A Mad Marriage by May Agnes Fleming (best ebook reader android .TXT) đ
- Author: May Agnes Fleming
- Performer: -
Book online «A Mad Marriage by May Agnes Fleming (best ebook reader android .TXT) đ». Author May Agnes Fleming
departs. âGo to your room, Crystal,â he says, less harshly; âand, for
Heavenâs sake try and get rid of that face. You look like a galvanized
corpse. You will have them thinking here I adopt the good old British
custom of beating my wife. Put on rougeâanythingâget your maid to do
it, only donât fetch that woe-begone countenance to France Forresterâs
sharp eyes.â
With this pleasant and bridegroom like adjuration he leaves her and goes
to the salon to receive their guest. He is humming a popular Parisian
street song as he goes, a half smile on his lips, all his old sunny
debonnaire self once more:
âMa mïżœre est ïżœ Paris.
Mon pïżœre est ïżœ Versailles,
Et moi je suis ici,
Pour chanter sur la pailleââ
he sings as he enters. France sits in a great ruby velvet chair,
charmingly dressed, looking fresher, fairer, more brightly, saucily
handsome, Eric thinks, than he has ever seen her. âHow blessings
brighten as they take their flight.â What did he see in his faded,
passïżœe, pallid little wife, to prefer her to this brilliant, dark
beauty? For my lordâs taste has changed, and âblack beautiesâ are
decidedly in the ascendant again.
âMy dear France,â he says, holding both her hands, âthis is an
astounder. We knew you were coming, but not so soon. When did you
arrive, and where are you located?â
âWe arrived late last night, and have apartments in the Faubourg St.
Honore, near the British Embassy. And with my usual impetuosity, and my
usual disregard of les convenances, I ran the risk of finding you
still asleep, and rushed away immediately after breakfast. You are
up, I see, for which, oh, be thankful. And now where is Crystal?â
âCrystal will be here in a moment. How well you are looking, France,â
he says, half-regretfully; âbeing in love must be a great
beautifierâbetter than all Madame Rachelâs cosmetics.â
âMust be!â she laughs; âyou donât know from experience then? I can
return the complimentâyou are looking as if life went well with youââ
âHis âand was free, his means was easy,
A finer, nobler gent than he,
Neâer rode along the shons Eleesy,
Or paced the Roo de Rivolee!â
quotes France, after her old fashion; âbut then, of course, we are in
the height of our honeymoon, and see all things through spectacles
couleur de rose.â
Eric laughs, but rather grimly. He is thinking of the honeymoon-like
tïżœte-ïżœ-tïżœte her coming ended.
âAnd how are they all?â he inquiresââthe Madre and Mrs. Caryll? Mrs.
Caryll is here, I suppose?â
âGrandmamma is hereâyes. And better than you ever saw her. And your
mother is well and dying to see you, and how matrimony agrees with you.
Do you know, Eric,â laughing, âI canât fancy you in the rïżœle of
Benedick the married man.â
He laughs too, but it is not a very mirthful laugh.
âCaryll is with you?â he says, keeping wide of his own conjugal bliss;
âOf course he is, thoughâlucky fellow! I neednât ask if he is well?â
âYou need not, indeed,â France says, and into her face a lovely rose
light comes; âbut you will soon see for yourselfâthey will all call
later. What does keep CrystalâI hope she is not so silly as to stay and
make an elaborate toilet for me?â
âNo, noâshe will be down in a moment. She has a headacheâis rather
seedy this morningâlate hours and dissipation will tell on rustic
beauty, you know. By the bye, apropos of nothing, do you know Terry
Dennison is hereâat this hotel? We are quite a family party, you see,â
he laughs again rather grimly.
âTerry here! dear old Terry! how glad I shall be to see him. When did he
get over?â
âLast night also. It appears to have been a night of arrivals. Ah, here
is Crystal now.â
He looks rather anxiously as he says it. He knows of old how keen Miss
Forresterâs hazel eyes areâhe feels that she has already perceived
something to be wrong. That she has heard nothing he is quite sure. Her
manner would certainly not be so frankly natural and cordial if one
whisper of the truth had reached her.
Crystal has done her best. She has exchanged her white wrapper for a
pink one that lends a faint, fictitious glow to her face. The suggestion
about rouge she has not adoptedârouge, Crystal looks upon as a device
of the evil one. Something almost akin to gladness lights her sad eyes
as she comes forward and into Franceâs wide, open arms.
âMy dear Lady Dynely! My dear little Crystal!â and then France stops and
sends her quick glance from her face to Ericâs, and reads trouble
without a second look. She is honestly shocked, and takes no pains to
hide it.
Eric winces. Has Crystal so greatly changed then for the worse? All
his selfish, unreasoning anger stirs again within him.
âYou have been ill?â she says, blankly. âYouâyou look wretchedly.â
âI told you she had a headache,â Eric interrupts, irritably. âI told you
late hours and Paris dissipation will tell upon rustic beauty. There is
nothing the matter. Open your lips, oh, silent Crystal! and reassure
Miss Forrester.â
âI am quite well, thank you,â Crystal says, but no effort can make the
words other than faint and mournful. Then she sits down with her face
from the light, and leans back in her great carved and gilded chair,
looking so small, and fragile, and childish, and colorless that a great
compassion for her, and a great, vague wrath against him, fills Franceâs
heart. She does not know what he has done, but she knows he has done
something, and is wroth accordingly. Why, the child has gone to a
shadowâlooks utterly crushed and heart-broken. Is he tired of her
already?âis heâbut no, that is too bad to think even of fickle
Ericâhe cannot be neglecting her for a rival.
