<h2 id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</h2>
<h3 id="Another_Gentleman_of_the_Same_Name">ANOTHER GENTLEMAN OF THE SAME NAME.</h3>
<p>She went up stairs, after this, to her own
room, a comfortable, luxurious little place, near
Mrs. Despard’s own apartment. A clear, bright
fire burned in the grate, and her special sleepy-hollow
chair was drawn before it; and when
she had laid aside her hat, and disposed of her
purchases, she came to this chair, and seated
herself in it. Then she drew the Pen’yllan
letter from her pocket, and laid it on her lap,
and left it there, while she folded her hands,
and leaned back, looking at the fire dreamily,
and thinking to herself.</p>
<p>The truth is, that letter, that gentle, sweet-tempered,
old-fashioned letter of Miss Clarissa’s,
stung the girl, worldly and selfish as she was.
Three years ago she would not have cared
much, but “seeing the world”—ah! the world
had taught her a lesson. She had seen a great
deal of this world, under Mrs. Despard’s guidance.
She had ripened marvelously; she had
grown half a score of years older; she had
learned to be bitter and clear-sighted; and now
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span>
a curious mental process was going on with
her.</p>
<p>“We shall never cease to feel your absence,
my dear,” wrote Miss Tregarthyn. “Indeed,
we sometimes say to each other, that we feel it
more every day; but, at the same time, we
cannot help seeing that our life is not the life
one so young and attractive ought to live. It
was not a congenial life for our poor dear old
Philip, and how could it seem congenial to his
daughter? And if, by a little sacrifice, we can
make our dear Lisbeth happy, ought we not
to be more than willing to submit to it? We
are so proud of you, my dear, and it delights
us so to hear that you are enjoying yourself,
and being so much admired, that when we receive
your letters, we forget everything else.
Do you think you can spare us a week in the
summer? If you can, you know how it will
rejoice us to see you, even for that short time,”
etc., etc., through half a dozen pages.</p>
<p>And this letter now lay on Lisbeth’s lap, as
we have said, while she pondered over the contents
moodily.</p>
<p>“I do not see,” she said, at last, “I do not
see what there is in me for people to be so
fond of.”</p>
<p>A loosened coil of her hair hung over her
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
shoulder and bosom, and she took this soft and
thick black tress, and began to twist it round
and round her slender mite of a wrist with a
sort of vindictive force. “Where is the fascination
in me?” she demanded, of the fire, one
might have thought. “It is not for my amiability,
it is not for my ‘odd fine eyes, and
odd soft voice,’ as Mrs. Despard puts it, that
those three women love me, and lay themselves
under my feet. If they were men,” with
scorn, “one could understand it. But women!
Is it because they are so much better than I
am, that they cannot help loving something—even
me? Yes it is!” defiantly. “Yes it
is!”</p>
<p>She was angry, and all her anger was against
herself, or at least against the fate which had
made her what she was. Lisbeth knew herself
better than other people knew her. It was a
fate, she told herself. She had been born cold-blooded
and immovable, and it was not to be
helped. But she never defended herself thus,
when others accused her; she would have
scorned to do it. It was only against her own
secret, restless, inner accusations that she
deigned to defend herself. It was characteristic
of her that she should brave the opinions
of others, and feel rebellious under her own.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
What Lisbeth Crespigny thought in secret of
Lisbeth Crespigny must have its weight.</p>
<p>At last she remembered the dress lying upon
the bed—the dress Lecomte had just sent
home. She was passionately fond of dress, especially
fond of a certain striking, yet artistic
style of setting, for her own unusually effective
face and figure. She turned now to this new
dress, as a refuge from herself.</p>
<p>“I may as well put it on now,” she said.
“It is seven o’clock, and it is as well to give
one’s self plenty of time.”</p>
<p>So she got up, and began her toilet leisurely.
She found it by no means unpleasant to watch
herself grow out of chrysalis form. She even
found a keen pleasure in standing in the brilliant
light before the mirror, working patiently
at the soft, cloud-like masses of her hair, until
she had wound and twisted it into some
novel, graceful fancifulness. And yet even this
scarcely arose from a vanity such as the vanity
of other women.</p>
<p>She went down to the drawing-room, when
she was dressed. She knew she was looking
her best, without being told. The pale gray
tissue, pale as a gray sea-mist, the golden-hearted,
purple pansies with which it was
lightly sown, and which were in her hair, and
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
on her bosom, and in her hands, suited her entirely.
Her eyes, too, soft, dense, mysterious
under their sweeping, straight black lashes—well,
Lisbeth Crespigny’s eyes, and no other
creature’s.</p>
<p>“A first glance would tell me who had designed
that dress,” said Mrs. Despard. “It is
not Lecomte; it is your very self, in every
touch and tint.”</p>
<p>Lisbeth smiled, and looking down the length
of the room, where she stood reflected in a
mirror at the end of it, unfurled her fan, a
gilded fan, thickly strewn with her purple pansies;
but she made no reply.</p>
<p>A glass door, in the drawing-room, opened
into a conservatory all aglow with light and
bloom, and in this conservatory she was standing
half an hour later, when the first arrivals
came. The door, a double one, was wide
open, and she, in the midst of the banks and
tiers of flowers, was bending over a vase of
heliotrope, singing a low snatch of song.</p>
<div class="poem"><div class="stanza">
<span class="i0">“The fairest rose blooms but a day,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">The fairest Spring must end with May,<br/></span>
<span class="i1">And you and I can only say,<br/></span>
<span class="i14">Good-by, good-by, good-by!”<br/></span></div>
</div>
<p>She just sang this much, and stopped. One
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
of the two people who had arrived was speaking
to Mrs. Despard. She lifted her head, and
listened. She could not see the speaker’s face,
because a tall, tropical-leaved lily interposed itself.
