Of all this, I say, Miss Hallaton made accurate note; but I doubt if she had an idea of Mr. Picard"s team, though it came next; of his flash-looking load, with a _loudish_ lady on the box; of his blue coach, his red wheels, his well-dressed servants, or the workman-like pull up which brought the whole thing to an anchor, and was, indeed, one of the best performances of the day.
And now a dozen two-year-olds, after a dozen false starts, have run off their five furlongs with the speed of an express train, and "the Termagant filly," overpowering her jockey, a little bundle of pink satin and puff, huddled up on her back, has won by a neck. There is a lull till the numbers are up for the next race, and even the Ring, hungry, insatiate, roaring like the ocean, has subsided into a momentary calm.
Sir Henry takes a cigar from a gorgeous case, and turns to his daughter.
"Backed her for her blood, Nell," says he; "they"re all speedy, but they can"t stay. Only a pony--that"s better than nothing, however."
"How _can_ you, papa?" replies Nell. "It"s wicked of you to bet, though you _do_ generally seem to win."
Helen draws the usual distinction as to the immorality of gambling. To win is less than folly, to lose is more than sin. I do not think though that Sir Henry was equally confiding about his wagers when his judgment had been at fault. He seemed in the best of humours now.
"Nell, that"s the prettiest bonnet we"ve hoisted the whole season, and the dress isn"t the worst I"ve seen to-day. It"s cruel to waste such a "get-up" in a carriage. Come across, and we"ll show ourselves on the Lawn."
"And you won"t bet on the next race, papa?" says Helen, delighted; for is there not a chance, nay, almost a certainty, that Captain Vanguard, having eaten, and drunk, and smoked, and been through all the other privileged portals, will come to the Lawn for inspection of countless ladies drawn up in line-of-battle on their own special parade-ground?
The great tumult of the day was over; the Royal party had arrived under the usual burst of cheers; the greys had been admired; the carriages commented on; the Master of the Buckhounds, his horse, his figure, his boots, his seat, and all that covered it, subjected to rigid criticism.
Everybody had a few spare minutes to walk about and admire or ridicule everybody else. As father and daughter set foot on the smooth burnt-up slope in front of the boxes, they came suddenly face to face with Mrs.
Lascelles and Miss Ross. Each lady caught sight of Sir Henry at the same moment, and waited to see what her friend would do. I believe that if one had turned coldly on her heel, in answer to his ready salute, the other would have followed suit, and neither would ever have spoken to her fickle admirer again. But it is probable that the latter"s habits familiarised him with such meetings, for in an instant he had both by the hand, and was accosting them with that mixture of interest, deference, and cordiality, which const.i.tuted the charm of his very agreeable manner. He seemed to take it as a matter of course that he should have made love to both, that they should all meet at Ascot, and that he should proceed to make love to them again.
"So glad to see you, Mrs. Lascelles!" exclaimed this hardened offender.
"How wet you must have got the last time we parted. I sent my carriage after you directly I got home, but it was too late. So glad to see you, Miss Ross. You left us in such a hurry we didn"t half wish you good-bye.
Helen and I were very dull without you. Here she is--don"t she look well? don"t you both look well? don"t we all look well?"
With such effrontery it was impossible not to fall into an easy strain of conversation, and after an affectionate greeting had been exchanged between Helen and her two presumptive step-mothers, the whole party proceeded to Mrs. Lascelles"s box, from whence, without crowding or inconvenience, they could see the race for the Cup, in so far as it was affected by the run-in seventy yards from home.
Sir Henry, who had another "pony" depending on this event, would have liked to be a little nearer the Judge"s chair; but I doubt if the ladies cared much for the final struggle, decided by half a length. Mrs.
Lascelles, thinking that her old admirer looked worn, handsome, and gentleman-like, in spite of crow"s-feet and grizzling whiskers, while resolving to punish him severely for his treachery, was reflecting that the process would be by no means unpleasant to herself. Miss Ross continued silent and pre-occupied, haunted by the vision of that st.u.r.dy boy kicking and crowing in the dirt. While Helen, commanding the four-in-hand coaches with her gla.s.s, saw only Vanguard"s shapely figure on the roof of his drag as he turned to watch the race; and when the excitement was over, sprang down to mingle with the crowd that poured into the Course, on his way, as she hoped and believed, to join them here.
