The Old Countess; or, The Two Proposals Part 9
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Here Olympia's voice swept through the house, with an outpouring of melody that brought the audience to its feet, but when the tumult subsided, Hepworth found that the man had been talking on and on, with an under-tow of political gossip, that reached him in words at last.
"They wanted the Legislature, which wasn't to be had without money, you know; two or three men had been seen--nothing less than a hundred thousand would do it. I was president of the board, went up myself, saw the members, who sent me to their confidential men--jackals we call 'em, ha! ha!--got it done for sixty thousand--said nothing, but divided the rest--jackals got twenty, the other twenty--you understand. She got an Inger shawl out of that operation, the very one she has on."
"No, it isn't nothing of the sort. This one was the other," whispered Mrs. Stacy, holding up a corner of the magnificent shawl she wore.
Hepworth turned and gazed upon the shawl until his face grew white as death, in the gaslight. The very sight of that rich garment made him faint.
The mistake he had made had a silencing effect upon Stacy too. He had no wish that the history of that garment should be produced, and when his wife was about to speak, silenced her at once.
"My dear Harriet," he said, "how often have I told you that talking at a theater or the operer is awfully vulgar. I wonder you can persist in it, and Mr. Hepworth by. Just listen to that music! Haven't you no taste? If you haven't, just take a look around the boxes. That young feller there is the Prince of Wales."
Mrs. Stacy took a mother-of-pearl opera gla.s.s from her lap, and obediently turned it upon the royal box.
Before the performance was over, and while Hepworth was drawn back, in spite of himself, to the most painful scenes of his life, an usher came down the nearest pa.s.sage, and put a little twisted note into his hand.
It was from Olympia, inviting him to supper the next evening.
Hepworth crushed the pretty missive in his hand, while he turned to send a verbal refusal, but the usher had withdrawn, and he had no other way of sending a reply that night.
The opera was at its close now, and Hepworth left the house, irritated and restless. Could he find no place in which this miserable past would not haunt him? He had hardly made his way through the crowd when his arm was seized, and Stacy almost wheeled him around on the pavement.
"My dear sir, this way. Mrs. Stacy is already in the carriage. Of course we would not ride and let you go afoot. Have been a poor man myself once--needn't deny that to you. Know what it is to keep up a show without capital. But no old friend of mine shall go afoot while I have the wherewith to pay for a carriage, and an empty seat in it. Shall set in the back seat with Mrs. Stacy, upon my soul you shall, and that's an honor I don't offer to every man. Now just tell me where you are putting up."
Hepworth laughed, in spite of his annoyance. The patronizing fussiness of the ex-alderman struck a keen sense of the ridiculous, which was strong in his character.
"If you insist," he said. "But you are too generous."
"Not at all, not at all. When Alderman Stacy does a thing, he does it handsomely. This way, this way!"
Hepworth seated himself in the carriage where Mrs. Stacy squeezed herself in one corner, and gathered up her skirts to make room for him, and Stacy had his foot on the step, when a new poster, just placed at the door of the opera house, struck his attention, and he stepped back to examine it.
"'First appearance of a young American, a protege of Olympia.' Just read that poster, Mr. Hepworth, and tell me what you think of it," he said, lifting himself into the carriage. "Mrs. Stacy, my dear, just look that way, and tell me if you can guess who it is that will make a first appearance Monday night? You know that young lady, and so does Mr.
Hepworth. Now, make a guess."
"How can you?" said Mrs. Stacy. "You know, Matthew, dear, I never was good at conundrums and such like."
Matthew puffed himself out with a deep, long breath, and clasping two huge hands encased in flame-colored gloves on his knee, leaned toward Hepworth.
"You try, now."
Hepworth shook his head, and Stacy burst out with his mystery.
"It's the identical child that was brought up at the inquest in Forty-third street--Daniel Yates' little daughter."
"No!" exclaimed Mrs. Stacy. "That little creature?"
"It ain't n.o.body else--you may bet high on that, Mrs. Stacy."
Hepworth kept perfectly still, but his heart fairly stopped beating.
"But how did you find out, Matthew, dear?"