But the voice startled her uncomfortably.</p>
<p>“Who is that man?” she said, to herself.
“Who is that man?” And then, without
waiting another moment, she left the heliotrope,
and made her way to the glass door.</p>
<p>Mrs. Despard looked first, and saw her
standing there.</p>
<p>“Ah, Lisbeth,” she said, and then turned,
with a little smile, toward the gentleman who
stood nearest to her. “Here is an old friend,”
she added, as Lisbeth advanced. “You are
indebted to Mr. Lyon for the pleasure of seeing
Mr. Anstruthers again.”</p>
<p>Lisbeth came forward, feeling as if she was
on the verge of losing her amiable temper.
What was Hector Anstruthers doing here?
What did he want? Had he been insane
enough to come with any absurd fancy that—that
he could—that—. But her irritated hesitance
carried her no farther than this. The
young man met her halfway, with the greatest
self-possession imaginable.</p>
<p>“This is an unexpected pleasure,” he said,
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span>
holding out his hand frankly. “I was not
aware, when Lyon brought me to his friend’s,
that I should find you here.”</p>
<p>All this, as complacently, be it observed, as
if he had been addressing any other woman in
the world; as if that little affair of a few years
ago had been too mere a bagatelle to be
remembered; as if his boyish passion, and
misery, and despair, had faded utterly out of
his mind.</p>
<p>Mrs. Despard smiled again, and watched her
young friend closely. But if Lisbeth was
startled and annoyed by the too apparent
change, she was too clever to betray herself.
She was a sharp, secretive young person, and
had her emotions well under control. She
held out her hand with a smile of her own—a
slow, well-bred, not too expressive affair, not
an effusive affair, by any means.</p>
<p>“Delighted, I am sure?” she said. “I have
just been reading a letter from Aunt Clarissa,
and naturally it has prepared me to be doubly
glad to see one of her special favorites.”</p>
<p>After that the conversation became general,
Anstruthers somehow managing to take the
lead. Lisbeth opened her eyes. Was this the
boy she had left in the moonlight at Pen’yllan?
The young simpleton who had been at
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
her feet on the sands, spouting poetry, and
adoring her, and making himself her grateful
slave? The impetuous, tiresome lad, who had
blushed, and raved, and sighed, and, in the
end, had succeeded in wearying her so completely?
Three years had made a difference.
Here was a sublime young potentate, wondrously
altered, and absolutely wondrously
well-looking. The mustache she had secretly
sneered at in its budding youth, was long,
silken, brown; the slight, long figure had developed
into the fairest of proportions; the
guileless freshness of color had died away,
and left an interesting, if rather significant
pallor. Having been a boy so long, he seemed
to have become a man all at once; and as
he stood talking to Mrs. Despard, and occasionally
turning to Lisbeth, his serenity of
manner did him credit. Was it possible that
he knew what to say? It appeared so. He
did not blush; his hands and feet evidently
did not incommode him. He was talking vivaciously,
and with the air of a man of the
world. He was making Mrs. Despard laugh,
and there was every now and then a touch of
daring, yet well-bred sarcasm in what he was
saying. Bah! He was as much older as she
herself was. And yet, incongruous as the
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
statement may appear, she hardly liked him
any the better.</p>
<p>“How long,” she asked, abruptly, of Bertie
Lyon, “has Mr. Anstruthers been in London?”
Lyon, that radiant young dandy, was almost
guilty of staring at her amazedly.</p>
<p>“Beg pardon,” he said. “Did you say
‘how long!’”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>The young man managed to recover himself.
Perhaps, after all, she was as ignorant about
Anstruthers as she seemed to be, and it was
not one of her confounded significant speeches.
They were nice enough people, of course, and
Mrs. Despard was the sort of woman whose
parties a fellow always liked to be invited to;
but then they were not exactly in the set to
which Anstruthers belonged, and of which he
himself was a shining member.</p>
<p>“Well, you see,” he said, “he has spent the
greater part of his life in London; but it was
not until about three years ago that he began
to care much about society. He came into his
money then, when young Scarsbrook shot himself
accidentally, in Scotland, and he has lived
pretty rapidly since,” with an innocent faith
in Miss Crespigny’s ability to comprehend even
a modest bit of slang. “He is a tremendously
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
talented fellow, Anstruthers—paints, and
writes, and takes a turn at everything. He is
the art-critic on the <i>Cynic</i>; and people talk
about what he does, all the more because he
has no need to do anything; and it makes him
awfully popular.”</p>
<p>Lisbeth laughed; a rather savage little laugh.</p>
<p>“What is it that amuses you?” asked Lyon.
“Not Anstruthers, I hope.”</p>
<p>“Oh, no!” answered the young lady. “Not
this Anstruthers, but another gentleman of the
same name, whom I knew a long time ago.”</p>
<p>“A long time ago?” said the young man,
gallantly, if not with wondrous sapience. “If
it is a long time ago, I should think you must
have been so young that your acquaintance
would be hardly likely to make any impression
upon you, ludicrous or otherwise.” For he was
one of the victims, too, and consequently liked
to make even a stupidly polite speech.
<span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span></p>
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