Now he stops to speak to a good-looking bad-looking man, whom she recognises as the driver of the coach which so nearly overtook his own.
Certain courtesies of the road have already made these two acquaintances and almost friends. Now he bows to a d.u.c.h.ess, now nods to a gipsy; presently he is lost in the throng, and emerges under their very box, when good-humoured Mrs. Lascelles, doing as she would be done by, beckons him up at once, and makes ready a place for him at Miss Hallaton"s side.
He has something pleasant to say to each lady; and Miss Ross rouses herself to observe his good looks, enhanced by that frank air of courtesy, peculiar to an English gentleman, which is so fascinating to the women least accustomed to it. She gives him the benefit of a deadly shot or two from her black eyes, as he seats himself by Helen"s side, and the girl, quick-sighted, silent, sensitive, feels each glance like a stab.
But it is pleasant to have him here, out of the crowd, amidst this beautiful scenery, under the summer sun, and over her steals that feeling of security and complete repose which is the infallible test of genuine affection.
He is quiet and happy too. Neither of them says much; perhaps they have a good deal to think of, and are thinking of it.
Uncle Joseph and young Goldthred, returning from an unremunerative expedition to the betting-ring, are somewhat discomfited to observe this invasion of their territories, but become speedily rea.s.sured in detecting Sir Henry"s obvious anxiety to escape, that he may get "on"
for the next race, and the ill-concealed admiration of Frank Vanguard for that reckless individual"s daughter.
Mr. Groves backs Mrs. Lascelles"s invitation freely.
"You will come and dine, Sir Henry," says she; "promise, and I"ll let you off this minute. You know you are dying to get back to that wicked betting. Think of Helen. She"ll be tired to death with the journey to London in a stuffy railway. Things! You don"t want any things. Besides, why not work the wires? Telegraph for your servants to bring them down.
We needn"t dress for dinner. Captain Vanguard, if you can get away from the barracks, won"t you come too?"
Frank looked at Helen, Helen looked resolutely at the card in her hand.
He was forced, unwillingly, to decline, but doubtless remarked the colour fade in her cheek while he did so, expressing at the same time a hope of meeting next day. Uncle Joseph, who had quite abandoned the control of his own household, expressed entire satisfaction with everybody"s arrangements, and Miss Ross whispered in his ear, "it was very dear of him to be so good-natured!"
Goldthred, too, having lost nine pairs of gloves, six and a half, three b.u.t.tons, to Mrs. Lascelles, was in the seventh heaven. Altogether, not many race-goers left the Course better pleased with themselves that day.
And Mr. Picard, looking down at Helen as he pa.s.sed her carriage driving home, said to the loudish lady by his side--
"_That"s_ the handsomest girl I"ve seen the whole season! I wonder who she is?"
To which the loudish lady replied with acrimony--
"_Do_ you think so? Well, perhaps she is fresh looking, in a bread-and-b.u.t.ter, missy-ish sort of style. Can"t you go a little faster?
One gets choked with this horrid dust!"
CHAPTER VII.
FRANK.
The barrack-room of a subaltern in the Household Cavalry has been lately described by a gifted auth.o.r.ess as resembling "the boudoir of a young d.u.c.h.ess." My experience of the latter, I honestly confess, is exceedingly limited, but I think I know enough of the former tenement to submit that our talented romancer has overstated her case. She would have been nearer the mark, I imagine, had she compared the lair of the formidable warrior to a servants" hall, a laundry, a condemned cell, or some such abode of vacuity and desolation, modified princ.i.p.ally by whitewash. Gaudy pictures on the walls, gaudy flowers in the window-sill, do indeed serve to brighten the neutral tints prevailing in an officer"s quarters, as provided by his grateful country, and a barrack-room chair is an exceedingly comfortable resting-place in which to smoke the pipe of peace in the stronghold of war. For ease, merriment, and good-fellowship, give me the habitation of the dragoon; but when you talk of pomp, luxury, taste, and refinement, I am prepared to back the d.u.c.h.ess, ay, even though she be a dowager d.u.c.h.ess, against all the cavalry regiments in the Army List, and give you the Horse Artillery in!
