The Chauffeur and the Chaperon Part 11
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"At the top? I have not seen a window that opens at the top. We do not have them made so."
"How funny! But I suppose there must be a reason why a whole nation should go on having windows that won't open at the top."
"I do not know, except that we have always had them like that, so probably it is better to go on," said Lilli, after a few seconds'
reflection, during which she looked exceedingly charming. She and Lisbeth made no attempt at having figures, but their faces are perfect, and their long tails of hair are fair and glossy as the silk of American corn.
When the twins left us to our own devices, I was for simply was.h.i.+ng hands and faces; but Phil fiercely tore off her blouse, and made herself pink with the effort of unearthing another from our box.
"What does it matter about changing?" I asked. "There's no time, and they don't expect it. Besides, our things are as good as theirs--except Miss van der Windt's. _She's_ very smart--to make up for her plainness."
"That's just the point," said Phil, struggling into a white, medallioned blouse that fastened as intricately as the working of a prize puzzle.
"I've taken _such_ a dislike to her, and she to us."
"How do you know?"
"I can't tell how. But I do know. And I want our frocks to be prettier than hers. _Do_ change, like a pet. I'll hook you up, if you'll do me.
Come, you _might_. You _would_ bring me abroad."
"Oh, all right!"
So I changed. And by dint of supernatural speed we were ready to leave our green-and-pink doll's bedroom just as a j.a.panese gong moaned an apology for supplying us with dinner instead of tea.
Once in a "blue moon" Phil and I are invited by some one to dine at the Carlton or the Savoy, or at houses where the dinners are long and elaborate; but memories of those dinners pale before the reality of this at the Villa van Buren, in a handsome, shut-up dining-room.
There were _hors d'oeuvres_, and sh.e.l.l fish, and soup, and another kind of fish; and after that began a long procession of meat and birds, cooked in delicious, rich sauces. There were so many that I lost count, as Noah must when he stood at the ark door to receive the animals as they came along, two by two; but these were a little easier to keep track of, because you could remind yourself by saying: "That was the one done up in currant juice; that was the one with compote of cherries,"
and so on; which, of course, Noah couldn't.
Phil's capacity and mine was exhausted comparatively early in the feast, but everybody else was eating steadily on, so we dared not refuse a course, lest it should be considered rude in Holland. We did our best, straight through to a wonderful iced pudding, and managed a crumb of spiced cheese; but when raw currants appeared, we had to draw the line.
The others called them "bessen," pulling the red beads off their stems with a fork, and sprinkling them with sugar, but my blood curdled at the sight of this dreadful fruit, and my mouth crinkled up inside.
Although we sat down at six, it was after eight when we rose, and as the windows were shut, the room was suffocating. Everybody looked flushed, and I dared not hope, after excluding the air for so long, that we should be allowed a breath of it later. But Cousin Cornelia, as a matter of course, led the way into the garden-room, where lamps, shaded with rose-colored silk, had now been lighted on two of the book-and magazine-strewn tables.
The strong air of the sea blew blessedly upon us, seeming cold after the heat of the dining-room, but Cousin Cornelia did not even wrap a shawl about her shoulders. We were _out-of-doors_ now, and it was right to have air, so you took it for granted, and did not suffer. But indoors, what were windows for if you did not keep them closed? It seemed a waste of good material, and therefore a tempting of Providence to take revenge by sending you bronchitis or rheumatism.
It was exquisite in the garden-room. Sea and sky mingled in a haze of tender blue. All the air was blue, spangled with the lights of the pier; and our lamps, and the shaded lamps of other garden-rooms, glowed in the azure dusk like burning flowers, roses, and daffodils, and tulips.
We had coffee in cups small and delicate as egg-sh.e.l.ls, and the old silver spoons were spoons for dolls or fairies.
Robert asked if we would like to go to the circus, which could not, he said, be surpa.s.sed in Europe; or to a cla.s.sical concert at the Kurhaus: but we were contented in the garden-room, with the music of the sea. We talked of many things, and if Robert is deficient in a knowledge of history, the others make up for his ignorance. They know something of everything; and even the apple-blossom twins could put Phyllis and me to shame, if they were not too polite, on the subject of modern musicians and painters.
They speak French, German, and Italian, as well as English: a smattering of Spanish too; yet they said modestly, when we exclaimed at their accomplishments, that it was nothing; hardly anybody would learn Dutch, so the Dutch must learn the languages of other nations.
As for Freule Menela (I must not call her "Miss," it seems, because "Freule" is a kind of t.i.tle) she is the cleverest of all, as the sweet twins tried to make us understand; and the pretty creatures are proud of her, thinking little of their own beauty. Sometimes I fancied that a shade of contempt pa.s.sed over her face when Robert ventured a remark which showed him more accomplished as sportsman than scholar; but, if she noticed that he turned to Phil or me with any brightening of interest, she at once took pains to engage his attention.