Her cordial manner changes at onceâa constraint has fallen upon them.
All Ericâs attempts at badinage, at society small talk, fall flat. He
rises at last, looks at his watch, pleads an engagement, and prepares to
go.
âI know you and Crystal are dying to compare notes,â he says, gayly,
âand that I am in the way. Only Crystalâs notes will be brief, I warn
you, France; she has not your gift of tongue. Lady Dynely is the living
exemplification of the adage that speech is silver, and silence is
gold.â
âShall you be in when your mother and Gordon call, Eric?â France asks,
rather coldly. âIf not, I am commissioned to tender an impromptu
invitation to dine with Mrs. Caryll.â
âAwfully sorry,â Eric answers, âbut we stand pledged to dine at the
Embassy. I must put in an appearance, whether or no, and Crystal will
alsoâheadache permitting. Crystal rather shrinks from heavy dinner
parties and goes nowhere.â
âI thought late hours and Paris dissipation were telling on her,â
retorts France, still coldly. And Eric laughs and goes, with a last
severe, warning glance at his wifeâa glance which says in its quick
blue flash:
âTell if you dare!â
It is a needless warningâCrystal has no thought of tellingâof
complaining of him to any one on earth. She lies back in her big chair,
her little hands folded, silent and pale, while the sounds of ringing
life reach them from the bright, gay boulevard below, and the jubilant
sunlight fills the room.
âHow thin you have grown, Crystal,â France says at last, very gently.
âParis does not agree with you I think. We must make Eric take you home
to Dynely.â
Her eyes light eagerlyâsomething like color comes into the colorless
face. She catches her breath hard.
âOh!â she says, âif he only would!â
France is watching her intently.
âYou donât like Paris, then?â
âLike it!â the gentle eyes for an instant flash. âI hate it.â
There is a pause. Franceâs heart is hot within her. Fickle, unstable,
she had always known Eric to be; selfish to the core and cruel in his
selfishness; but an absolute brute, never before.
âDo you go out much?â she asks.
âNoâyes.â Crystal falters. She hardly knows which answer to make in her
fear of committing Eric. âI donât care to go outâdinner parties are a
boreâI never was used to much society, you know, at home.â
âI am afraid you must be very lonely.â
âOh, no! that isânot very. I read and playâa littleâand then, Ericââ
But her voice breaks, it is not trained to the telling of falsehoods,
and the truth she cannot tell.
âYes,â France says quietly, âEric is out a great deal naturallyâhe is
not a domestic man; but once you return to Dynely all that will be
changed. We must try and prevail upon him to take you home at once.â
The sad blue eyes give her a grateful glance. Then a troubled,
frightened look comes into them.
âPerhapsâperhaps you had better not,â she says; âhe will think you are
dictating to him, and he cannot bear to be dictated to. He likes
ParisâI am sure he will be angry if he is urged to go.â
âWe can survive that calamity,â Miss Forrester answers, cynically; âand
your healthâand, yes, I will say itâhappiness, are the things to be
considered first.â
âBut I am happy,â cries Crystal, in still increasing alarm, âindeed I
am. How could I be otherwise so soon?â
Her traitor voice breaks again. France looks at her in unutterable
compassion.
âAh, how indeed!â she answers, âyou poor little pale child! Well, I must
goâthey really donât know where I am, and we are all to go sight-seeing
to the Luxembourg. Do come with us, Crystal; you look as though you
needed it.â
But Lady Dynely shakes her small, fair head.
âI cannot,â she says. âEric may return, and be vexed to find me out.â
âEric! Eric!â thinks France, intolerantly; âI should like to box Ericâs
ears!â
âBesides, sight-seeing tires me,â Crystal goes on, with a wan little
smile, âand I donât think I care for pictures. We visited the
Luxembourg, and the Louvre, and the Tuileries, and all the rest of the
show places, when we first came, and I remember I was ill all day with
headache after them. I like best to stay at home and readâindeed I do.â
France sighs.
âMy little Crystal! But you will be lonely.â
âOh, no. Eric may come to luncheonâhe often doesâand Terry will drop
in, I dare say, by and by. You know Terry is here?â interrogatively.
âYes; Eric told me. I wish I could take you with me all the same, little
one. I hate to leave you here in this hotel alone. It is a shame!âa
shame!â says France, in her hot indignation.
But Crystal lifts a pained, piteous face.
âPlease donât speak like that, France. It is all right,â she says, with
a little gasp; âIâI prefer it.â
âDo come!â France persists, unheedingly. âWe will leave you at home with
grandmamma Caryll, while we do the sight-seeing. You will love her,
Crystalâshe is the dearest, best old lady in Europe. Then we will dine
comfortably together, en famille, and go to the Varieties in the
evening, to see this popular actress Paris raves aboutâMadame Felicia.â
But, to Franceâs surprise, Crystal suddenly withdraws her hands and
looks up at her with eyes that absolutely flash.
âI will never go to the Varieties!â she cries; âI will never go to see
Madame
Comments (0)