“I’m all right now, Sandy,” whispered the gentleman as soon as his feet were planted firmly on the piazza. “You may come back for me at nine o’clock.”
Having taken his hand from his servant’s arm, he advanced to meet a lady who stood in the door awaiting him, a tall, elderly woman, gaunt and angular of frame, with a mottled face, and high cheekbones partially covered by bands of hair entirely too black and abundant for a person of her age, if one might judge from the lines of her mouth, which are rarely deceptive in such matters.
“Perhaps you’d better not send your man away, Mr. Delamere,” observed the lady, in a high shrill voice, which grated upon the old gentleman’s ears. He was slightly hard of hearing, but, like most deaf people, resented being screamed at. “You might need him before nine o’clock. One never knows what may happen after one has had the second stroke. And moreover, our butler has fallen down the back steps—negroes are so careless!—and sprained his ankle so that he can’t stand. I’d like to have Sandy stay and wait on the table in Peter’s place, if you don’t mind.”
“I thank you, Mrs. Ochiltree, for your solicitude,” replied Mr. Delamere, with a shade of annoyance in his voice, “but my health is very good just at present, and I do not anticipate any catastrophe which will require my servant’s presence before I am ready to go home. But I have no doubt, madam,” he continued, with a courteous inclination, “that Sandy will be pleased to serve you, if you desire it, to the best of his poor knowledge.”
“I shill be honored, ma’am,” assented Sandy, with a bow even deeper than his master’s, “only I’m ’feared I ain’t rightly dressed fer ter wait on table. I wuz only goin’ ter pra’r-meetin’, an’ so I didn’ put on my bes’ clo’s. Ef Mis’ Ochiltree ain’ gwine ter need me fer de nex’ fifteen minutes, I kin ride back home in de ca’ige an’ dress myse’f suitable fer de occasion, suh.”
“If you think you’ll wait on the table any better,” said Mrs. Ochiltree, “you may go along and change your clothes; but hurry back, for it is seven now, and dinner will soon be served.”
Sandy retired with a bow. While descending the steps to the carriage, which had waited for him, he came face to face with a young man just entering the house.
“Am I in time for dinner, Sandy?” asked the newcomer.
“Yas, Mistuh Tom, you’re in plenty er time. Dinner won’t be ready till I git back, which won’ be fer fifteen minutes er so yit.”
Throwing away the cigarette which he held between his fingers, the young man crossed the piazza with a light step, and after a preliminary knock, for an answer to which he did not wait, entered the house with the air of one thoroughly at home. The lights in the parlor had been lit, and Ellis, who sat talking to Major Carteret when the newcomer entered, covered him with a jealous glance.
Slender and of medium height, with a small head of almost perfect contour, a symmetrical face, dark almost to swarthiness, black eyes, which moved somewhat restlessly, curly hair of raven tint, a slight mustache, small hands and feet, and fashionable attire, Tom Delamere, the grandson of the old gentleman who had already arrived, was easily the handsomest young man in Wellington. But no discriminating observer would have characterized his beauty as manly. It conveyed no impression of strength, but did possess a certain element, feline rather than feminine, which subtly negatived the idea of manliness.
He gave his hand to the major, nodded curtly to Ellis, saluted his grandfather respectfully, and inquired for the ladies.
“Olivia is dressing for dinner,” replied the major; “Mrs. Ochiltree is in the kitchen, struggling with the servants. Clara—Ah, here she comes now!”
Ellis, whose senses were preternaturally acute where Clara was concerned, was already looking toward the hall and was the first to see her. Clad in an evening gown of simple white, to the close-fitting corsage of which she had fastened a bunch of pink roses, she was to Ellis a dazzling apparition. To him her erect and well-moulded form was the embodiment of symmetry, her voice sweet music, her movements the perfection of grace; and it scarcely needed a lover’s imagination to read in her fair countenance a pure heart and a high spirit—the truthfulness that scorns a lie, the pride which is not haughtiness. There were suggestive depths of tenderness, too, in the curl of her lip, the droop of her long lashes, the glance of her blue eyes—depths that Ellis had long since divined, though he had never yet explored them. She gave Ellis a friendly nod as she came in, but for the smile with which she greeted Delamere, Ellis would have given all that he possessed—not a great deal, it is true, but what could a man do more?
“You are the last one, Tom,” she said reproachfully. “Mr. Ellis has been here half an hour.”
Delamere threw a glance at Ellis which was not exactly friendly. Why should this fellow always be on hand to emphasize his own shortcomings?
“The rector is not here,” answered Tom triumphantly. “You see I am not the last.”
“The rector,” replied Clara, “was called out of town at six o’clock this evening, to visit a dying man, and so cannot be here. You are the last, Tom, and Mr. Ellis was the first.”
Ellis was ruefully aware that this comparison in his favor was the only visible advantage that he had gained from his early