"Oh! we aldermen find out everything. The girl was brought up in the country, near Sing-Sing, in a cedar-post cottage that the executor wanted to raise some money on. I went up to see it, and had a good look at the girl. Yes, my dear, she was, to say, very handsome, but proud.
Daniel Yates had brought her up like a queen, and I give you my word she looked it; but there was no mistake about it. The executor had just gobbled up everything Yates left, and there was no one to look after him, so that the girl was just nowhere financially. I found out that the cottage could not be sold or mortgaged, nor let either, according to law, though the executor tried it on hard, and came again and again about it, especially after she left it. So I found out everything about the girl. That primer donner took a fancy to her, and adopted her right out of hand because of her voice, and to-morrow night you can both of you see her, for I mean to have a box up among the British arrestocracy that night, and I invite you both free gratis for nothing."
"Are you sure of this?" questioned Hepworth, who had not spoken till now.
"Just as sure as I am that Alderman Stacy sits before you. But if you don't believe it, ask the girl yourself. I mean to call on her, and Mrs.
Stacy will do likewise. You can go along. That is, we will call, if she comes out first chop on Monday night."
"Mr. Stacy," said the superb matron in the back seat, drawing herself up with wonderful dignity, "I don't mean to put on airs nor nothing because I'm your lady and richer than some folks, or Mr. Hepworth wouldn't be an honored guest in this here carriage; but I must set my foot square aginst actresses and primmer donners--in short, theatre-clers in general."
"Just you hear that," said Stacy, looking at Hepworth. "Isn't she coming it down strong, and lifting of her head high?"
"It isn't that, Mr. Stacy, but because I am a wife and a--a woman--that I feel called upon to stand between them creturs and the sect. Pay them your money, Mr. Stacy--pay them any amount of money from the front--but nothing beyond that, Mr. Stacy!"
"Oh, humbug," said Mr. Stacy; "that is putting it too strong, Harriet--as if I couldn't pay money or not, just as I please."
"It isn't humbug, Mr. Stacy, but a question of benignant morality, which it is every woman's duty to take up and hurl back, till she totters on the brink, martyr-like, between heaven and earth! Don't you think so, Mr. Hepworth?"
"Did you ever hear anything up to that?" exclaimed Stacy, swelling with pompous satisfaction. "Harriet is the sort of woman that a man of substance can depend on, morrerly, financierly, and--and--. Not that I'm going to give in, you know; but it's satisfaction to know that your money has lifted such a person into her proper spear."
"That's very kind of you, and I feel it, Stacy, dear; but when you speak of lifting me up with _your_ money, who was it that owned the first five hundred dollars you, or me, Mr. Stacy?"
"Harriet!"
"It's no use thundering out my baptismal name against me, Mr. Stacy, for that's a thing I won't bear at no price! Truth is truth, Mr. Hepworth, and rich as that man is, rolling over and over in gold, like a porpose in salt water, it was my five hundred dollars that did it! Let him say if I didn't own that much?"
"But didn't I marry you, and then didn't you own me? Would you set down good looks, financial ability, and moral character A number one, at five hundred dollars, and you--"
What was coming next Hepworth was destined never to learn, for Mrs.
Stacy, overcome by a fit of conjugal remorse, leaned forward and placed one substantial hand in the flame-colored glove of her husband.
"Matthew, forgive me! I didn't mean it. That mention of the primmer donner and her protager upset me; but I am your wife yet, Stacy, dear--your true and lawful wife--just as ready to travel with you into every tropical climate of Europe as I ever was."
Stacy would not clasp his flame-colored fingers around that hand, but let it drop with ignominious looseness, while he drew a handkerchief from his pocket and buried his face in it.
"Harriet! Harriet! you have hurt my feelings, mortified my--my manhood before an old friend!"
It was in the night, the carriage was close, the lamps dim, and Hepworth only knew that there a heap of drapery launched itself into the front seat, that a voice came from the midst, saying:
"Oh, Matthew! Matthew!"
Then the white handkerchief dropped like a flag at half mast, and the reconciliation was complete.
CHAPTER VII.
The Old Countess; or, The Two Proposals Part 9
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The Old Countess; or, The Two Proposals Part 9 summary
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