They talked in low, pleasant voices, scarcely raising their tones or making a gesture; and there was always that faint suggestion of the Scotch accent, whether they spoke English or broke into Dutch. When I remarked upon it, Cousin Cornelia laughed and said it was perhaps the common Celtic ancestry; and that if the Dutch heard Gaelic talked, they could recognize a few words here and there.
It was not more than an hour after we finished our coffee, that tea was brought, with more beautiful china, and a great deal of handsome silver.
What with this potent mixture of stimulants, and being in a new house, and thinking exciting thoughts of the future, I felt I shouldn't be able to sleep. Nevertheless, after we'd said good-night, and Phil and I were undressing, I was not pleased when Cousin Cornelia knocked at the door.
"She has come about the motor-boat," I thought, "to tell us we oughtn't to go. Heaven grant me strength to resist." For in her quilted j.a.panese silk dressing-gown she looked larger and more formidable than ever.
Not a word did she say about the motor-boat at first. It was our past which seemed to interest her, not our future. As a relation she has the right to ask me things about myself, and Phil's history is inextricably tangled up with mine.
She wanted to know where we lived in London, and how: also on what, though she didn't put it as crudely as that. I was frank, and told her about my serial stories and Phil's typing.
"I suppose you think we're mad to break up our work and go on a motor-boat tour in Holland, as if we were millionaires, when really we're poor girls," I said, before she had time to reprove us. "But we have each about a hundred and twenty pounds a year, whatever happens, so it isn't as desperate as you might think. Besides, it is going to be _the_ time of our lives. Even my stepsister feels so now, though she was against it at first, and neither of us would give it up for anything."
"I don't think you should give it up," said Cousin Cornelia. You might have knocked me down with a feather--quite a small one: for in her note she had said we must come and let her offer us good advice before it was too late; and Robert had hinted that his mother meant to dissuade us from our wild-goose chase--in the company of Mr. Starr and Mr. Starr's aunt.
"I think you know how to take care of yourselves," she went on.
"And we'll have a chaperon," Phil a.s.sured her.
"So I have heard, from my son. I have great faith in the Scotch. Yes, as you have been a little too kind-hearted, and promised this strange young man, it is necessary that somebody should have an aunt. Otherwise, if you two had been quite alone together, it would not so much have mattered. In Holland girls have liberty, more than anywhere except in America. The bicycle is their chaperon, for all young girls and men bicycle with us. The motor-boat might have been your chaperon. Even if the aunt should not come, perhaps the nephew could be got rid of, and a way arranged, rather than give up your tour."
We were delighted, and I could have hugged Cousin Cornelia. Indeed, I did thank her warmly, and was rather surprised that Phil, who usually overflows with grat.i.tude for the slightest kindness, was not more effusive over my relative's interest in our affairs, and her broad-minded verdict.
"She's a lamb, after all, isn't she?" I asked, when the large lady had gone, and I was ready to creep into a bed only an inch too short for me.
"She may be a lamb, but she isn't going to let us shear her, if she can help it," said Phil, looking deadly wise.
"What _do_ you mean?"
"My dear girl, with all your cleverness, you're only a baby child about some things. _Don't_ you see what's she's driving at?"
I shook my head, with my hair about my face.
"Or what all her questions were leading up to? Well, then, what _do_ you think has made her change her mind about our motor-boating?"
"She saw we could take care of ourselves."
"She has found out that we're poor, and obliged to. She supposed from what your cousin Robert told her, that we were heiresses; and she would have kept us on a long visit if--oh, you silly old dear, don't you see she's afraid of us--with _him_? She'll be polite and nice, but she wants us to disappear."
"Good gracious!"
"Pretty Lilli told me this evening that Freule Menela van der Windt hasn't much money, but she comes of a splendid family: she's a distant relation of that Mr. Brederode, and her people are diplomats who live at The Hague, though she's an orphan and visits about. If one of us were rich--why--oh, it's too horrid to go on. Now, maybe, you understand what I mean, and can put two and two together and agree with me."
"For a saint, you sometimes develop a hideous amount of worldly wisdom, my Phil," I replied. "But when I come to think Cousin Cornelia over, I'm afraid you're right. It would be fun to _flirt_ with Robert, and frighten her, wouldn't it?"
"We are going away--to the motor-boat--to-morrow, and we shall never see him again," said Phil. "Besides, it's wrong to flirt, even with foreigners; and now do let me say my prayers."
VII
Next morning, when I waked up, and cautiously drew my watch from under the pillow, not to disturb Phyllis, it was only six o'clock, and there was Phil gazing at me, with eyes large and bright in the green dusk that filtered through the olive curtains.
The Chauffeur and the Chaperon Part 11
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The Chauffeur and the Chaperon Part 11 summary
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