The Child Wife. Reid Mayne

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gazing upon him, and instantly withdrawn, as his became turned upon her.

      “The play’s the thing, wherewith to touch the conscience of the king,” Hamlet declared.

      The ball! It promised a clearing up of this little mystery, with perhaps some others. He would be sure to meet them there – mother, daughter, niece – all three! It would be strange if he could not introduce himself; but if not, he must trust to the stewards.

      And to the ball he went; dressed with as much taste as the laws of fashion would allow – in those days liberal enough to permit of a white waistcoat.

      With only an occasional interval – transient as the scintillation of a meteor – it has been black ever since!

      The ball-room was declared open.

      Carriages were setting down by the piazza of the Ocean House, and silks rustling along the corridors of that most select of caravanserais.

      From the grand dining-saloon, cleared for the occasion (and when cleared, making a dancing-room worthy of Terpsichore herself), came those not very harmonious sounds that tell of the tuning of fiddles, and clearing out the throats of trombones.

      The Girdwood party entered with considerable éclat– the mother dressed like a grand-duchess, though without her diamonds. These blazed upon the brow of Julia, and sparkled on her snow white bosom – for the set comprised a necklace with pendants.

      She was otherwise splendidly attired; and, in truth, looked superb. The cousin of more modest grace and means, though pretty, seemed as nothing beside her.

      Mrs Girdwood had made a mistake – in coming in too early. It is true there were fashionable people already in the room. But these were the “organisers” of the entertainment; who, backed by a sort of semi-official authority, had gathered in little groups over the floor, scanning across fans, or through eye-glasses, the dancers as they came in.

      Through these the Girdwoods had to run the gauntlet – as they made their way to the upper end of the room.

      They did so with success, though not without being aware of some supercilious glances, accompanied by whispered words that, if heard, might have somewhat disconcerted them.

      It was the second Newport ball – “hops” count for nothing – at which Mrs Girdwood and her girls had shown themselves.

      The first had not given great satisfaction – more especially to Julia.

      But there was a better prospect now. Mrs Girdwood had entered, with a confidence based on the conversation she had just held with the distinguished incognito, Mr Swinton.

      She had seen this gentleman during the day: for, as already known, he had not shut himself up in his room. She was sufficiently discerning to see that he was possessed of a fine face and figure. His hair, too – of the most aristocratic kind! How could it be otherwise? She alone knew the reason – she and her daughter; to whom she had, of course, communicated the secret of her discovery. A bit of broken promise that need not be severely criticised.

      She knew of my lord’s late arrival – from Canada he had told her – though he had paid a flying visit to New York.

      She hoped no one in the ball-room would recognise him – at least not till after she had paraded him with her own party, and could assume the seeming of his introducer.

      She had still stronger reason for this. Storekeeper’s widow, as she was, she possessed the true tact of the match-making mother. It belongs to no clime exclusively; no country. It can be as well acquired in New York as in London, Vienna, or Paris. She was a believer in first impressions – with the “compromises” that often spring from them; and in this theory – with the view of putting it into practice – she had instructed her dear Julia while dressing her for the ball.

      The daughter had promised compliance. Who wouldn’t, with the prospect of earning twenty thousand dollars’ worth of diamonds?

      Chapter Ten.

      A Previous Engagement

      In all the gradations of the thermal line, is there any atmosphere more unbearable than that of a ball-room before the dancing commences?

      It is the very essence of discomfort.

      What a relief when the baton of the conductor is seen elevated over his acolytes, and those strains, proverbially soothing to the savage, resound through the glittering saloon!

      It was a relief to Mrs Girdwood and her girls. They had begun to fancy themselves too much observed. At least Julia had, half suspecting herself of being the subject of a cynical criticism, which she did not think of attributing to her diamonds.

      She was burning with an ill-repressed spleen, by no means diminished as the sets commenced forming, and no one came forward to claim either herself or her cousin.

      At that moment appeared a man whose presence changed the current of her thoughts. It was Maynard.

      In spite of her mother’s precautionary counsels, Miss Girdwood could not look upon this gentleman with indifference. To say nothing of what had passed between them, a glance satisfied her that there was no handsomer man in the room, or likely to come into it.

      He was approaching from the entrance, apparently making his way toward the Girdwood group.

      Julia wondered whether he was going to join them. She hoped that he would.

      “I suppose I may dance with him, mother – that is, if he asks me?”

      “Not yet, my dear, not yet. Wait a little longer. His lordship – Mr Swinton – may come in at any moment. You must have the first with him. I wonder why he’s not here,” pursued the impatient parent, for the tenth time raising her eye-glass and taking a survey of the saloon. “I suppose it’s not fashionable for men of rank to come in early. No matter, Julia; you must reserve yourself till the last moment.”

      But the last moment had now arrived. The introductory piece had been played and was succeeded by the hum of half-whispered voices, and the rustling of silk dresses – by that movement which precedes the taking of places – gentlemen gliding in short stages across the slippery floor, formally bending in front of expanded skirts, and mincing out the well-known speech, “May I have the pleasure?” Then a momentary show of irresolution on the part of the lady, perhaps the consulting of a slip of cardboard, an inclination of the head so slight as to be scarce observable, a rising to the feet, with the greatest apparent reluctance, and lastly the acceptance of the offered arm, as if conferring the supremest of favours!

      Neither of the young ladies under Mrs Girdwood’s care had been yet called upon to take part in this pantomime. Certainly the stewards were not doing their duty. There were no finer-looking girls in the room, and there were scores of gentlemen who would have been delighted to dance with them. Their standing neglected could be only an accidental oversight.

      The storekeeper’s widow began to find it disagreeable. She felt inclined to be less exacting about the description of partners. As there was no lord in sight, the ex-officer would not be much longer objected to.

      “Does he intend coming at all?” she reflected, thinking of Swinton.

      “Does he intend coming to us?” was the reflection of Julia, her thoughts dwelling upon Maynard.

      Her eyes, too, were on him. He was still

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