A German Pompadour Part 22
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'Will you let yourself sink into a mooning poet, my hero of great battles? No! you shall go back, dear love--back to your grand, soldier's life! See, I will stay here and dream of you, if you will not let me take the only path back to Wirtemberg. You shall write to me, sometimes send me a poem, a jewel perhaps--but we shall be parted! O Eberhard!' She sighed deeply, but her strange, hard eyes watched him narrowly. He turned away his face. She saw that her reminder of his military ambition had succeeded as she expected.
'You are right. Alas! this horrible degradation, this masquerading before G.o.d--and yet it is the only way.'
Her arms stole round him. Against his cheek he felt her smooth skin, her warm lips sought his.
'I love you, only you,' she whispered. 'In a few days I follow you to Stuttgart. Come to me!'
He flung her from him almost roughly.
'Not now! G.o.d in heaven! not now! Can you dream that at such a time I could? It would make the hideous bargain you contemplate to-morrow one degree more vile.' He turned from her and fled. In a moment she heard the clatter of his horse's hoofs in the courtyard.
CHAPTER XV
THE RETURN
A TRAVELLING coach and six horses thundered into Stuttgart, driven at a hand gallop, and raised clouds of white dust as it pa.s.sed down the Graben. An escort of Silver Guards rode with this coach. One of the soldiers' horses knocked over a child playing in the roadway, but the cavalcade pa.s.sed on unheeding, leaving the little crushed figure lying limp and still in the dust.
The coach drew up at the Jagerhaus, where the doors stood wide open, disclosing a company of servants drawn up in solemn line. Two sentries were posted at either side of the entrance. A black-clad major-domo bowed on the threshold, while half a dozen lackeys sprang forward to receive the tall woman who was slowly descending from the coach. Madame la Comtesse de Wurben, her Excellency the Landhofmeisterin of Wirtemberg, Countess Gravenitz, had arrived at Stuttgart to attend to the duties connected with her invalid husband's court charge.
This exalted lady was the first personage of the court after the reigning d.u.c.h.ess, and his Highness had offered her apartments in the castle, but these were refused, her Excellency preferring to occupy an independent residence.
Thus it fell out that Wilhelmine returned to the Jagerhaus towards the end of September, some four months after she had fled from Urach, and a few days since the mock marriage with Wurben, 'ce cher Nepomuk, mon mari,' as she ironically named him to Madame de Ruth.
There had been grievous storms at Stuttgart during the days succeeding his Highness's return from hunting in the Schonbuch, that shooting expedition which had been but a pretext to leave Stuttgart and hurry to Schaffhausen, in order to hinder the celebration of the ceremony of Wilhelmine's marriage.
Serenissimus returned in a mood which would brook no contradiction. He announced to the Geheimrathe, and to the court, that it was his pleasure to revive the ancient office of Landhofmeister, and that he had conferred this, the highest charge of his court, upon a Bohemian n.o.bleman of the name of Wurben, but that this gentleman being seriously indisposed, his lady-wife had undertaken to fulfil the various duties of Landhofmeisterin, and would reside at the Jagerhaus. Private information came to the astonished Geheimrathe that this new evil was but the old poison with a new label; that this Countess Wurben was the hated Gravenitzin. Bitterly they regretted their refusal of the two hundred thousand gulden, but it was too late now.
To Johanna Elizabetha this announcement was made by his Highness in person and with cruel frankness. She was told that she had refused a life of ease and peace, leaving his Highness to enjoy a happiness which she herself could never have provided, and that he took this way to save himself from despair, for without Wilhelmine he would not, nay, could not, live.
'You must abide by this, Madame, and if you are peaceably disposed, and behave with becoming consideration to her Excellency the Landhofmeisterin, it will be possible for you to remain in Stuttgart,' he told her.
Her Highness made no reply to this surprising speech, but immediately wrote to Stetten, imploring the d.u.c.h.ess-mother to come and put order into the family affairs. The dear lady arrived in high dudgeon, and according to her custom stated her opinion to Eberhard Ludwig in words he could not misunderstand. But in vain, and it was a very crestfallen, angry old lady who drove back through the fields to Stetten.
The court was in a quandary, in comparison to which the former perplexities in regard to the Gravenitzin were mere bagatelles. If they refused to go to court festivities where the Landhofmeisterin, after the d.u.c.h.ess, held the first rank, they would risk being excluded from court perhaps for years. Again, who knew how soon the favourite might fall into disgrace, or be banished once more by some unexpected event? There was much talk and fervid declarations of n.o.ble sentiments, loyalty to the d.u.c.h.ess, love of purity, and the rest; but when Wilhelmine invited the entire court to visit her at the Jagerhaus, on the occasion of a grand evening rout, it was noticeable that those few who did not appear sent copious excuses, pretending illness, and adding almost medical descriptions of their ailments, so anxious were they that Wilhelmine should believe them to be really indisposed! Already it was considered dangerous to offend the Gravenitzin, as they still called the Countess of Wurben, her Excellency the Landhofmeisterin, but to her face she was 'your Excellency,' and they paid her great court.
Naturally the d.u.c.h.ess Johanna Elizabetha held aloof, but she knew she must one day meet her rival face to face, one day take part in a court festivity where the woman would be only second in formal rank, in reality the first in the estimation of all.
The winter days grew short and dark, and Christmas approached. Christmas rejoicings with this sinful woman queening it at masque and dance! Even from informal family gatherings the Landhofmeisterin, as first lady in the land, could not be excluded.
