowers to grow for the
dinner-table and the drawing-rooms, selected the guests, brewed the
after-dinner punch and dictated the little notes his wife wrote to her friends.
If he did, these domestic activities were privately performed, and he presented
to the world the appearance of a careless and hospitable millionaire strolling
into his own drawing-room with the detachment of an invited guest, and saying:
"My wife's gloxinias are a marvel, aren't they? I believe she gets them
out from Kew."
Mr. Beaufort's secret, people were agreed, was the way he carried things
off. It was all very well to whisper that he had been "helped" to
leave England by the international banking-house in which he had been employed;
he carried off that rumour as easily as the rest--though New York's business
conscience was no less sensitive than its moral standard--he carried everything
before him, and all New York into his drawingrooms, and for over twenty years
now people had said they were "going to the Beauforts'" with the same
tone of security as if they had said they were going to Mrs. Manson Mingott's,
and with the added satisfaction of knowing they would get hot canvas-back ducks
and vintage wines, instead of tepid Veuve Clicquot without a year and warmed-up
croquettes from Philadelphia.
Mrs. Beaufort, then, had as usual appeared in her box just before the Jewel
Song; and when, again as usual, she rose at the end of the third act, drew her
opera cloak about her lovely shoulders, and disappeared, New York knew that
meant that half an hour later the ball would begin.
The Beaufort house was one that New Yorkers were proud to show to
foreigners, especially on the night of the annual ball. The Beauforts had been
among the first people in New York to own their own red velvet carpet and have
it rolled down the steps by their own footmen, under their own awning, instead
of hiring it with the supper and the ball-room chairs. They had also
inaugurated the custom of letting the ladies take their cloaks off in the hall,
instead of shuffling up to the hostess's bedroom and recurling their hair with
the aid of the gas-burner; Beaufort was understood to have said that he
supposed all his wife's friends had maids who saw to it that they were properly
coiffees when they left home.
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