The Revellers. Tracy Louis
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The bonne started. She shook the child angrily.
“You wicked girl!” she cried in French. “If madame heard you, she would blame me.”
The imp cuddled her bare knees in a paroxysm of glee.
“You see,” she shrilled. “I told you so.”
“Was all that swearing?” demanded Martin gravely.
“Some of it.”
“Then you shouldn’t do it. If I were your brother, I’d hammer you.”
“Oh, would you, indeed! I’d like to see any boy lay a finger on me. I’d tear his hair out by the roots.”
Naturally, the talk languished for a while, until Martin thought he had perhaps been rude in speaking so brusquely.
“I’m sorry if I offended you,” he said.
The saucy, wide-open eyes sparkled.
“I forgive you,” she said. “How old are you?”
“Fourteen. And you?”
“Twelve.”
He was surprised. “I thought you were younger,” he said.
“So does everybody. You see, I’m tiny, and mamma dresses me in this baby way. I don’t mind. I know your name. You haven’t asked me mine.”
“Tell me,” he said with a smile.
“Angèle. Angèle Saumarez.”
“I’ll never be able to say that,” he protested.
“Oh, yes, you will. It’s quite easy. It sounds Frenchy, but I am English, except in my ways, mother says. Now try. Say ‘An’ – ”
“Ang – ”
“Not so much through your nose. This way – ‘An-gèle.’”
The next effort was better, but tuition halted abruptly when Martin discovered that Angèle’s mother, instead of being “Mrs. Saumarez,” was “the Baroness Irma von Edelstein.”
“Oh, crikey!” he blurted out. “How can that be?”
Angèle laughed at his blank astonishment.
“Mamma is a German baroness,” she explained. “My papa was a colonel in the British army, but mamma did not lose her courtesy title when she married. Of course, she is Mrs. Saumarez, too.”
These subtleties of Burke and the Almanach de Gotha went over Martin’s head.
“It sounds a bit like an entry in a stock catalogue,” he said.
Angèle, in turn, was befogged, but saw instantly that the village youth was not sufficiently reverent to the claims of rank.
“You can never be a gentleman unless you learn these things,” she announced airily.
“You don’t say,” retorted Martin with a smile. He was really far more intelligent than this pert monitress, and had detected a curious expression on the stolid face of Françoise when the Baroness von Edelstein’s name cropped up in a talk which she could not understand. The truth was that the canny Norman woman, though willing enough to take a German mistress’s gold, thoroughly disliked the lady’s nationality. Martin could only guess vaguely at something of the sort, but the mere guess sufficed.
Angèle, however, wanted no more bickering just then. She was about to resume the lesson when the Baroness and Mrs. Bolland re-entered the house. Evidently the inspection of the dairy had been satisfactory, and the lady had signified her approval in words that pleased the older woman greatly.
The visitor was delighted, too, with the old-world appearance of the kitchen, the heavy rafters with their load of hams and sides of bacon, the oaken furniture, the spotless white of the well-scrubbed ash-topped table, the solemn grandfather’s clock, and the rough stone floor, over which soft red sandstone had been rubbed when wet.
By this time the tact of the woman of society had accommodated her words and utterance to the limited comprehension of her hearer, and she displayed such genuine interest in the farm and its belongings that Mrs. Bolland gave her a hearty invitation to come next morning, when the light would be stronger. Then “John” would let her see his prize stock and the extensive buildings on “t’ other side o’ t’ road… T’ kye (the cows) were fastened up for t’ neet” by this time.
The baroness was puzzled, but managed to catch the speaker’s drift.
“I do not rise very early,” she said. “I breakfast about eleven” – she could not imagine what a sensation this statement caused in a house where breakfast was served never later than seven o’clock – “and it takes me an hour to dress; but I can call about twelve, if that will suit.”
“Ay, do, ma’am,” was the cheery agreement. “You’ll be able te see t’ farmhands havin’ their dinner. It’s a fair treat te watch them men an’ lads puttin’ away a beefsteak pie.”
“And this is your little boy?” said the other, evidently inclined for gossip.
“Yes, ma’am.”
“He is a splendid little fellow. What a nice name you gave him – Martin Court Bolland – so unusual. How came you to select his Christian names?”
The question caused the farmer’s wife a good deal of unnoticed embarrassment. The baroness was looking idly at an old colored print of York Castle, and the boy himself was far too taken up with Angèle to listen to the chat of his elders.
Mrs. Bolland laughed confusedly.
“Martin,” she said. “Tak t’ young leddy an’ t’ nurse as far as t’ brig, an’ show ’em t’ mill.”
The baroness was surprised at this order, but an explanation was soon forthcoming. In her labored speech and broad dialect, the farmer’s wife revealed a startling romance. Thirteen years ago her husband’s brother died suddenly while attending a show at Islington, and the funeral took John and herself to London. They found the place so vast and noisy that it overwhelmed them; but in the evening, after the ceremony at Abney Park, they strolled out from their hotel near King’s Cross Station to see the sights.
Not knowing whither they were drifting, they found themselves, an hour later, gazing at St. Paul’s Cathedral from the foot of Ludgate Hill. They were walking toward the stately edifice, when a terrible thing happened.
A young woman fell, or threw herself, from a fourth-floor window onto the pavement of St. Martin’s Court. In her arms was an infant, a boy twelve months old. Providence saved him from the instant death met by his mother. A projecting signboard caught his clothing, tore him from the encircling arms, and held him a precarious second until the rent frock gave way.
But John Bolland’s sharp eyes had noted the child’s