'Dear and honoured Madame my Mother,' Johanna Elizabetha wrote, 'I have to meet this woman again. Let the first encounter not be before the world. I will invite her to our Christmas tree. Come you too, dear Madame my Mother, even if there is snow on the ground, to help your unhappy daughter, Johanna Elizabetha.' Thus she wrote to the formidable dame at Stetten.
It must be conceded that for the favourite this family gathering to which she was bidden presented disagreeable prospects of extreme difficulty, and she craved Eberhard Ludwig to permit her to decline the honour, but Serenissimus implored her to consent. It would be unwise to rebuff the d.u.c.h.ess's overture, and after all, possibly it was her Highness's intention to live peaceably with her husband's mistress. Other ladies had done so. He quoted history and recent events: Louis XIV., Louise de la Valliere, and Marie Therese of France, and so on. Also he represented to her that the first meeting with Johanna Elizabetha would be a trifle awkward with the whole court agape, so perhaps this private family gathering was an excellent opportunity; besides, as Landhofmeisterin, it was correct she should be included in the Pet.i.t Cercle.
She mocked at the homely custom of the Christmas tree, calling it unfitting for a grand seigneur's household to indulge in such old-fas.h.i.+oned peasant-like rejoicings.
'Can you dream of such a festivity at Versailles?' she asked, laughing.
He told her that his mother clung to the habit. It was an ancient German custom thus to celebrate the Birth of Christ.
'I love the notion, too, that in all my villages the peasants can have the same as I have, for once, poor souls!' he added simply.
'Eberhard, you are ridiculous!--yes, a ridiculous poet-fellow. But I will come to your peasant celebration, if it pleases you.' She was touched by this gentle saying of his.
And thus it fell out that on Christmas eve Wilhelmine ordered her coach to convey her to the castle. She drove through the snow in no happy frame of mind. Christmas trees and the favourite!--could anything be more incongruous? and she knew it. Angrily she sneered at the simple homeliness of the old German custom. Peasants could do these absurdities, but the d.u.c.h.ess of Wirtemberg?
In the long room where the madrigals had been sung on that well-remembered evening when Wilhelmine was installed lady-in-waiting to her Highness, a tall fir-tree was planted in a gilded barrel. A thousand twinkling lights burned on the branches, and little trinkets dangled temptingly. Overhead, on the topmost branch, the waxen Christmas angel with tinsel wings hovered over this family gathering. Symbol of peace and goodwill, this angel would look down pitifully on the men and women round the Christmas tree, whose hearts were full of bitterness, of envy and hatred! Lackeys were fastening candles on to the branches, and Johanna Elizabetha and Madame de Stafforth were hanging up trinkets and playthings for the Erbprinz.
The d.u.c.h.ess-mother entered. She glanced round the room. 'Has the enemy not arrived?' she said humorously.
Johanna Elizabetha sighed.
'No, she has not come yet. It is hard she should spoil our Christmas Eve; but it is better than meeting her for the first time as Landhofmeisterin with all her friends to stare at me.'
'She will not enjoy her evening, my dear,' returned the d.u.c.h.ess-mother, with a grim smile.
At this moment Eberhard Ludwig entered, leading the Erbprinz by the hand.
He sometimes endeavoured to be a kind father, but it was no easy matter for him. The d.u.c.h.ess-mother's face softened as she greeted her son, and bent to kiss the little boy, who scarcely responded to the old lady's embrace. His s.h.i.+ning, excited eyes were fixed upon the Christmas tree, and s.n.a.t.c.hing his hand from the Duke's grasp, he began to dance round in frantic childish rapture. Johanna Elizabetha forgot her troubles watching her son's joy, and she commenced cutting off the playthings for him.
'It were fitting to await our guest's arrival, Madame, before you strip the tree,' said the Duke coldly.
'Nonsense!' interrupted the d.u.c.h.ess-mother, 'surely Elizabetha can give her child the playthings if she wishes to?'
'Her Excellency the Landhofmeisterin!' announced a page, throwing open the door, and Wilhelmine appeared on the threshold.
His Highness hurried forward to greet her, while Johanna Elizabetha instinctively drew nearer to the d.u.c.h.ess-mother, catching the Erbprinz by the arm.
Wilhelmine bent low in an elaborate courtesy. Her Highness held out her hand shyly for her rival to kiss. The d.u.c.h.ess-mother watched the comedy for an instant, then turning to the Duke who stood behind Wilhelmine, nervously fingering his rapier-hilt, she said:
'Serenissimus will have the kindness to present to me the Landhofmeisterin, as I have not the pleasure to know her.'
'Madame, my mother permits me--This is Madame la Comtesse de Wurben, Landhofmeisterin,' he stammered, and the d.u.c.h.ess-mother threw him a contemptuous glance.
'Ah, Madame de Wurben! how sad it must be for you to be obliged to leave your husband in Bohemia,' she said. 'Have you good news of him now? I am so interested in illness. Tell me exactly what ails poor Count Wurben.'
Wilhelmine stared at this formidable dame in consternation. Wurben's fict.i.tious ailments were difficult to name.
'He suffered--from--from--smallpox some years ago, your Highness, and has never recovered his health,' she said haltingly.
'Ah! smallpox; yes, indeed, a terrible malady, and but too common. Did your husband contract it at the same time as you did, Madame? I see you must have been a great sufferer,' said the d.u.c.h.ess-mother, fixing her sharp brown eyes on the few hardly distinguishable pockmarks on Wilhelmine's face. The favourite flushed.
'I was not married to Monsieur de Wurben at that time, your Highness,'
she answered.
A German Pompadour Part 22
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A German Pompadour Part 22 summary
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