Let us take, for example, the room in which Frank Vanguard lies fast asleep, at ten in the morning, though a summer sun, streaming through the open window, bathes him, like a male Danae, in floods of gold. He possesses horses, carriages, costly jewellery, clothes in abundance, boots innumerable, yet his furniture consists of the following items:--
One iron bedstead, without curtains; one wooden tub; one enormous sponge, one medium-sized ditto; a chest of drawers, constructed to travel by baggage-waggon; a huge box, meant to hold saddlery; a stick and whip stand; twelve pairs of spurs; a set of boxing-gloves; four steeple-chase prints; and a meerschaum pipe he never smokes. These, with a chair or two, and a few toilet necessaries, comprise the whole furniture of his apartment; and he is happier here than in luxurious London lodgings, lordly castle, or stately country house.
The song of birds, the flutter of the summer morning, snort, stamp, and stable-call, ring of bridle, and clink of steel, all fail to wake him.
He is not for duty to-day, and never went to bed till five in the morning.
To say nothing of the mess-man and his satellites, it is a heavy week, that of Ascot Races, for field-officers, captains, subalterns, and all concerned in the dispensation of unbounded hospitality at Windsor during the meeting. They entertain countless guests, they convey them to and from the Course, they provide board and lodging for the gentlemen, amus.e.m.e.nt and adoration for the ladies, they are afoot day and night; yet seem always fresh, lively, good-humoured, and on the alert. But even cavalry officers are mortal, and though they never confess it, they _must_ be very tired, and a little thankful when the whole function is over.
No wonder Frank sleeps so sound--dreaming doubtless of--what? His dark-brown charger, his chestnut mare, the stag he shot last year in Scotland, the team he drove yesterday to Ascot? Of Miss Hallaton, perhaps, and the deep l.u.s.trous eyes that haunted him so while he flung himself on his bed and went off into the very slumber from which he is roused, even now, by unceremonious knuckles tapping at the door.
A sleepy man says "come in" without waking, and enter a soldier-servant nearly seven feet high, who proceeds to fill the tub, and further dressing arrangements generally, with a clatter, that he has found from experience of many masters is the surest way to get a sluggard out of bed. This stalwart personage considers himself responsible (and it is no light burthen) that his officer should always be in time. With a Cornet his prevision is touching, and almost maternal in its care. Having thoroughly roused the sleeper, his servant plants himself at the bedside, drawn up to an exceeding alt.i.tude, in the position drill-sergeants call "attention."
"What is it?" says Frank yawning.
"Gentleman come to breakfast, sir. Waiting in the little mess-room."
"Order it at once, Blake, and say I"ll be down in twenty minutes."
Exit Blake, facing to the right, solemnly but far less noisily than he came in; while Frank with one bound is on the floor, and with another in his tub, not feeling his eyes quite open till he has splashed the bracing cold water into them more than once.
While he shaves and dresses, getting through each process with surprising celerity, I may state that the gentleman waiting breakfast for him below is none other than Mr. Picard, the driver of the blue coach with red wheels, the quick-stepping browns, and the loudish lady of the day before.
A timely pull in Frank"s favour, when the latter was in difficulties with his team at an awkward corner on the Heath,--a little judicious flattery extolling the capabilities of that team, and the mode in which it was handled,--a draught of champagne-cup offered,--a cigar exchanged,--and Vanguard was so pleased with his new friend, that he pressed the invitation which now brought him to breakfast in the officers" mess-room, accompanied by an appet.i.te that never failed, and a determination to make the most of this, as of all other advantages in the game of life.
A couple of Cornets are already hard at work, with the voracity of youth just done growing in length but not breadth. Their jaws cease simultaneously at the entrance of a stranger, and, boys as they are, the instinct of each warns him against this plausible personage whom, as a guest, they welcome nevertheless with hospitality and perfect good breeding. It speaks well for Picard"s _savoir faire_, that long ere his entertainer comes down, he has made a favourable impression on these late Etonians, so that, emerging to smoke outside in couples as usual, says one inseparable to the other--
"Pleasant company that hairy chap, and tongue enough for a street-preacher! Who the devil is he, Jack, and where did Frank pick him up?"
To which Jack, whose real name is Frederic, replies with deliberation: